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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #54225 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/54225)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Trial of the Major War Criminals Before the
-International Military Tribunal, Volume III, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Trial of the Major War Criminals Before the International Military Tribunal, Volume III
- Nuremburg 14 November 1945-1 October 1946 (Vol. 3)
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: February 23, 2017 [EBook #54225]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRIAL MAJOR WAR CRIMINALS, VOLUME III ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Larry Harrison, Cindy Beyer and the online
-Distributed Proofreaders Canada team at www.pgdpcanada.net.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- [Cover Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- TRIAL
- OF
- THE MAJOR WAR CRIMINALS
-
- BEFORE
-
- THE INTERNATIONAL
- MILITARY TRIBUNAL
-
- N U R E M B E R G
- 14 NOVEMBER 1945-1 OCTOBER 1946
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
- P U B L I S H E D A T N U R E M B E R G , G E R M A N Y
- 1 9 4 7
-
-
-
-
- This volume is published in accordance with the
- direction of the International Military Tribunal by
- the Secretariat of the Tribunal, under the jurisdiction
- of the Allied Control Authority for Germany.
-
-
-
-
- VOLUME III
-
-
-
- O F F I C I A L T E X T
-
- I N T H E
-
- ENGLISH LANGUAGE
-
-
-
-
- P R O C E E D I N G S
-
- 1 December 1945 — 14 December 1945
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
- Tenth Day, Saturday, 1 December 1945,
- Morning Session 1
-
- Eleventh Day, Monday, 3 December 1945,
- Morning Session 35
- Afternoon Session 64
-
- Twelfth Day, Tuesday, 4 December 1945,
- Morning Session 91
- Afternoon Session 120
-
- Thirteenth Day, Wednesday, 5 December 1945,
- Morning Session 152
- Afternoon Session 178
-
- Fourteenth Day, Thursday, 6 December 1945,
- Morning Session 209
- Afternoon Session 241
-
- Fifteenth Day, Friday, 7 December 1945,
- Morning Session 272
- Afternoon Session 303
-
- Sixteenth Day, Monday, 10 December 1945,
- Morning Session 335
- Afternoon Session 367
-
- Seventeenth Day, Tuesday, 11 December 1945,
- Morning Session 400
- Afternoon Session 402
-
- Eighteenth Day, Wednesday, 12 December 1945,
- Morning Session 415
- Afternoon Session 447
-
- Nineteenth Day, Thursday, 13 December 1945,
- Morning Session 477
- Afternoon Session 512
-
- Twentieth Day, Friday, 14 December 1945,
- Morning Session 542
- Afternoon Session 571
-
-
-
-
- TENTH DAY
- Saturday, 1 December 1945
-
-
- _Morning Session_
-
-THE PRESIDENT (Lord Justice Sir Geoffrey Lawrence): I will begin the
-session by reading the judgment of the Tribunal upon the application
-made by counsel for the Defendant Hess.
-
-The Tribunal has given careful consideration to the motion of counsel
-for the defense of the Defendant Hess, and it had the advantage of
-hearing full argument upon it both from the Defense and the Prosecution.
-The Tribunal has also considered the very full medical reports, which
-have been made on the condition of the Defendant Hess, and has come to
-the conclusion that no grounds whatever exist for a further examination
-to be ordered.
-
-After hearing the statement of the Defendant Hess in Court yesterday,
-and in view of all the evidence, the Tribunal is of the opinion that the
-Defendant Hess is capable of standing his trial at the present time, and
-the motion of the Counsel for the Defense is, therefore, denied, and the
-Trial will proceed.
-
-Now the witness under examination should come back to the witness box.
-
-[_Erwin Lahousen resumed the stand._]
-
-MR. G. D. ROBERTS (Leading Counsel for the United Kingdom): May it
-please the Tribunal, Sir David Maxwell-Fyfe yesterday said he had no
-questions to ask this witness. He has now requested me very shortly to
-cross-examine this witness on one incident mentioned in the Indictment,
-namely, the murder of 50 R.A.F. officers who escaped from Stalag Luft 3
-in March of 1944.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: You said to “cross-examine”?
-
-MR. ROBERTS: I realize that this is a matter which falls in the part of
-the Indictment which is being dealt with by the prosecutors for the
-U.S.S.R. My Lord, I have mentioned that matter to General Rudenko, who
-with his usual courtesy and kindness, has said that he has no objection
-to my asking some questions on that matter.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Very well, Mr. Roberts.
-
-MR. ROBERTS: Much obliged.
-
-[_Turning to the witness._] Might I ask you this? Do you know anything
-of the circumstances of the death of 50 R.A.F. officers in March 1944,
-who had escaped from Stalag Luft 3 at Sagan and were recaptured?
-
-ERWIN LAHOUSEN (Witness): No, I have nothing to say because at that time
-I was on the Eastern front, as commander of my regiment, and no longer
-had any contact with my former duties.
-
-MR. ROBERTS: Did you hear of the matter from any of your fellow
-officers?
-
-LAHOUSEN: No, I heard nothing about it whatsoever.
-
-MR. ROBERTS: You can’t assist the Court at all with the matter?
-
-LAHOUSEN: No, not at all.
-
-DR. EGON KUBUSCHOK (Counsel for Defendant Von Papen): Witness, you
-stated yesterday that you were the intimate friend and collaborator of
-Admiral Canaris. Since I can no longer address my question directly to
-Admiral Canaris, I ask you to answer the following questions for me: Did
-Admiral Canaris know of Defendant Von Papen’s attitude toward Hitler’s
-war policies, and how did Admiral Canaris express himself to you on this
-point?
-
-LAHOUSEN: First, I should like to make a slight correction on the
-question addressed to me. I never asserted that I was the intimate
-friend of Canaris. Pieckenbrock was a friend of Canaris, whereas I was
-merely one of his confidants. From this relationship, however, I recall
-that Von Papen’s and Canaris’ attitude toward the matter which the
-Counsel has just brought up, was a negative one.
-
-DR. KUBUSCHOK: Was this negative attitude only toward the war policy, or
-was it also toward all the violent methods used in the execution of such
-a policy?
-
-LAHOUSEN: According to my recollection I have to answer this question in
-the affirmative, judging from a conversation between Admiral Canaris and
-Von Papen, during the visit of the latter in Berlin at which I was
-present.
-
-DR. KUBUSCHOK: Did you know that Von Papen told Canaris that there could
-be no resistance against Hitler’s aggressive policies from political
-quarters, but that such resistance would have to be sought among the
-ranks of the military?
-
-LAHOUSEN: In this connection, that is to say, in the direct connection
-as it is now being presented, I personally cannot say anything. In other
-words, I personally was not an ear witness at any conversation between
-Canaris and Von Papen during which this matter was brought up, and I
-cannot recall today whether Canaris ever told me anything regarding such
-conversations with Von Papen. It is quite possible, however, but I
-cannot recall it and consequently my oath as witness does not permit me
-to make any statement other than the one I have made.
-
-DR. KUBUSCHOK: Witness, do you conclude from this that Canaris believed
-that Von Papen purposely continued to hold an exposed political office
-in order to exercise a mitigating influence?
-
-LAHOUSEN: I believe so, though I have no tangible proof from any of his
-statements. But that is my impression, from what I still recollect
-today.
-
-DR. OTTO NELTE (Counsel for Defendant Keitel): My client has requested
-me to ask you the following questions: How long have you known Canaris
-and Pieckenbrock?
-
-LAHOUSEN: I have known Canaris and Pieckenbrock since 1937 through my
-previous activity in the Austrian Intelligence Department.
-
-DR. NELTE: At that time were there any relations of a military nature
-between yourself and the Abwehr, which was being run by Admiral Canaris?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Not only did such connections exist with the Austrian
-intelligence, but the Austrian Federal Army and the German Wehrmacht
-maintained it that time an absolutely legal and purely military exchange
-of information—legal in the sense that this exchange and collaboration
-of military intelligence was carried on with the knowledge of the
-Austrian authorities. To state it clearly, this was a purely military
-collaboration for exchanging intelligence on countries bordering upon
-Austria.
-
-DR. NELTE: May I ask if this contact between you and Canaris was also of
-a personal nature, in other words I want to determine how the Austrian
-Army felt about the question of the Anschluss?
-
-LAHOUSEN: This and similar questions, that is to say, all questions of a
-political nature, particularly the question of the Anschluss or the very
-intense illegal Nazi activities, at that time, had to be and were
-completely ignored. It was generally agreed between Count Marogna, the
-official liaison man—he also was executed after the 20th of July—and
-Canaris and Generaloberst Beck that this line should be taken.
-
-DR. NELTE: Do I understand you wish to imply that this personal contact
-did not mean that the Austrian General Staff officers gave information
-on everything regarding their attitude to the idea of the Anschluss, or
-that they were willing or able to give this information?
-
-LAHOUSEN: This personal contact started on the day when I saw Canaris
-for the first time, while I was still an Austrian officer. It was in the
-offices of the Federal Ministry of Defense, where Canaris was with the
-Chief of the Austrian General Staff.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Would you please repeat the question?
-
-DR. NELTE: I asked the witness to what extent a personal contact existed
-between the officers of the German General Staff or the Abwehr and the
-officers of the Intelligence Section or the Austrian General Staff for
-the purpose of determining the feelings about the Anschluss.
-
-LAHOUSEN: First of all, there was no such personal contact in the sense
-that the word is used here. The contact which actually did take
-place—and there are witnesses in this room who can confirm this
-statement: Von Papen must be informed thoroughly of this—took place on
-a single day, during which I never spoke with Canaris alone, but always
-in the presence of my superior officers. In any case, no questions
-relating to the Anschluss and no political questions on Austrian
-internal problems were discussed there. Naturally I myself did not raise
-any, and Canaris expressly refrained from doing so.
-
-DR. NELTE: What was your job in the Abwehr Office II?
-
-LAHOUSEN: In the Abwehr Section II, which I took over at the beginning
-of 1939—I described it yesterday, and I am willing to repeat it, if you
-wish—this particular job had no special name. Actually my task was to
-carry out various undertakings and actions, which I can define very
-precisely: Nuisance activity, acts of sabotage, or prevention of
-sabotage and nuisance activity, or in general those types of activities
-that are carried out by Kommandos. All these activities were carried out
-in agreement with, and conformed to, the military demands of the Armed
-Forces Operations Staff or the General Staff.
-
-DR. NELTE: Who generally gave you your orders regarding co-ordinating
-these activities with the military activities?
-
-LAHOUSEN: My immediate chief, Canaris, usually gave me orders concerning
-the whole of my activity.
-
-DR. NELTE: I was referring to the office, whether they came from the OKH
-or the OKW?
-
-LAHOUSEN: They did not come from the OKW as a rule. Usually they came by
-way of the OKW represented by the Chief of the OKW, Keitel, or the chief
-of the Wehrmacht Operations Staff; and when the General Staff or the Air
-Force Operations Staff were interested in any undertaking, the orders,
-as far as I can remember, were also transmitted by way of the Armed
-Forces Operations Staff, and the representatives of the three Armed
-Forces, that is, the Army, Air Force, and Navy, appointed to it. All
-these orders came through the same channels to the Canaris Foreign
-Intelligence Department (Ausland Abwehr) which transmitted those
-concerning my activities to me for necessary action.
-
-DR. NELTE: Are you now describing the official channels through which
-you received the orders? Were the orders issued by the Army or the Armed
-Forces Operations Staff? Or did the Army give the orders for
-transmission by way of the High Command of the Armed Forces?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Actually, speaking of myself, in questions of this kind,
-regarding matters which concerned my department, I had dealings only
-with my immediate superior, Canaris; and the superior of Canaris at that
-time was the OKW under Keitel, and he was in touch with the gentlemen of
-the Armed Forces Operational Staff, and now and then with the members of
-the General Staff of the Army. I could mention specific cases from
-memory. But in general the procedure was such as I described it.
-
-DR. NELTE: Is it true that Keitel, as the Chief of the OKW, at first
-every year, and then from 1943 on, at regular and shorter intervals,
-spoke to the office and department chiefs of the OKW; and on such
-occasions made a point of telling them that anyone who believed that
-something was being asked of him which his conscience would not allow
-him to carry out should tell him, Keitel, about it personally?
-
-LAHOUSEN: It is true that the Chief of the OKW did several times address
-the circle just mentioned. I cannot recall any exact words of his which
-could be interpreted in such a way as to mean that one could take the
-risk, in cases about which I testified yesterday, of speaking with him
-so openly and frankly as myself and others, that is, witnesses still
-alive, could speak to Canaris at any time. I definitely did not have
-that impression, whatever the meaning might have been which was given to
-his words at that time.
-
-DR. NELTE: Do I understand you correctly to mean that in principle you
-do not wish to challenge the fact that Keitel actually said these words?
-
-LAHOUSEN: I can neither challenge it, nor can I add anything to it,
-because I have no exact recollection of it. I do recall that these
-addresses or conferences took place, and it is quite possible that the
-Chief of the OKW at that time might have used those words. I can only
-add what I have already said.
-
-DR. NELTE: Is it true that on several occasions, you, in the company of
-Admiral Canaris, as well as alone, had audience with the Chief of the
-OKW, in order to discuss with him plans or undertakings of a delicate
-nature, which were in the purview of your official duties?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes, I said a great deal about that yesterday; and I do not
-feel I have the right to talk about such things unless I was there
-personally.
-
-DR. NELTE: I had the impression yesterday that in many respects you were
-acting as a mouthpiece for Admiral Canaris, who used you as a mentor for
-the entries in his diary. Was that your testimony?
-
-LAHOUSEN: The impression is completely fallacious. I am not a
-mouthpiece, and am now, as I was then, completely independent inwardly
-in what I say. I have never allowed myself, nor shall I ever allow
-myself, to become the mouthpiece for any conception, or to make any
-statements that are contrary to my inner convictions and to my
-conscience.
-
-DR. NELTE: You misunderstood me if you believe that I used the word
-“mouthpiece” derogatorily. I simply wanted to bring out the fact that
-yesterday you made frequent references to the remarks in Canaris’ diary,
-that is to the remarks of Canaris quoted by you.
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes, I did so in those cases where the matter discussed
-affected Canaris. He himself cannot testify, since he is dead. Just
-because I know a great deal about this, and because my information is
-exact, I felt it my duty to say what I know.
-
-DR. NELTE: Did Keitel ever ask questions or order any inquiries to be
-made about the political views of the officers in the Intelligence
-Department? Did he ever ask whether there were any National Socialists
-in the departments of the intelligence service?
-
-LAHOUSEN: At the afore-mentioned periodical meetings he asked this
-question and others of this nature in an unmistakable way, and he left
-no doubt that in an office such as the OKW he could not tolerate any
-officers who did not believe in the idea of final victory, or who did
-not give proof of unswerving loyalty to the Führer and much more
-besides.
-
-DR. NELTE: Could these statements be taken to mean that he demanded
-obedience in the military sense, or do you think he was speaking from a
-political point of view?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Of course, he was speaking from a military point of view, but
-no less clearly from the political aspect, for it was not admissible to
-make any distinction between the two. The Wehrmacht was to form a single
-whole—the National Socialistic Wehrmacht. Here he touched upon the root
-problem.
-
-DR. NELTE: You believe, therefore, that the basic attitude was really
-the military one, also in the OKW?
-
-LAHOUSEN: The basic attitude was, or should have been, National
-Socialistic, and not military. In other words, first and foremost
-National Socialistic, and everything else afterwards.
-
-DR. NELTE: You said “should have been.”
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes, because it actually was not the case.
-
-DR. NELTE: Quite so. You mean, therefore, that in the first place it was
-military and not National Socialistic.
-
-LAHOUSEN: It should have been a purely military one, according to our
-conception, but according to the point of view put forward by the Chief
-of the OKW at that time—whether he received an order in this sense I am
-not in a position to say, as I was not there—the basic attitude should
-be one of absolute obedience in a National Socialistic sense.
-
-DR. NELTE: Do you know anything about the attitude of the generals to
-this problem?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Of course, I do, because immediately after such conferences,
-as have been mentioned here, a lively exchange of opinions took place on
-this subject and a large number of those who were present—I could name
-them and some of them are present—resented that fact that the words
-addressed to them had this strong political flavor, and were couched in
-this “higher level language” (Sprachregelung von oben) as we used to
-call it, and contained so little that was relevant and purely military,
-let alone anything else.
-
-DR. NELTE: Yesterday, when discussing the meeting that took place in the
-Führer’s train, on the 12th September of 1939, you said, regarding the
-communication of the Chief of the OKW to you, that the Defendant Keitel
-addressed himself to you, or rather to the gentlemen present; and said
-that these measures had been determined between the Führer and Göring.
-He, Keitel, had no influence on them. The Führer and Göring telephoned
-frequently to one another. Sometimes he knew something about it;
-sometimes he knew nothing. Is that what you said?
-
-LAHOUSEN: That is correct. I made a record of everything that was said
-in my presence; and I repeated it here because it is true.
-
-DR. NELTE: May I ask whether the remark, “Sometimes I find out something
-about it, sometimes I do not,” relates to a concrete, specific case, or
-was that a general rule?
-
-LAHOUSEN: That was to be understood as a general statement, to the best
-of my recollection.
-
-DR. NELTE: At this conference in the Führer’s train on the 12th of
-September 1939, did you first of all speak about the transmission of the
-political aims which, according to you, came from Ribbentrop. Did I
-understand you correctly?
-
-LAHOUSEN: That is correct.
-
-DR. NELTE: And you said that the Defendant Keitel transmitted these aims
-to those who were present. Now, what I am not clear about is whether
-this referred to the order regarding the bombardment of Warsaw from the
-air. Did I understand rightly?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes, as regards the air bombardment of Warsaw, to the best of
-my recollection and from what is recorded in the notes, I can only say
-in this connection, the same as when the question of shootings in Poland
-came up, that Canaris took the initiative by provoking a discussion on
-this subject—I no longer remember how he did this—and then pointing
-out the terrible political repercussions that this would have,
-especially abroad.
-
-DR. NELTE: The Defendant Keitel is anxious that I should put the
-question to you, whether, when this order for the bombing of Warsaw was
-made known he did not stress the fact that this was to be put into
-effect only if the fortress of Warsaw did not surrender after the demand
-made by the bearer of the flag of truce, and even then only after an
-opportunity to evacuate the city had been given to the civilian
-population and the diplomats.
-
-LAHOUSEN: I cannot recall the precise words he used but according to my
-knowledge of the situation at that time it is quite possible, indeed
-probable, that the Chief of the OKW, Keitel, did make this remark.
-
-DR. NELTE: Do you know that the Commander-in-Chief of the army at that
-time, Von Brauchitsch, and the Chief of the OKW, Keitel, before the
-Polish War began, categorically objected to the use of Gestapo and SD
-Kommandos, maintaining that these were unbearable in the Wehrmacht, and
-in this connection asked for Hitler’s concurrence and received it?
-
-LAHOUSEN: No, I did not know that, and could not have known it because
-of my subordinate position at that time. Please do not overrate the
-importance of my position at that time.
-
-DR. NELTE: As we are also concerned here with taking cognizance of a
-document, which, I take it, was transmitted to all departments and
-sections of the OKW, I thought you might remember. They were the
-so-called directives, were they not? And these directives, mentioned in
-connection with the campaign against Poland, in contrast to what
-happened later . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I think you were going a little bit too fast.
-
-DR. NELTE: I said that in connection with these military actions, the
-decrees and directives were always transmitted to the various offices of
-the OKW in the form of carbon copies—I mean the offices which were in
-any way concerned. I thought, therefore . . .
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes, but these were things which did not concern my particular
-department, I stress the word “particular,” I did not even see them.
-
-DR. NELTE: As later on in the conversation you were drawn into the
-discussion on these questions—it is true you did stress that you did
-not know the actual wording of the orders . . .
-
-LAHOUSEN: Orders which I did not see and read. Of course, I knew a great
-many things, because I came to hear of them.
-
-DR. NELTE: For that reason, I want to ask you whether you recall that
-the Gestapo and SD had interfered behind the advance in connection with
-Poland, contrary to the intentions expressed in the orders of the
-military leaders?
-
-LAHOUSEN: I cannot recall that today. I can only refer to what I heard
-and what is recorded in the files on this matter, namely, the remark of
-Hitler’s, which was passed down by Keitel, who was chief at that time,
-and which was to the effect, that if the armed forces objected to these
-measures, the armed forces as well as the high command—that is
-apparently what you mean—would have to put up with it if the Gestapo
-and the SS went ahead with these things. That is all I can tell you. I
-know that because I was present at these discussions.
-
-DR. NELTE: During this conversation, were you not told that General
-Blaskowitz—in other words, the Army—had made a complaint about the
-methods of the SS and the SD?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Whether or not this question was brought up at this
-conference, I cannot recall. I can hardly assume that it was brought up,
-because otherwise this question would have been recorded in the notes of
-that conference, particularly since the complaint came from General
-Blaskowitz, whose attitude in such matters was quite clear and well
-known. But apart from this conversation in the Führer’s train, I do
-recall something about the matter just mentioned, that is, the
-objections raised by Blaskowitz. I cannot say today how these objections
-were made, whether in writing or by word of mouth, neither do I know the
-occasion on which they were made. While I do remember the substance of
-the matter, I cannot recall whether it came up for discussion at the
-meeting where I was present.
-
-DR. NELTE: What appears to me to be important in this matter, is the
-fact that the Wehrmacht, the troops, really did protest, or at least
-refused . . .
-
-LAHOUSEN: That the Armed Forces did object, is, of course, quite
-evident.
-
-DR. NELTE: That is what I wanted to know. Who gave the order . . .
-
-LAHOUSEN: One moment, please. When I say “the Armed Forces,” I mean the
-masses of common soldiers, the ordinary simple men. Of course, there
-were in these Armed Forces other men whom I wish to exclude. I do not
-wish to be misunderstood. The concept “Armed Forces” does not include
-everybody, but it does include the mass of simple men with natural
-feelings.
-
-DR. NELTE: When using the term “Wehrmacht” I only wanted to bring out
-the contrast between the broad masses of the soldiers and the SS and SD,
-and I think we are agreed on this.
-
-LAHOUSEN: I think we have ample and fairly conclusive proof of this
-contract in the conditions prevailing and the methods used at that time,
-which in that form and scope were then for the first time shown openly
-enough to become apparent to the broad masses of the Wehrmacht—quite
-apart from anything I can say about it in this short, extremely short
-exposition.
-
-DR. NELTE: Who gave the order regarding the collaboration with the
-Ukrainian group? You spoke yesterday . . .
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes, I have to go back somewhat farther. First of all I must
-say that this group was composed of citizens from various countries,
-that is, Hungarians, Czechs, and afterwards Polish citizens, who because
-of their attitude of opposition, had emigrated or gone to Germany. I
-cannot say who gave the order for the collaboration, because at the time
-when these things happened—it was some time back, I remember quite
-clearly it was in 1938 or even earlier—I was not even working in the
-Amt Ausland Abwehr and was not in touch with the Department, which I did
-not take over until the beginning of 1939. It was already on a firm
-footing when I took it over.
-
-In this connection I must add, since it was also touched upon yesterday,
-that these Ukrainians, at least the majority of them, had no ties
-whatsoever with Germany. I can say definitely that a large proportion of
-these people with whom the Amt Ausland Abwehr had contact at that time
-were in German concentration camps, and that some of these people were
-fighting for their country in Soviet partisan groups. That is a fact.
-
-DR. NELTE: Did Admiral Canaris not tell you that the Chief of the OKW,
-Keitel, when informed by the SS of the demand for Polish uniforms and
-military equipment, had given the clear order that the Abteilung Abwehr
-should have nothing to do with this game?
-
-LAHOUSEN: As I stated yesterday, this matter was handled very
-mysteriously and secretly also in our circle. Not only myself, but the
-others also, knew absolutely nothing about the game which was being
-played until after it actually happened. The War Diary of the Department
-makes this very clear. It records that one day, quite suddenly, like a
-bolt from the blue, a demand was received, by order of Canaris, for so
-and so many uniforms for an undertaking known as “Himmler”. My amazement
-and my enquiry as to how Himmler came to have anything to do with an
-undertaking which required Polish uniforms is also recorded in the War
-Diary, not by me, but by the officer who kept this diary. In reply I was
-merely told that these articles of equipment would be picked up by a
-certain person on a certain day, and no further explanation was given.
-And there the matter ended. Of course, when the name of Himmler was
-mentioned, besides being mysterious, the thing immediately began to
-appear suspicious to us. By us, I mean everybody who had to do with it
-in the course of his duty, right down to the ordinary sergeant, who, of
-course, had to procure these uniforms by some means or other and deliver
-them to a certain Hauptsturmführer SS—the name is recorded in the War
-Diary. These people had their misgivings. That was a thing which could
-not be forbidden.
-
-DR. NELTE: Yesterday you also made statements about the treatment of
-prisoners of war. In what way was Abwehr II concerned with
-prisoner-of-war questions?
-
-LAHOUSEN: That is quite simple. Abwehr II was naturally very interested
-in an objective way that prisoners of war should be treated as well and
-as decently as possible, and the same applies to any intelligence
-service in the world. That was all.
-
-DR. NELTE: Do I understand you to mean that Abwehr II, as a department,
-was not concerned with prisoner-of-war questions?
-
-LAHOUSEN: It had absolutely nothing to do with prisoner-of-war
-questions.
-
-DR. NELTE: Yesterday you spoke about the problem of the treatment of
-prisoners of war in connection with a conference that took place, if I
-remember rightly, at the end of July 1941?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes, at this conference I did not represent only my section,
-but the whole Amt Ausland Abwehr, that is to say—for general questions
-of international law and military political questions, that is, those
-questions which to the greatest extent generally concerned foreign
-countries, and the intelligence sections. Department III which dealt
-with espionage was practically interested—because after all, the
-officers affiliated with it were in the prisoner-of-war camps.
-Naturally, from the point of view of my section it was important to be
-informed about those matters—and that my section was only interested
-within the frame of the entire problem, that people should not be killed
-off, but treated decently, quite apart from any of the other
-considerations which were mentioned.
-
-DR. NELTE: You said yesterday that the prisoner-of-war camps in the
-operations zone of the Eastern sector were under the OKW. Is that
-correct?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes, what I said about prisoner-of-war camps yesterday I knew
-from the conference with Reinecke, and not from any knowledge of the
-orders themselves, which I had neither seen nor read. At this conference
-I was able to obtain a clear idea of the prisoner-of-war question owing
-to the presence of Reinecke, the chief of the prisoner-of-war
-department, who represented his own department and the OKW, and I
-repeated everything I remembered about this.
-
-DR. NELTE: What I was really asking was about the limitation of the
-jurisdictions.
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes.
-
-DR. NELTE: Do you know that in the Army Operational Zone the army on
-operations was responsible for the care of prisoners of war?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes.
-
-DR. NELTE: And that the OKW became responsible for their care only when
-the prisoners of war arrived in Germany?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes, I repeated what I knew about the matter at the time from
-what I had heard. This was that the General Staff of the Army had made
-all preparations to bring these people back, and Hitler then authorized
-the OKW to hold this up, and the OKW was then held responsible by the
-General Staff for the consequences. What happened after that I do not
-know and have no right to judge. I can only repeat what I saw and heard.
-
-DR. NELTE: I thought that yesterday you expressed the conjecture that
-the prisoners were not brought back owing to an order from Hitler.
-
-LAHOUSEN: I did not express a conjecture. I simply repeated what I heard
-at the time and what I know. It might, of course, have been wrong.
-
-DR. NELTE: Heard from whom?
-
-LAHOUSEN: I heard this from the people with whom I was in daily contact,
-that is, at the daily situation conferences, at which Canaris, the
-department chiefs, and other people who came there to report were
-present. I heard it there, and a great deal was said about this matter.
-I have always made this clear since my first interrogation. I told
-Reinecke to his face that what he himself said about this question at
-the time . . .
-
-DR. NELTE: That has nothing to do with my question.
-
-LAHOUSEN: I understand your question perfectly. I only want to make it
-quite clear how I came yesterday to say what I did—to examine how far
-this applies according to the actual, organizational and other divisions
-. . .
-
-DR. NELTE: But you know that in principle the OKW had charge of
-prisoners of war only in Germany?
-
-LAHOUSEN: There is no question about that.
-
-DR. NELTE: How could it happen that the Abwehr office adopted the
-attitude you defined yesterday regarding the question of enemy commando
-activities? You were supposed to deal with these things from the German
-side, but you—that is, your department—were not officially concerned
-with the handling of these things?
-
-LAHOUSEN: No, not immediately concerned. The Amt Ausland had something
-to do with these things because somehow it received intelligence of any
-order that was under consideration, even before it was put into shape,
-and certainly as soon as it was drawn up. The order in question had, of
-course, a bearing on an essential point of international law, and the
-Ausland section of the Abwehr department—or rather the “Sachbearbeiter”
-(expert) as he was called—was naturally concerned with it. As a matter
-of fact, my department was directly concerned with these things for
-reasons which I have already explained, because it might turn out that
-persons for whom I was responsible might be directly affected.
-
-DR. NELTE: Did the department which dealt with international law in the
-Amt Ausland Abwehr ever put its official attitude in writing?
-
-LAHOUSEN: As I pointed out yesterday, I wrote a contribution on the
-subject, from the point of view of my section, which was transmitted to
-Canaris and was to be part of the long document. I only learned what use
-was made of it from what Bürckner said at the time, and which was that
-his department passed the thing on in this manner, either in writing or
-verbally, as a protest or counter remonstrance, at any rate pointing out
-the dangers. This happened a second time, and again I cannot say in what
-form, whether verbally or in writing or _vice versa_—the first time in
-writing and then verbally—after executions had already taken place, and
-because I had again started to make myself heard because of the
-executions that had already taken place. That was the logical
-development.
-
-DR. NELTE: You also said something yesterday about putting a
-distinguishing mark on Russian prisoners by branding. Did it become
-known to you that such a scheme, as brought out in this question, was
-cancelled by a telephoned order from the Chief of the OKW, who had gone
-to the Führer’s headquarters for this purpose, and that it was only
-because of a regrettable, a terrible misunderstanding, that a few copies
-of this order were issued?
-
-LAHOUSEN: No, I do not know about this, because, generally speaking, I
-only heard of the things which happened in the Amt Ausland Abwehr, that
-is, from Canaris’ section downwards, if I was directly concerned with
-them. What happened on the higher levels, that is, from Canaris upwards,
-was and could only be known to me if I was in some way connected with
-it.
-
-DR. NELTE: You yourself did not see the order?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Which order are you referring to?
-
-DR. NELTE: The one concerning the branding of Russian prisoners.
-
-LAHOUSEN: No. As in the case of the Commando Order and others, I
-attended only the very lively discussion of this question, and with
-regard to the branding of Russian prisoners I remember Canaris
-mentioning that a doctor had furnished a written report on how this
-could be done most efficiently.
-
-DR. NELTE: You stated yesterday that Admiral Canaris had said that the
-Defendant Keitel had given the order to do away with General Weygand?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes.
-
-DR. NELTE: The Defendant Keitel denies that. He now asks whether you
-ever saw any document or written proof of this order. He wants to know
-the origin of any statement which concerned General Weygand.
-
-LAHOUSEN: This order was not given in writing, but it came to me because
-I was supposed to put it into execution, that is, not I, but my
-department. It came up through Canaris, in that circle which I have so
-often described, and which means that it was known only to a few. I was
-brought into the matter through a talk which Canaris gave at Keitel’s
-office in the OKW and at which I was present. Keitel had already
-addressed me on the matter. I recorded this in my personal notes and I
-mentioned the date. After all, such a thing was not an everyday
-occurrence, at least not to me. It was 23 December 1940.
-
-DR. NELTE: Do you not remember the actual wording of the question that
-Defendant Keitel was supposed to have asked?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Of course I cannot remember the precise wording; the incident
-happened too long ago. I remember the gist very well. What he meant was,
-“What has been done in this matter? How do things stand?”
-
-DR. NELTE: You said yesterday that you gave an evasive answer.
-
-LAHOUSEN: I said yesterday that I could not remember exactly how I
-worded my answer but I certainly did not say what I had said in the
-presence of Canaris, namely, “I would not think of executing such a
-murderous order; my section and my officers are not an organization of
-murderers. Anything but that.” What I probably said to Keitel was
-something about how difficult the matter was, or any evasive answer that
-I may have thought of.
-
-DR. NELTE: If the Chief of the OKW had ordered such an action on his own
-initiative or on higher orders, this would, because of the high rank of
-General Weygand, have amounted to an act of state. You did not tell us
-yesterday whether after December 23, 1940 anything transpired in this
-matter, that is to say, whether the Chief of the OKW took up this
-question again.
-
-LAHOUSEN: No, I did not say anything about that yesterday, but I
-frequently mentioned during the interrogations that after that the Chief
-of the OKW did nothing more about it. Canaris’ attitude made it obvious
-that nothing further had been heard of it, for in the hierarchy of
-commands which for me was authoritative, he would have had to transmit
-orders to me. On the other hand, the information which I received in the
-Giraud matter was authoritative.
-
-DR. NELTE: We shall come to that presently. It is extraordinary that if
-an act of state, such as the murder of General Weygand, had been
-ordered, nothing more should have been heard of it. Can you explain
-this?
-
-LAHOUSEN: I can only explain it in the light of the construction which
-not only I myself, but also the others, put on the matter at that time.
-The situation at that time was very agitated; events followed each other
-very rapidly and something happened all the time, and we assumed—I
-shall come back to why we assumed it—that this matter and the
-importance attached to it had been superseded by some more important
-military or political event, and that it had receded into the
-background.
-
-DR. NELTE: Do you wish to say anything else?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes. I wish to state that what I am saying now has a certain
-bearing on the inner development of the Giraud affair. We—that is,
-Canaris, myself, and the others—who knew about this when the matter
-started, had hoped that it would take the same course as the Weygand
-affair; that is, that the matter would be dropped. Whether the order had
-been given by Keitel, or Hitler or Himmler, it would have been shelved
-when it came to Canaris and to me. In our circles it would have been
-relatively easy to intercept it or to divert it. That was what we hoped
-when the Giraud affair came up, as we had seen what actually had
-happened in the Weygand affair. Whether that was right or wrong I cannot
-judge. This is the explanation.
-
-DR. NELTE: For a less important matter your argument might be plausible,
-but in such an important matter as the Weygand case it does not seem to
-me to hold water. But even if it had been so, had the intention to do
-away with Weygand existed in any quarters and for any reason, how do you
-explain the fact that Weygand, who later was taken to Germany and housed
-in a villa, lived undisturbed and honored and met with no harm? It would
-have been understandable if the order to eliminate him had been
-seriously expressed in any quarters, that it should have been carried
-out on this occasion.
-
-LAHOUSEN: I can only answer to this that the attitude towards
-personalities in public life, whether at home or abroad, varied a great
-deal. There were high personalities who at one moment were in great
-favor and thought of very highly, and at the next moment were to be
-found in a concentration camp.
-
-DR. NELTE: Now regarding the Giraud case, you stated that Admiral
-Canaris said in your presence and the presence of others that General
-Giraud was to be done away with on orders from higher quarters.
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes. That it is so is borne out by the remark that
-Pieckenbrock made, and which I remember very well, that Herr Keitel
-should tell these things to Herr Hitler once and for all.
-
-DR. NELTE: So according to the communication made to you by Admiral
-Canaris, it was not an order of Keitel’s but an order of Hitler’s.
-
-LAHOUSEN: As far as we knew in the Abwehr office, it was Keitel who gave
-the order to Canaris. I can only assume this in view of an order Hitler
-made to this effect I do not know who actually gave this order, because
-I had no insight into the hierarchy of command beyond Canaris. It was,
-as far as I was concerned, an order from Canaris—an order which I could
-discuss immediately with him, in the same way as I can discuss it here.
-
-DR. NELTE: You yourself did not hear this order?
-
-LAHOUSEN: No, I personally did not hear it. I never said I did.
-
-DR. NELTE: But you mentioned that later Keitel spoke to you about this
-matter?
-
-LAHOUSEN: The procedure was the same as in the case of Weygand.
-
-DR. NELTE: Do you remember whether any precise or positive expression
-such as “killing,” “elimination,” or something similar was used on this
-occasion?
-
-LAHOUSEN: The word generally used was “elimination” (umlegen).
-
-DR. NELTE: What I mean is whether in this connection such a word was
-used by the Defendant Keitel in addressing you?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes, of course—when I gave my report, the notes of which I
-have, together with the date, just as in the Weygand case. For reasons
-unknown to me, the Giraud affair was apparently carried further than the
-Weygand affair, for Canaris and I could determine the different stages
-in its development.
-
-DR. NELTE: You did not answer my question. What did the Defendant Keitel
-say to you in this instance, when you were present at the occasion of a
-report by Canaris and the question of Giraud was brought up? What did he
-say?
-
-LAHOUSEN: The same thing: “How does the matter stand?” And by “matter”
-he clearly meant Giraud’s elimination, and that was the very subject we
-discussed under similar conditions in the Weygand affair.
-
-DR. NELTE: That is your opinion, but that is not the fact on which you
-have to give evidence. I wish to find out from you what Keitel actually
-said to you. When speaking to you or in your presence, did he use the
-expression “dispose of” or “eliminate”?
-
-LAHOUSEN: I cannot remember the expression he used, but it was perfectly
-clear what it was all about. Whatever it was, it was not a question of
-sparing Giraud’s life or imprisoning him. They had had the opportunity
-to do that while he was in occupied territory.
-
-DR. NELTE: That is what I want to speak about now. You are familiar with
-the fact that after Giraud’s flight and his return to Unoccupied France,
-a conference took place in Occupied France.
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes, I heard of that.
-
-DR. NELTE: Ambassador Abetz had a talk with General Giraud which dealt
-with the question of his voluntary return to confinement. You know that?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes, I heard of that.
-
-DR. NELTE: Then you probably also know that at that time the local
-military commander immediately called up the Führer’s headquarters by
-way of Paris. It was believed that an important communication was to be
-made; namely, that Giraud was in Occupied France and could be taken
-prisoner?
-
-LAHOUSEN: I know about this in its broad outline.
-
-DR. NELTE: Then you know also that the OKW—that is to say in this case,
-Keitel—then decided that this should not happen.
-
-LAHOUSEN: No, that I do not know.
-
-DR. NELTE: But you do know that General Giraud returned to Unoccupied
-France without having been harmed?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes, I do know that.
-
-DR. NELTE: Well, in that case, the answer to my previous question is
-self-apparent.
-
-LAHOUSEN: I speak the truth when I say I do not know. I could not have
-known unless they had talked about it in my presence.
-
-DR. NELTE: Well, it is so, and the facts prove it to be so. Did you know
-that General Giraud’s family lived in Occupied France?
-
-LAHOUSEN: No, I did not know that.
-
-DR. NELTE: I thought the Abwehr division was entrusted with surveillance
-of this region?
-
-LAHOUSEN: No, you are mistaken—certainly not my department. I do not
-know whether another department was in charge of that.
-
-DR. NELTE: The question was asked simply to prove that the family did
-not suffer because General Giraud escaped and later refused to return to
-captivity. I have one more question which you may be able to answer.
-
-LAHOUSEN: I beg your pardon. May I return, please, to the question of
-Giraud?
-
-DR. NELTE: This question also has to do with General Giraud.
-
-LAHOUSEN: Very well.
-
-DR. NELTE: Do you know that one day your chief, Canaris, received by
-special courier a letter from Giraud in which Giraud asked whether he
-might return to France? Do you know that?
-
-LAHOUSEN: No. No, I do not know about it. Perhaps I was not in Berlin at
-the time. I was not always in Berlin.
-
-DR. NELTE: I am aware of that. I thought it might be mentioned in the
-diary.
-
-LAHOUSEN: No, I did not keep the diary. I simply made additions to it so
-far as my particular department was concerned, but I was not familiar
-with the diary in its entirety.
-
-DR. NELTE: Thank you.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will adjourn now for 10 minutes.
-
- [_A recess was taken._]
-
-FLOTTENRICHTER OTTO KRANZBUEHLER (Counsel for Defendant Dönitz): I would
-like to make a motion in connection with the technical side of the
-proceedings. In the course of the proceedings, many German witnesses
-will be heard. It is important that the Tribunal should know exactly
-what the witnesses say. During the hearing of this witness I have tried
-to compare what the witness actually said with the English translation.
-I think I can state that in many essential points the translation did
-not entirely correspond to the statement of the witness. I would,
-therefore, like to suggest that German stenographers take down directly
-the statements of the witness in German so that Defense Counsel will
-have an opportunity of comparing what the witness actually says with the
-English translation and, if necessary, of making an application for the
-correction of the translation. That is all.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Yes, Mr. Justice Jackson.
-
-MR. JUSTICE ROBERT H. JACKSON (Chief of Counsel for the United States):
-I just want to inform the Court and Counsel, in connection with the
-observation that has just been made, that that has been anticipated and
-that every statement of the witness is recorded in German, so that if
-any question arises, if Counsel addresses a motion to it, the testimony
-can be verified.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Is that German record available to Defendants’ Counsel?
-
-MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: I don’t think it is. It is not, so far as I know.
-It would not be available unless there were some occasion for it.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: It is transcribed, I suppose?
-
-MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: I don’t know how far that process is carried. I
-will consult the technicians and advise about it, but I know that it is
-preserved. The extent of my knowledge now is that it is preserved in
-such a form that, if a question does arise, it can be accurately
-determined by the Tribunal, so that if they call attention to some
-particular thing, either the witness can correct it or we can have the
-record produced. It would not be practicable to make the recording
-available without making reproducing machines available. While I am not
-a technician in that field, I would not think it would be practicable to
-place that at their disposal.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Wouldn’t it be practicable to have a transcription made
-of the shorthand notes in German and, within the course of one or two
-days after the evidence has been given, place that transcription in the
-Defendants’ Counsel room?
-
-MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: I think that is being done. I think perhaps Colonel
-Dostert can explain just what is being done better than I can, because
-he is the technician in this field. I am sure that no difficulty need
-arise over this matter of correct translations.
-
-COLONEL LEON DOSTERT (Chief of Interpreters): Your Honors, the reports
-of the proceedings are taken down in all four languages and every word
-spoken in German is taken down in German by German court stenographers.
-The notes are then transcribed and can be made available to Defense
-Counsel. Moreover, there is a mechanical recording device which
-registers every single word spoken in any language in the courtroom, and
-in case of doubt about the authenticity of the reporters’ notes, we have
-the further verification of the mechanical recording, so that Defense
-Counsel should have every opportunity to check the authenticity of the
-translation.
-
-MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: I am advised further by Colonel Dostert that 25
-copies of the German transcript are being delivered to the defendants
-each day.
-
-FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBUEHLER: Mr. President, I was not informed that the
-German testimony is being taken down in shorthand in German. I assumed
-that the records handed over to us were translations. If German
-shorthand notes are being taken in the court, I withdraw my motion.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I think we shall get on faster if the Defendants’
-Counsel, before making motions, inquire into the matters about which
-they are making the motions.
-
-DR. FRITZ SAUTER (Counsel for Defendant Ribbentrop): I would like to ask
-a few questions of the witness.
-
-Witness, you previously stated that at some time an order was given,
-according to which, Russian prisoners of war were to be marked in a
-certain manner and that this order had been withdrawn by the Defendant
-Keitel. You did say that, did you not?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes, I said that I have knowledge that there was this purpose.
-
-DR. SAUTER: This is interesting from the point of view of the Defendant
-Ribbentrop, and I would like to hear from you whether you know about
-this matter. Ribbentrop maintains that when he heard about the order to
-brand Russian prisoners of war, he, in his capacity as Reich Foreign
-Minister, went immediately to the Führer’s headquarters to inform
-General Field Marshal Keitel of this order, and pointed out to him that
-he, Ribbentrop, in his capacity as Foreign Minister, as well as in his
-capacity as the guarantor of international law, objected to such
-treatment of Russian prisoners of war.
-
-I would be interested to know, Witness, whether in your circle something
-was said as to who drew Keitel’s attention to this order and asked him
-to retract it?
-
-LAHOUSEN: I was not informed of that and I only knew, as I said
-yesterday, that there had been this intention, but it was not carried
-out.
-
-DR. SAUTER: Then I have another question.
-
-Witness, you spoke yesterday about some remarks of the Defendant
-Ribbentrop, especially one statement to the effect that an uprising
-should be staged in Poland—not in Russia—and that all Polish farm
-houses should go up in flames and all Jews should be killed. That,
-roughly, was how the statement ran.
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes.
-
-DR. SAUTER: Now, later on, I believe, in answering a question of one of
-the Russian prosecutors, you amplified your statement by mentioning an
-order of the Defendant Ribbentrop. I would now like to know whether you
-really meant to say that it was an order from Ribbentrop to a military
-department?
-
-LAHOUSEN: No.
-
-DR. SAUTER: Just a minute please, so that you can answer both questions
-together.
-
-I would also like to remind you that yesterday, when this matter was
-first discussed, you spoke of a directive which, I believe, your
-superior officer had, as you said, received from Ribbentrop?
-
-LAHOUSEN: No, the Chief of the OKW received it, not my superior officer,
-who was Canaris. I would like to repeat it, in order to clarify this
-matter. It was a matter that came up for discussion on the 12th of
-September 1939 in the Führer’s train. These meetings took place in the
-following sequence with respect to time and locality: At first a short
-meeting took place between the Reich Foreign Minister Ribbentrop and
-Canaris in his coach.
-
-DR. SAUTER: Were you present?
-
-LAHOUSEN: I was present at that meeting. General political questions
-regarding Poland and the Ukrainians in Poland were discussed. I do not
-know anything more about this meeting, which was the first.
-
-After that there was another meeting in the coach of Keitel, who was
-then Chief of the OKW, and in the course of this meeting Keitel
-summarized and commented on the general political directives issued by
-Ribbentrop. He then mentioned several possible solutions for the
-handling of the Polish problem from the point of view of foreign
-policy—this can happen, or something else can happen; it is quite
-possible. In this connection he said:
-
- “You, Canaris, have to promote an uprising with the aid of the
- Ukrainian organizations which are working with you and which
- have the same objectives, namely, the Poles and the Jews.”
-
-And then a third discussion, or rather, a very brief remark at the end
-of a very short conversation between the Foreign Minister Ribbentrop and
-Canaris was made in connection with this subject, after the intention
-had been made quite clear. It was about how the uprising was to be
-carried out and what was to happen. I remember this so well, because he
-demanded that the farm houses must burn. Canaris discussed the matter
-with me in detail later on and referred to this remark.
-
-That is what happened, as I have described it. This was the sequence:
-Directives from the High Command to Keitel; then passed on by Keitel to
-Canaris at this meeting; then repeated to Canaris in the form of a
-remark which I remember so well because it contained the words about
-farm houses in flames, which is rather an unusual thing to say.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: It would assist the Tribunal if one question at a time
-were asked and if the witnesses would answer “yes” or “no” to the
-question asked, and explain, if they must, afterwards. But questions and
-answers should be put as shortly as possible and only one question
-should be asked at a time.
-
-DR. SAUTER: Now, witness, something else has struck me.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: You heard what I said did you? Do you understand it?
-
-DR. SAUTER: [_Continuing._] Yesterday you said that these remarks of
-Ribbentrop are not in the diary, if I understood you correctly.
-
-LAHOUSEN: No, this is not from the diary but has a connection with
-Canaris’ diary, by means of which I can make this remark.
-
-DR. SAUTER: You said yesterday that this remark struck you as being
-rather surprising.
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes.
-
-DR. SAUTER: And today you said that General Blaskowitz also made some
-striking statements. You also mentioned, however, that these statements
-of Blaskowitz were not entered in the diary.
-
-LAHOUSEN: No.
-
-DR. SAUTER: Now, it occurs to me—and I would like you to answer this
-question: Why, if this remark of the Defendant Ribbentrop surprised you,
-was it not entered in the diary?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Regarding Blaskowitz, I have to say—or rather—repeat the
-following:
-
-I said that I did not hear the Blaskowitz matter mentioned in this
-connection during the meeting, and I cannot assume that this subject
-came up concurrently, otherwise it would have been entered in these
-notes. It may be, of course, that the Blaskowitz matter was discussed at
-a time when I was not there. I have only put down what I heard or what
-Canaris told me to enter in the record.
-
-DR. SAUTER: But did you yourself hear that from Ribbentrop?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes, but the substance was not altered. Whether one speaks of
-extermination, elimination, or the burning of farms, they all amount to
-terroristic measures.
-
-DR. SAUTER: Did Von Ribbentrop really talk of killing Jews? Are you sure
-you remember that?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes, I definitely remember that, because Canaris talked not
-only to me, but also to others in Vienna about this matter and called me
-time and again as a witness.
-
-DR. SAUTER: You heard that too?
-
-LAHOUSEN: That did not settle the matter, but these words of
-Ribbentrop’s were frequently discussed.
-
-DR. SAUTER: Witness, something else. You have told us about murderous
-designs on which you or your department or other officers were employed
-or which you were charged to carry out. Did you report these to any
-police station as the law required? May I point out that according to
-German law failure to report intended crimes is punishable with
-imprisonment or in serious cases with death.
-
-LAHOUSEN: Well, when you talk about German law, I cannot follow you. I
-am not a lawyer, but just an ordinary man.
-
-DR. SAUTER: As far as I know, that is also punishable according to
-Austrian law.
-
-LAHOUSEN: At that time Austrian law, as far as I know, was no longer
-valid.
-
-DR. SAUTER: In other words, you never reported the intended crime,
-either as a private person or as an official?
-
-LAHOUSEN: I should have had to make a great many reports—about 100,000
-projected murders, of which I knew and could not help but know. You can
-read about them in the records—and about shootings and the like—of
-which of necessity I had knowledge, whether I wanted to know or not,
-because, unfortunately, I was in the midst of it.
-
-DR. SAUTER: It is not a matter of shootings which had taken place and
-could no longer be prevented, but rather a matter of intended murder at
-a time when perhaps it could have been prevented.
-
-LAHOUSEN: I can only answer: Why did the person who received this order
-at first hand not do the same thing? Why did he not denounce Hitler for
-instance?
-
-DR. SAUTER: You, as a general of the German Wehrmacht, should have asked
-Hitler . . .
-
-LAHOUSEN: I am sorry, you overestimate my rank, I had only been a
-general in the German Wehrmacht since the first of January 1945, that
-is, only for 4 months. At that time I was lieutenant colonel and later
-colonel of the General Staff, not in the General Staff.
-
-DR. SAUTER: But in 1938, immediately after Hitler’s attack on Austria,
-you at once made a request to be taken into the German Wehrmacht by
-Hitler.
-
-LAHOUSEN: I did not make a request, and I did not have to do this.
-Wherever I was in the service, I was known for my special services. I
-was not a stranger. With the knowledge of the Austrian Government and
-also, in a restricted sense, with the knowledge of the German
-authorities (that is, of certain persons) I was working for the Austrian
-Government in a matter which exclusively concerned things outside the
-scope of Austrian internal policy. I co-operated with the Wehrmacht, as
-well as with the Italian and Hungarian Governments with the knowledge of
-the Austrian Government and the competent authorities. There were
-matters of politics which were not my domain.
-
-DR. SAUTER: But I believe, Witness, your memory deceives you, because
-immediately after Hitler’s attack on Austria, you called on the General
-Staff in Berlin and there you tried to get a commission in the German
-Wehrmacht, and you now deny this. You also filled in and signed a
-questionnaire, in which you declared your complete allegiance to the
-Greater German Reich and to Adolf Hitler; and shortly afterwards you
-took the oath of allegiance to Adolf Hitler.
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes, of course, I did it just as everybody else who was in the
-position of being transferred from one office and capacity to another.
-
-DR. SAUTER: Before, you said you did not apply for this appointment, and
-I have information to the contrary: That you, in the company of two or
-three other officers were the first to go to Berlin with the sole
-purpose of asking the Chief of the German General Staff Beck to take you
-into the German Army.
-
-LAHOUSEN: I am very glad that you mention this subject, because it
-allows me to make my position perfectly clear. It was not necessary for
-me to make an application for my future position in the German
-Wehrmacht. I was known because of my military activities, just as any
-military attaché is known in the country where he is accredited.
-
-Moreover, I can easily explain why my rise in office was so rapid. I
-have said that my activities and my co-operation with the Austrian
-Military Intelligence Service, which were not determined by me but by my
-superior Austrian office, were at that time directed against the
-neighboring country of Czechoslovakia. Czechoslovakia was the country
-that was next on the list after Austria. Therefore, it was natural that
-my later chief, Canaris, who knew me from my former position, was very
-interested in having me promoted in his department. He put in a word for
-me, and so did Colonel General Beck, whom I was visiting. Other people
-also know this; and I have now told everything that General Beck told me
-at that time.
-
-DR. SAUTER: Then it is true, you did go to Berlin and apply to be
-transferred into the German Wehrmacht, which you at first denied?
-
-LAHOUSEN: No, that is not true, I did not apply. Others made the
-request. I can even say that I did not go there: I flew there. Canaris,
-who knew me not only in my military capacity but also in regard to my
-personal attitude (just as Marogna had known me and just as Colonel
-General Beck, who was informed about me by Canaris), made the request
-for me. I myself did not apply, but others applied for me, for reasons
-which only later became clear to me, because they knew my personal
-attitude, just as my Austrian comrades—they were necessarily few—knew
-about this and about me. That is how things stood.
-
-DR. SAUTER: I have no other questions to ask this witness.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Before the cross-examination I wish to announce that
-there will be no public session of the Tribunal this afternoon.
-
-DR. OTTO STAHMER (Counsel for Defendant Göring): I am counsel for the
-Defendant Göring, and I would like to address a few questions to the
-witness.
-
-Witness, if I understood you correctly, you said yesterday that it was
-Canaris’ personal conviction that his failure to prevent the attack on
-Poland would mean the end of Germany and a great misfortune for us. A
-triumph of the system would mean an even greater disaster, and it was
-the purpose of General Canaris to prevent this. Did I understand you
-correctly?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes, except for one point: Not that he had not been successful
-in preventing it, but that it was not possible to prevent it. Canaris
-had no way of knowing this . . .
-
-DR. STAHMER: Is it known to you that Admiral Canaris, in the first years
-of the war, had very active sabotage organizations behind the enemy
-front and that he personally worked very hard for these organizations?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Naturally I knew about that, and I have fully informed the
-American authorities who were interested in this subject.
-
-DR. STAHMER: But how is that possible? This would not be in conformity
-with his inner political beliefs.
-
-LAHOUSEN: This is explained by the fact that in the circle in which he
-was active he could never say what he really thought, and thousands of
-others could not do so either—what I said is a truth without saying.
-The essential thing is not what he said, or what he had to say in order
-to follow a purpose; but what he did and how he did it. This I know and
-others know it, too.
-
-DR. STAHMER: This is not a question of what he said, but of what he
-actually did. He not only proposed such measures, but also applied
-himself to their execution—is that true?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Ostensibly he had, of course, to remain within the limits of
-his office, in order to keep his position. That was the important thing,
-that he should remain in this position, to prevent in 1939 the thing
-that actually happened in 1944: that Himmler should take things in hand.
-I place before you these two men, one against the other: Canaris and
-Himmler—and I think I need hardly tell you what Canaris was striving
-for when he (Canaris) took part—ostensibly took part in these
-activities.
-
-DR. STAHMER: You mentioned the name of Himmler, in this connection, I
-would like to ask the following question:
-
-Is it known to you that Admiral Canaris, during the first years of the
-war, laid great stress on his good relations with the SS and the
-necessity for close co-operation with the SS, so much so, that the
-Defendant Göring had to advise him to be more independent of the SS in
-his military functions?
-
-THE PRESIDENT: You are going too quickly and I do not think you are
-observing what I said just now, that it will help the Tribunal if you
-will ask one question at a time.
-
-DR. STAHMER: I will put my question briefly; did the witness know that
-Admiral Canaris, during the first years of the war, had good connections
-with the SS and recognized the necessity for close co-operation with the
-formation, and never failed to stress this?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes, this is known to me. I also know why.
-
-DR. STAHMER: And why?
-
-LAHOUSEN: So that he might be in a position to see and to know and keep
-himself informed of everything these people were doing, and be able to
-intervene wherever and whenever possible.
-
-DR. STAHMER: Was it the duty of your organization, or the duty of
-Canaris’ department to pass on important enemy intelligence to the
-military leadership in good time?
-
-LAHOUSEN: I do not understand what the office of Canaris has to do with
-this?
-
-DR. STAHMER: Your section of the office of Canaris?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes, of course, the Department I.
-
-DR. STAHMER: Now, according to my information, your office did not pass
-on to the military departments concerned information of the
-Anglo-American landing in North Africa. Is that true?
-
-LAHOUSEN: I do not know. Please do not make me responsible for the
-department. This is a question which could easily be answered by Colonel
-Pieckenbrock, but not by me.
-
-DR. STAHMER: Regarding the Case “Rowehl,” you said yesterday that a
-colonel of the Air Force, Rowehl, had formed a special squadron, which
-had the tasks of making reconnaissance flights over Poland, England, and
-the southeast sector prior to the Polish campaign. Is that true?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes.
-
-DR. STAHMER: You also said that Colonel Rowehl went to see Admiral
-Canaris to report on the results of these flights and to submit
-photographs. Is that true?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes. How should I have known about it otherwise? I did not
-invent it.
-
-DR. STAHMER: I did not say that. How did Colonel Rowehl come to report
-to Admiral Canaris about this?
-
-LAHOUSEN: I believe I mentioned yesterday, that this was a function of
-the Amt Ausland Abwehr, Abteilung I.
-
-DR. STAHMER: Have you yourself seen the photographs that were taken over
-England?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes, I have seen them.
-
-DR. STAHMER: When and where were these pictures shown to you?
-
-LAHOUSEN: In the office of Canaris they were shown to me. I had nothing
-to do with them in an official way. I happened to be present at the
-time. I was interested in seeing what was going on.
-
-DR. STAHMER: What did these photographs show?
-
-LAHOUSEN: I have forgotten the details. They were photographs taken from
-airplanes.
-
-DR. STAHMER: The photographs were not shown to you officially?
-
-LAHOUSEN: No, the photographs were not shown to me officially, I was
-merely an interested spectator on this occasion, as I have just told
-you.
-
-DR. STAHMER: Did Rowehl give any written reports about these flights to
-the Amt?
-
-LAHOUSEN: I do not know.
-
-DR. STAHMER: You do not know? You also said that Rowehl’s squadron made
-flights from Budapest?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes.
-
-DR. STAHMER: Do you know that from your own experience or from some
-other information?
-
-LAHOUSEN: I know it through personal investigation. The date is entered
-in the War Diary kept by the section. At that time I was in Budapest,
-and I was asked to attend the conferring of a citation in Budapest.
-
-DR. STAHMER: That was before the Polish campaign?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes.
-
-DR. STAHMER: And why were these flights carried out from Budapest?
-
-LAHOUSEN: I do not know. I said that yesterday. A gentleman of the Air
-Force would have to answer that.
-
-DR. RUDOLF DIX (Counsel for Defendant Schacht): Witness, do you know
-Captain Strünck from the Abwehr?
-
-LAHOUSEN: I would like you to tell me something more than the name. The
-name alone does not mean anything to me. Give me a few points that will
-refresh my memory.
-
-DR. DIX: He is a lawyer who was a reserve officer with the Abwehr. I do
-not know in which department, but I would say it was in the department
-of Pieckenbrock. However, if you do not know him I will not question you
-any further.
-
-LAHOUSEN: If he was with Pieckenbrock I do not know him. I knew a few.
-Is Strünck still alive?
-
-DR. DIX: No, he is no longer living.
-
-LAHOUSEN: Was he executed?
-
-DR. DIX: He suffered the same death as Canaris and Oster. For the
-information of the Court, I should like to add that I asked this
-question because I named Strünck as a witness and the Court has admitted
-him as such. I wish to take this opportunity—but if you do not know him
-I will not continue questioning you.
-
-LAHOUSEN: When I asked whether he is still alive, I seemed to recall
-that this man, together with others whom I knew very well, might have
-been killed, but I cannot be more definite on this point.
-
-DR. HEINZ FRITZ (Counsel for Defendant Fritzsche): I would like to ask
-the witness a few questions.
-
-Witness, do you know that the Defendant Fritzsche, when in May 1942 he
-was transferred to the 6th Army as a soldier and there heard for the
-first time of the existence of an order for executions, recommended to
-the Commander-in-Chief of the 6th Army, Paulus, that he should have this
-order suspended within the jurisdiction of his army and have this
-decision made known by leaflets to be dropped over the Russian front?
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Be careful only to ask one question at a time. You have
-just asked three or four questions at once.
-
-DR. FRITZ: Yes, Sir. Is it known to you that Fritzsche gave Paulus the
-advice to rescind the order for his army sector?
-
-LAHOUSEN: That order had already been given to his army. Will you kindly
-give me the approximate date?
-
-DR. FRITZ: That was during the Russian campaign, as I mentioned
-yesterday. Most of these things occurred in May 1942.
-
-LAHOUSEN: No. I do not know anything about this in connection with
-Fritzsche. In connection with the name Reichenau, which was mentioned
-before, I do remember a conversation between Reichenau and Canaris at
-which I was present. It made a great impression on me. During this
-conversation, and in this circle, where there were several other
-gentlemen present, Reichenau held quite different ideas and judged
-things quite differently from what I had expected of him. Apart from
-that, I do not know anything about this particular question.
-
-DR. FRITZ: Also nothing concerning the fact that Paulus had rescinded
-the order within the sector of his army?
-
-LAHOUSEN: No, not in connection with the name Paulus, but in general I
-believe, as I also stated yesterday, that several army commanders, whose
-names are no longer in my memory today, or whose names have been
-recorded, were mentioned by me.
-
-DR. KURT KAUFFMANN (Counsel for Defendant Kaltenbrunner): Do you know
-Mr. Kaltenbrunner?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Kaltenbrunner? I met Kaltenbrunner only once in my life, and
-that was on a day that will always remain in my memory. It was also the
-first meeting between Canaris and Kaltenbrunner. It took place in Munich
-in the Regina Hotel, and it was on the day when two young people, a
-student and his sister, were arrested and executed. They had distributed
-leaflets in the auditorium of the University of Munich. I read the
-contents of the leaflets, and I remember, among other things, that they
-contained an appeal to the Wehrmacht.
-
-I can easily reconstruct that day. It was the first and last time that I
-saw Kaltenbrunner, with whose name I was familiar. Of course,
-Kaltenbrunner mentioned this subject to Canaris, who was completely
-shattered because of what had happened that day and was still under the
-painful impression—and thank God there are still witnesses available
-who can testify to this. When discussing the matter Kaltenbrunner was
-very much to the point, but at the same time he was quite cynical about
-it. That is the only thing I can tell you about this matter.
-
-DR. KAUFFMANN: Kaltenbrunner claims that Himmler retained full executive
-powers for himself, while he was only in charge of the intelligence
-service. Is this borne out by the conversation that you just mentioned?
-
-LAHOUSEN: I would like you to know what bearing that has on the
-Kaltenbrunner-Himmler matter—the struggle for power which was taking
-place in the SS. I have merely described this event. I can give you the
-names of the people present, who like myself were very much impressed
-for the reasons which I have mentioned.
-
-HERR GEORG BÖHM (Counsel for the SA): You were asked yesterday whether
-the orders regarding the treatment of Soviet prisoners of war were known
-to the leaders of the SA and other organizations, and your answer was
-that these orders must have been known to them. I would now like to ask
-you who these leaders were at the time and what were their names?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Who they were and what their names were, I do not know. I also
-stated explicitly yesterday why I said so. They must have been known to
-them and to a large circle through the execution of these orders, and,
-of course, through the return of the wounded. The German people must
-have learned about them.
-
-HERR BÖHM: In other words, it was only an opinion of yours, but in no
-way a fact-based on personal observation?
-
-LAHOUSEN: No, it was not. I personally never had anything to do with any
-SA leader. I never had anything to do with them, and I do not think any
-one of them knows me well.
-
-HERR BÖHM: Could you make a statement on this, that is, whether the
-orders which were mentioned yesterday were given to the formations of
-the SA?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Would you kindly formulate that question again?
-
-HERR BÖHM: Could you make another statement as to whether the contents
-of these orders, which were discussed yesterday, were sent to the
-formations of the SA through official channels?
-
-LAHOUSEN: No, not through official channels, but in the way I have
-previously indicated; in other words, members of the SA who were also in
-the Wehrmacht could see actually what happened out there, and when they
-came back they spoke about it, the same as anyone else. It was only in
-this connection . . .
-
-HERR BÖHM: Is it known to you whether members of the SA had anything at
-all to do with the handling of prisoners of war?
-
-LAHOUSEN: When members of the SA were in the Wehrmacht, yes.
-
-HERR BÖHM: Did you make any personal observations in this connection?
-
-LAHOUSEN: No, I never said that. I said I had already talked about the
-SA.
-
-HERR BÖHM: I asked you which leaders of the SA formations knew about
-them, and you answered that they should have known about them.
-
-LAHOUSEN: I said the leaders of these organizations came to know about
-them in this way.
-
-HERR BÖHM: And today I ask you whether the individual formations of the
-SA had received these orders.
-
-LAHOUSEN: I can only repeat what I said yesterday, and I think I was
-very clear on the subject, in other words, how these orders were issued.
-I myself did not read these orders, but I know the effects they had.
-
-HERR BÖHM: I can imagine myself how this happened, but I asked you
-whether you know anything about how these orders reached the SA?
-
-LAHOUSEN: No.
-
-HERR BÖHM: You do not know? Do you know anything from your own personal
-observations about members of the SA being employed for the supervision
-of prisoner-of-war camps?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes, because from my personal observations, once when I was on
-my way to the Army Group North, I caught an SA man who was kicking a
-Russian prisoner of war and I pulled him up about it. I think that is
-mentioned somewhere in my records, and also an episode about an
-Arbeitsdienst man.
-
-HERR BÖHM: Did you report any of these incidents through the proper
-channels? Did you see to it that the leaders of this organization were
-informed about them?
-
-LAHOUSEN: I reported it to my superior officer, or it was mentioned in
-my report on my visit either orally or in writing. There were
-discussions on this and similar incidents.
-
-HERR BÖHM: Have you got anything in your records?
-
-LAHOUSEN: Yes.
-
-HERR BÖHM: Will you please submit it?
-
-LAHOUSEN: I am looking it up. This is about the Arbeitsdienst man, this
-document.
-
-HERR BÖHM: It is not about the SA man?
-
-LAHOUSEN: No.
-
-HERR BÖHM: Then you cannot submit anything in answer to my question?
-
-LAHOUSEN: I do not have it here. I would have to look it up.
-
-HERR BÖHM: Do you think you might find some records?
-
-LAHOUSEN: I would have to have an opportunity of going through the whole
-of the material which is in the hands of the American authorities to
-find this one.
-
-HERR BÖHM: I will ask the Court that you be given this opportunity.
-
-I would also like to inquire whether you were ever able to observe that
-members of the SA whom you ascertained were employed on supervisory
-duties, ever took any measures which were in line with the orders
-against Soviet soldiers.
-
-LAHOUSEN: No, not personally.
-
-HERR BÖHM: Thank you.
-
-DR. STAHMER: I would like to ask the Court for a fundamental ruling on
-whether the defendant also has the right personally to ask the witness
-questions. According to the German text of the Charter, Paragraph 16, I
-believe this is permissible.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will consider the point you have raised and
-will let you know later.
-
-MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: The United States Prosecution would desire to be
-heard, I am sure, if there were any probability of that view being taken
-by the Tribunal.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Perhaps we had better hear you now, Mr. Justice Jackson.
-
-MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: Well, I think it is very clear that these
-provisions are mutually exclusive. Each defendant has the right to
-conduct his own defense or to have the assistance of counsel. Certainly
-this would become a performance rather than a trial if we go into that
-sort of thing. In framing this Charter, we anticipated the possibility
-that some of these defendants, being lawyers themselves, might conduct
-their own defenses. If they do so, of course they have all the
-privileges of counsel. If they avail themselves of the privileges of
-counsel, they are not, we submit, entitled to be heard in person.
-
-DR. STAHMER: I would like to point out once more that Paragraph 16 (e),
-according to my opinion, speaks very clearly for my point of view. It
-says that the defendant has the right, either personally or through his
-counsel, to present evidence, and according to the German text it is
-clear that the defendant has the right to cross-examine any witness
-called by the Prosecution. According to the German text there reference
-can be made only to the defendant—with respect to terms as well as to
-the contents. In my opinion it is made clear that the defendant has the
-right to cross-examine any witness called by the Prosecution.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Does any other German counsel, defendant’s counsel, wish
-to cross-examine the witness?
-
-DR. ROBERT SERVATIUS (Counsel for Defendant Sauckel): I would only like
-to point out that in the written forms given to us by the Court, the
-defendant, as well as his counsel can make a motion. A place is left for
-two signatures on the questionnaire. I conclude, therefore, that the
-defendant himself has the right to speak on the floor.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: What I asked was whether any other defendant’s counsel
-wished to cross-examine the witness.
-
-[_Herr Böhm approached the lectern._]
-
-THE PRESIDENT: What is it? Would you put the earphones on, please,
-unless you understand English. What is it you want to ask now? You have
-already cross-examined the witness.
-
-HERR BÖHM: Yes, I have cross-examined him, but he has given me to
-understand that he made a report about an incident which occurred during
-one of his visits of inspection, and that he has some written notes. As
-I am not yet able to release the witness, I should like to move that the
-Prosecution allow to be placed at the disposal of the witness any
-available notes or reports on the observations made by him at the time,
-so that he may find the evidence he wants.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I think you must conclude your cross-examination now.
-
-HERR BÖHM: Certainly.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The Court thinks it would be better if you want to make
-any further application with reference to this witness, that you should
-make it in writing later.
-
-HERR BÖHM: Yes.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Then, as no other defendant’s counsel wishes to
-cross-examine the witness, the Tribunal will now retire for the purpose
-of considering the question raised by Dr. Stahmer as to whether a
-defendant has the right to cross-examine as well as his own counsel.
-
- [_A recess was taken._]
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal has carefully considered the question raised
-by Dr. Stahmer, and it holds that defendants who are represented by
-counsel have not the right to cross-examine witnesses. They have the
-right to be called as witnesses themselves and to make a statement at
-the end of the Trial.
-
-Do the Prosecutors wish to ask any questions of this witness in
-re-examination?
-
-COLONEL JOHN HARLAN AMEN (Associate Trial Counsel for the United
-States): Just one question, your Lordship.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Let the witness come back here.
-
-THE MARSHAL (Colonel Charles W. Mays): He was taken away.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Taken away?
-
-THE MARSHAL: That’s right. He was taken away by some captain who brought
-him here for the Trial. They have sent after him now.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Do you know how far he has been taken away?
-
-THE MARSHAL: No, Sir, I do not. I will find out immediately.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Colonel Amen, are the questions that you wish to ask of
-sufficient importance for the Tribunal to wait for this witness or for
-him to be recalled on Monday?
-
-COL. AMEN: I don’t believe so, Your Lordship.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Very well then. The Tribunal will adjourn, and it will be
-understood that in the future no witness will be removed whilst he is
-under examination, from the precincts of this Court except on the orders
-of the Tribunal.
-
-COL. AMEN: I do not know how that happened Your Lordship, I understood
-he was still here.
-
- [_The Tribunal adjourned until 3 December 1945 at 1000 hours._]
-
-
-
-
- ELEVENTH DAY
- Monday, 3 December 1945
-
-
- _Morning Session_
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I call on the prosecutor for the United States.
-
-SIDNEY S. ALDERMAN (Associate Trial Counsel for the United States): May
-it please the Tribunal, it occurs to me that perhaps the Tribunal might
-be interested in a very brief outline of what might be expected to occur
-within the next week or two weeks in this Trial.
-
-I shall immediately proceed with the aggressive war case, to present the
-story of the rape of Czechoslovakia. I shall not perhaps be able to
-conclude that today.
-
-Sir Hartley Shawcross, the British chief prosecutor, has asked that he
-be allowed to proceed tomorrow morning with his opening statement on
-Count Two and I shall be glad to yield for that purpose, with the
-understanding that we shall resume on Czechoslovakia after that.
-
-Thereafter, the British prosecutor will proceed to present the
-aggressive warfare case as to Poland, which brought France and England
-into the war. Thereupon the British prosecutor will proceed with the
-expansion of aggressive war in Europe, the aggression against Norway and
-Denmark, against Holland, Belgium, and Luxembourg, against Yugoslavia
-and Greece. And in connection with those aggressions the British
-prosecutor will present to the Tribunal the various treaties involved
-and the various breaches of treaties involved in those aggressions.
-
-That, as I understand it, will complete the British case under Count Two
-and will probably take the rest of this week.
-
-Then it will be necessary for the American prosecuting staff to come
-back to Count One to cover certain portions which have not been covered,
-specifically, persecution of the Jews, concentration camps, spoliation
-in occupied territories, the High Command, and other alleged criminal
-organizations, particularly evidence dealing with individual
-responsibility of individual defendants.
-
-Roughly, I would anticipate that that would carry through the following
-week—two weeks. However, that is a very rough estimate.
-
-Thereupon, the French chief prosecutor will make his opening statement
-and will present the evidence as to Crimes against Humanity and War
-Crimes under Counts Three and Four as to Western Occupied countries.
-
-Following that, the Russian chief prosecutor will make his opening
-statement and will present corresponding evidence regarding War Crimes
-and Crimes against Humanity in the Eastern countries.
-
-That, in very rough outline, is what we have in mind to present.
-
-I turn now to the third section in the detailed chronological
-presentation of the aggressive war case: Aggression against
-Czechoslovakia. The relevant portions of the Indictment are set forth in
-Subsection 3, under Section IV (F), appearing at Pages 7 and 8 of the
-printed English text of the Indictment.
-
-This portion of the Indictment is divided into three parts:
-
-(a) The 1936-38 phase of the plan; that is, the planning for the assault
-both on Austria and Czechoslovakia.
-
-(b) The execution of the plan to invade Austria; November 1937 to March
-1938.
-
-(c) The execution of the plan to invade Czechoslovakia; April 1938 to
-March 1939.
-
-On Thursday, last, I completed the presentation of the documents on the
-execution of the plan to invade Austria. Those documents are gathered
-together in a document book which was handed to the Tribunal at the
-beginning of the Austrian presentation.
-
-The materials relating to the aggression against Czechoslovakia have
-been gathered in a separate document book, which I now submit to the
-Tribunal and which is marked “Document Book 0.”
-
-The Tribunal will recall that in the period 1933 to 1936 the defendants
-had initiated a program of rearmament, designed to give the Third Reich
-military strength and political bargaining power to be used against
-other nations. You will recall also that beginning in the year 1936 they
-had embarked on a preliminary program of expansion which, as it turned
-out, was to last until March 1939. This was intended to shorten their
-frontiers, to increase their industrial and food reserve, and to place
-them in a position, both industrially and strategically, from which they
-could launch a more ambitious and more devastating campaign of
-aggression.
-
-At the moment—in the early spring of 1938—when the Nazi conspirators
-began to lay concrete plans for the conquest of Czechoslovakia, they had
-reached approximately the half-way point in this preliminary program.
-
-The preceding autumn, at the conference in the Reich Chancellery on
-November 5, 1937, covered by the Hossbach minutes, Hitler had set forth
-the program which Germany was to follow. Those Hossbach minutes, you
-will recall, are contained in Document 386-PS as United States Exhibit
-Number 25, which I read to the Tribunal in my introductory statement a
-week ago today.
-
-“The question for Germany,” the Führer had informed his military
-commanders at that meeting, “is where the greatest possible conquest can
-be made at the lowest cost.”
-
-At the top of his agenda stood two countries, Austria and
-Czechoslovakia.
-
-On March 12, 1938 Austria was occupied by the German Army, and on the
-following day it was annexed to the Reich. The time had come for a
-redefinition of German intentions regarding Czechoslovakia. A little
-more than a month later two of the conspirators, Hitler and Keitel, met
-to discuss plans for the envelopment and conquest of the Czechoslovak
-State.
-
-Among the selected handful of documents which I read to the Tribunal in
-my introduction a week ago to establish the corpus of the crime of
-aggressive war was the account of this meeting on 21 April 1938. This
-account is Item 2 in our Document Number 388-PS, as United States
-Exhibit Number 26.
-
-The Tribunal will recall that Hitler and Keitel discussed the pretext
-which Germany might develop to serve as an excuse for a sudden and
-overwhelming attack. They considered the provocation of a period of
-diplomatic squabbling which, growing more serious, would lead to an
-excuse for war. In the alternative—and this alternative they found to
-be preferable—they planned to unleash a lightning attack as the result
-of an incident of their own creation.
-
-Consideration, as we alleged in the Indictment and as the document
-proved, was given to the assassination of the German Minister at Prague
-to create the requisite incident.
-
-The necessity of propaganda to guide the conduct of Germans in
-Czechoslovakia and to intimidate the Czechs was recognized. Problems of
-transport and tactics were discussed, with a view to overcoming all
-Czechoslovak resistance within 4 days, thus presenting the world with a
-_fait accompli_ and forestalling outside interventions.
-
-Thus, in mid-April 1938, the designs of the Nazi conspirators to conquer
-Czechoslovakia had already readied the stage of practical planning.
-
-Now all of that occurred, if the Tribunal please, against a background
-of friendly diplomatic relations. This conspiracy must be viewed against
-that background. Although they had, in the fall of 1937, determined to
-destroy the Czechoslovak State, the leaders of the German Government
-were bound by a treaty of arbitration and assurances freely given, to
-observe the sovereignty of Czechoslovakia. By a formal treaty signed at
-Locarno on 16 October 1925—Document TC-14, which will be introduced by
-the British prosecutor—Germany and Czechoslovakia agreed, with certain
-exceptions, to refer to an arbitral tribunal or to the Permanent Court
-of International Justice matters of dispute. I quote, they would so
-refer:
-
- “All disputes of every kind between Germany and Czechoslovakia
- with regard to which the parties are in conflict as to their
- respective rights, and which it may not be possible to settle
- amicably by the normal methods of diplomacy.”
-
-And the preamble to this treaty stated:
-
- “The President of the German Reich and the President of the
- Czechoslovak Republic equally resolved to maintain peace between
- Germany and Czechoslovakia by assuring the peaceful settlement
- of differences, which might arise between the two countries;
- declaring that respect for the rights established by treaty or
- resulting from the law of nations, is obligatory for
- international tribunals; agreeing to recognize that the rights
- of a state cannot be modified save with its consent, and
- considering that sincere observance of the methods of peaceful
- settlement of international disputes permits of resolving,
- without recourse to force, questions which may become the cause
- of divisions between states, have decided to embody in a treaty
- their common intention in this respect.”
-
-That ends the quotation.
-
-Formal and categoric assurances of their good will towards
-Czechoslovakia were both coming from the Nazi conspirators as late as
-March 1938. On March 11 and 12, 1938, at the time of the annexation of
-Austria, Germany had a considerable interest in inducing Czechoslovakia
-not to mobilize. At this time the Defendant Göring assured Masaryk, the
-Czechoslovak Minister in Berlin, on behalf of the German Government that
-German-Czech relations were not adversely affected by the development in
-Austria and that Germany had no hostile intentions towards
-Czechoslovakia. As a token of his sincerity, Defendant Göring
-accompanied his assurance with the statement, “Ich gebe Ihnen mein
-Ehrenwort (I give you my word of honor).”
-
-At the same time, the Defendant Von Neurath, who was handling German
-foreign affairs during Ribbentrop’s stay in London, assured Masaryk, on
-behalf of Hitler and the German Government, that Germany still
-considered herself bound by the Arbitration Convention of 1925.
-
-These assurances are contained in Document TC-27, another of the series
-of documents which will be presented to the Tribunal by the British
-prosecutor under Count Two of the Indictment.
-
-Behind the screen of these assurances the Nazi conspirators proceeded
-with their military and political plans for aggression. Ever since the
-preceding fall it had been established that the immediate aim of German
-policy was the elimination both of Austria and of Czechoslovakia. In
-both countries the conspirators planned to undermine the will to resist
-by propaganda and by Fifth Column activities, while the actual military
-preparations were being developed.
-
-The Austrian operation, which received priority for political and
-strategic reasons, was carried out in February and March 1938.
-Thenceforth the Wehrmacht planning was devoted to “Fall Grün” (Case
-Green), the designation given to the proposed operation against
-Czechoslovakia.
-
-The military plans for Case Green had been drafted in outline from as
-early as June 1937. The OKW top-secret directive for the unified
-preparation of the Armed Forces for war—signed by Von Blomberg on June
-24, 1937, and promulgated to the Army, Navy, and Luftwaffe for the year
-beginning July 1, 1937,—included, as a probable war-like eventuality
-for which a concentrated plan was to be drafted, Case Green, “War on two
-fronts, with the main struggle in the southeast.”
-
-This document—our Number C-175, Exhibit USA-69—was introduced in
-evidence as part of the Austrian presentation and is an original carbon
-copy, signed in ink by Von Blomberg. The original section of this
-directive dealing with the probable war against Czechoslovakia—it was
-later revised—opens with this supposition. I read _from the bottom_ of
-Page 3 of the English translation of this directive, following the
-heading II, and Subparagraph (1) headed “Suppositions”:
-
- “The war in the East can begin with a surprise German operation
- against Czechoslovakia in order to parry the imminent attack of
- a superior enemy coalition. The necessary conditions to justify
- such an action politically, and in the eyes of international law
- must be created beforehand.”
-
-After detailing possible enemies and neutrals in the event of such
-action, the directive continues as follows:
-
- “(2) _The task of the German Armed Forces_”—and that much is
- underscored—“is to make their preparations in such a way that
- the bulk of all forces can break into Czechoslovakia quickly, by
- surprise, and with the greatest force, while in the West the
- minimum strength is provided as rear-cover for this attack.
-
-
-
- “The aim and object of this surprise attack by the German Armed
- Forces should be to eliminate from the very beginning and for
- the duration of the war, the threat by Czechoslovakia to the
- rear of the operations in the West, and to take from the Russian
- Air Force the most substantial portion of its operational base
- in Czechoslovakia. This must be done by the defeat of the enemy
- armed forces and the occupation of Bohemia and Moravia.”
-
-The introduction to this directive sets forth as one of its guiding
-principles the following statement—and I now read from Page 1 of the
-English translation, that is, the third paragraph following Figure 1:
-
- “Nevertheless, the politically fluid world situation, which does
- not preclude surprising incidents, demands constant preparedness
- for war on the part of the German Armed Forces:”—and then—“(a)
- to counterattack at any time; (b) to make possible the military
- exploitation of politically favorable opportunities should they
- occur.”
-
-This directive ordered further work on the plan for “mobilization
-without public announcement.” I quote:
-
- “. . . in order to put the Armed Forces in a position to be able
- to begin a sudden war which will take the enemy by surprise, in
- regard to both strength and time of attack.”
-
-This is, of course, a directive for staff planning, but the nature of
-the planning and the very tangible and ominous developments which
-resulted from it, give it a significance that it would not have in
-another setting.
-
-Planning along the lines of this directive was carried forward during
-the fall of 1937 and the winter of 1937-38. On the political level, this
-planning for the conquest of Czechoslovakia received the approval and
-support of Hitler in the conference with his military commanders on 5
-November 1937, reported in the Hossbach minutes, to which I have
-frequently heretofore referred.
-
-In early March 1938, before the march into Austria, we find the
-Defendants Ribbentrop and Keitel concerned over the extent of the
-information about war aims against Czechoslovakia to be furnished to
-Hungary. On 4 March 1938, Ribbentrop wrote to Keitel, enclosing for
-General Keitel’s confidential cognizance the minutes of a conference
-with Sztojay, the local Hungarian Ambassador, who had suggested an
-interchange of views. This is Document 2786-PS, a photostat of the
-original captured letter, which I now offer in evidence as Exhibit
-USA-81. In his letter to Keitel, Ribbentrop said:
-
- “I have many doubts about such negotiations. In case we should
- discuss with Hungary possible war aims against Czechoslovakia,
- the danger exists that other parties as well would be informed
- about this. I would greatly appreciate it if you would notify me
- briefly whether any commitments were made here in any respect.
- With best regards and Heil Hitler.”
-
-At the 21 April meeting between Hitler and Keitel, the account of which
-I read last week and alluded to earlier this morning (Document 388-PS,
-Item 2), specific plans for the attack on Czechoslovakia were discussed
-for the first time. This meeting was followed, in the late spring and
-summer of 1938, by a series of memoranda and telegrams advancing Case
-Green (Fall Grün). Those notes and communications were carefully filed
-at Hitler’s headquarters by the very efficient Colonel Schmundt, the
-Führer’s military adjutant, and were captured by American troops in a
-cellar at Obersalzberg, near Berchtesgaden. This file, which is
-preserved intact, bears out Number 388-PS, and is United States Exhibit
-Number 26. We affectionately refer to it as “Big Schmundt”—a large
-file. The individual items in this file tell more graphically than any
-narrative the progress of the Nazi conspirators’ planning to launch an
-unprovoked and brutal war against Czechoslovakia. From the start the
-Nazi leaders displayed a lively interest in intelligence data concerning
-Czechoslovakian armament and defense. With the leave of the Tribunal I
-shall refer to some of these items in the Big Schmundt file without
-reading them. The documents to which I refer are Item 4 of the Schmundt
-file, a telegram from Colonel Zeitzler, in General Jodl’s office of the
-OKW, to Schmundt at Hitler’s headquarters.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Are you proposing not to read them?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: I hadn’t intended to read them in full, unless that may be
-necessary.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I am afraid we must adhere to our decision.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: If the Tribunal please, I should simply wish to refer to
-the title or heading of Item 12, which is headed, “Short Survey of
-Armament of the Czech Army,” dated Berlin, 9 June 1938, and initialed
-“Z” for Zeitzler, and Item 13, “Questions of the Führer,” dated Berlin,
-9 June 1938, and classified “Most Secret.” I should like to read four of
-the questions which Hitler wanted authoritative information about, as
-shown by that document, and I read indicated questions on Pages 23, 24,
-25, and 26 of Item 13 of Document 388-PS.
-
-Question 1: Hitler asked about armament of the Czech Army. I don’t think
-it necessary to read the answers. They are detailed answers giving
-information in response to these questions posed by Hitler.
-
- “Question 2: How many battalions, _et cetera_, are employed in
- the West for the construction of emplacements?
-
-
-
- “Question 3: Are the fortifications of Czechoslovakia still
- occupied in unreduced strength?
-
-
-
- “Question. 4: Frontier protection in the West.”
-
-As I say, those questions were answered in detail by the OKW and
-initialed by Colonel Zeitzler of Jodl’s staff.
-
-As a precaution against French and British action during the attack on
-Czechoslovakia, it was necessary for the Nazi conspirators to rush the
-preparation of fortification measures along the western frontier in
-Germany. I refer you to Item 8, at Page 12 of the Big Schmundt file, a
-telegram presumably sent from Schmundt in Berchtesgaden to Berlin, and I
-quote from this telegram. It is, as I say, Item 8 of the Schmundt file,
-Page 12 of Document 388-PS: “Inform Colonel General Von Brauchitsch and
-General Keitel.” And then, skipping a paragraph: “The Führer repeatedly
-emphasized the necessity of pressing forward greatly the fortification
-work in the West.”
-
-In May, June, July, and August of 1938 conferences between Hitler and
-his political and military advisors resulted in the issuance of a series
-of constantly revised directives for the attack on Czechoslovakia. It
-was decided that preparations for X-Day, the day of the attack, should
-be completed no later than 1 October. I now invite the attention of the
-Tribunal to the more important of these conferences and directives.
-
-On 28 May 1938 Hitler called a conference of his principal advisors. At
-this meeting he gave the necessary instructions to his fellow
-conspirators to prepare the attack on Czechoslovakia. This fact Hitler
-later publicly admitted. I now refer and invite the notice of the
-Tribunal to Document 2360-PS, a copy of the _Völkischer Beobachter_ of
-31 January 1939. In a speech before the Reichstag the preceding day,
-reported in this newspaper, reading now from Document 2360-PS, Hitler
-spoke as follows:
-
- “On account of this intolerable provocation which had been
- aggravated by a truly infamous persecution and terrorization of
- our Germans there, I have determined to solve once and for all,
- and this time radically, the Sudeten-German question. On 28 May
- I ordered first: That preparation should be made for military
- action against this state by 2 October. I ordered second: The
- immense and accelerated expansion of our defensive front in the
- West.”
-
-Two days after this conference, on 30 May 1938, Hitler issued the
-revised military directive for Case Green. This directive is Item 11 in
-the Big Schmundt file, Document 388-PS. It is entitled, “Two-front War,
-with Main Effort in the Southeast,” and this directive replaced the
-corresponding section, Part 2, Section II, of the previous quote,
-“Directive for Unified Preparation for War,” which had been promulgated
-by Von Blomberg on 26 June 1937, which I have already introduced in
-evidence as our Document C-175, United States Exhibit Number 69. This
-revised directive represented a further development of the ideas for
-political and military action discussed by Hitler and Keitel in their
-conference on 21 April. It is an expansion of the rough draft submitted
-by the Defendant Keitel to Hitler on 20 May, which may be found as Item
-5 in the Schmundt file. It was signed by Hitler. Only five copies were
-made. Three copies were forwarded with a covering letter from Defendant
-Keitel to General Von Brauchitsch for the Army, to Defendant Raeder for
-the Navy, and to Defendant Göring for the Luftwaffe. In his covering
-memorandum Keitel noted that its execution must be assured—I quote: “As
-from 1 October 1938 at the latest.” I now read from this document, which
-is the basic directive under which the Wehrmacht carried out its
-planning for Case Green, a rather lengthy quotation from the first page
-of Item 11, Page 16 of the English version:
-
- “1. Political prerequisites. It is my unalterable decision to
- smash Czechoslovakia by military action in the near future. It
- is the job of the political leaders to await or bring about the
- politically and militarily suitable moment.
-
-
-
- “An inevitable development of conditions inside Czechoslovakia
- or other political events in Europe, creating a surprisingly
- favorable opportunity and one which may never come again, may
- cause me to take early action.
-
-
-
- “The proper choice and determined and full utilization of a
- favorable moment is the surest guarantee of success. Accordingly
- the preparations are to be made at once.
-
-
-
- “2. Political possibilities for the commencement of the action.
- The following are necessary prerequisites for the intended
- invasion:
-
-
-
- “a. Suitable obvious cause and with it, b. sufficient political
- justification, c. action unexpected by the enemy, which will
- find him prepared in the least possible degree.
-
-
-
- “From a military as well as a political standpoint the most
- favorable course is a lightning-swift action as the result of an
- incident through which Germany is provoked in an unbearable way
- for which at least part of world opinion will grant the moral
- justification of military action.
-
-
-
- “But even a period of tension, more or less preceding a war,
- must terminate in sudden action on our part, which must have the
- elements of surprise as regards time and extent, before the
- enemy is so advanced in military preparedness that he cannot be
- surpassed.
-
-
-
- “3. Conclusions for the preparation of Fall Grün.
-
-
-
- “a. For the ‘armed war’ it is essential that the surprise
- element, as the most important factor contributing to success,
- be made full use of by appropriate preparatory measures, already
- in peacetime and by an unexpectedly rapid course of the action.
- Thus it is essential to create a situation within the first 2 or
- 3 days which plainly demonstrates to hostile nations, eager to
- intervene, the hopelessness of the Czechoslovakian military
- situation and which, at the same time, will give nations with
- territorial claims on Czechoslovakia an incentive to intervene
- immediately against Czechoslovakia. In such a case, intervention
- by Poland and Hungary against Czechoslovakia may be expected,
- especially if France—due to the obvious pro-German attitude of
- Italy—fears, or at least hesitates, to unleash a European war
- by intervening against Germany. Attempts by Russia to give
- military support to Czechoslovakia mainly by the Air Force are
- to be expected. If concrete successes are not achieved by the
- land operations within the first few days, a European crisis
- will certainly result. This knowledge must give commanders of
- all ranks the impetus to decided and bold action.
-
-
-
- “b. The Propaganda War must on the one hand intimidate
- Czechoslovakia by threats and wear down her power of resistance;
- on the other hand issue directions to national groups for
- support in the ‘armed war’ and influence the neutrals into our
- way of thinking. I reserve further directions and determination
- of the date.
-
-
-
- “4. Tasks of the Armed Forces. Armed Forces preparations are to
- be made on the following basis:
-
-
-
- “a. The mass of all forces must be employed against
- Czechoslovakia.
-
-
-
- “b. For the West, a minimum of forces are to be provided as rear
- cover which may be required, the other frontiers in the East
- against Poland and Lithuania are merely to be protected, the
- southern frontiers to be watched.
-
-
-
- “c. The sections of the Army which can be rapidly employed must
- force the frontier fortifications with speed and decision and
- must break into Czechoslovakia with the greatest daring in the
- certainty that the bulk of the mobile army will follow them with
- the utmost speed. Preparations for this are to be made and timed
- in such a way that the sections of the army which can be rapidly
- employed cross the frontier at the appointed time, at the same
- time as the penetration by the Air Force, before the enemy can
- become aware of our mobilization. For this, a timetable between
- Army and Air Force is to be worked out in conjunction with OKW
- and submitted to me for approval.
-
-
-
- “5. Missions for the branches of the Armed Forces.
-
-
-
- “a. Army. The basic principle of the surprise attack against
- Czechoslovakia must not be endangered nor the initiative of the
- Air Force be wasted by the inevitable time required for
- transporting the bulk of the field forces by rail. Therefore it
- is first of all essential to the Army that as many assault
- columns as possible be employed at the same time as the surprise
- attack by the Air Force. These assault columns—the composition
- of each, according to their tasks at that time—must be formed
- with troops which can be employed rapidly owing to their
- proximity to the frontier or to motorization and to special
- measures of readiness. It must be the purpose of these thrusts
- to break into the Czechoslovakian fortification lines at
- numerous points and in a strategically favorable direction, to
- achieve a break-through, or to break them down from the rear.
- For the success of this operation, co-operation with the
- Sudeten-German frontier population, with deserters from the
- Czechoslovakian Army, with parachutists or airborne troops and
- with units of the sabotage service will be of importance. The
- bulk of the army has the task of frustrating the Czechoslovakian
- plan of defense, of preventing the Czechoslovakian army from
- escaping . . .”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Is it necessary to read all this detail?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: I was just worried about not getting it into the
-transcript.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: It seems to me that this is all detail, that before you
-pass from the document you ought to read the document on Page 15, which
-introduces it and which gives the date of it.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: I think so. It is a letter dated:
-
- “Berlin, 30 May 1938; copy of the fourth copy; Supreme Commander
- of the Armed Forces; most secret; access only through officer;
- written by an officer. Signed Keitel; distributed to C-in-C
- Army, C-in-C Navy, C-in-C Air Force.
-
-
-
- “By order of the Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, Part 2,
- Section II, of the directive on the unified preparations for war
- of the Armed Forces dated 24 June 1937, (Ob. d. W)”—with some
- symbols, including “Chefsache” (top secret)—“(two-front war
- with main effort on the Southeast—strategic concentration
- Green) is to be replaced by the attached version. Its execution
- must be assured as from 1 October 1938 at the latest.
- Alterations in other parts of the directives must be expected
- during the next week.
-
-
-
- “By order of Chief of the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces,
- signed, Keitel.
-
-
-
- “Certified a true copy, Zeitzler, Oberstleutnant on the General
- Staff.”
-
-In line with the suggestion of the presiding Justice, I shall omit the
-detailed instructions which are set out for action by the Luftwaffe and
-by the Navy, and I turn next to the last paragraph of the directive,
-which will be found on Page 19 of the English version:
-
- “In war economy it is essential that in the field of the
- armament industry a maximum deployment of forces is made
- possible through increased supplies. In the course of
- operations, it is of value to contribute to the reinforcement of
- the total war—economic strength—by rapidly reconnoitering and
- restarting important factories. For this reason the sparing of
- Czechoslovakian industrial and factory installations, insofar as
- military operations permit, can be of decisive importance to
- us.”
-
-In other words, the Nazi conspirators, 4 months before the date of their
-planned attack, were already looking forward to the contribution which
-the Czech industrial plant would make to further Nazi war efforts and
-economy.
-
-And the final paragraph of this directive, Paragraph 7, on Page 19:
-
- “All preparations for sabotage and insurrection will be made by
- OKW. They will be made, in agreement with, and according to, the
- requirement of the branches of the Armed Forces, so that their
- effects accord with the operations of the Army and Air Force as
- to time and locality.
-
-
-
- “Signed Adolf Hitler.
-
-
-
- “Certified a true copy, Zeitzler, Oberstleutnant on the General
- Staff.”
-
-Three weeks later, on 18 June 1938, a draft for a new directive was
-prepared and initialed by the Defendant Keitel. This is Item 14 at Pages
-27 to 32 of the Big Schmundt file. It did not supersede the 30 May
-directive. I shall read the third and fifth paragraphs on Page 28 of the
-English translation, and the last paragraph on Page 29:
-
- “The immediate aim is a solution of the Czech problem by my own
- free decision; this stands in the foreground of my political
- intentions. I am determined as from 1 October 1938 to use to the
- full every favorable political opportunity to realize this aim.”
-
-Then skipping a paragraph:
-
- “However, I will decide to take action against Czechoslovakia
- only if I am firmly convinced, as in the case of the occupation
- of the demilitarized zone and the entry into Austria, that
- France will not march and therefore England will not intervene.”
-
-And then skipping to the last paragraph on the 29th page:
-
- “The directives necessary for the prosecution of the war itself
- will be issued by me from time to time.”
-
-
-
- “K”—initial of Keitel, and—“Z”—initial of Zeitzler.
-
-The second and third parts of this directive contain general directions
-for the deployment of troops and for precautionary measures in view of
-the possibility that during the execution of the Fall Grün (or Case
-Green) France or England might declare war on Germany. Six pages of
-complicated schedules which follow this draft in the original have not
-been translated into English. These schedules, which constitute Item 15
-in the Schmundt file, give a timetable of specific measures for the
-preparation of the Army, Navy, and Luftwaffe for the contemplated
-action.
-
-Corroboration for the documents in the Schmundt file is found in General
-Jodl’s diary, our Document Number 1780-PS and United States Exhibit
-Number 72, from which I quoted portions during the Austrian
-presentation. I now quote from three entries in this diary written in
-the spring of 1938. Although the first entry is not dated it appears to
-have been written several months after the annexation of Austria, and
-here I read under the heading on Page 3 of the English translation:
-
- “Later undated entry:
-
-
-
- “After annexation of Austria the Führer mentions that there is
- no hurry to solve the Czech question, because Austria had to be
- digested first. Nevertheless, preparations for Case Green will
- have to be carried out energetically. They will have to be newly
- prepared on the basis of the changed strategic position because
- of the annexation of Austria. State of preparation, see
- Memorandum L-1-A of 19 April, reported to the Führer on 21
- April.
-
-
-
- “The intention of the Führer not to touch the Czech problem as
- yet will be changed because of the Czech strategic troop
- concentration of 21 May, which occurs without any German threat
- and without the slightest cause for it. Because of Germany’s
- self-restraint the consequences lead to a loss of prestige for
- the Führer, which he is not willing to take once more.
- Therefore, the new order is issued for Green on 30 May.”
-
-And then the entry, 23 May:
-
- “Major Schmundt reports ideas of the Führer. . . . Further
- conferences, which gradually reveal the exact intentions of the
- Führer, take place with the Chief of the Armed Forces High
- Command (OKW) on 28 May, 3 and 9 June,—see inclosures (War
- Diary).”
-
-Then the entry of 30 May:
-
- “The Führer signs directive Green, where he states his final
- decision to destroy Czechoslovakia soon and thereby initiates
- military preparation all along the line. The previous intentions
- of the Army must be changed considerably in the direction of an
- immediate break-through into Czechoslovakia right on
- D-Day”—X-Tag—“combined with aerial penetration by the Air
- Force.
-
-
-
- “Further details are derived from directive for strategic
- concentration of the Army. The whole contrast becomes acute once
- more between the Führer’s intuition that we must do it this
- year, and the opinion of the Army that we cannot do it as yet,
- as most certainly the Western Powers will interfere and we are
- not as yet equal to them.”
-
-During the spring and summer of 1938 the Luftwaffe was also engaged in
-planning in connection with the forthcoming Case Green and the further
-expansion of the Reich.
-
-I now offer in evidence Document R-150, as United States Exhibit 82.
-This is a top-secret document dated 2 June 1938, issued by Air Group
-Command 3, and entitled “Plan Study 1938, Instruction for Deployment and
-Combat, ‘Case Red.’”
-
-“Case Red” is the code name for action against the Western Powers if
-need be. Twenty-eight copies of this document were made, of which this
-is number 16. This is another staff plan, this time for mobilization and
-employment of the Luftwaffe in the event of war with France. It is given
-significance by the considerable progress by this date of the planning
-for the attack on Czechoslovakia.
-
-I quote from the second paragraph on Page 3 of the English translation,
-referring to the various possibilities under which war with France may
-occur. You will note that they are all predicated on the assumption of a
-German-Czech conflict.
-
- “France will either (a) interfere in the struggle between the
- Reich and Czechoslovakia in the course of Case Green, or (b)
- start hostilities simultaneously with Czechoslovakia. (c) It is
- possible but not likely that France will begin the fight while
- Czechoslovakia still remains aloof.”
-
-And then, reading down lower on the page under the heading “Intention”:
-
- “Regardless of whether France enters the war as a result of Case
- Green or whether she makes the opening move of the war
- simultaneously with Czechoslovakia, in any case the mass of the
- German offensive formations will, in conjunction with the Army,
- first deliver the decisive blow against Czechoslovakia.”
-
-By mid-summer direct and detailed planning for Case Green was being
-carried out by the Luftwaffe. In early August, at the direction of the
-Luftwaffe General Staff, the German Air Attaché in Prague reconnoitered
-the Freudenthal area of Czechoslovakia south of Upper Silesia for
-suitable landing grounds.
-
-I offer in evidence Document 1536-PS as Exhibit USA-83, a report of the
-Luftwaffe General Staff, Intelligence Division, dated 12 August 1938.
-This was a top-secret document for general officers only, of which only
-two copies were made.
-
-Attached as an enclosure was the report of Major Moericke, the German
-Attaché in Prague, dated 4 August 1938. I quote the first four
-paragraphs of the enclosure:
-
- “I was ordered by the General Staff of the Air Force to
- reconnoiter the land in the region Freudenthal-Freihermersdorf
- . . .”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Page 3 of the document?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: Yes. “. . . for landing possibilities.
-
- “For this purpose I obtained private lodgings in Freudenthal
- with the manufacturer Macholdt, through one of my trusted men in
- Prague.
-
-
-
- “I had specifically ordered this man to give no details about me
- to Macholdt, particularly about my official position.
-
-
-
- “I used my official car (Dienst Pkw) for the journey to
- Freudenthal taking precautions against being observed.”
-
-By 25 August the imminence of the attack on Czechoslovakia compelled the
-issuance by the Luftwaffe of a detailed intelligence memorandum,
-entitled “Extended Case Green”; in other words, an estimate of possible
-action by the Western Powers during the attack on Czechoslovakia.
-
-I now offer this document in evidence, Number 375-PS as Exhibit USA-84.
-This is a top-secret memorandum of the Intelligence Section of the
-Luftwaffe, General Staff, dated Berlin, 25 August 1938. Based on the
-assumption that Great Britain and France would declare war on Germany
-during Case Green, this study contains an estimate of the strategy and
-air strength of the Western Powers as of 1 October 1938, the target date
-for Case Green. I quote the first two sentences of the document. That is
-under the heading “Initial Political Situation”:
-
- “The basic assumption is that France will declare war during the
- Case Green. It is presumed that France will decide upon war only
- if active military assistance by Great Britain is definitely
- assured.”
-
-Now, knowledge of the pending or impending action against Czechoslovakia
-was not confined to a close circle of high officials of the Reich and
-the Nazi Party. During the summer Germany’s allies, Italy and Hungary,
-were apprised by one means or another of the plans of the Nazi
-conspirators. I offer in evidence Document 2800-PS as Exhibit USA-85.
-This is a captured document from the German Foreign Office files, a
-confidential memorandum of a conversation with the Italian Ambassador
-Attolico, in Berlin on 18 July 1938. At the bottom is a handwritten note
-headed “For the Reichsminister only”, and the Reichsminister was the
-Defendant Ribbentrop. I now read this note. I read from the note the
-third and fourth paragraphs:
-
- “Attolico added that we had made it unmistakably clear to the
- Italians what our intentions are regarding Czechoslovakia. He
- also knew the appointed time well enough so that he could take
- perhaps a 2 months’ holiday now which he could not do later on.
-
-
-
- “Giving an idea of the attitude of other governments, Attolico
- mentioned that the Romanian Government had refused to grant
- application for leave to its Berlin Minister.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Would this be a convenient time to break off for 10
-minutes?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: Yes, Sir.
-
- [_A recess was taken._]
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: May it please the Tribunal, a month later Mussolini sent a
-message to Berlin asking that he be told the date on which Case Green
-would take place. I offer in evidence Document Number 2791-PS as Exhibit
-USA-86, a German Foreign Office note on a conversation with Ambassador
-Attolico. This note is signed “R” for Ribbentrop and dated 23 August
-1938. I now read two paragraphs from this memorandum:
-
- “On the voyage of the _Patria_ Ambassador Attolico explained to
- me that he had instructions to request the notification of a
- contemplated time for German action against Czechoslovakia from
- the German Government.
-
-
-
- “In case the Czechs should again cause a provocation against
- Germany, Germany would march. This would be tomorrow, in 6
- months, or perhaps in a year. However, I could promise him that
- the German Government, in case of an increasing gravity of the
- situation or as soon as the Führer made his decision, would
- notify the Italian Chief of Government as rapidly as possible.
- In any case, the Italian Government will be the first one who
- will receive such a notification.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: You did not tell us what the initial was, did you?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: The initial “R” for Ribbentrop, and the date 23 August
-1938.
-
-Four days later Attolico again asked to be notified of the date of the
-pending attack. I offer Document Number 2792-PS as Exhibit
-USA-87—another German Foreign Office memorandum, and from that document
-I read three paragraphs under the heading “R. M. 251.”
-
- “Ambassador Attolico paid me a visit today at 12 o’clock to
- communicate the following:
-
-
-
- “He had received another written instruction from Mussolini
- asking that Germany communicate in time the probable date of
- action against Czechoslovakia. Mussolini asked for such
- notification, as Mr. Attolico assured me, in order ‘to be able
- to take in due time the necessary measures on the French
- frontier.’ Berlin, 27 August 1938; ‘R’”—for Ribbentrop, and
- then:
-
-
-
- “N. B. I replied to Ambassador Attolico, just as on his former
- démarche, that I could not impart any date to him; that,
- however, in any case Mussolini would be the first one to be
- informed of any decision. Berlin, 2 September 1938.”
-
-Hungary, which borders Czechoslovakia to the southeast, was from the
-first considered to be a possible participant in Case Green. You will
-recall that in early March 1938 Defendants Keitel and Ribbentrop had
-exchanged letters on the question of bringing Hungary into the Nazi
-plan. At that time the decision was in the negative, but by mid-August
-1938 the Nazi conspirators were attempting to persuade Hungary to join
-in the attack.
-
-From August 21 to 26 Admiral Horthy and some of his ministers visited
-Germany. Inevitably there were discussions of the Czechoslovak question.
-I now offer Document 2796-PS as Exhibit USA-88. This is a captured
-German Foreign Office account signed by Von Weizsäcker of the
-conversations between Hitler and Ribbentrop and a Hungarian Delegation
-consisting of Horthy, Imredy, and Kanya aboard the S. S. _Patria_ on 23
-August 1938. In this conference Ribbentrop inquired about the Hungarian
-attitude in the event of a German attack on Czechoslovakia and suggested
-that such an attack would prove to be a good opportunity for Hungary.
-
-The Hungarians, with the exception of Horthy, who wished to put the
-Hungarian intention to participate on record, proved reluctant to commit
-themselves. Thereupon Hitler emphasized Ribbentrop’s statement and said
-that whoever wanted to join the meal would have to participate in the
-cooking as well. I now quote from this document the first two
-paragraphs:
-
- “While in the forenoon of the 23rd of August the Führer and the
- Regent of Hungary were engaged in a political discussion, the
- Hungarian Ministers Imredy and Kanya were in conference with Von
- Ribbentrop. Von Weizsäcker also attended the conference.
-
-
-
- “Von Kanya introduced two subjects for discussion: Point 1, the
- negotiations between Hungary and the Little Entente; and 2, the
- Czechoslovakian problem.”
-
-Then I skip two paragraphs and read the fifth paragraph:
-
- “Von Ribbentrop inquired what Hungary’s attitude would be if the
- Führer would carry out his decision to answer a new Czech
- provocation by force. The reply of the Hungarians presented two
- kinds of obstacles: The Yugoslavian neutrality must be assured
- if Hungary marches towards the north and perhaps the east;
- moreover, the Hungarian rearmament had only been started and one
- to two more years time for its development should be allowed.
-
-
-
- “Von Ribbentrop then explained to the Hungarians that the
- Yugoslavs would not dare to march while they were between the
- pincers of the Axis Powers. Romania alone would therefore not
- move. England and France would also remain tranquil. England
- would not recklessly risk her empire. She knew our newly
- acquired power. In reference to time, however, for the
- above-mentioned situation, nothing definite could be predicted
- since it would depend on Czech provocation. Von Ribbentrop
- repeated that, ‘Whoever desires revision must exploit the good
- opportunity and participate.’
-
-
-
- “The Hungarian reply thus remained a conditional one. Upon the
- question of Von Ribbentrop as to what purpose the desired
- General Staff conferences were to have, not much more was
- brought forward than the Hungarian desire of a mutual inventory
- of military material and preparedness for the Czech conflict.
- The clear political basis for such a conflict—the time of a
- Hungarian intervention—was not obtained.
-
-
-
- “In the meantime, more positive language was used by Von Horthy
- in his talk with the Führer. He wished not to hide his doubts
- with regard to the English attitude, but he wished to put on
- record Hungary’s intention to participate. The Hungarian
- Ministers were, and remained even later, more skeptical since
- they feel more strongly about the immediate danger for Hungary
- with its unprotected flanks.
-
-
-
- “When Von Imredy had a discussion with the Führer in the
- afternoon he was very relieved when the Führer explained to him
- that in regard to the situation in question he demanded nothing
- of Hungary. He himself would not know the time. Whoever wanted
- to join the meal would have to participate in the cooking as
- well. Should Hungary wish conferences of the General Staffs he
- would have no objections.”
-
-I think perhaps that sentence, “Whoever wanted to join the meal would
-have to participate in the cooking as well,” is perhaps as cynical a
-statement as any statesman has ever been guilty of.
-
-By the third day of the conference the Germans were able to note that,
-in the event of a German-Czech conflict, Hungary would be sufficiently
-armed for participation on 1 October. I now offer in evidence Document
-Number 2797-PS as Exhibit USA-89, another captured German Foreign Office
-memorandum of a conversation between Ribbentrop and Kanya on 25 August
-1938. You will note that the English mimeographed translation bears the
-date 29 August. That is incorrect; it should read 25 August. I read the
-last paragraph from that document, or the last two:
-
- “Concerning Hungary’s military preparedness in case of a
- German-Czech conflict Von Kanya mentioned several days ago that
- his country would need a period of one to two years in order to
- develop adequately the armed strength of Hungary.
-
-
-
- “During today’s conversation Von Kanya corrected this remark and
- said that Hungary’s military situation was much better. His
- country would be ready, as far as armaments were concerned, to
- take part in the conflict by October 1 of this year.”—Signed
- with an illegible signature which probably is that of
- Weizsäcker.
-
-The account of the German-Hungarian conference again finds its
-corroboration in General Jodl’s diary, Document Number 1780-PS, from
-which I have already several times read. The entry in that diary for 21
-to 26 August on Page 4 of the English version of the document reads as
-follows:
-
- “Visit to Germany of the Hungarian Regent. Accompanied by the
- Prime Minister, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, and the War
- Minister Von Raatz.
-
-
-
- “They arrived with the idea that in the course of a great war
- after a few years, and with the help of German troops, the old
- State of Hungary can be re-established. They leave with the
- understanding that we have neither demands from them nor claims
- against them, but that Germany will not stand for a second
- provocation by Czechoslovakia, even if it should be tomorrow. If
- they want to participate at that moment, it is up to them.
-
-
-
- “Germany, however, will never play the role of arbitrator
- between them and Poland. The Hungarians agree; but they believe
- that when the issue arises a period of 48 hours would be
- indispensable to them to find out Yugoslavia’s attitude.”
-
-The upshot of the talks with the Hungarians proved to be a staff
-conference on 6 September.
-
-I quote again from Jodl’s diary, the entry for 6 September, beginning at
-the end of that same page:
-
- “Chief of General Staff, General of Artillery Halder, has a
- conference with the Hungarian Chief of General Staff Fischer.
- Before that he is briefed by me on the political attitude of the
- Führer, especially his order not to give any hint on the exact
- moment. The same with OAI, General Von Stülpnagel.”
-
-It is somewhat interesting to find a high-ranking general giving a
-briefing on such political matters.
-
-Then we come to final actual preparations for the attack. With a 1
-October target date set for Case Green, there was a noticeable increase
-in the tempo of the military preparations in late August and September.
-Actual preparations for the attack on Czechoslovakia were well under
-way. The agenda of the Nazi conspirators was devoted to technical
-details, the timing of “X-days,” questions of mobilization, questions of
-transport and supplies.
-
-On 26 August the Defendant Jodl initialed a memorandum entitled, “Timing
-of the X-Order and the Question of Advance Measures.” This is Item 17 at
-Pages 37 and 38 of the English translation of the Schmundt file on Case
-Green, our Number 388-PS.
-
-I should like to invite the special attention of the Tribunal to this
-memorandum. It demonstrates beyond the slightest doubt the complicity of
-the OKW and of Defendant Keitel and Jodl in the shameful fabrication of
-an incident as an excuse for war. It reveals in bare outline the deceit,
-the barbarity, the completely criminal character of the attack that
-Germany was preparing to launch.
-
-I ask leave to read this document in full:
-
- “Chief Section L; for chiefs only; written by General Staff
- officer; top secret; note on progress of report; Berlin, 24
- August 1938; access only through officer; 1 copy.
-
-
-
- “Timing of the X-Order and the Question of Advance Measures.
-
-
-
- “The Luftwaffe’s endeavor to take the enemy air forces by
- surprise at their peacetime airports justifiably leads them to
- oppose measures taken in advance of the X-Order and to demand
- that the X-Order itself be given sufficiently late on X minus 1
- to prevent the fact of Germany’s mobilization becoming known to
- Czechoslovakia on that day.
-
-
-
- “The Army’s efforts are tending in the opposite direction. It
- intends to let OKW initiate all advance measures between X minus
- 3 and X minus 1 which will contribute to the smooth and rapid
- working of the mobilization. With this in mind OKH also demands
- that the X-Order be given to the Army not later than 1400 on X
- minus 1.
-
-
-
- “To this the following must be said:
-
-
-
- “‘Operation Green’”—or Aktion Grün—“will be set in motion by
- means of an ‘incident’ in Czechoslovakia which will give Germany
- provocation for military intervention. The fixing of the exact
- time for this incident is of the utmost importance.”—I call
- special attention to that sentence—“The fixing of the exact
- time for this incident is of the utmost importance.
-
-
-
- “It must come at a time when the over-all meteorological
- conditions are favorable for our superior air forces to go into
- action and at an hour which will enable authentic news of
- it”—news of this prepared incident—“to reach us on the
- afternoon of X minus 1.
-
-
-
- “It can then be spontaneously answered by the giving of the
- X-Order at 1400 on X minus 1.
-
-
-
- “On X minus 2 the Navy, Army, and Air Force will merely receive
- an advance warning.
-
-
-
- “If the Führer intends to follow this plan of action, all
- further discussion is superfluous.
-
-
-
- “For then no advance measures may be taken before X minus 1 for
- which there is not an innocent explanation as we shall otherwise
- appear to have manufactured the incident. Orders for absolutely
- essential advance measures must be given in good time and
- camouflaged with the help of numerous maneuvers and exercises.
-
-
-
- “Also, the question raised by the Foreign Office as to whether
- all Germans should be called back in time from prospective enemy
- territories must in no way lead to the conspicuous departure
- from Czechoslovakia of any German subjects before the incident.
-
-
-
- “Even a warning of diplomatic representatives in Prague is
- impossible before the first air attack, although the
- consequences could be very grave in the event of their becoming
- victims of such an attack (that is the death of representatives
- of friendly or confirmed neutral powers).
-
-
-
- “If, for technical reasons, the evening hours should be
- considered desirable for the incident, then the following day
- cannot be X-Day, but it must be the day after that.
-
-
-
- “In any case we must act on the principle that nothing must be
- done before the incident which might point to mobilization, and
- that the swiftest possible action must be taken after the
- incident (X-Fall).
-
-
-
- “It is the purpose of these notes to point out what a great
- interest the Wehrmacht has in the incident and that it must be
- informed of the Führer’s intentions in good time—insofar as the
- Abwehr Section is not also charged with the organization of the
- incident.
-
-
-
- “I request that the Führer’s decision be obtained on these
- points.”—Signed—“J”—(Jodl).
-
-In handwriting, at the bottom of the page of that document, are the
-notes of the indefatigable Schmundt, Hitler’s adjutant. These reveal
-that the memorandum was submitted to Hitler on August 30; that Hitler
-agreed to act along these lines, and that Jodl was so notified on 31
-August. There follows Jodl’s initials once more.
-
-On 3 September Keitel and Von Brauchitsch met with Hitler at the
-Berghof. Again Schmundt kept notes of the conference. These will be
-found as Item 18 at Pages 39 and 40 of the Document Number 388-PS. I
-shall read the first three short paragraphs of these minutes:
-
- “Colonel General Von Brauchitsch reports on the exact time of
- the transfer of the troops to ‘exercise areas’ for ‘Grün’. Field
- units to be transferred on 28 September. From here will then be
- ready for action. When X-Day becomes known field units carry out
- exercises in opposite directions.
-
-
-
- “Führer has objection. Troops assemble field units a 2-day march
- away. Carry out camouflage exercises everywhere.”—Then there is
- a question mark.—“OKH must know when X-Day is by 1200 noon, 27
- September.”
-
-You will note that Von Brauchitsch reported that field troops would be
-transferred to the proper areas for Case Green on 28 September and would
-then be ready for action. You will also note that the OKH must know when
-X-Day is by 12 noon on 27 September.
-
-During the remainder of the conference Hitler gave his views on the
-strategy the German armies should employ and the strength of the Czech
-defenses they would encounter. He spoke of the possibility, and I quote,
-“of drawing in the Henlein people.” The situation in the West still
-troubled him. Schmundt further noted, and here I read the final sentence
-from Page 40 of the English transcript:
-
- “The Führer gives orders for the development of the Western
- fortifications: Improvement of advance positions around Aachen
- and Saarbrücken; construction of 300 to 400 battery positions
- (1600 artillery pieces). He emphasizes flanking action.”
-
-Five days later General Stülpnagel asked Defendant Jodl for written
-assurance that the OKH would be informed 5 days in advance about the
-impending action. In the evening Jodl conferred with Luftwaffe generals
-about the co-ordination of ground and air operations at the start of the
-attack. I now read the 8 September entry in General Jodl’s diary, Page 5
-of the English translation of Document 1780-PS.
-
- “General Stülpnagel, OAI, asks for written assurance that the
- Army High Command will be informed 5 days in advance if the plan
- is to take place. I agree and add that the over-all
- meteorological situation can be estimated to some extent only
- for 2 days in advance and that therefore the plans may be
- changed up to this moment (X-Day minus 2)”—or as the German
- puts it—“X-2 Tag.”
-
-
-
- “General Stülpnagel mentions that for the first time he wonders
- whether the previous basis of the plan is not being abandoned.
- It presupposed that the Western Powers would not interfere
- decisively. It gradually seems as if the Führer would stick to
- his decision, even though he may no longer be of this opinion.
- It must be added that Hungary is at least moody and that . . .
- Italy is reserved.”
-
-Now, this is Jodl talking:
-
- “I must admit that I am worrying, too, when comparing the change
- of opinion about political and military potentialities,
- according to directives of 24 June ’37, 5 November ’37, 7
- December ’37, 30 May 1938, with the last statements. In spite of
- that, one must be aware of the fact that the other nations will
- do everything they can to apply pressure on us. We must pass
- this test of nerves, but because only very few people know the
- art of withstanding this pressure successfully, the only
- possible solution is to inform only a very small circle of
- officers of news that causes us anxiety, and not to have it
- circulate through anterooms as heretofore.
-
-
-
- “1800 hours to 2100 hours: Conference with Chief of High Command
- of Armed Forces and Chief of General Staff of the Air Force.
- (Present were General Jeschonnek, Kammhuber, Sternburg, and
- myself). We agree about the promulgation of the X-Day
- order”—X-Befehl—“(X-1, 4 o’clock) and pre-announcement to the
- Air Force (X-Day minus 1”—X minus 1 day—“7 o’clock). The ‘Y’
- time has yet to be examined; some formations have an approach
- flight of one hour.”
-
-Late on the evening of the following day, 9 September, Hitler met with
-Defendant Keitel and Generals Von Brauchitsch and Halder at Nuremberg.
-Dr. Todt, the construction engineer, later joined this conference, which
-lasted from 10 in the evening until 3:30 the following morning.
-Schmundt’s minutes on this conference are Item 19 in the large Schmundt
-file, on Pages 41 to 43 of Document 388-PS.
-
-In this meeting General Halder reviewed the missions assigned to four of
-the German armies being committed to the attack, the 2d, the 10th, the
-12th and the 14th German Armies. With his characteristic enthusiasm for
-military planning, Hitler then delivered a soliloquy on strategic
-considerations, which should be taken into account as the attack
-developed. I shall quote only four paragraphs, beginning with the
-summary of General Von Brauchitsch’s remarks, on the bottom of Page 42:
-
- “General Oberst Von Brauchitsch: ‘Employment of motorized
- divisions was based on the difficult rail situation in Austria
- and the difficulties in getting other divs’”—that is for
- divisions—“‘ready to march into the area at the right time. In
- the West vehicles will have to leave on the 20th of September,
- if X-Day remains as planned. Workers leave on the 23d, by
- relays. Specialist workers remain according to decision by Army
- Command II.’
-
-
-
- “The Führer: ‘Does not see why workers have to return home as
- early as X-11. Other workers and people are also on the way on
- mobilization day. Also the railroad cars will stand around
- unnecessarily later on.’
-
-
-
- “General Keitel: ‘Workers are not under the jurisdiction of
- district commands in the West. Trains must be assembled.’
-
-
-
- “Von Brauchitsch: ‘235,000 men RAD (Labor Service) will be
- drafted, 96 construction battalions will be distributed (also in
- the East). 40,000 trained laborers stay in the West.’”
-
-From this day forward the Nazi conspirators were occupied with the
-intricate planning which is required before such an attack. On 11
-September Defendant Jodl conferred with a representative of the
-Propaganda Ministry about methods of refuting German violations of
-international law and of exploiting those of the Czechs. I read the 11
-September entry in the Jodl diary at Page 5 of the English translation
-of 1780-PS:
-
- “In the afternoon conference with Secretary of State Hahnke, for
- the Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda on imminent
- common tasks. These joint preparations for
- refutation”—Widerlegung—“of our own violations of
- international law, and the exploitation of its violations by the
- enemy, were considered particularly important.”
-
-This discussion developed into a detailed study compiled by Section L,
-that is, Jodl’s section of the OKW.
-
-I now offer in evidence Document C-2 as Exhibit USA-90, which is a
-carbon copy of the original, signed in pencil. Seven copies of this
-captured document, as it shows on its face, were prepared and
-distributed on 1 October 1938 to the OKH, the OKM, the Luftwaffe, and
-the Foreign Office.
-
-In this study anticipated violations by Germany of international law in
-connection with the invasion of Czechoslovakia are listed and
-counterpropaganda suggested for the use of the propaganda agencies. It
-is a highly interesting top-secret document and with a glance at the
-original you can see the careful form in which the study of anticipated
-violations of international law and propagandists refutations thereof
-were set out.
-
-The document is prepared in tabular form, in which the anticipated
-instances of violation of international law are listed in the left hand
-column. In the second column are given specific examples of the
-incidents. In the third and fourth column the position to be taken
-toward these incidents, in violation of international law and in
-violation of the laws of warfare, is set forth.
-
-The fifth column, which in this document unfortunately is blank, was
-reserved for the explanations to be offered by the Propaganda Minister.
-I first quote from the covering letter:
-
- “Enclosed is a list drawn up by Section L of the OKW, of the
- violations of international law which may be expected on the
- part of fighting troops.
-
-
-
- “Owing to the short time allowed for the compilation, Columns
- c-1 and c-2 had to be filled in directly therefore, for the time
- being.
-
-
-
- “The branches of the Armed Forces are requested to send in an
- opinion so that a final version may be drawn up.
-
-
-
- “The same is requested of the Foreign Office.
-
-
-
- “The Chief of the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces.
-
-
-
- “By order”—signed—“Bürckner.”
-
-I am sorry that I perhaps cannot take the time to read extensively from
-this document. I shall confine myself to reading the first 10
-hypothetical incidents for which justification must be found from the
-second column, Column b of the table:
-
- “First: In an air raid on Prague the British Embassy is
- destroyed.
-
-
-
- “Second: Englishmen or Frenchmen are injured or killed.
-
-
-
- “Third: The Hradschin is destroyed in an air raid on Prague.
-
-
-
- “Fourth: On account of a report that the Czechs have used gas,
- the firing of gas projectiles is ordered.
-
-
-
- “Fifth: Czech civilians, not recognizable as soldiers, are
- caught in the act of sabotage (destruction of an important
- bridge, destruction of foodstuffs and fodder) are discovered
- looting wounded or dead soldiers and thereupon shot.
-
-
-
- “Sixth: Captured Czech soldiers or Czech civilians are detailed
- to do road work or to load munitions, and so forth.
-
-
-
- “Seventh: For military reasons it is necessary to requisition
- billets, foodstuffs, and fodder from the Czech population. As a
- result, the latter suffer from want.
-
-
-
- “Eighth: Czech population is, for military reasons, compulsorily
- evacuated to the rear area.
-
-
-
- “Ninth: Churches are used for military accommodations.
-
-
-
- “Tenth: In the course of their duty, German aircraft fly over
- Polish territory where they are involved in an air battle with
- Czech aircraft.”
-
-From Nuremberg on the 10th of September, Hitler issued an order bringing
-the Reichsarbeitsdienst (the German Labor Service) under the OKW. This
-top-secret order . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Are you passing from that document now?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: Yes.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Would you read the classification with reference to gas?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: Perhaps I should, Sir.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: It is number 4.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: Incident number 4?
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Yes.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: Well, number 4 was the supposed incident. “On account of a
-report that the Czechs have used gas, the firing of gas projectiles is
-ordered.” Under the column, “Attitude of International Law Group”:
-
- “According to the declaration agreed to in June 1925 by 40
- states, including Czechoslovakia, the employment of poison
- gases, chemical warfare agents, and bacteriological substances
- is expressly forbidden. Quite a number of states made the
- reservation to this declaration on the prohibition of gas
- warfare.”
-
-Then, under the column headed “Justification by the Laws of War”:
-
- “If the assertion, that the opponent—in this case the
- Czechs—used a prohibited gas in warfare, is to be believed by
- the world, it must be possible to prove it. If that is possible,
- the firing of gas projectiles is justified, and it must be given
- out in public that it can be proved that the enemy was the first
- to violate the prohibition. It is therefore particularly
- important to furnish this proof. If the assertion is unfounded
- or only partially founded, the gas attack is to be represented
- only as the need for carrying out a justified reprisal, in the
- same way as the Italians did in the Abyssinian war. In this
- case, however, the justification for such harsh reprisals must
- also be proved.”
-
-From Nuremberg on the 10th of September, Hitler issued an order bringing
-the Reichsarbeitsdienst (the German Labor Service) under the OKW . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: There is another short passage which seems to be
-material.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: I was very much tempted to read the whole document.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The justification of number 10.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: Number 10 was, “In course of their duty, German aircraft
-fly over Polish territory where they are involved in an air battle with
-Czech aircraft.”
-
-Under the heading, “Attitude of the International Law Group”:
-
- “According to Article 1 of the Fifth Hague Convention of 18
- October 1907, the territory of neutral powers is not to be
- violated. A deliberate violation by flying over this territory
- is a breach of international law if the neutral powers have
- declared an air barrier for combat aircraft. If German planes
- fly over Polish territory this constitutes a violation of
- international law, provided that this action is not expressly
- permitted.”
-
-Now, under the heading, “Justification by the Laws of War,” is this:
-
- “An attempt at denials should first be made; if this is
- unsuccessful a request for pardon should be made (on the grounds
- of miscalculation of position) to the Polish Government and
- compensation for damage guaranteed.”
-
-I had referred to an order issued by Hitler on 10 September 1938 from
-Nuremberg, bringing the German Labor Service under the OKW. This
-top-secret order, of which 25 copies were made, is Item 20 in the
-Schmundt file, Page 44. I will read that order:
-
- “1. The whole RAD organization comes under the command of the
- Supreme Command of the Army effective 15 September.
-
-
-
- “2. The Chief of OKW decides on the first commitments of this
- organization in conjunction with the Reich Labor Leader
- (Reichsarbeitsführer) and on assignments from time to time to
- the Supreme Commands of the Navy, Army, and Air Force. Where
- questions arise with regard to competency he will make a final
- decision in accordance with my instructions.
-
-
-
- “3. For the time being this order is to be made known only to
- the departments and personnel immediately concerned.
-
-
-
- “Signed, Adolf Hitler.”
-
-Four days later, on 14 September, Defendant Keitel issued detailed
-instructions for the employment of specific RAD units. This order is
-Item 21 in the Schmundt file, at Page 45 in the English translation. I
-do not think I need read the order.
-
-There is another order issued by the Defendant Jodl on 16 September,
-Item 24, at Page 48 in the Schmundt file. I think I need only read the
-heading or title of that:
-
- “Subject: Employment of Reich Labor Service for maneuvers with
- Wehrmacht. Effective 15 September the following units will be
- trained militarily under direction of the Commander-in-Chief of
- the Army.”
-
-Two further entries in the Defendant Jodl’s diary give further
-indications of the problems of the OKW in this period of mid-September,
-just 2 weeks before the anticipated X-Day.
-
-I now read the answers for the 15th and 16th September, at Pages 5 and 6
-of the English translation of the Jodl diary.
-
- “15 September: In the morning, conference with Chief of Army
- High Command and Chief of General Staffs of Army and Air Force,
- the question was discussed as to what could be done if the
- Führer insists on advancement of the date, due to the rapid
- development of the situation.
-
-
-
- “16 September: General Keitel returns from the Berghof at 1700
- hours. He graphically describes the results of the conference
- between Chamberlain and the Führer. The next conference will
- take place on the 20th or 21st in Godesberg.
-
-
-
- “With consent of the Führer, the order is given in the evening
- by the Armed Forces High Command, to the Army High Command, and
- to the Ministry of Finance, to line up the v.G.a.D. along the
- Czech border.”—That I understand to have reference to the
- reinforced border guard.
-
-
-
- “In the same way, an order is issued to the railways to have
- empty rolling stock kept in readiness, clandestinely; for the
- strategic concentrations of the Army, so that it can be
- transported starting 28 September.”
-
-The order to the railroads to make rolling stock available, to which
-General Jodl referred, appears as Item 22, at Page 47 of the Schmundt
-file. In this order the Defendant Keitel told the railroads to be ready
-by 28 September but to continue work on the Western fortifications even
-after 20 September in the interest of camouflage. I quote the first four
-paragraphs of this order:
-
- “The Reichsbahn (the railroads) must provide trains of empty
- trucks in great numbers by September 28 for the carrying out of
- mobilization exercises. This task now takes precedence over all
- others.
-
-
-
- “Therefore the trainloads for the limes job”—I understand the
- “limes job” to have reference to defense fortification in the
- West—“will have to be cut down after September 17 and those
- goods loaded previous to this date unloaded by September 20.
-
-
-
- “The Supreme Command of the Army (Fifth Division of the Army
- General Staff) must issue further orders after consultation with
- the authorities concerned.
-
-
-
- “However, in accordance with the Führer’s directive, every
- effort should be made to continue to supply the materials in as
- large quantities as feasible, even after 20 September 1938, and
- this for reasons of camouflage as well as in order to continue
- the important work on the limes.”
-
-The penultimate stage of the aggression begins on 18 September. From
-that date until the 28th a series of orders was issued advancing
-preparations for the attack. These orders are included in the Schmundt
-file and I shall not take the time of the Tribunal by attempting to read
-all of it.
-
-On the 18th the commitment scheduled for the five participating Armies,
-the 2d, 8th, 10th, 12th, and 14th, was set forth. That is Item 26 in the
-Schmundt file at Page 50 of the English translation. Hitler approved the
-secret mobilization of five divisions in the West to protect the German
-rear during Case Green, and I refer to Item 31 in the Schmundt file at
-Page 13—I beg your pardon, it is Page 55, I had a misprint. I might
-refer to that. It is a “most-secret” order, Berlin, 27 September 1938,
-1920 hours; 45 copies of which this is the 16th:
-
- “The Führer has approved the mobilization, without warning, of
- the five regular West divisions (26th, 34th, 36th, 33d, and
- 35th). The Führer and Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces has
- expressly reserved the right to issue the order for employment
- in the fortification zone and the evacuation of this zone by the
- workers of the Todt organization.
-
-
-
- “It is left to the OKH to assemble as far as possible, first of
- all the sections ready to march and, subsequently, the remaining
- sections of the divisions in marshalling areas behind the
- Western fortifications.”—Signed—“Jodl.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I think this would be a good time to adjourn.
-
-We will meet again at 2 o’clock.
-
- [_A recess was taken until 1400 hours._]
-
-
-
-
- _Afternoon Session_
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: May it please the Tribunal, my attention has been called
-to the fact that I misread a signature on one of the documents to which
-I adverted this morning. It is Item 31 of the Schmundt minutes. I read
-the name “Jodl” as being the signature on that item. I should have read
-Keitel.
-
-In the course of presenting details of the documents which are being
-offered in evidence, I think it would be well to pause for a moment, and
-recall the setting in which these facts took place. The world will never
-forget the Munich Pact, and the international crisis which led to it. As
-this crisis was developing in August and September of 1938, and frantic
-efforts were being made by the statesmen of the world to preserve the
-peace of the world, little did they know of the evil plans and designs
-in the hearts and the minds of these conspirators.
-
-What is being presented to the Tribunal today is the inside story, in
-their own words, underlying the Pact of Munich. We are now able to
-spread upon the pages of history the truth concerning the fraud and
-deceit practiced by the Nazi conspirators in achieving for their own
-ends, the Pact of Munich as a stepping stone towards further aggression.
-One cannot think back without living again through the dread of war, the
-fear of war, the fear of world disaster, which seized all peace-loving
-persons. The hope for peace which came with the Munich Pact was, we now
-see, a snare and a deceit—a trap, carefully set by the defendants on
-trial. The evil character of these men who were fabricating this scheme
-for aggression and war is demonstrated by their own documents.
-
-Further discussions were held between the Army and the Luftwaffe about
-the time of day at which the attack should be launched. Conference notes
-initialed by the Defendant Jodl, dated 27 September, reveal the
-difference in views. These notes are Item 54, at Page 90 in the
-translation of Document 388-PS. I shall read these first three
-paragraphs as follows: The heading is:
-
- “Most secret; for chiefs only; only through officers.
-
-
-
- “Conference notes; Berlin, 27 September 1938; 4 copies, first
- copy. To be filed Grün.
-
-
-
- “Co-ordinated Time of Attack by Army and Air Force on X-Day.
-
-
-
- “As a matter of principle, every effort should be made for a
- co-ordinated attack by Army and Air Forces on 1 X-Day.
-
-
-
- “The Army wishes to attack at dawn, that is, about 0615. It also
- wishes to conduct some limited operations in the previous night,
- which however, would not alarm the entire Czech front.
-
-
-
- “Air Force’s time of attack depends on weather conditions. These
- could change the time of attack and also limit the area of
- operations. The weather of the last few days, for instance,
- would have delayed the start until between 0800 and 1100 due to
- low ceiling in Bavaria.”
-
-Then I’ll skip to the last two paragraphs on Page 91:
-
- “Thus it is proposed:
-
-
-
- “Attack by the Army—independent of the attack by the Air
- Force—at the time desired by the Army (0615), and permission
- for limited operations to take place before then; however, only
- to an extent that will not alarm the entire Czech front.
-
-
-
- “The Luftwaffe will attack at a time most suitable to them.”
-
-The initial at the end of that order is “J” meaning, I think clearly,
-Jodl.
-
-On the same date, 27 September, the Defendant Keitel sent a most-secret
-memorandum to the Defendant Hess, and the Reichsführer SS, Himmler, for
-the guidance of Nazi Party officials. This memorandum is Item 32 in the
-Schmundt files at Page 56 of the English translation. I read the first
-four paragraphs of this message.
-
- “As a result of the political situation the Führer and
- Chancellor has ordered mobilization measures for the Armed
- Forces, without the political situation being aggravated by
- issuing the mobilization (X) order, or corresponding code words.
-
-
-
- “Within the framework of these mobilization measures it is
- necessary for the Armed Forces authorities to issue demands to
- the various Party authorities and their organizations, which are
- connected with the previous issuing of the mobilization order,
- the advance measures or special code names.
-
-
-
- “The special situation makes it necessary that these demands be
- met (even if the code word has not been previously issued)
- immediately and without being referred to higher authority.
-
-
-
- “OKW requests that subordinate offices be given immediate
- instructions to this effect, so that the mobilization of the
- Armed Forces can be carried out according to plan.”
-
-Then I skip to the last paragraph:
-
- “The Supreme Command of the Armed Forces further requests that
- all measures not provided for in the plans which are undertaken
- by Party organizations or Police units, as a result of the
- political situation, be reported in every case and in plenty of
- time to the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces. Only then can
- it be guaranteed that these measures can be carried out in
- practice.
-
-
-
- “The Chief of the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces, Keitel.”
-
-Two additional entries from the Defendant Jodl’s diary reveal the extent
-to which the Nazi conspirators carried out all of their preparations for
-an attack, even during the period of negotiations which culminated in
-the Munich Agreement. I quote the answers in the Jodl diary for 26 and
-27 September, from Page 7 of the translation of Document 1780-PS. 26
-September . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Have you got in mind the dates of the visits of Mr.
-Chamberlain to Germany, and of the actual agreement? Perhaps you can
-give it later on.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: I think it will be covered later, yes.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Very well.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: The agreement of the Munich Pact was the 29th of
-September, and this answer then was 3 days before the Pact, the 26th of
-September:
-
- “Chief of the Armed Forces High Command, acting through the Army
- High Command, has stopped the intended approach march of the
- advance units to the Czech border, because it is not yet
- necessary and because the Führer does not intend to march in
- before the 30th in any case. Order to approach towards the Czech
- frontier need be given on the 27th only.
-
-
-
- “Fixed radio stations of Breslau, Dresden and Vienna are put at
- the disposal of the Reich Ministry for Popular Enlightenment and
- Propaganda for interference with possible Czech propaganda
- transmissions.
-
-
-
- “Question by Ausland whether Czechs are to be allowed to leave
- and cross Germany. Decision from Chief of the Armed Forces High
- Command: ‘Yes.’
-
-
-
- “1515 hours: The Chief of the Armed Forces High Command informs
- General Stumpf about the result of the Godesberg conversations
- and about the Führer’s opinion. In no case will X-Day be before
- the 30th.
-
-
-
- “It is important that we do not permit ourselves to be drawn
- into military engagements because of false reports, before
- Prague replies.
-
-
-
- “A question of Stumpf about Y-Hour results in the reply that on
- account of the weather situation, a simultaneous intervention of
- the Air Force and Army cannot be expected. The Army needs the
- dawn, the Air Force can only start later on account of frequent
- early fogs.
-
-
-
- “The Führer has to make a decision as to which of the
- Commanders-in-Chief is to have priority.
-
-
-
- “The opinion of Stumpf is also that the attack of the Army has
- to proceed. The Führer has not made any decision as yet about
- commitment against Prague.
-
-
-
- “2000 hours: The Führer addresses the people and the world in an
- important speech at the Sportpalast.”
-
-Then the entry on 27 September:
-
- “1320 hours: The Führer consents to the first wave of attack
- being advanced to a line from where they can arrive in the
- assembly area by 30 September.”
-
-The order referred to by General Jodl was also recorded by the faithful
-Schmundt, which appears as Item 33 at Page 57 of the file. I’ll read it
-in its entirety. It is the order which brought the Nazi Army to a
-jumping-off point for the unprovoked and brutal aggression:
-
- “28.9.38.; most secret; memorandum.
-
-
-
- “At 1300 hours 27 September the Führer and Supreme Commander of
- the Armed Forces ordered the movement of the assault units from
- their exercise areas to their jumping-off points.
-
-
-
- “The assault units (about 21 reinforced regiments, or seven
- divisions) must be ready to begin the action against Grün on 30
- September, the decision having been made 1 day previously by
- 1200 noon.
-
-
-
- “This order was conveyed to General Keitel at 1320 through Major
- Schmundt”—pencil note by Schmundt.
-
-At this point, with the Nazi Army poised in a strategic position around
-the borders of Czechoslovakia, we shall turn back for a moment to
-examine another phase of the Czech aggression. The military preparations
-for action against Czechoslovakia had not been carried out _in vacuo_.
-
-They had been preceded by a skillfully conceived campaign designed to
-promote civil disobedience in the Czechoslovak State. Using the
-techniques they had already developed in other uncontested ventures
-underhandedly, the Nazi conspirators over a period of years used money,
-propaganda, and force to undermine Czechoslovakia. In this program the
-Nazis focused their attention on the persons of German descent living in
-the Sudetenland, a mountainous area bounding Bohemia and Moravia on the
-northwest and south. I now invite the attention of the Tribunal to
-Document Number 998-PS and offer it in evidence as an exhibit.
-
-This exhibit is entitled, “German Crimes Against Czechoslovakia” and is
-the Czechoslovak Government’s official report for the prosecution and
-trial of the German major war criminals. I believe that this report is
-clearly included within the provisions of Article 21, of the Charter, as
-a document of which the Court will take judicial notice. Article 21
-provides:
-
- “The Tribunal shall not require proof of facts of common
- knowledge but shall take judicial notice thereof. It shall also
- take judicial notice of official governmental documents and
- reports of the United Nations, including the accounts and
- documents of the committees set up in the various Allied
- countries for the investigation of war crimes and the records
- and findings of military or other tribunals of any of the United
- Nations.”
-
-Since, under that provision, the Court will take judicial notice of this
-governmental report by the Czech Government, I shall, with the leave of
-the Tribunal, merely summarize Pages 9 to 12 of this report to show the
-background of the subsequent Nazi intrigue within Czechoslovakia.
-
-Nazi agitation in Czechoslovakia dated from the earliest days of the
-Nazi Party. In the years following the first World War, a German
-National Socialist Workers Party (DNSAP), which maintained close contact
-with Hitler’s NSDAP, was activated in the Sudetenland. In 1932,
-ringleaders of the Sudeten Volkssport, an organization corresponding to
-the Nazi SA or Sturmabteilung, openly endorsed the 21 points of Hitler’s
-program, the first of which demanded the union of all Germans in a
-greater Germany. Soon thereafter, they were charged with planning armed
-rebellion on behalf of a foreign power and were sentenced for conspiracy
-against the Czech Republic.
-
-Late in 1933, the National Socialist Party of Czechoslovakia forestalled
-its dissolution by voluntary liquidation and several of its chiefs
-escaped across the border into Germany. For a year thereafter, Nazi
-activity in Czechoslovakia continued underground.
-
-On 1 October 1934, with the approval and at the urging of the Nazi
-conspirators, an instructor of gymnastics, Konrad Henlein, established
-the German Home Front or Deutsche Heimatfront, which, the following
-spring became the Sudeten German Party (SDP). Profiting from the
-experiences of the Czech National Socialist Party, Henlein denied any
-connection with the German Nazis. He rejected pan-Germanism and
-professed his respect for individual liberties and his loyalty to honest
-democracy and to the Czech State. His party, nonetheless, was built on
-the basis of the Nazi Führerprinzip, and he became its Führer.
-
-By 1937, when the powers of Hitler’s Germany had become manifest,
-Henlein and his followers were striking a more aggressive note,
-demanding without definition, “complete Sudeten autonomy”. The SDP laid
-proposals before the Czech Parliament which would in substance, have
-created a state within a state.
-
-After the annexation of Austria by Germany in March 1938, the
-Henleinists, who were now openly organized after the Nazi model,
-intensified their activities. Undisguised anti-Semitic propaganda
-started in the Henlein press.
-
-The campaign against Bolshevism was intensified. Terrorism in the
-Henlein-dominated communities increased. A storm-troop organization,
-patterned and trained on the principles of the Nazi SS was established,
-known as the FS, Freiwilliger Selbstschutz (or Voluntary Vigilantes).
-
-On 24 April 1938, in a speech to the Party Congress in Karlovy Vary,
-Henlein came into the open with what he called his Karlsbad Program. In
-this speech, which echoed Hitler in tone and substance, Henlein asserted
-the right of the Sudeten Germans to profess German political philosophy
-which, it was clear, meant National Socialism.
-
-As the summer of 1938 wore on, the Henleinists used every technique of
-the Nazi Fifth Column. As summarized in Pages 12 to 16 of the Czech
-Government official report, these techniques included:
-
-(a) Espionage. Military espionage was conducted by the SDP, the FS, and
-by other members of the German minority on behalf of Germany. Czech
-defenses were mapped and information on Czech troop movements was
-furnished to the German authorities.
-
-(b) Nazification of German organizations in Czechoslovakia. The
-Henleinists systematically penetrated the whole life of the German
-population of Czechoslovakia. Associations and social cultural centers
-regularly underwent “Gleichschaltung”, that is purification, by the SDP.
-Among the organizations conquered by the Henleinists were sports
-societies, rowing clubs, associations of ex-service men, and choral
-societies. The Henleinists were particularly interested in penetrating
-as many business institutions as possible and bringing over to their
-side the directors of banks, the owners or directors of factories, and
-the managers of commercial firms. In the case of Jewish ownership or
-direction, they attempted to secure the cooperation of the clerical and
-technical staffs of the institutions.
-
-(c) German direction and leadership. The Henleinists maintained
-permanent contact with the Nazi officials designated to direct
-operations within Czechoslovakia. Meetings in Germany, at which
-Henleinists were exhorted and instructed in Fifth Column activity, were
-camouflaged by being held in conjunction with “Sänger Feste” (or choral
-festivals), gymnastic shows, and assemblies, and commercial gatherings
-such as the Leipzig Fair. Whenever the Nazi conspirators needed
-incidents for their war of nerves, it was the duty of the Henleinists to
-supply them.
-
-(d) Propaganda. Disruptive and subversive propaganda was beamed at
-Czechoslovakia in German broadcasts and was echoed in the German press.
-Goebbels called Czechoslovakia a “nest of Bolshevism” and spread the
-false report of Russian troops and airplanes centered in Prague. Under
-direction from the Reich, the Henleinists maintained whispering
-propaganda in the Sudetenland which contributed to the mounting tension
-and to the creation of incidents. Illegal Nazi literature was smuggled
-from Germany and widely distributed in the border regions. The Henlein
-press, more or less openly, espoused Nazi ideology before the German
-population in the Sudetenland.
-
-(e) Murder and terrorism. Nazi conspirators provided the Henleinists,
-and particularly the FS, with money and arms with which to provoke
-incidents and to maintain a state of permanent unrest. Gendarmes,
-customs officers, and other Czech officials were attacked. A boycott was
-established against Jewish lawyers, doctors, and tradesmen.
-
-The Henleinists terrorized the non-Henlein population and the Nazi
-Gestapo crossed into the border districts to carry Czechoslovak citizens
-across the border into Germany. In several cases, political foes of the
-Nazis were murdered on Czech soil. Nazi agents murdered Professor
-Theodor Lessing in 1933, and engineer Formis in 1935. Both men were
-anti-Nazis who had escaped from Germany after Hitler came to power and
-had sought refuge in Czechoslovakia.
-
-Sometime afterwards, when there was no longer need for pretense and
-deception, Konrad Henlein made a clear and frank statement of the
-mission assigned to him by the Nazi conspirators. I offer in evidence
-Document Number 2863-PS, an excerpt from a lecture by Konrad Henlein
-quoted in the book _Four Fighting Years_, a publication of the
-Czechoslovak Ministry of Foreign Affairs; and I quote from Page 29. This
-book has been marked for identification Exhibit USA-92, but without
-offering it in evidence, I ask the Tribunal to take judicial notice of
-it. I shall read from Page 29. This lecture was delivered by Henlein on
-4 March 1941, in the auditorium of the University of Vienna, under the
-auspices of the Wiener Verwaltungsakademie. During a thorough search of
-libraries in Vienna and elsewhere, we have been unable to find a copy of
-the German text. This text, this volume that I have here, is an English
-version. The Vienna newspapers the following day carried only summaries
-of the lecture. This English version, however, is an official
-publication of the Czech Government and is, under the circumstances, the
-best evidence that we can produce of the Henlein speech.
-
-In this lecture on “The Fight for the Liberation of the Sudetens”
-Henlein said:
-
- “National Socialism soon swept over us Sudeten Germans. Our
- struggle was of a different character from that in Germany.
- Although we had to behave differently in public we were, of
- course, secretly in touch with the National Socialist revolution
- in Germany so that we might be a part of it. The struggle for
- Greater Germany was waged on Sudeten soil, too. This struggle
- could be waged only by those inspired by the spirit of National
- Socialism, persons who were true followers of our Führer,
- whatever their outward appearance. Fate sought me out to be the
- leader of the national group in its final struggle. When in the
- autumn of 1933, the leader of the NSDAP asked me to take over
- the political leadership of the Sudeten Germans, I had a
- difficult problem to solve. Should the National Socialist Party
- continue to be carried on illegally or should the movement, in
- the interest of the self-preservation of the Sudeten Germans and
- in order to prepare their return to the Reich, wage its struggle
- under camouflage and by methods which appeared quite legal to
- the outside world? For us Sudeten Germans only the second
- alternative seemed possible, for the preservation of our
- national group was at stake. It would certainly have been easier
- to exchange this hard and mentally exhausting struggle for the
- heroic gesture of confessing allegiance to National Socialism
- and entering a Czechoslovak prison. But it seemed more than
- doubtful whether, by this means, we could have fulfilled the
- political task of destroying Czechoslovakia as a bastion in the
- alliance against the German Reich.”
-
-The account of Nazi intrigue in Czechoslovakia which I have just
-presented to the Tribunal is the outline of this conspiracy as it had
-been pieced together by the Czechoslovak Government early this summer.
-Since then, captured documents and other information made available to
-us since the defeat of Germany have clearly and conclusively
-demonstrated the implication, which hitherto could only be deduced, of
-the Nazi conspirators in the agitation in the Sudetenland.
-
-I offer in evidence Document Number 3060-PS, Exhibit USA-93. This is the
-original, handwritten draft of a telegram sent from the German Legation
-in Prague on 16 March 1938 to the Foreign Minister in Berlin. It is
-presumably written by the German Minister Eisenlohr. It proves
-conclusively that the Henlein movement was an instrument, a puppet of
-the Nazi conspirators. The Henlein party, it appears from this document,
-was directed from Berlin and from the German Legation in Prague. It
-could have no policy of its own. Even the speeches of its leaders had to
-be co-ordinated with the German authorities.
-
-I will read this telegram:
-
- “Prague, 16 March 1938.
-
-
-
- “Foreign (Office), Berlin; (cipher cable—secret); No. 57 of 16
- March.
-
-
-
- “With reference to cable order No. 30 of 14 March.
-
-
-
- “Rebuff to Frank has had a salutary effect. Have thrashed out
- matters with Henlein, who recently had shunned me, and with
- Frank separately and received following promises:
-
-
-
- “1. The line of German foreign policy as transmitted by the
- German Legation is exclusively decisive for policy and tactics
- of the Sudeten German Party. My directives are to be complied
- with implicitly.
-
-
-
- “2. Public speeches and the press will be co-ordinated uniformly
- with my approval. The editorial staff of _Zeit_”—_Time_—“is to
- be improved.
-
-
-
- “3. Party leadership abandons the former intransigent line,
- which in the end might lead to political complications, and
- adopts a line of gradual promotion of Sudeten German interests.
- The objectives are to be set in every case with my participation
- and to be promoted by parallel diplomatic action. Laws for the
- protection of nationalities (Volksschutzgesetze) and territorial
- autonomy are no longer to be stressed.
-
-
-
- “4. If consultations with Berlin agencies are required or
- desired before Henlein issues important statements on his
- program, they are to be applied for and prepared through the
- Legation.
-
-
-
- “5. All information of the Sudeten German Party for German
- agencies is to be transmitted through the Legation.
-
-
-
- “6. Henlein will establish contact with me every week, and will
- come to Prague at any time if requested.
-
-
-
- “I now hope to have the Sudeten German Party under firm control,
- as this is more than ever necessary for coming developments in
- the interest of foreign policy. Please inform Ministries
- concerned and Mittelstelle (Central Office for Racial Germans)
- and request them to support this uniform direction of the
- Sudeten German Party.”
-
-The initials are illegible.
-
-The dressing down administered by Eisenlohr to Henlein had the desired
-effect. The day after the telegram was dispatched from Prague, Henlein
-addressed a humble letter to Ribbentrop, asking an early personal
-conversation.
-
-I offer in evidence Document Number 2789-PS as Exhibit USA-94. This is
-the letter from Konrad Henlein to Defendant Ribbentrop, captured in the
-German Foreign Office files, dated 17 March 1938.
-
- “Most honored Minister of Foreign Affairs:
-
-
- “In our deeply felt joy over the fortunate turn of events in
- Austria we feel it our duty to express our gratitude to all
- those who had a share in this new grand achievement of our
- Führer.
-
-
-
- “I beg you, most honored Minister, to accept accordingly the
- sincere thanks of the Sudeten Germans herewith.
-
-
-
- “We shall show our appreciation to the Führer by doubled efforts
- in the service of the Greater German policy.
-
-
-
- “The new situation requires a re-examination of the Sudeten
- German policy. For this purpose I beg to ask you for the
- opportunity of a very early personal talk.
-
-
-
- “In view of the necessity of such a clarification I have
- postponed the nation-wide Party Congress, originally scheduled
- for 26th and 27th of March 1938, for 4 weeks.
-
-
-
- “I would appreciate it if the Ambassador, Dr. Eisenlohr, and two
- of my closest associates would be allowed to participate in the
- requested talks.
-
- “Heil Hitler. Loyally yours”—signed—“Konrad Henlein.”
-
-You will note that Henlein was quite aware that the seizure of Austria
-made possible the adoption of a new policy towards Czechoslovakia. You
-will also note that he was already in close enough contact with
-Ribbentrop and the German Minister in Prague to feel free to suggest
-early personal talks.
-
-Ribbentrop was not unreceptive to Henlein’s suggestion. The
-conversations Henlein had proposed took place in the Foreign Office in
-Berlin on the 29th of March 1938. The previous day Henlein had conferred
-with Hitler himself.
-
-I offer in evidence Document Number 2788-PS as Exhibit USA-95, captured
-German Foreign Office notes of the conference on the 29th of March. I
-read the first two paragraphs:
-
- “In this conference the gentlemen enumerated in the enclosed
- list participated.
-
-
-
- “The Reich Minister started out by emphasizing the necessity to
- keep the conference which had been scheduled strictly a secret.
- He then explained, in view of the directives which the Führer
- himself had given to Konrad Henlein personally yesterday
- afternoon, that there were two questions which were of
- outstanding importance for the conduct of policy of the Sudeten
- German Party.”
-
-I will omit the discussion of the claims of the Sudeten Germans and
-resume the minutes of this meeting in the middle of the last paragraph
-of the first page of the English translation, with the sentence
-beginning, “The aim of the negotiations.”
-
- “The aim of the negotiations to be carried out by the Sudeten
- German Party with the Czechoslovakian Government is finally
- this: To avoid entry into the Government by the extension and
- gradual specification of the demands to be made. It must be
- emphasized clearly in the negotiations that the Sudeten German
- Party alone is the party to the negotiations with the
- Czechoslovakian Government, not the Reich Cabinet. The Reich
- Cabinet itself must refuse to appear toward the government in
- Prague or toward London and Paris as the advocate or pacemaker
- of the Sudeten German demands. It is a self-evident prerequisite
- that during the impending discussion with the Czechoslovak
- Government the Sudeten Germans should be firmly controlled by
- Konrad Henlein, should maintain quiet and discipline, and should
- avoid indiscretions. The assurances already given by Konrad
- Henlein in this connection were satisfactory.
-
-
-
- “Following these general explanations of the Reichsminister, the
- demands of the Sudeten German Party from the Czechoslovak
- Government, as contained in the enclosure, were discussed and
- approved in principle. For further co-operation, Konrad Henlein
- was instructed to keep in the closest possible touch with the
- Reichsminister and the head of the Central Office for Racial
- Germans, as well as the German Minister in Prague, as the local
- representative of the Foreign Minister. The task of the German
- Minister in Prague would be to support the demand of the Sudeten
- German Party as reasonable—not officially, but in more private
- talks with the Czechoslovak politicians, without exerting any
- direct influence on the extent of the demands of the Party.
-
-
-
- “In conclusion, there was a discussion whether it would be
- useful if the Sudeten German Party would co-operate with other
- minorities in Czechoslovakia, especially with the Slovaks. The
- Foreign Minister decided that the Party should have the
- discretion to keep a loose contact with other minority groups if
- the adoption of a parallel course by them might appear
- appropriate.
-
-
-
- “Berlin, 29 March 1938,
-
-
-
- “R”—for Ribbentrop.
-
-Not the least interesting aspect of this secret meeting is the list of
-those who attended: Konrad Henlein; his principal deputy, Karl Hermann
-Frank; and two others represented the Sudeten German Party. Professor
-Haushofer, the geopolitician, and SS Obergruppenführer Lorenz
-represented the Volksdeutsche Mittelstelle (the Central Office for
-Racial Germans). The Foreign Office was represented by a delegation of
-eight. These eight included Ribbentrop, who presided at the meeting and
-did most of the talking; Von Mackensen; Weizsäcker and Minister
-Eisenlohr from the German Legation at Prague.
-
-In May, Henlein came to Berlin for more conversations with the Nazi
-conspirators. At this time the plans for Case Green, for the attack on
-the Czechs, were already on paper, and it may be assumed that Henlein
-was briefed on the role he was to play during the summer months.
-
-I again quote from General Jodl’s diary, Document 1780-PS, the entry for
-22 May 1938: “Fundamental conference between the Führer and K. Henlein
-(see enclosure).” The enclosure unfortunately is missing from Jodl’s
-diary.
-
-The Tribunal will recall that in his speech in Vienna Henlein had
-admitted that he had been selected by the Nazi conspirators in the fall
-of 1933 to take over the political leadership of the Sudeten Germans.
-The documents I have just read show conclusively the nature of Henlein’s
-mission. They demonstrate that Henlein’s policy, his propaganda, even
-his speeches, were controlled by Berlin.
-
-I will now show that from the year 1935 the Sudeten German Party was
-secretly subsidized by the German Foreign Office. I offer in evidence
-Document 3059-PS as Exhibit USA-96, another secret memorandum captured
-in the German Foreign Office file.
-
-This memorandum, signed by Woermann and dated Berlin, 19 August 1938,
-was occasioned by the request of the Henlein Party for additional funds.
-I read from that document:
-
- “The Sudeten German Party has been subsidized by the Foreign
- Office regularly since 1935 with certain amounts, consisting of
- a monthly payment of 15,000 marks; 12,000 marks of this are
- transmitted to the Prague Legation for disbursement and 3,000
- marks are paid out to the Berlin representation of the Party
- (Bureau Bürger). In the course of the last few months the tasks
- assigned to the Bureau Bürger have increased considerably due to
- the current negotiations with the Czech Government. The number
- of pamphlets and maps which are produced and disseminated has
- risen; the propaganda activity in the press has grown immensely;
- the expense accounts have increased especially because due to
- the necessity for continuous good information, the expenses for
- trips to Prague, London, and Paris (including the financing of
- travels of Sudeten German deputies and agents) have grown
- considerably heavier. Under these conditions the Bureau Bürger
- is no longer able to get along with the monthly allowance of
- 3,000 marks if it is to do everything required. Therefore Herr
- Bürger has applied to this office for an increase of this amount
- from 3,000 marks to 5,500 marks monthly. In view of the
- considerable increase in the business transacted by the bureau,
- and of the importance which marks the activity of the bureau in
- regard to the co-operation with the Foreign Office, this desire
- deserves the strongest support.
-
-
-
- “Herewith submitted to the personnel department with a request
- for approval. Increase of payments with retroactive effect from
- 1 August is requested.”—signed—“Woermann.”
-
-Under this signature is a footnote:
-
- “Volksdeutsche Mittelstelle”—Central Office for Racial
- Germans—“will be informed by the Political
- Department”—handwritten marginal note.
-
-We may only conjecture what financial support the Henlein movement
-received from other agencies of the German Government.
-
-As the military preparations to attack Czechoslovakia moved forward in
-the late summer and early fall, the Nazi command made good use of
-Henlein and his followers. About the 1st of August, the Air Attaché in
-the German Legation in Prague, Major Moericke, acting on instructions
-from Luftwaffe headquarters in Berlin, visited the Sudeten German leader
-in Freudenthal. With his assistance and in the company of the local
-leader of the FS, the Henlein equivalent of the SS, he reconnoitered the
-surrounding countryside to select possible airfield sites for German
-use. The FS leader, a Czech reservist then on leave, was in the uniform
-of the Czech Army, a fact which, as the Attaché noted, served as
-excellent camouflage.
-
-I now read from the enclosure to Document 1536-PS, which I offered in
-evidence earlier and which bears United States Exhibit Number 83. I have
-already read the first four paragraphs of the enclosure:
-
- “The manufacturer M. is the head of the Sudeten German Glider
- Pilots in Fr.”—that’s Freudenthal—“and said to be absolutely
- reliable by my trusted man. My personal impression fully
- confirmed this judgment. No hint of my identity was made to him,
- although I had the impression that M. knew who I was.
-
-
-
- “At my request, with which he complied without any question, M.
- travelled with me over the country in question. We used M.’s
- private car for the trip.
-
-
-
- “As M. did not know the country around Beneschau sufficiently
- well, he took with him the local leader of the FS, a Czech
- reservist of the Sudeten German Racial Group, at the time on
- leave. He was in uniform. For reasons of camouflage, I was
- entirely in agreement with this—without actually saying so.
-
-
-
- “As M., during the course of the drive, observed that I
- photographed large open spaces out of the car, he said. ‘Aha, so
- you’re looking for airfields!’ I answered that we supposed that
- in the case of any serious trouble, the Czechs would put their
- airfields immediately behind the line of fortifications. I had
- the intention of looking over the country from that point of
- view.”
-
-In the latter part of the Air Attaché’s report, reference is made to the
-presence of reliable agents and informers, which he called “V-Leute”
-(V-people), apparently drawn from the ranks of the Henlein party in this
-area. It was indicated that these agents were in touch with the “Abwehr
-Stelle” (the Intelligence Office) in Breslau.
-
-In September, when the Nazi propaganda campaign was reaching its height,
-the Nazis were not satisfied with playing merely on the Sudeten demands
-for autonomy. They attempted to use the Slovaks as well. On the 19th of
-September the Foreign Office in Berlin sent a telegram to the German
-Legation in Prague. I offer the document in evidence, Number 2858-PS,
-Exhibit USA-97, another captured German Foreign Office document—a
-telegram:
-
- “Please inform Deputy Kundt that Konrad Henlein requests to get
- in touch with the Slovaks at once and induce them to start their
- demands for autonomy tomorrow.”—signed—“Altenburg.”
-
-Kundt was Henlein’s representative in Prague.
-
-As the harassed Czech Government sought to stem the disorders in the
-Sudetenland, the German Foreign Office turned to threatening diplomatic
-tactics in a deliberate effort to increase the tension between the two
-countries. I offer in evidence Documents 2855-PS, 2854-PS, 2853-PS, and
-2856-PS, as United States Exhibits respectively 98, 99, 100, and 101.
-Four telegrams from the Foreign Office in Berlin to the Legation in
-Prague were dispatched between the 16th and 24th of September 1938. They
-are self-explanatory. The first is dated 16 September.
-
- “Tonight 150 subjects of Czechoslovakia of Czech blood were
- arrested in Germany. This measure is an answer to the arrest of
- Sudeten Germans since the Führer’s speech of 12 September. I
- request you to ascertain as soon as possible the number of
- Sudeten Germans arrested since 12 September as far as possible.
- The number of those arrested there is estimated conservatively
- at 400 by the Gestapo. Cable report.”
-
-A handwritten note follows:
-
- “Impossible for me to ascertain these facts as already
- communicated to the chargé d’affaires.”
-
-The second telegram is dated September 17:
-
- “Most urgent.
-
-
-
- “I. Request to inform the local government immediately of the
- following:
-
-
-
- “The Reich Government has decided that:
-
-
-
- “(a) Immediately as many Czech subjects of Czech descent,
- Czech-speaking Jews included, will be arrested in Germany as
- Sudeten Germans have been in Czechoslovakia since the beginning
- of the week; (b) If any Sudeten Germans should be executed
- pursuant to a death sentence on the basis of martial law, an
- equal number of Czechs will be shot in Germany.”
-
-The third telegram was sent on 24 September. I read it:
-
- “According to information received here, Czechs have arrested
- two German frontier policemen, seven customs officials, and 30
- railway officials. As counter measure all the Czech staff in
- Marschegg were arrested. We are prepared to exchange the
- arrested Czech officials for the German officials. Please
- approach Government there and wire result.”
-
-On the same day the fourth telegram was dispatched, and I read the last
-paragraph:
-
- “‘Confidential’. Yielding of Czech hostages arrested here for
- the prevention of the execution of any sentences passed by
- military courts against Sudeten Germans is, of course, out of
- question.”
-
-In the latter half of September, Henlein devoted himself and his
-followers wholeheartedly to the preparations for the coming German
-attack. About 15 September, after Hitler’s provocative Nuremberg speech
-in which he accused Beneš of torturing and planning the extermination of
-the Sudeten Germans, Henlein and Karl Hermann Frank, one of his
-principal deputies, fled to Germany to avoid arrest by the Czech
-Government. In Germany Henlein broadcast over the powerful Reichsender
-radio station his determination to lead the Sudeten Germans home to the
-Reich and denounced what he called the Hussites-Bolshevist criminals of
-Prague. From his headquarters in a castle at Donndorf, outside Bayreuth,
-he kept in close touch with the leading Nazi conspirators, including
-Hitler and Himmler. He directed activities along the border and began
-the organization of the Sudeten German Free Corps, an auxiliary military
-organization. You will find these events set forth in the Czechoslovak
-official government report, 998-PS, which has already been offered as
-Exhibit USA-91.
-
-Henlein’s activities were carried on with the advice and assistance of
-the German Nazi leaders. Lieutenant Colonel Köchling was assigned to
-Henlein in an advisory capacity to assist with the Sudeten German Free
-Corps. In a conference with Hitler on the night of September 17,
-Köchling received far-reaching military powers.
-
-At this conference, the purpose of the Free Corps was frankly
-stated—the maintenance of disorder and clashes. I read from Item 25, a
-handwritten note labelled “most secret,” on Page 49 of the Schmundt
-file, Document 388-PS:
-
- “Most secret. Last night conference took place between Führer
- and Lieutenant Colonel Köchling. Duration of conference 7
- minutes. Lieutenant Colonel Köchling remains directly
- responsible to OKW. He will be assigned to Konrad Henlein in an
- advisory capacity. He received far-reaching military plenary
- powers from the Führer. The Sudeten German Free Corps remains
- responsible to Konrad Henlein alone. Purpose: Protection of the
- Sudeten Germans and maintenance of disturbances and clashes. The
- Free Corps will be established in Germany. Armament only with
- Austrian weapons. Activities of Free Corps to begin as soon as
- possible.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Would that be a good place to break off for 10 minutes?
-
- [_A recess was taken._]
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: May it please the Tribunal, General Jodl’s diary again
-gives a further insight into the position of the Henlein Free Corps. At
-this time, the Free Corps was engaged in active skirmishing along the
-Czech border, furnishing incidents and provocation in the desired
-manner. I quote from the entries in the Jodl diary, for the 19th and
-20th September 1938, at Page 6 of the Document 1780-PS, which is Exhibit
-USA-72.
-
- “19 September: Order is given to the Army High Command to take
- care of the Sudeten German Free Corps.
-
-
-
- “20 September: England and France have handed over their demands
- in Prague, the contents of which are still unknown. The
- activities of the Free Corps start assuming such an extent that
- they may bring about, and already have brought about,
- consequences harmful to the plans of the Army. (Transferring
- rather strong units of the Czech Army to the proximity of the
- border.) By checking with Lieutenant Colonel Köchling, I attempt
- to lead these activities into normal channels.
-
-
-
- “Toward the evening the Führer also takes a hand and gives
- permission to act only with groups up to 12 men each, after the
- approval of the corps headquarters.”
-
-A report from Henlein’s staff, which was found in Hitler’s headquarters,
-boasted of the offensive operations of the Free Corps. It is Item 30 of
-the Schmundt file, Page 54 of Document 388-PS. I read the last two
-paragraphs:
-
- “Since 19 September, in more than 300 missions, the Free Corps
- has executed its task with an amazing spirit of attack,”—now,
- that word “attack” was changed by superimposition to
- “defense”—“and with a willingness often reaching a degree of
- unqualified self-sacrifice. The result of the first phase of its
- activities: More than 1500 prisoners, 25 MG’s”—which I suppose
- means machine guns—“and a large amount of other weapons and
- equipment, aside from serious losses in dead and wounded
- suffered by the enemy.”—And there was superimposed in place of
- “enemy”, “the Czech terrorists.”
-
-In his headquarters in the castle at Donndorf, Henlein was in close
-touch with Admiral Canaris of the Intelligence Division of the OKW and
-with the SS and the SA. The liaison officer between the SS and Henlein
-was Oberführer Gottlob Berger (SS).
-
-I now offer in evidence Document 3036-PS as Exhibit USA-102, which is an
-affidavit executed by Gottlob Berger; and in connection with that
-affidavit, I wish to submit to the Tribunal that it presents, we think,
-quite a different question of proof from the Schuschnigg affidavits
-which were not admitted in evidence by the Court. Schuschnigg, of
-course, was a neutral and non-Nazi Austrian. He was not a member of this
-conspiracy, and I can well understand that the Court rejected his
-affidavit for these reasons.
-
-This man was a Nazi. He was serving in this conspiracy. He has made this
-affidavit. We think the affidavit has probative value and should be
-admitted by the Tribunal under the pertinent provision of the Charter,
-which says that you will accept in evidence any evidence having
-probative value. We think it would be unfair to require us to bring here
-as a witness a man who would certainly be a hostile witness, who is to
-us a member of this conspiracy, and it seems to us that the affidavit
-should be admitted with leave to the defendants, if they wish, to call
-the author of the affidavit as their witness. I should have added that
-this man was a prominent member of the SS which is charged before you as
-being a criminal organization, and we think the document is perfectly
-competent in evidence as an admission against interest by a prominent
-member of the SS organization.
-
-DR. STAHMER: Mr. President, the Defense objects to the use of this
-document. This document was drawn up as late as 22 November 1945, here
-in Nuremberg, and the witness Berger could, therefore, be brought to
-Court without any difficulty. We must insist that he be heard here on
-the subjects on which the Prosecution wishes to introduce his testimony.
-That would be the only way in which the Defense could have an
-opportunity of cross-examining the witness and thereby contribute to
-obtaining objective truth.
-
- [_Pause in the proceedings while the Tribunal consulted._]
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal upholds the objection and will not hear this
-affidavit. It is open to either the Prosecution or the defendants, of
-course, to call the man who made the affidavit. That is all I have to
-say. We have upheld your objection.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: If the Tribunal please, I had another affidavit by one
-Alfred Helmut Naujocks which, I take it, will be excluded under this
-same ruling, and which, therefore, I shall not offer.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: If the circumstances are the same.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: Yes, I might merely refer to it for identification because
-it is in your document books.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Very well.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: It is Document 3029-PS.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Very well. That also will be rejected as evidence.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: Yes. Offensive operations along the Czechoslovakian border
-were not confined to skirmishes carried out by the Free Corps. Two
-SS-Totenkopf (Deathhead) battalions were operating across the border in
-Czech territory near Asch.
-
-I quote now from Item 36 in the Schmundt file, an OKW most-secret order,
-signed by Jodl, and dated 28 September. This appears at Page 61 Of the
-Schmundt file:
-
- “Supreme Command of the Armed Forces, Berlin, 28 September 1938;
- 45 copies, 16th copy; most secret.
-
-
-
- “Subject: Four SS-Totenkopf battalions subordinate to the
- Commander-in-Chief Army.
-
-
-
- “To: Reichsführer SS and Chief of the German Police (SS Central
- Office) (36th copy).
-
-
-
- “By order of the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces the
- following battalions of the SS Deathhead organization will be
- under the command of the Commander-in-Chief of the Army with
- immediate effect.
-
-
-
- “Second and Third Battalions of the 2d SS-Totenkopf Regiment
- Brandenburg at present in Brieg (Upper Silesia).
-
-
-
- “First and Second Battalions of the 3d SS-Totenkopf Regiment
- Thuringia, at present in Radebeul and Kötzschenbroda near
- Dresden.
-
-
-
- “Commander-in-Chief of the Army is requested to deploy these
- battalions for the West, (Upper Rhine) according to the Führer’s
- instructions.
-
-
-
- “These SS-Totenkopf units now operating in the Asch promontory
- (I and II Battalions of the SS-Totenkopf Regiment Oberbayern)
- will come under the Commander-in-Chief of the Army only when
- they return to German Reich territory, or when the Army crosses
- the German-Czech frontier.
-
-
-
- “It is requested that all further arrangements be made between
- Commander-in-Chief of the Army and Reichsführer SS (SS Central
- Office).
-
-
-
- “For the Chief of the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces,
- Jodl.”
-
-According to the 25 September entry in General Jodl’s diary, these
-SS-Totenkopf battalions were operating in this area on direct orders
-from Hitler. As the time X-Day approached, the disposition of the Free
-Corps became a matter of dispute.
-
-On 26 September Himmler issued an order to the Chief of Staff of the
-Sudeten German Free Corps, directing that the Free Corps come under
-control of the Reichsführer SS in the event of German invasion of
-Czechoslovakia. This document is Item 37 in the Schmundt file, on Page
-62.
-
-On 28 September Defendant Keitel directed that as soon as the German
-Army crosses the Czech border, the Free Corps will take orders from the
-OKH. In this most-secret order of the OKW, Keitel discloses that
-Henlein’s men are already operating in Czechoslovak territory.
-
-I read now from Item 34 of the Schmundt file on Page 58, the last three
-paragraphs of this most-secret order:
-
- “For the Henlein Free Corps and units subordinate to it the
- principle remains valid, that they receive instructions direct
- from the Führer and that they carry out their operations only in
- conjunction with the competent corps headquarters. The advance
- units of the Free Corps will have to report to the local
- commander of the frontier guard immediately before crossing the
- frontier.
-
-
-
- “Those units remaining forward of the frontier should, in their
- own interests, get into communication with the frontier guard as
- often as possible.
-
-
-
- “As soon as the Army crosses the Czechoslovak border the Henlein
- Free Corps will be subordinate to the OKH. Thus it will be
- expedient to assign a sector to the Free Corps, even now, which
- can be fitted into the scheme of army boundaries later.”
-
-On 30 September, when it became clear that the Munich Settlement would
-result in a peaceful occupation of the Sudetenland, the Defendant Keitel
-ordered that the Free Corps Henlein, in its present composition, be
-placed under the command of Himmler.
-
-I read from Item 38, at Page 63, of the Schmundt file:
-
- “1. Attachment of the Henlein Free Corps. The Supreme Commander
- of the Armed Forces has just ordered that the Henlein Free Corps
- in its present composition be placed under command of
- Reichsführer SS and the Chief of German Police. It is therefore
- not at the immediate disposal of OKH as field unit for the
- invasion, but is to be later drawn in, like the rest of the
- police forces, for police duties in agreement with the
- Reichsführer SS.”
-
-I have been able, if the Tribunal please, to ascertain the dates the
-Tribunal asked about before the recess.
-
-The first visit of Chamberlain to Germany in connection with this matter
-was 15 September 1938. Chamberlain flew to Munich and arrived at 12:30
-o’clock on 15 September. He went by train from Munich to Berchtesgaden,
-arriving at 1600 hours, by car to Berghof, arriving about at 1650, for
-three talks with Hitler. On 16 September Chamberlain returned by air to
-London.
-
-The second visit was on 22 September. Chamberlain met with Hitler at Bad
-Godesberg at 1700 hours for a 3-hour discussion, and it was a deadlock.
-On 23 September discussions were resumed at 2230 hours. On 24 September
-Chamberlain returned to London.
-
-The third visit was on 29 September. Chamberlain flew to Munich and the
-meeting of Chamberlain, Mussolini, Daladier, and Hitler took place at
-the Brown House at 1330 and continued until 0230 hours on 30 September
-1938, a Friday, when the Munich Agreement was signed. Under the threat
-of war by the Nazi conspirators, and with war in fact about to be
-launched, the United Kingdom and France concluded the Munich Pact with
-Germany and Italy at that early morning hour of 30 September 1938. This
-Treaty will be presented by the British prosecutor. It is sufficient for
-me to say of it at this point that it was the cession of the Sudetenland
-by Czechoslovakia to Germany. Czechoslovakia was required to acquiesce.
-
-The Munich Pact will be TC-23 of the British documents.
-
-On 1 October 1938 German troops began the occupation of the Sudetenland.
-During the conclusion of the Munich Pact the Wehrmacht had been fully
-deployed for the attack, awaiting only the word of Hitler to begin the
-assault.
-
-With the cession of the Sudetenland new orders were issued. On 30
-September the Defendant Keitel promulgated Directive Number 1 on
-occupation of territory separated from Czechoslovakia. This is Item 39
-at Page 64 of the Schmundt file. This directive contained a timetable
-for the occupation of sectors of former Czech territory between 1 and 10
-October and specified the tasks of the German Armed Forces.
-
-I read now the fourth and fifth paragraphs of that document:
-
- “2. The present degree of mobilized preparedness is to be
- maintained completely, for the present also in the West. Order
- for the rescinding of measures taken, is held over.
-
-
-
- “The entry is to be planned in such a way that it can easily be
- converted into operation Grün.”
-
-It contains one other important provision about the Henlein forces, and
-I quote from the list under the heading “a. Army”:
-
- “Henlein Free Corps. All combat action on the part of the
- Volunteer Corps must cease as from 1st October.”
-
-The Schmundt file contains a number of additional secret OKW directives
-giving instructions for the occupation of the Sudetenland. I think I
-need not read them, as they are not essential to the proof of our case.
-They merely indicate the scope of the preparations of the OKW.
-
-Directives specifying the occupational area of the Army, the units under
-its command, arranging for communication facilities, supply, and
-propaganda, and giving instructions to the various departments of the
-Government were issued over Defendant Keitel’s signature on 30
-September. These are Items 40, 41, and 42 in the Schmundt file. I think
-it is sufficient to read the caption and the signature.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: What page?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: Page 66 of the English version. This is the Supreme
-Commander of the Armed Forces, most secret:
-
- “Special Orders Number 1 to Directive Number 1. Subject:
- Occupation of Territory Ceded by
- Czechoslovakia.”—Signature—“Keitel.”
-
-Item 41 is on Page 70 of the Schmundt file.
-
- “Supreme Command of the Armed Forces; most secret IV a. Most
- secret; subject: Occupation of Sudeten-German
- Territory.”—Signed—“Keitel.”
-
-Item 42 in the Schmundt file is on Page 75, again most secret.
-
- “Subject: Occupation of the Sudeten-German
- Area.”—Signed—“Keitel.”
-
-By 10 October Von Brauchitsch was able to report to Hitler that German
-troops had reached the demarcation line and that the order for the
-occupation of the Sudetenland had been fulfilled. The OKW requested
-Hitler’s permission to rescind Case Green, to withdraw troops from the
-occupied area, and to relieve the OKH of executive powers in the
-Sudeten-German area as of 15 October. These are Items 46, 47, and 48 in
-the Schmundt file.
-
-Item 46, which appears at Page 77, is a letter from Berlin, dated
-October 10, 1938, signed by Von Brauchitsch:
-
- “My Führer:
-
-
-
- “I have to report that the troops will reach the demarcation
- line as ordered, by this evening. Insofar as further military
- operations are not required, the order for the occupation of the
- country which was given to me will thus have been fulfilled. The
- guarding of the new frontier line will be taken over by the
- reinforced frontier supervision service in the next few days.
-
-
-
- “It is thus no longer a military necessity to combine the
- administration of the Sudetenland with the command of the troops
- of the Army under the control of one person.
-
-
-
- “I therefore ask you, my Führer, to relieve me, with effect from
- 15 October 1938, of the charge assigned to me: That of
- exercising executive powers in Sudeten-German Territory.
-
-
-
- “Heil, my Führer, Von Brauchitsch.”
-
-Item 47 of the Schmundt file, appearing on Page 78, is a secret telegram
-from the OKW to the Führer’s train, Lieutenant Colonel Schmundt:
-
- “If evening report shows that occupation of Zone 5 has been
- completed without incident, OKW intends to order further
- demobilization.
-
-
-
- “Principle: 1) To suspend operation Grün but maintain a
- sufficient state of preparedness on part of Army and Luftwaffe
- to make intervention possible if necessary. 2) All units not
- needed to be withdrawn from the occupied area and reduced to
- peacetime status, as population of occupied area is heavily
- burdened by the massing of troops.”
-
-Skipping to below the OKW signature, this appears, at the left:
-
- “Führer’s decision:
-
-
-
- “1. Agreed.
-
-
-
- “2. Suggestion to be made on the 13 October in Essen by General
- Keitel. Decision will then be reached.”
-
-On the same date additional demobilization of the forces in the
-Sudetenland was ordered by Hitler and Defendant Keitel. Three days later
-the OKW requested Hitler’s consent to the reversion of the RAD (Labor
-Corps) from the control of the Armed Forces. These are Items 52 and 53
-in the Schmundt file.
-
-As the German forces entered the Sudetenland, Henlein’s Sudetendeutsche
-Partei was merged with the NSDAP of Hitler. The two men who had fled to
-Hitler’s protection in mid-September, Henlein and Karl Hermann Frank,
-were appointed Gauleiter and Deputy Gauleiter, respectively, of the
-Sudetengau. In the parts of the Czechoslovak Republic that were still
-free the Sudetendeutsche Partei constituted itself as the National
-Socialistic German Worker Party in Czechoslovakia, NSDAP in
-Czechoslovakia, under the direction of Kundt, another of Henlein’s
-deputies.
-
-The Tribunal will find these events set forth in the Czechoslovak
-official report, Document 998-PS.
-
-The stage was now prepared for the next move of the Nazi conspirators,
-the plan for the conquest of the remainder of Czechoslovakia. With the
-occupation of the Sudetenland and the inclusion of German-speaking
-Czechs within the Greater Reich, it might have been expected that the
-Nazi conspirators would be satisfied. Thus far in their program of
-aggression the defendants had used as a pretext for their conquests the
-union of the Volksdeutsche, the people of German descent, with the
-Reich. Now, after Munich, the Volksdeutsche in Czechoslovakia have been
-substantially all returned to German rule.
-
-On 26 September, at the Sportpalast in Berlin, Hitler spoke to the
-world. I now refer and invite the notice of the Tribunal to the
-_Völkischer Beobachter_, Munich edition, special edition for 27
-September 1938, in which this speech is quoted. I read from Page 2,
-Column 1, quoting from Hitler:
-
- “And now we are confronted with the last problem which must be
- solved and will be solved. It is the last territorial claim”
- . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Is this document in our documents?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: No. I am asking the Court to take judicial notice of that.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Very well.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: It is a well-known German publication.
-
- “It is the last territorial claim which I have to make in
- Europe, but it is a claim from which I will not swerve and which
- I will satisfy, God willing.” (Document Number 2358-PS.)
-
-And further:
-
- “I have little to explain. I am grateful to Mr. Chamberlain for
- all his efforts, and I have assured him that the German people
- want nothing but peace; but I have also told him that I cannot
- go back beyond the limits of our patience.”
-
-This is Page 2, Column 1.
-
- “I assured him, moreover, and I repeat it here, that when this
- problem is solved there will be no more territorial problems for
- Germany in Europe. And I further assured him that from the
- moment, when Czechoslovakia solves its other problems—that is
- to say, when the Czechs have come to an arrangement with their
- other minorities peacefully and without oppression—I will no
- longer be interested in the Czech State. And that, as far as I
- am concerned, I will guarantee it. We don’t want any Czechs!”
-
-The major portion of the passage I have quoted will be contained in
-Document TC-28, which I think, will be offered by the British
-prosecutor.
-
-Yet two weeks later Hitler and Defendant Keitel were preparing estimates
-of the military forces required to break Czechoslovak resistance in
-Bohemia and Moravia.
-
-I now read from Item 48, at Page 82, of the Schmundt file. This is a
-top-secret telegram sent by Keitel to Hitler’s headquarters on 11
-October 1938 in answer to four questions which Hitler had propounded to
-the OKW. I think it is sufficient merely to read the questions which
-Hitler had propounded:
-
- “Question 1. What reinforcements are necessary in the situation
- to break all Czech resistance in Bohemia and Moravia?
-
-
-
- “Question 2. How much time is requested for the regrouping or
- moving up of new forces?
-
-
-
- “Question 3. How much time will be required for the same purpose
- if it is executed after the intended demobilization and return
- measures?
-
-
-
- “Question 4. How much time would be required to achieve the
- state of readiness of 1 October?”
-
-On 21 October, the same day on which the administration of the
-Sudetenland was handed over to the civilian authorities, a directive
-outlining plans for the conquest of the remainder of Czechoslovakia was
-signed by Hitler and initialed by the Defendant Keitel.
-
-I now offer in evidence Document C-136 as Exhibit USA-104, a top-secret
-order of which 10 copies were made, this being the first copy, signed in
-ink by Keitel.
-
-In this order, issued only 3 weeks after the winning of the Sudetenland,
-the Nazi conspirators are already looking forward to new conquests. I
-quote the first part of the body of the document:
-
- “The future tasks for the Armed Forces and the preparations for
- the conduct of war resulting from these tasks will be laid down
- by me in a later directive. Until this directive comes into
- force the Armed Forces must be prepared at all times for the
- following eventualities:
-
-
-
- “1) The securing of the frontiers of Germany and the protection
- against surprise air attacks.
-
-
-
- “2) The liquidation of the remainder of Czechoslovakia.
-
-
-
- “3) The occupation of the Memel.”
-
-And then proceeding, the statement following Number 2:
-
- “Liquidation of the remainder of Czechoslovakia: It must be
- possible to smash at any time the remainder of Czechoslovakia if
- her policy should become hostile towards Germany.
-
-
-
- “The preparations to be made by the Armed Forces for this
- contingency will be considerably smaller in extent than those
- for Grün; they must, however, guarantee a continuous and
- considerably higher state of preparedness, since planned
- mobilization measures have been dispensed with. The
- organization, order of battle, and state of readiness of the
- units earmarked for that purpose are in peacetime to be so
- arranged for a surprise assault that Czechoslovakia herself will
- be deprived of all possibility of organized resistance. The
- object is the swift occupation of Bohemia and Moravia and the
- cutting off of Slovakia. The preparations should be such that at
- the same time ‘Grenzsicherung West’”—the measures of frontier
- defense in the West—“can be carried out.
-
-
-
- “The detailed mission of Army and Air Force is as follows:
-
-
-
- “a. Army: The units stationed in the vicinity of Bohemia-Moravia
- and several motorized divisions are to be earmarked for a
- surprise type of attack. Their number will be determined by the
- forces remaining in Czechoslovakia; a quick and decisive success
- must be assured. The assembly and preparations for the attack
- must be worked out. Forces not needed will be kept in readiness
- in such a manner that they may be either committed in securing
- the frontiers or sent after the attack army.
-
-
-
- “b. Air Force: The quick advance of the German Army is to be
- assured by early elimination of the Czech Air Force. For this
- purpose the commitment in a surprise attack from peacetime bases
- has to be prepared. Whether for this purpose still stronger
- forces may be required can be determined from the development of
- the military-political situation in Czechoslovakia only. At the
- same time a simultaneous assembly of the remainder of the
- offensive forces against the West must be prepared.”
-
-And then Part 3 goes on under the heading, “Annexation of the Memel
-District.”
-
-It is signed by Adolf Hitler and authenticated by Defendant Keitel. It
-was distributed to the OKH, to Defendant Göring’s Luftwaffe, and to
-Defendant Raeder at Navy headquarters.
-
-Two months later, on 17 December 1938, Defendant Keitel issued an
-appendix to the original order, stating that by command of the Führer
-preparations for the liquidation of Czechoslovakia are to continue.
-
-I offer in evidence Document C-138 as Exhibit USA-105, and other
-captured OKW documents classified top secret.
-
-Distribution of this order was the same as for the 21 October order. I
-shall read the body of this order.
-
- “Corollary to Directive of 21. 10. 38.
-
-
-
- “Reference: ‘Liquidation of the Rest of Czechoslovakia.’ The
- Führer has given the following additional order:
-
-
-
- “The preparations for this eventuality are to continue on the
- assumption that no resistance worth mentioning is to be
- expected.
-
-
-
- “To the outside world too it must clearly appear that it is
- merely an action of pacification, and not a warlike undertaking.
-
-
-
- “The action must therefore be carried out by the peacetime Armed
- Forces only, without reinforcements from mobilization. The
- necessary readiness for action, especially the ensuring that the
- most necessary supplies are brought up, must be effected by
- adjustment within the units.
-
-
-
- “Similarly the units of the Army detailed for the march in must,
- as a general rule, leave their stations only during the night
- prior to the crossing of the frontier, and will not previously
- form up systematically on the frontier. The transport necessary
- for previous organization should be limited to the minimum and
- will be camouflaged as much as possible. Necessary movements, if
- any, of single units and particularly of motorized forces, to
- the troop training areas situated near the frontier, must have
- the approval of the Führer.
-
-
-
- “The Air Force should take action in accordance with the similar
- general directives.
-
-
-
- “For the same reasons the exercise of executive power by the
- Supreme Command of the Army is laid down only for the newly
- occupied territory and only for a short
- period.”—Signed—“Keitel.”
-
-I invite the attention of the Tribunal to the fact that this particular
-copy of this order, an original carbon signed in ink by Keitel, was the
-one sent to the OKM, the German Naval headquarters. It bears the
-initials of Fricke, head of the Operation Division of the naval war
-staff; Schniewind, Chief of Staff; and of Defendant Raeder.
-
-As the Wehrmacht moved forward, with plans for what it clearly
-considered would be an easy victory, the Foreign Office played its part.
-In a discussion of means of improving German-Czech relations with the
-Czech Foreign Minister Chvalkovsky in Berlin on 31 January 1939,
-Defendant Ribbentrop urged upon the Czech Government a quick reduction
-in the size of the Czech Army. I offer in evidence Document 2795-PS as
-Exhibit USA-106, captured German Foreign Office notes of this
-discussion. I will read only the footnote, which is in Ribbentrop’s
-handwriting:
-
- “I mentioned to Chvalkovsky especially that a quick reduction in
- the Czech Army would be decisive in our judgment.”
-
-Does the Court propose sitting beyond 4:30?
-
-THE PRESIDENT: No, I think not. The Tribunal will adjourn.
-
- [_The Tribunal adjourned until 4 December 1945 at 1000 hours._]
-
-
-
-
- TWELFTH DAY
- Tuesday, 4 December 1945
-
-
- _Morning Session_
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I will call on the Chief Prosecutor for Great Britain and
-Northern Ireland.
-
-SIR HARTLEY SHAWCROSS (Chief Prosecutor for the United Kingdom): May it
-please the Tribunal, on an occasion to which reference has and will be
-made, Hitler, the leader of the Nazi conspirators who are now on trial
-before you, is reported as having said, in reference to their warlike
-plans:
-
- “I shall give a propagandist cause for starting the war, never
- mind whether it be true or not. The victor shall not be asked
- later on whether he told the truth or not. In starting and
- making a war, not the right is what matters, but victory—the
- strongest has the right.”
-
-The British Empire with its Allies has twice, within the space of 25
-years, been victorious in wars which have been forced upon it, but it is
-precisely because we realize that victory is not enough, that might is
-not necessarily right, that lasting peace and the rule of international
-law is not to be secured by the strong arm alone, that the British
-nation is taking part in this Trial. There are those who would perhaps
-say that these wretched men should have been dealt with summarily
-without trial by “executive action”; that their power for evil broken,
-they should have been swept aside into oblivion without this elaborate
-and careful investigation into the part which they played in bringing
-this war about: _Vae Victis!_ Let them pay the penalty of defeat. But
-that was not the view of the British Government. Not so would the rule
-of law be raised and strengthened on the international as well as upon
-the municipal plane; not so would future generations realize that right
-is not always on the side of the big battalions; not so would the world
-be made aware that the waging of aggressive war is not only a dangerous
-venture but a criminal one.
-
-Human memory is very short. Apologists for defeated nations are
-sometimes able to play upon the sympathy and magnanimity of their
-victors, so that the true facts, never authoritatively recorded, become
-obscured and forgotten. One has only to recall the circumstances
-following upon the last World War to see the dangers to which, in the
-absence of any authoritative judicial pronouncement, a tolerant or a
-credulous people is exposed. With the passage of time the former tend to
-discount, perhaps because of their very horror, the stories of
-aggression and atrocity that may be handed down; and the latter, the
-credulous, misled by perhaps fanatical and perhaps dishonest
-propagandists, come to believe that it was not they but their opponents
-who were guilty of that which they would themselves condemn. And so we
-believe that this Tribunal, acting, as we know it will act
-notwithstanding its appointment by the victorious powers, with complete
-and judicial objectivity, will provide a contemporary touchstone and an
-authoritative and impartial record to which future historians may turn
-for truth, and future politicians for warning. From this record shall
-future generations know not only what our generation suffered, but also
-that our suffering was the result of crimes, crimes against the laws of
-peoples which the peoples of the world upheld and will continue in the
-future to uphold—to uphold by international co-operation, not based
-merely on military alliances, but grounded, and firmly grounded, in the
-rule of law.
-
-Nor, though this procedure and this Indictment of individuals may be
-novel, is there anything new in the principles which by this prosecution
-we seek to enforce. Ineffective though, alas, the sanctions proved and
-showed to be, the nations of the world had, as it will be my purpose in
-addressing the Tribunal to show, sought to make aggressive war an
-international crime, and although previous tradition has sought to
-punish states rather than individuals, it is both logical and right
-that, if the act of waging war is itself an offense against
-international law, those individuals who shared personal responsibility
-for bringing such wars about should answer personally for the course
-into which they led their states. Again, individual war crimes have long
-been recognized by international law as triable by the courts of those
-states whose nationals have been outraged, at least so long as a state
-of war persists. It would be illogical in the extreme if those who,
-although they may not with their own hands have committed individual
-crimes, were responsible for systematic breaches of the laws of war
-affecting the nationals of many states should escape for that reason. So
-also in regard to Crimes against Humanity. The rights of humanitarian
-intervention on behalf of the rights of man, trampled upon by a state in
-a manner shocking the sense of mankind, has long been considered to form
-part of the recognized law of nations. Here too, the Charter merely
-develops a pre-existing principle. If murder, rapine, and robbery are
-indictable under the ordinary municipal laws of our countries, shall
-those who differ from the common criminal only by the extent and
-systematic nature of their offenses escape accusation?
-
-It is, as I shall show, the view of the British Government that in these
-matters, this Tribunal will be applying to individuals, not the law of
-the victor, but the accepted principles of international usage in a way
-which will, if anything can, promote and fortify the rule of
-international law and safeguard the future peace and security of this
-war-stricken world.
-
-By agreement between the chief prosecutors, it is my task, on behalf of
-the British Government and of the other states associated in this
-Prosecution, to present the case on Count Two of the Indictment and to
-show how these defendants, in conspiracy with each other, and with
-persons not now before this Tribunal, planned and waged a war of
-aggression in breach of the treaty obligations by which, under
-international law, Germany, as other states, has thought to make such
-wars impossible.
-
-The task falls into two parts. The first is to demonstrate the nature
-and the basis of the Crime against Peace, which is constituted under the
-Charter of this Tribunal, by waging wars of aggression and in violation
-of treaties; and the second is to establish beyond all possibility of
-doubt that such wars were waged by these defendants.
-
-As to the first, it would no doubt be sufficient just to say this. It is
-not incumbent upon the Prosecution to prove that wars of aggression and
-wars in violation of international treaties are, or ought to be,
-international crimes. The Charter of this Tribunal has prescribed that
-they are crimes and that the Charter is the statute and the law of this
-Court. Yet, though that is the clear and mandatory law governing the
-jurisdiction of this Tribunal, we feel that we should not be discharging
-our task in the abiding interest of international justice and morality
-unless we showed to the Tribunal, and indeed to the world, the position
-of this provision of the Charter against the general perspective of
-international law. For, just as in the experience of our country, some
-old English statutes were merely declaratory of the common law, so today
-this Charter merely declares and creates a jurisdiction in respect of
-what was already the law of nations.
-
-Nor is it unimportant to emphasize that aspect of the matter, lest there
-may be some, now or hereafter, who might allow their judgment to be
-warped by plausible catchwords or by an uninformed and distorted sense
-of justice towards these defendants. It is not difficult to be misled by
-such criticisms as that resort to war in the past has not been a crime;
-that the power to resort to war is one of the prerogatives of the
-sovereign state; even that this Charter, in constituting wars of
-aggression a crime, has imitated one of the most obnoxious, doctrines of
-National Socialist jurisprudence, namely _post factum_ legislation—that
-the Charter is in this respect reminiscent of bills of attainder—and
-that these proceedings are no more than a measure of vengeance, subtly
-concealed in the garb of judicial proceedings which the victor wreaks
-upon the vanquished. These things may sound plausible—yet they are not
-true. It is, indeed, not necessary to doubt that some aspects of the
-Charter bear upon them the imprint of significant and salutary novelty.
-But it is our submission and our conviction, which we affirm before this
-Tribunal and the world, that fundamentally the provision of the Charter
-which constitutes wars, such wars as these defendants joined in waging
-and in planning a crime, is not in any way an innovation. This provision
-of the Charter does no more than constitute a competent jurisdiction for
-the punishment of what not only the enlightened conscience of mankind
-but the law of nations itself had constituted an international crime
-before this Tribunal was established and this Charter became part of the
-public law of the world.
-
-So first let this be said:
-
-Whilst it may be quite true that there is no body of international rules
-amounting to law in the Austinian sense of a rule imposed by a sovereign
-upon a subject obliged to obey it under some definite sanction; yet for
-50 years or more the people of the world, striving perhaps after that
-ideal of which the poet speaks:
-
- “When the war drums throb no longer
- And the battle flags are furled,
- In the parliament of man,
- The federation of the world”—
-
-sought to create an operative system of rules based upon the consent of
-nations to stabilize international relations, to avoid war taking place
-at all and to mitigate the results of such wars as took place. The first
-treaty was of course the Hague Convention of 1899 for the Pacific
-Settlement of International Disputes. That Convention was, indeed, of no
-more than precatory effect, and we attach no weight to it for the
-purposes of this case, but it did establish agreement that, in the event
-of serious disputes arising between the signatory powers, they would as
-far as possible submit to mediation. That Convention was followed in
-1907 by another convention reaffirming and slightly strengthening what
-had previously been agreed. These early conventions fell, indeed, very
-far short of outlawing war, or of creating any binding obligation to
-arbitrate. I shall certainly not ask the Tribunal to say any crime was
-committed by disregarding those conventions.
-
-But at least they established that the contracting powers accepted the
-general principle that, if at all possible, war should be resorted to
-only if mediation failed.
-
-Although these conventions are mentioned in this Indictment, I am not
-relying on them save to show the historical development of the law, and
-it is unnecessary, therefore, to argue about their precise effect, for
-the place which they once occupied has been taken by far more effective
-instruments. I mention them now merely for this, that they were the
-first steps towards that body of rules of law which we are seeking here
-to enforce.
-
-There were, of course, other individual agreements between particular
-states, agreements which sought to preserve the neutrality of individual
-countries, as, for instance, that of Belgium, but those agreements were
-inadequate, in the absence of any real will to comply with them, to
-prevent the first World War in 1914.
-
-Shocked by the occurrence of that catastrophe, the nations of Europe,
-not excluding Germany, and of other parts of the world, came to the
-conclusion that, in the interests of all alike, a permanent organization
-of the nations should be established to maintain the peace. And so the
-Treaty of Versailles was prefaced by the Covenant of the League of
-Nations.
-
-Now, I say nothing at this moment of the general merits of the various
-provisions of the Treaty of Versailles. They have been criticized, some
-of them perhaps justly criticized, and they were certainly made the
-subject of much bellicose propaganda in Germany. But it is unnecessary
-to inquire into the merits of the matter, for, however unjust one might
-for this purpose assume the provisions of the Treaty of Versailles to
-have been, they contained no kind of excuse for the waging of war to
-secure an alteration in their terms. Not only was that treaty a
-settlement, by agreement, of all the difficult territorial questions
-which had been left outstanding by the war itself, but it established
-the League of Nations which, if it had been loyally supported, could so
-well have resolved those international differences which might otherwise
-have led, as indeed they eventually did lead, to war. It set up in the
-Council of the League, in the Assembly and in the Permanent Court of
-International Justice, a machine not only for the peaceful settlement of
-international disputes, but also for the frank ventilation of all
-international questions by open and free discussion. At that time, in
-those years after the last war, the hopes of the world stood high.
-Millions of men in all countries—perhaps even in Germany itself—had
-laid down their lives in what they hoped and believed was a war to end
-war. Germany herself entered the League of Nations and was given a
-permanent seat on the Council; and on that Council, as in the assembly
-of the League, German governments which preceded that of the Defendant
-Von Papen in 1932 played their full part. In the years from 1919 to that
-time in 1932, despite some comparatively minor incidents in the heated
-atmosphere which followed the end of the war, the peaceful operation of
-the League continued. Nor was it only the operation of the League which
-gave ground, and good ground, for hope that at long last the rule of law
-would replace anarchy in the international field.
-
-The statesmen of the world deliberately set out to make wars of
-aggression an international crime. These are no new terms invented by
-the victors to embody in this Charter. They have figured, and they have
-figured prominently, in numerous treaties, in governmental
-pronouncements, and in the declarations of statesmen in the period
-preceding the second World War. In treaties concluded between the Union
-of Soviet Socialist Republics and other states, such as Persia in 1927,
-France in 1935, China in 1937, the contracting parties undertook to
-refrain from any act of aggression whatever against the other party. In
-1933 the Soviet Union became a party to a large number of treaties
-containing a detailed definition of aggression, and the same definition
-appeared in the same year in the authoritative report of the Committee
-on Questions of Security set up in connection with the Conference for
-the Reduction and Limitation of Armaments. But at this time states were
-going beyond commitments to refrain from wars of aggression and to
-assist states which were victims of aggression. They were condemning
-aggression in unmistakable terms. Thus in the Anti-War Treaty of
-Non-Aggression and Conciliation, which was signed on the 10th of October
-1933, by a number of American states, subsequently joined by practically
-all the states of the American continents and a number of European
-countries as well, the contracting parties solemnly declared that “they
-condemn wars of aggression in their mutual relations or in those of
-other states.” And that treaty was fully incorporated into the Buenos
-Aires convention of December 1936, signed and ratified by a large number
-of American countries, including, of course, the United States. And
-previously, in 1928, the 6th Pan-American Conference had adopted a
-resolution declaring that, as “war of aggression constitutes a crime
-against the human species . . . all aggression is illicit and as such is
-declared prohibited.” A year earlier, as long ago as September 1927, the
-Assembly of the League of Nations adopted a resolution affirming the
-conviction that “a war of aggression can never serve as a means of
-settling international disputes and is, in consequence, an international
-crime” and going on to declare that “all wars of aggression are, and
-shall always be prohibited.”
-
-The first article of the draft Treaty for Mutual Assistance of 1923 read
-in these terms:
-
- “The High Contracting Parties, affirming that aggressive war is
- an international crime, undertake the solemn engagement not to
- make themselves guilty of this crime against any other nation.”
-
-In the Preamble to the Geneva Protocol of 1924, it was stated that
-“offensive warfare constitutes an infraction of solidarity and an
-international crime.” These instruments that I have just last mentioned
-remained, it is true, unratified for various reasons, but they are not
-without significance or value.
-
-These repeated declarations, these repeated condemnations of wars of
-aggression testified to the fact that with the establishment of the
-League of Nations, with the legal developments which followed it, the
-place of war in international law had undergone a profound change. War
-was ceasing to be the unrestricted prerogative of sovereign states. The
-Covenant of the League of Nations did not totally abolish the right of
-war. It left, perhaps, certain gaps which were possibly larger in theory
-than in practice. But in effect it surrounded the right of war by
-procedural and substantive checks and delays, which, if the Covenant had
-been faithfully observed, would have amounted to an elimination of war,
-not only between members of the League, but also, by reason of certain
-provisions of the Covenant, in the relations of non-members as well. And
-thus the Covenant of the League restored the position as it existed at
-the dawn of international law, at the time when Grotius was laying down
-the foundations of the modern law of nations and established the
-distinction, a distinction accompanied by profound legal consequences in
-the sphere, for instance, of neutrality, between a just war and an
-unjust war.
-
-Nor was that development arrested with the adoption of the Covenant of
-the League. The right of war was further circumscribed by a series of
-treaties, numbering—it is an astonishing figure but it is right—nearly
-a thousand, of arbitration and conciliation embracing practically all
-the nations of the world. The so-called Optional Clause of Article 36 of
-the Statute of the Permanent Court of International Justice, the clause
-which conferred upon the Court compulsory jurisdiction in regard to the
-most comprehensive categories of disputes, and which constituted in
-effect by far the most important compulsory treaty of arbitration in the
-postwar period, was widely signed and ratified. Germany herself signed
-it in 1927 and her signature was renewed, and renewed for a period of 5
-years by the Nazi government in July of 1933. (Significantly, that
-ratification was not again renewed on the expiration of its 5 years’
-validity in March of 1938 by Germany). Since 1928 a considerable number
-of states signed and ratified the General Act for the Pacific Settlement
-of International Disputes which was designed to fill the gaps left by
-the Optional Clause and by the existing treaties of arbitration and
-conciliation.
-
-And all this vast network of instruments of pacific settlement testified
-to the growing conviction throughout the civilized world that war was
-ceasing to be the normal or the legitimate means of settling
-international disputes. The express condemnation of wars of aggression,
-which I have already mentioned, supplies the same testimony. But there
-was, of course, more direct evidence pointing in the same direction. The
-Treaty of Locarno of the 16th October 1925, to which I shall have
-occasion to refer presently, and to which Germany was a party, was more
-than a treaty of arbitration and conciliation in which the parties
-undertook definite obligations with regard to the pacific settlement of
-disputes which might arise between them. It was, subject to clearly
-specified exceptions of self-defense in certain contingencies, a more
-general undertaking in which the parties to it agreed that “they would
-in no case attack or invade each other or resort to war against each
-other.” And that constituted a general renunciation of war, and it was
-so considered to be in the eyes of international jurists and in the
-public opinion of the world. The Locarno Treaty was not just another of
-the great number of arbitration treaties which were being concluded at
-this time. It was regarded as a kind of cornerstone in the European
-settlement and in the new legal order in Europe in partial, just, and
-indeed, generous substitution for the rigors of the Treaty of
-Versailles. And with that treaty, the term “outlawry of war” left the
-province of mere pacifist propaganda. It became current in the writings
-on international law and in the official pronouncements of governments.
-No one could any longer say, after the Locarno Treaty—no one could any
-longer associate himself with the plausible assertion that at all
-events, as between the parties to that treaty, war remained an
-unrestricted right of sovereign states.
-
-But, although the effect of the Locarno Treaty was limited to the
-parties to it, it had wider influence in paving the way towards that
-most fundamental, that truly revolutionary enactment in modern
-international law, namely, the General Treaty for the Renunciation of
-War of 27 August 1928, the Pact of Paris, the Kellogg-Briand Pact. That
-treaty, a most deliberate and carefully prepared piece of international
-legislation, was binding in 1939 on more than 60 nations, including
-Germany. It was, and it has remained, the most widely signed and
-ratified international instrument. It contained no provision for its
-termination, and it was conceived, as I said, as the cornerstone of any
-future international order worthy of the name. It is fully part of
-international law as it stands today, and it has in no way been modified
-or replaced by the Charter of the United Nations. It is right, in this
-solemn hour in the history of the world, when the responsible leaders of
-a state stand accused of a premeditated breach of this great treaty
-which was, which remains, a source of hope and of faith for mankind, to
-set out in detail its two operative articles and its Preamble. Let me
-read them to the Tribunal—first the Preamble, and it starts like this:
-
- “The President of the German Reich”—and the other states
- associated . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Shall we find it among the documents?
-
-SIR HARTLEY SHAWCROSS: It will be put in. I don’t think you have it at
-the moment.
-
- “The President of the German Reich . . . deeply sensitive of
- their solemn duty to promote the welfare of mankind; persuaded
- that the time has come when a frank renunciation of war as an
- instrument of international policy should be made to the end
- that the peaceful and friendly relations now existing between
- their peoples may be perpetuated; convinced that all changes in
- their relations with one another should be sought only by
- pacific means and be the result of a peaceful and orderly
- progress, and that any signatory power which shall hereafter
- seek to promote its national interests by resort to war, should
- be denied the benefits furnished by this Treaty; hopeful that,
- encouraged by their example, all the other nations of the world
- will join in this humane endeavor and by adhering to the present
- treaty as soon as it comes into force bring their peoples within
- the scope of its beneficent provisions, thus uniting civilized
- nations of the world in a common renunciation of war as an
- instrument of their national policy . . . .”
-
-Then, Article I:
-
- “The High Contracting Parties solemnly declare in the names of
- their respective peoples that they condemn recourse to war for
- the solution of international controversies and renounce it as
- an instrument of national policy in their relations with one
- another.”
-
-And Article II:
-
- “The High Contracting Parties agree that the settlement or
- solution of all disputes or conflicts of whatever nature or of
- whatever origin they may be, which may arise among them, shall
- never be sought except by pacific means.”
-
-In that treaty, that General Treaty for the Renunciation of War,
-practically the whole civilized world abolished war as a legally
-permissible means of enforcing the law or of changing it. The right of
-war was no longer of the essence of sovereignty. Whatever the position
-may have been at the time of the Hague Convention, whatever the position
-may have been in 1914, whatever it may have been in 1918—and it is not
-necessary to discuss it—no international lawyer of repute, no
-responsible statesman, no soldier concerned with the legal use of armed
-forces, no economist or industrialist concerned in his country’s war
-economy could doubt that with the Pact of Paris on the statute book a
-war of aggression was contrary to international law. Nor have the
-repeated violations of the Pact by the Axis Powers in any way affected
-its validity. Let this be firmly and clearly stated. Those very
-breaches, except perhaps to the cynic and the malevolent, have added to
-the strength of the treaty; they provoked the sustained wrath of peoples
-angered by the contemptuous disregard of this great statute and
-determined to vindicate its provisions. The Pact of Paris is the law of
-nations. This Tribunal will declare it. The world must enforce it.
-
-Let this also be said, that the Pact of Paris was not a clumsy
-instrument likely to become a kind of signpost for the guilty. It did
-not enable Germany to go to war against Poland and yet rely, as against
-Great Britain and France, on any immunity from warlike action because of
-the very provisions of the pact. For the pact laid down expressly in its
-preamble that no state guilty of a violation of its provisions might
-invoke its benefits. And when, on the outbreak of the second World War,
-Great Britain and France communicated to the League of Nations that a
-state of war existed between them and Germany as from the 3rd of
-September 1939, they declared that by committing an act of aggression
-against Poland, Germany had violated her obligations assumed not only
-towards Poland but also towards the other signatories of the pact. A
-violation of the pact in relation to one signatory was an attack upon
-all the other signatories and they were entitled to treat it as such. I
-emphasize that point lest any of these defendants should seize upon the
-letter of the particulars of Count Two of the Indictment and seek to
-suggest that it was not Germany who initiated war with the United
-Kingdom and France on 3 September 1939. The declaration of war came from
-the United Kingdom and from France; the act of war and its commencement
-came from Germany in violation of the fundamental enactment to which she
-was a party.
-
-The General Treaty for the Renunciation of War, this great
-constitutional instrument of an international society awakened to the
-deadly dangers of another Armageddon, did not remain an isolated effort
-soon to be forgotten in the turmoil of recurrent international crises.
-It became, in conjunction with the Covenant of the League of Nations or
-independently of it, the starting point for a new orientation of
-governments in matters of peace, war, and neutrality. It is of
-importance, I think, to quote just one or two of the statements which
-were being made by governments at that time in relation to the effect of
-the pact. In 1929 His Majesty’s Government in the United Kingdom said,
-in connection with the question of conferring upon the Permanent Court
-of International Justice jurisdiction with regard to the exercise of
-belligerent rights in relation to neutral states—and it illustrates the
-profound change which was being accepted as having taken place as a
-result of the Pact of Paris in international law:
-
- “But the whole situation . . . . rests, and international law on
- the subject has been entirely built up, on the assumption that
- there is nothing illegitimate in the use of war as an instrument
- of national policy, and, as a necessary corollary, that the
- position and rights of neutrals are entirely independent of the
- circumstances of any war which may be in progress. Before the
- acceptance of the Covenant, the basis of the law of neutrality
- was that the rights and obligations of neutrals were identical
- as regards both belligerents, and were entirely independent of
- the rights and wrongs of the dispute which had led to the war,
- or the respective position of the belligerents at the bar of
- world opinion.”
-
-Then the Government went on:
-
- “Now it is precisely this assumption which is no longer valid as
- regards states which are members of the League of Nations and
- parties to the Peace Pact. The effect of those instruments,
- taken together, is to deprive nations of the right to employ war
- as an instrument of national policy, and to forbid the states
- which have signed them to give aid or comfort to an offender.”
-
-This was being said in 1929, when there was no war upon the horizon.
-
- “As between such states, there has been in consequence a
- fundamental change in the whole question of belligerent and
- neutral rights. The whole policy of His Majesty’s present
- Government (and, it would appear, of any alternative government)
- is based upon a determination to comply with their obligations
- under the Covenant of the League and the Peace Pact. This being
- so, the situation which we have to envisage in the event of a
- war in which we were engaged is not one in which the rights and
- duties of belligerents and neutrals will depend upon the old
- rules of war and neutrality, but one in which the position of
- the members of the League will be determined by the Covenant and
- by the Pact.”
-
-The Chief Prosecutor for the United States of America referred in his
-opening speech before this Tribunal to the weighty pronouncement of Mr.
-Stimson, the Secretary of War, in which, in 1932, he gave expression to
-the drastic change brought about in international law by the Pact of
-Paris, and it is perhaps convenient to quote the relevant passage in
-full:
-
- “War between nations was renounced by the signatories of the
- Kellogg-Briand Pact. This means that it has become illegal
- throughout practically the entire world. It is no longer to be
- the source and subject of rights. It is no longer to be the
- principle around which the duties, the conduct, and the rights
- of nations revolve. It is an illegal thing. Hereafter, when two
- nations engage in armed conflict, either one or both of them
- must be wrongdoers—violators of this general treaty law. We no
- longer draw a circle about them and treat them with the
- punctilios of the duelist’s code. Instead we denounce them as
- law-breakers.”
-
-And nearly 10 years later, when numerous independent states lay
-prostrate, shattered or menaced in their very existence before the
-impact of the war machine of the Nazi State, the Attorney General of the
-United States, subsequently a distinguished member of the highest
-Tribunal of that great country, gave significant expression to the
-change which had been effected in the law as the result of the Pact of
-Paris in a speech for which the freedom-loving peoples of the world will
-always be grateful. On the 27th of March 1941—and I mention it now not
-as merely being the speech of a statesman, although it was certainly
-that, but as being the considered opinion of a distinguished lawyer,—he
-said this:
-
- “The Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928, in which Germany, Italy and
- Japan covenanted with us, as well as with other nations, to
- renounce war as an instrument of policy, made definite the
- outlawry of war and of necessity altered the dependent concept
- of neutral obligations.
-
-
-
- “The Treaty for the Renunciation of War and the Argentine
- Anti-War Treaty deprived their signatories of the right of war
- as an instrument of national policy or aggression and rendered
- unlawful wars undertaken in violation of these provisions. In
- consequence these treaties destroyed the historical and
- juridical foundations of the doctrine of neutrality conceived as
- an attitude of absolute impartiality in relation to aggressive
- wars . . . .
-
-
-
- “It follows that the state which has gone to war in violation of
- its obligations acquires no right to equality of treatment from
- other states, unless treaty obligations require different
- handling of affairs. It derives no rights from its illegality.
-
-
-
- “In flagrant cases of aggression where the facts speak so
- unambiguously that world opinion takes what may be the
- equivalent of judicial notice, we may not stymie international
- law and allow these great treaties to become dead letters. The
- intelligent public opinion of the world which is not afraid to
- be vocal, and the action of the American States, has made a
- determination that the Axis Powers are the aggressors in the
- wars today, which is an appropriate basis in the present state
- of international organizations for our policy.”
-
-Thus, there is no doubt that by the time the National Socialist State of
-Germany had embarked upon the preparation of the war of aggression
-against the civilized world and by the time it had accomplished that
-design, aggressive war had become, in virtue of the Pact of Paris and
-the other treaties and declarations to which I have referred, illegal
-and a crime beyond all uncertainty and doubt. And it is on that
-proposition, and fundamentally on that universal treaty, the
-Kellogg-Briand Pact, that Count Two of this Indictment is principally
-based.
-
-The Prosecution has deemed it necessary—indeed, imperative—to
-establish beyond all possibility of question, at what I am afraid may
-appear to be excessive length, that only superficial learning or
-culpable sentimentality can assert that there is any significant element
-of retroactivity in the determination of the authors of this Charter to
-treat aggressive war as conduct which international law has prohibited
-and stigmatized as criminal. We have traced the progressive limitation
-of the rights of war, the renunciation and condemnation of wars of
-aggression, and above all, the total prohibition and condemnation of all
-wars conceived as an instrument of national policy. What statesman or
-politician in charge of the affairs of nations could doubt, from 1928
-onwards, that aggressive war, or that all war, except in self-defense or
-for the collective enforcement of the law, or against a state which had
-itself violated the Pact of Paris, was unlawful and outlawed? What
-statesman or politician embarking upon such a war could reasonably and
-justifiably count upon an immunity other than that of a successful
-outcome of the criminal venture? What more decisive evidence of a
-prohibition laid down by positive international law could any lawyer
-desire than that which has been adduced before this Tribunal?
-
-There are, it is true, some small town lawyers who deny the very
-existence of any international law; and indeed, as I have said, the
-rules of the law of nations may not satisfy the Austinian test of being
-imposed by a sovereign. But the legal regulation of international
-relations rests upon quite different juridical foundations. It depends
-upon consent, but upon a consent which, once given, cannot be withdrawn
-by unilateral action. In the international field the source of law is
-not the command of a sovereign but the treaty agreement binding upon
-every state which has adhered to it. And it is indeed true, and the
-recognition of its truth today by all the great powers of the world is
-vital to our future peace—it is indeed true that, as M. Litvinov once
-said, and as Great Britain fully accepts:
-
- “Absolute sovereignty and entire liberty of action only belong
- to such states as have not undertaken international obligations.
- Immediately a state accepts international obligations it limits
- its sovereignty.”
-
-In that way and that way alone lies the future peace of the world. Yet
-it may be argued that although war itself was outlawed and forbidden, it
-was not criminally outlawed and criminally forbidden. International law,
-it may be said, does not attribute criminality to states and still less
-to individuals. But can it really be said on behalf of these defendants
-that the offense of these aggressive wars, which plunged millions of
-people to their death, which by dint of War Crimes and Crimes against
-Humanity brought about the torture and extermination of countless
-thousands of innocent civilians, which devastated cities, which
-destroyed the amenities—nay, the most rudimentary necessities of
-civilization in many countries—which has brought the world to the brink
-of ruin from which it will take generations to recover—will it
-seriously be said by these defendants that such a war is only an
-offense, only an illegality, only a matter of condemnation perhaps
-sounding in damages, but not a crime justiciable by any Tribunal? No law
-worthy of the name can allow itself to be reduced to an absurdity in
-that way, and certainly the great powers responsible for this Charter
-were not prepared to admit it. They draw the inescapable conclusion from
-the renunciation, the prohibition, the condemnation of war which had
-become part of the law of nations, and they refuse to reduce justice to
-impotence by subscribing to the outworn doctrines that a sovereign state
-can commit no crime and that no crime can be committed on behalf of the
-sovereign state by individuals acting in its behalf. They refuse to
-stultify themselves, and their refusal and their decision has decisively
-shaped the law for this Tribunal.
-
-If this be an innovation, it is an innovation long overdue—a desirable
-and beneficent innovation fully consistent with justice, fully
-consistent with common sense and with the abiding purposes of the law of
-nations. But is it indeed an innovation? Or is it no more than the
-logical development of the law? There was indeed a time when
-international lawyers used to maintain that the liability of the state,
-because of its sovereignty, was limited to a contractual responsibility.
-International tribunals have not accepted that view. They have
-repeatedly affirmed that a state can commit a tort; that it may be
-guilty of trespass, of nuisance, and of negligence. And they have gone
-further. They have held that a state may be bound to pay what are in
-effect penal damages. In a recent case decided in 1935 between the
-United States and Canada, an arbitral tribunal, with the concurrence of
-its American member, decided that the United States were bound to pay
-what amounted to penal damages for an affront to Canadian sovereignty.
-And on a wider plane, the Covenant of the League of Nations, in
-providing for sanctions, recognized the principle of enforcement of the
-law against collective units, such enforcement to be, if necessary, of a
-penal character. And so there is not anything startlingly new in the
-adoption of the principle that the state as such is responsible for its
-criminal acts. In fact, save for reliance on the unconvincing argument
-of sovereignty, there is in law no reason why a state should not be
-answerable for crimes committed on its behalf. A hundred years ago Dr.
-Lushington, a great English Admiralty judge, refused to admit that a
-state could not be a pirate. History—very recent history—does not
-warrant the view that a state cannot be a criminal. On the other hand,
-the immeasurable potentialities for evil, inherent in the state in this
-age of science and organization would seem to demand, quite
-imperatively, means of repression of criminal conduct even more drastic
-and more effective than in the case of individuals. And insofar,
-therefore, as this Charter has put on record the principle of the
-criminal responsibility of the state, it must be applauded as a wise and
-far-seeing measure of international legislation.
-
- [_A recess was taken._]
-
-SIR HARTLEY SHAWCROSS: [_Continuing._] I was saying before the recess
-that there could be no doubt about the principle of criminal
-responsibility on the part of the state which engaged in aggressive war.
-
-Admittedly, the conscience shrinks from the rigors of collective
-punishment, which may fall upon the guilty and the innocent alike,
-although, it may be noted, most of these innocent victims would not have
-hesitated to reap the fruits of the criminal act if it had been
-successful. Humanity and justice will find means of mitigating any
-injustice in collective punishment. Above all, much hardship can be
-obviated by making the punishment fall upon the individuals who were
-themselves directly responsible for the criminal conduct of their state.
-It is here that the powers who framed this Charter took a step which
-justice, sound legal sense, and an enlightened appreciation of the good
-of mankind must acclaim without cavil or reserve. The Charter lays down
-expressly that there shall be individual responsibility for the crimes,
-including the crimes against the peace, committed on behalf of the
-state. The state is not an abstract entity. Its rights and duties are
-the rights and duties of men. Its actions are the actions of men. It is
-a salutary principle, a principle of law, that politicians who embark
-upon a particular policy—as here—of aggressive war should not be able
-to seek immunity behind the intangible personality of the state. It is a
-salutary legal rule that persons who, in violation of the law, plunge
-their own and other countries into an aggressive war should do so with a
-halter around their necks.
-
-To say that those who aid and abet, who counsel and procure a crime are
-themselves criminals, is a commonplace in our own municipal law. Nor is
-the principle of individual international responsibility for offenses
-against the law of nations altogether new. It has been applied not only
-to pirates. The entire law relating to war crimes, as distinct from the
-crime of war, is based upon the principle of individual responsibility.
-The future of international law, and indeed, of the world itself,
-depends on its application in a much wider sphere, in particular, in
-that of safeguarding the peace of the world. There must be acknowledged
-not only, as in the Charter of the United Nations, fundamental human
-rights, but also, as in the Charter of this Tribunal, fundamental human
-duties, and of these none is more vital, none is more fundamental, than
-the duty not to vex the peace of nations in violation of the clearest
-legal prohibitions and undertakings. If this be an innovation, it is an
-innovation which we are prepared to defend and to justify, but it is not
-an innovation which creates a new crime. International law had already,
-before the Charter was adopted, constituted aggressive war a criminal
-act.
-
-There is thus no substantial retroactivity in the provisions of the
-Charter. It merely fixes the responsibility for a crime already clearly
-established as such by positive law upon its actual perpetrators. It
-fills a gap in international criminal procedure. There is all the
-difference between saying to a man, “You will now be punished for what
-was not a crime at all at the time you committed it,” and in saying to
-him, “You will now pay the penalty for conduct which was contrary to law
-and a crime when you executed it, although, owing to the imperfection of
-the international machinery, there was at that time no court competent
-to pronounce judgment against you.” It is that latter course which we
-adopt, and if that be retroactivity, we proclaim it to be most fully
-consistent with that higher justice which, in the practice of civilized
-states, has set a definite limit to the retroactive operation of laws.
-Let the defendants and their protagonists complain that the Charter is
-in this matter an _ex parte fiat_ of the victors. These victors,
-composing, as they do, the overwhelming majority of the nations of the
-world, represent also the world’s sense of justice, which would be
-outraged if the crime of war, after this second world conflict, were to
-remain unpunished. In thus interpreting, declaring, and supplementing
-the existing law, these states are content to be judged by the verdict
-of history. _Securus judicat orbis terrarum._ Insofar as the Charter of
-this Tribunal introduces new law, its authors have established a
-precedent for the future—a precedent operative against all, including
-themselves, but in essence that law, rendering recourse to aggressive
-war an international crime, had been well established when the Charter
-was adopted. It is only by way of corruption of language that it can be
-described as a retroactive law.
-
-There remains the question, with which I shall not detain the Tribunal
-for long, whether these wars which were launched by Germany and her
-leaders in violation of treaties or agreements or assurances were also
-wars of aggression. A war of aggression is a war which is resorted to in
-violation of the international obligation not to have recourse to war,
-or, in cases in which war is not totally renounced, which is resorted to
-in disregard of the duty to utilize the procedure of pacific settlement
-which a state has bound itself to observe. There was, as a matter of
-fact, in the period between the two world wars, a divergence of opinion
-among jurists and statesmen whether it was preferable to attempt in
-advance a legal definition of aggression, or to leave to the states
-concerned and to the collective organs of the international community
-freedom of appreciation of the facts in any particular situation that
-might arise. Those holding the latter view argued that a rigid
-definition might be abused by an unscrupulous state to fit in with its
-aggressive design; they feared, and the British Government was for a
-time among those who took this view, that an automatic definition of
-aggression might become “a trap for the innocent and a signpost for the
-guilty.” Others held that in the interest of certainty and security a
-definition of aggression, like a definition of any crime in municipal
-law, was proper and useful. They urged that the competent international
-organs, political and judicial, could be trusted to avoid in any
-particular case a definition of aggression which might lead to
-obstruction or to an absurdity. In May of 1933 the Committee on Security
-Questions of the Disarmament Conference proposed a definition of
-aggression on these lines:
-
- “The aggressor in an international conflict shall, subject to
- the agreements in force between the parties to the dispute, be
- considered to be that state which is the first to commit any of
- the following actions:
-
-
-
- “(1) Declaration of war upon another state;
-
-
-
- “(2) Invasion by its armed forces, with or without a declaration
- of war, of the territory of another state;
-
-
-
- “(3) Attack by its land, naval, or air forces, with or without a
- declaration of war, on the territory, vessels, or aircraft of
- another state;
-
-
-
- “(4) Naval blockade of the coasts or ports of another state;
-
-
-
- “(5) Provision of support to armed bands formed in its territory
- which have invaded the territory of another state, or refusal;
- notwithstanding the request of the invaded state, to take in its
- own territory all the measures in its power to deprive those
- bands of all assistance or protection.”
-
-The various treaties concluded in 1933 by the Union of Soviet Socialist
-Republics and other states followed closely that definition. So did the
-draft convention submitted in 1933 by His Majesty’s Government to the
-Disarmament Conference.
-
-However, it is unprofitable to elaborate here the details of the problem
-or of the definition of aggression. This Tribunal will not allow itself
-to be deflected from its purpose by attempts to ventilate in this Court
-what is an academic and, in the circumstances, an utterly unreal
-controversy as to what is the nature of a war of aggression, for there
-is no definition of aggression, general or particular, which does not
-cover and cover abundantly and irresistibly in every detail, the
-premeditated onslaught by Germany on the territorial integrity and
-political independence of so many sovereign states.
-
-This, then, being the law as we submit it to be to this Tribunal—that
-the peoples of the world by the Pact of Paris had finally outlawed war
-and made it criminal—I turn now to the facts to see how these
-defendants under their leader and with their associates destroyed the
-high hopes of mankind and sought to revert to international anarchy.
-First, let this be said, for it will be established beyond doubt by the
-documents which you will see, from the moment Hitler became Chancellor
-in 1933, with the Defendant Von Papen as Reich Chancellor, and with the
-Defendant Von Neurath as his Foreign Minister, the whole atmosphere of
-the world darkened. The hopes of the people began to recede. Treaties
-seemed no longer matters of solemn obligation but were entered into with
-complete cynicism as a means for deceiving other states of Germany’s
-warlike intentions. International conferences were no longer to be used
-as a means for securing pacific settlements but as occasions for
-obtaining by blackmail demands which were eventually to be enlarged by
-war. The world came to know the “war of nerves”, the diplomacy of the
-_fait accompli_, of blackmail and bullying.
-
-In October 1933 Hitler told his Cabinet that as the proposed Disarmament
-Convention did not concede full equality to Germany, “It would be
-necessary to torpedo the Disarmament Conference. It was out of the
-question to negotiate: Germany would leave the Conference and the
-League”. On the 21st of October 1933 Germany did so, and by so doing
-struck a deadly blow at the fabric of security which had been built up
-on the basis of the League Covenant. From that time on the record of
-their foreign policy became one of complete disregard of international
-obligations, and indeed not least of those solemnly concluded by
-themselves. Hitler himself expressly avowed to his confederates,
-“Agreements are kept only so long as they serve a certain purpose.” He
-might have added that again and again that purpose was only to lull an
-intended victim into a false sense of security. So patent, indeed, did
-this eventually become that to be invited by the Defendant Ribbentrop to
-enter a non-aggression pact with Germany was almost a sign that Germany
-intended to attack the state concerned. Nor was it only the formal
-treaty which they used and violated as circumstances seemed to make
-expedient. These defendants are charged, too, with breaches of the less
-formal assurances which, in accordance with diplomatic usage, Germany
-gave to neighboring states. You will hear the importance which Hitler
-himself publicly attached to assurances of that kind. Today, with the
-advance of science, the world has been afforded means of communication
-and intercourse hitherto unknown, and as Hitler himself expressly
-recognized in his public utterances, international relations no longer
-depend upon treaties alone. The methods of diplomacy change. The leader
-of one nation can speak directly to the government and peoples of
-another, and that course was not infrequently adopted by the Nazi
-conspirators. But, although the methods change, the principles of good
-faith and honesty, established as the fundamentals of civilized society,
-both in the national and international spheres, remain unaltered. It is
-a long time since it was said that we are part one of another, and if
-today the different states are more closely connected and thus form part
-of a world society more than ever before, so also, more than before, is
-there that need for good faith and honesty between them.
-
-Let us see how these defendants, ministers and high officers of the Nazi
-Government, individually and collectively comported themselves in these
-matters.
-
-On the 1st of September 1939 in the early hours of the morning under
-manufactured and, in any event, inadequate pretexts, the Armed Forces of
-the German Reich invaded Poland along the whole length of her frontiers
-and thus launched the war which was to bring down so many of the pillars
-of our civilization.
-
-It was a breach of the Hague Conventions. It was a breach of the Treaty
-of Versailles which had established the frontiers between Germany and
-Poland. And however much Germany disliked that treaty—although Hitler
-had expressly stated that he would respect its territorial
-provisions—however much she disliked it, she was not free to break it
-by unilateral action. It was a breach of the Arbitration Treaty between
-Germany and Poland concluded at Locarno on the 16th of October 1925. By
-that treaty Germany and Poland expressly agreed to refer any matters of
-dispute not capable of settlement by ordinary diplomatic machinery to
-the decision of an arbitral tribunal or of the Permanent Court of
-International Justice. It was a breach of the Pact of Paris. But that is
-not all. It was also a breach of a more recent and, in view of the
-repeated emphasis laid upon it by Hitler himself, in some ways a more
-important engagement into which Nazi Germany had entered with Poland.
-After the Nazi Government came into power, on the 26th of January 1934
-the German and Polish Governments had signed a 10 year pact of
-non-aggression. It was, as the signatories themselves stated, to
-introduce a new era into the political relations between Poland and
-Germany. It was said in the text of the pact itself that “the
-maintenance and guarantee of lasting peace between the two countries is
-an essential prerequisite for the general peace of Europe.” The two
-governments therefore agreed to base their mutual relations on the
-principles laid down in the Pact of Paris, and they solemnly declared
-that:
-
- “In no circumstances . . . will they proceed to the application
- of force for the purpose of reaching a decision in such
- disputes.”
-
-That declaration and agreement was to remain in force for at least 10
-years and thereafter it was to remain valid unless it was denounced by
-either Government 6 months before the expiration of the 10 years, or
-subsequently by 6 months’ notice. Both at the time of its signature and
-during the following 4 years Hitler spoke of the German-Polish agreement
-publicly as though it were a cornerstone of his foreign policy. By
-entering into it, he persuaded many people that his intentions were
-genuinely pacific, for the re-emergence of a new Poland and an
-independent Poland after the war had cost Germany much territory and had
-separated East Prussia from the Reich. And that Hitler should, of his
-own accord, enter into friendly relations with Poland—that in his
-speeches on foreign policy he should proclaim his recognition of Poland
-and of her right to an exit to the sea, and the necessity for Germans
-and Poles to live side by side in amity—these facts seemed to the world
-to be convincing proof that Hitler had no “revisionist” aims which would
-threaten the peace of Europe; that he was even genuinely anxious to put
-an end to the age-old hostility between the Teuton and the Slav. If his
-professions were, as embodied in the treaty and as contained in these
-declarations, genuine, his policy excluded a renewal of the “Drang nach
-Osten”, as it had been called, and was thereby going to contribute to
-the peace and stability of Europe. That was what the people were led to
-think. We shall have occasion enough to see how little truth these
-pacific professions in fact contained.
-
-The history of the fateful years from 1934 to 1939 shows quite clearly
-that the Germans used this treaty, as they used other treaties, merely
-as an instrument of policy for furthering their aggressive aims. It is
-clear from the documents which will be presented to the Tribunal that
-these 5 years fall into two distinct phases in the realization of the
-aggressive aims which always underlay the Nazi policy. There was first
-the period from the Nazi assumption of power in 1933 until the autumn of
-1937. That was the preparatory period. During that time there occurred
-the breaches of the Versailles and Locarno Treaties, the feverish
-rearmament of Germany, the reintroduction of conscription, the
-reoccupation and remilitarization of the Rhineland, and all those other
-necessary preparatory measures for future aggression which my American
-colleagues have already so admirably put before the Tribunal.
-
-During that period—the preparatory period—Germany was lulling Poland
-into a false sense of security. Not only Hitler, but the Defendant
-Göring and the Defendant Ribbentrop made statements approbating the
-non-aggression pact. In 1935 Göring was saying that, “The pact was not
-planned for a period of 10 years but forever; there need not be the
-slightest fear that it would not be continued.” Even though Germany was
-steadily building up the greatest war machine that Europe had ever
-known, and although, by January 1937, the German military position was
-so strong and so secure that, in spite of the treaty breaches which it
-involved, Hitler could openly refer to his strong Army, he took pains,
-at the same time, to say—and again I quote—that:
-
- “By a series of agreements we have eliminated existing tensions
- and thereby contributed considerably to an improvement in the
- European atmosphere. I merely recall the agreement with Poland
- which has worked out to the advantage of both sides.”
-
-And so it went on: abroad, protestations of pacific intentions; at home,
-“guns before butter.”
-
-In 1937 this preparatory period drew to a close and Nazi policy moved
-from general preparation for future aggression to specific planning for
-the attainment of certain specific aggressive aims. And there are two
-documents in particular which mark that change.
-
-The first of these was called “Directive for Unified Preparation for
-War”; issued in June 1937—June 29, 1937—by the Reich Minister for War,
-who was then Von Blomberg, Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces. That
-document is important, not only for its military directions, but for the
-appreciation it contained of the European situation and for the
-revelation of the Nazi attitude towards it.
-
- “The general political position”—Von Blomberg stated, and I am
- quoting from the document—“justifies the supposition that
- Germany need not consider an attack from any side. Grounds for
- this are, in addition to the lack of desire for war in almost
- all nations, particularly the Western Powers, the deficiencies
- in the preparedness for war of a number of states, and of Russia
- in particular.”
-
-It is true, he added, “The intention of unleashing a European war is
-held just as little by Germany.” And it may be that that phrase was
-carefully chosen because, as the documents will show, Germany hoped to
-conquer Europe, perhaps to conquer the world in detail; to fight on one
-front at a time, against one power at a time, and not to unleash a
-general European conflict.
-
-But Von Blomberg went on:
-
- “The politically fluid world situation, which does not preclude
- surprising incidents, demands a continuous preparedness for war
- of the German Armed Forces (a) to counter attack at any
- time”—yet he had just said that there was no fear of any
- attack—and “(b)”—and I invite the Tribunal again to notice
- this phrase—“to enable the military exploitation of politically
- favorable opportunities, should they occur.”
-
-That phrase is no more than a euphemistic description of aggressive war.
-It reveals the continued adherence of the German military leaders to the
-doctrine that military might, and if necessary war, should be an
-instrument of policy—the doctrine which had been explicitly condemned
-by the Kellogg Pact, which was renounced by the pact with Poland, and by
-innumerable other treaties.
-
-The document goes on to set out the general preparations necessary for a
-possible war in the mobilization period of 1937-1938. It is evidence at
-least for this, that the leaders of the German Armed Forces had it in
-mind to use the military strength which they were building up for
-aggressive purposes. No reason, they say, to anticipate attack from any
-side—there is a lack of desire for war. Yet they prepare to exploit
-militarily favorable opportunities.
-
-Still more important as evidence of the transition to planned aggression
-is the record of the important conference which Hitler held at the Reich
-Chancellery on the 5th of November 1937, at which Von Blomberg, Reich
-Minister for War; Von Fritsch, the Commander-in-Chief of the Army;
-Göring, Commander-in-Chief of the Luftwaffe; Raeder, the
-Commander-in-Chief of the Navy; and Von Neurath, then the Foreign
-Minister, were present. The minutes of that conference have already been
-put in evidence. I refer to them now only to emphasize those passages
-which make apparent the ultimate intention to wage an aggressive war.
-You will remember that the burden of Hitler’s argument at that
-conference was that Germany required more territory in Europe. Austria
-and Czechoslovakia were specifically envisaged. But Hitler realized that
-the process of conquering those two countries might well bring into
-operation the treaty obligations of Great Britain and of France. He was
-prepared to take the risk. You remember the passage:
-
- “The history of all times: Roman Empire, British Empire has
- proved that every space expansion can be effected only by
- breaking resistance and taking risks. Even setbacks are
- unavoidable: Neither formerly nor today has space been found
- without an owner. The attacker always comes up against the
- proprietor. The question for Germany is where the greatest
- possible conquest can be made at the lowest possible cost.”
-
-In the course of that conference Hitler had foreseen and discussed the
-likelihood that Poland would be involved if the aggressive expansionist
-aims which he put forward brought about a general European war in the
-course of their realization by the Nazi State. And when, therefore, on
-that very day on which that conference was taking place, Hitler assured
-the Polish Ambassador of the great value of the 1934 Pact with Poland,
-it can only be concluded that its real value in Hitler’s eyes was that
-of keeping Poland quiet until Germany had acquired such a territorial
-and strategic position that Poland was no longer a danger.
-
-That view is confirmed by the events which followed. At the beginning of
-February of 1938 the change from Nazi preparation for aggression to
-active aggression itself took place. It was marked by the substitution
-of Ribbentrop for Neurath as Foreign Minister, and of Keitel for
-Blomberg as head of the OKW. Its first fruits were the bullying of
-Schuschnigg at Berchtesgaden on February 12, 1938 and the forcible
-absorption of Austria in March. Thereafter the Green Plan for the
-destruction of Czechoslovakia was steadily developed in the way which
-you heard yesterday—the plan partially foiled, or final consummation at
-least delayed, by the Munich Agreement.
-
-With those aspects, those developments of Nazi aggression, my American
-colleagues have already dealt. But it is obvious that the acquisition of
-these two countries, their resources in manpower, their resources in the
-production of munitions of war, immensely strengthened the position of
-Germany as against Poland. And it is, therefore, perhaps not surprising
-that, just as the Defendant Göring assured the Czechoslovak Minister in
-Berlin, at the time of the Nazi invasion of Austria, that Hitler
-recognized the validity of the German-Czechoslovak Arbitration Treaty of
-1925, and that Germany had no designs against Czechoslovakia
-herself—you remember, “I give you my word of honor,” the Defendant
-Göring said—just as that is not surprising, so also it is not perhaps
-surprising that continued assurances should have been given during 1938
-to Poland in order to keep that country from interfering with the Nazi
-aggression on Poland’s neighbors.
-
-Thus, on the 20th of February of 1938, on the eve of his invasion of
-Austria, Hitler, referring to the fourth anniversary of the Polish Pact,
-permitted himself to say this to the Reichstag—and I quote:
-
- “. . . and so a way to a friendly understanding has been
- successfully paved, an understanding which, beginning with
- Danzig, has today in spite of the attempt of some mischief
- makers, succeeded in finally taking the poison out of the
- relations between Germany and Poland and transforming them into
- a sincere friendly co-operation . . . Relying on her
- friendships, Germany will not leave a stone unturned to save
- that ideal which provides the foundation for the task ahead of
- us—peace.”
-
-Still more striking, perhaps, are the cordial references to Poland in
-Hitler’s speech in the Sportpalast at Berlin on the 26th of September
-1938. He then said:
-
- “The most difficult problem with which I was confronted was that
- of our relations with Poland. There was a danger that Poles and
- Germans would regard each other as hereditary enemies. I wanted
- to prevent this. I know well enough that I should not have been
- successful if Poland had had a democratic constitution. For
- these democracies which indulge in phrases about peace are the
- most bloodthirsty war agitators. In Poland there ruled no
- democracy, but a man. And with him I succeeded, in precisely 12
- months, in coming to an agreement which, for 10 years in the
- first instance, removed in principle the danger of a conflict.
- We are all convinced that this agreement will bring lasting
- pacification. We realize that here are two peoples which must
- live together and neither of which can do away with the other. A
- people of 33 millions will always strive for an outlet to the
- sea. A way for understanding, then, had to be found, and it will
- be further extended. But the main fact is that the two
- governments, and all reasonable and clear-sighted persons among
- the two peoples within the two countries, possess the firm will
- and determination to improve their relations. It was a real work
- of peace, of more worth than all the chattering in the League of
- Nations palace at Geneva.”
-
-And so flattery of Poland preceded the annexation of Austria and renewed
-flattery of Poland preceded the projected annexation of Czechoslovakia.
-The realities behind these outward expressions of good will are clearly
-revealed in the documents relating to the Fall Grün, which are already
-before the Tribunal. They show Hitler as fully aware that there was a
-risk of Poland, England, and France being involved in war to prevent the
-German annexation of Czechoslovakia and that this risk, although it was
-realized, was also accepted. On 25 August of 1938 top-secret orders to
-the German Air Force in regard to the operations to be conducted against
-England and France, if they intervened, pointed out that, as the
-French-Czechoslovak Treaty provided for assistance only in the event of
-an “unprovoked” attack, it would take a day or two for France and
-England, and I suppose for their legal advisors to decide whether
-legally the attack had been unprovoked or not, and consequently a
-Blitzkrieg, accomplishing its aims before there could be any effective
-intervention by France or England, was the object to be aimed at.
-
-On the same day an Air Force memorandum on future organization was
-issued, and to it there was attached a map on which the Baltic States,
-Hungary, Czechoslovakia, and Poland were all shown as part of Germany,
-and preparations for expanding the Air Force, and I quote, “as the Reich
-grows in area,” as well as dispositions for a two-front war against
-France and Russia, were discussed. And on the following day Von
-Ribbentrop was being minuted about the reaction of Poland towards the
-Czechoslovak problem. I quote: “The fact that after the liquidation of
-the Czechoslovakian question it will be generally assumed that Poland
-will be next in turn is not to be denied,” is recognized, but it is
-stated, “The later this assumption sinks in, the better.”
-
-I will pause for a moment at the date of the Munich Agreement and ask
-the Tribunal to remind itself of what the evidence of documents and
-historical facts shows up to that day. It has made undeniable both the
-fact of Nazi aggressiveness and of active and actual aggression. Not
-only does that conference of 1937 show Hitler and his associates
-deliberately considering the acquisition of Austria and Czechoslovakia,
-if necessary by war, but the first of the operations had been carried
-through in March of 1938; and a large part of the second, under threat
-of war—a threat which as we now see was much more than a bluff—a
-threat of actual and real war, although without the actual need for its
-initiation, secured, as I said, a large part of the second objective in
-September of 1938. And, more ominous still, Hitler had revealed his
-adherence to the old doctrines of _Mein Kampf_—those essentially
-aggressive doctrines to the exposition of which in _Mein Kampf_, long
-regarded as the Bible of the Nazi Party, we shall draw attention in
-certain particular passages. Hitler is indicating quite clearly not only
-to his associates, but indeed to the world at this time, that he is in
-pursuit of Lebensraum and that he means to secure it by threat of force,
-or if threat of force fails, by actual force—by aggressive war.
-
-So far actual warfare had been avoided because of the love of peace, the
-lack of preparedness, the patience, the cowardice—call it what you
-will—of the democratic powers; but after Munich the question which
-filled the minds of all thinking people with acute anxiety was “where
-will this thing end? Is Hitler now satisfied as he declared himself to
-be? Or is his pursuit of Lebensraum going to lead to future aggressions,
-even if he has to embark on open, aggressive war to secure it?”
-
-It was in relation to the remainder of Czechoslovakia and to Poland that
-the answer to these questions was to be given. So far, up to the time of
-the Munich Agreement, no direct and immediate threat to Poland had been
-made. The two documents from which I have just quoted, show of course,
-that high officers of the Defendant Göring’s air staff already regarded
-the expansion of the Reich and, it would seem, the destruction and
-absorption of Poland, as a foregone conclusion. They were already
-anticipating, indeed, the last stage of Hitler’s policy as expounded in
-_Mein Kampf_—war to destroy France and to secure Lebensraum in Russia.
-And the writer of the minute to Ribbentrop already took it for granted
-that, after Czechoslovakia, Poland would be attacked. But more
-impressive than those two documents is the fact that, as I have said, at
-the conference of 5 November 1937, war with Poland, if she should dare
-to prevent German aggression against Czechoslovakia, had been quite
-coolly and calmly contemplated, and the Nazi leaders were ready to take
-the risk. So also had the risk of war with England and France under the
-same circumstances been considered and accepted. As I indicated, such a
-war would, of course, have been aggressive war on Germany’s part, and
-they were contemplating aggressive warfare. For to force one state to
-take up arms to defend another state against aggression, in other words,
-to fulfill its treaty obligations is undoubtedly to initiate aggressive
-warfare against the first state. But in spite of those plans, in spite
-of these intentions behind the scenes, it remains true that until Munich
-the decision for direct attack upon Poland and her destruction by
-aggressive war had apparently not as yet been taken by Hitler and his
-associates. It is to the transition from the intention and preparation
-of initiating aggressive war, evident in regard to Czechoslovakia, to
-the actual initiation and waging of aggressive war against Poland that I
-now pass. That transition occupies the 11 months from the 1st of October
-1938 to the actual attack on Poland on the 1st of September 1939.
-
-Within 6 months of the signature of the Munich Agreement the Nazi
-leaders had occupied the remainder of Czechoslovakia, which by that
-Agreement they had indicated their willingness to guarantee. On the 14th
-of March 1939 the aged and infirm president of the “rump” of
-Czechoslovakia, Hacha and his Foreign Minister were summoned to Berlin.
-At a meeting held between 1 o’clock and 2:15 in the small hours of the
-15th of March in the presence of Hitler, of the Defendants Ribbentrop,
-Göring, and Keitel, they were bullied and threatened and even bluntly
-told that Hitler “had issued the orders for the German troops to move
-into Czechoslovakia and for the incorporation of Czechoslovakia into the
-German Reich.”
-
-It was made quite clear to them that resistance would be useless and
-would be crushed “by force of arms with all available means,” and it was
-thus that the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia was set up and that
-Slovakia was turned into a German satellite, though nominally
-independent state. By their own unilateral action, on pretexts which had
-no shadow of validity, without discussion with the governments of any
-other country, without mediation, and in direct contradiction of the
-sense and spirit of the Munich Agreement, the Germans acquired for
-themselves that for which they had been planning in September of the
-previous year, and indeed much earlier, but which at that time they had
-felt themselves unable completely to secure without too patent an
-exhibition of their aggressive intentions. Aggression achieved whetted
-the appetite for aggression to come. There were protests. England and
-France sent diplomatic notes. Of course, there were protests. The Nazis
-had clearly shown their hand. Hitherto they had concealed from the
-outside world that their claims went beyond incorporating into the Reich
-persons of German race living in bordering territory. Now for the first
-time, in defiance of their solemn assurances to the contrary, non-German
-territory and non-German people had been seized. This acquisition of the
-whole of Czechoslovakia, together with the equally illegal occupation of
-Memel on the 22d of March 1939, resulted in an immense strengthening of
-the German positions, both politically and strategically, as Hitler had
-anticipated it would, when he discussed the matter at that conference in
-November of 1937.
-
-But long before the consummation by the Nazi leaders of their aggression
-against Czechoslovakia, they had begun to make demands upon Poland. The
-Munich settlement achieved on the 25th of October 1938, that is to say
-within less than a month of Hitler’s reassuring speech about Poland to
-which I have already referred, and within, of course, a month of the
-Munich Agreement, M. Lipski, the Polish Ambassador in Berlin, reported
-to M. Beck, the Polish Foreign Minister, that at a luncheon at
-Berchtesgaden the day before, namely, on the 24th of October 1938, the
-Defendant Ribbentrop had put forward demands for the reunion of Danzig
-with the Reich and for the building of an extra-territorial motor road
-and railway line across Pomorze, the province which the Germans called
-“The Corridor”. From that moment onwards until the Polish Government had
-made it plain, as they did during a visit of the Defendant Ribbentrop to
-Warsaw in January 1939, that they would not consent to hand over Danzig
-to German sovereignty, negotiations on these German demands continued.
-And even after Ribbentrop’s return from the visit to Warsaw, Hitler
-thought it worthwhile, in his Reichstag speech on the 30th of January
-1939, to say:
-
- “We have just celebrated the fifth anniversary of the conclusion
- of our non-aggression pact with Poland. There can scarcely be
- any difference of opinion today among the true friends of peace
- as to the value of this agreement. One only needs to ask oneself
- what might have happened to Europe if this agreement, which
- brought such relief, had not been entered into 5 years ago. In
- signing it, the great Polish marshal and patriot rendered his
- people just as great a service as the leaders of the National
- Socialist State rendered the German people. During the troubled
- months of the past year, the friendship between Germany and
- Poland has been one of the reassuring factors in the political
- life of Europe.”
-
-But that utterance was the last friendly word from Germany to Poland,
-and the last occasion on which the Nazi Leaders mentioned the
-German-Polish Agreement with approbation. During February 1939 silence
-fell upon German demands in relation to Poland. But as soon as the final
-absorption of Czechoslovakia had taken place and Germany had also
-occupied Memel, Nazi pressure upon Poland was at once renewed. In two
-conversations which he and the Defendant Ribbentrop held on the 21st of
-March and the 26th of March, respectively, with the Polish Ambassador,
-German demands upon Poland were renewed and were further pressed. And in
-view of the fate which had overtaken Czechoslovakia, in view of the
-grave deterioration in her strategical position towards Germany, it is
-not surprising that the Polish Government took alarm at the
-developments. Nor were they alone. The events of March 1939 had at last
-convinced both the English and the French Governments that the Nazi
-designs of aggression were not limited to men of German race, and that
-the specter of European war resulting from further aggressions by Nazi
-Germany had not, after all, been exorcised by the Munich Agreement.
-
-As a result, therefore, of the concern of Poland and of England and of
-France at the events in Czechoslovakia, and at the newly applied
-pressure on Poland, conversations between the English and Polish
-Governments had been taking place, and, on the 31st of March 1939, Mr.
-Neville Chamberlain, speaking in the House of Commons, stated that His
-Majesty’s Government had given an assurance to help Poland in the event
-of any action which clearly threatened Polish independence and which the
-Polish Government accordingly considered it vital to resist. On the 6th
-of April 1939 an Anglo-Polish communiqué stated that the two countries
-were prepared to enter into an agreement of a permanent and reciprocal
-character to replace the present temporary and unilateral assurance
-given by His Majesty’s Government.
-
-The justification for that concern on the part of the democratic powers
-is not difficult to find. With the evidence which we now have of what
-was happening within the councils of the German Reich and its Armed
-Forces during these months, it is manifest that the German Government
-were intent on seizing Poland as a whole, that Danzig—as Hitler himself
-was to say in time, a month later—“was not the subject of the dispute
-at all.” The Nazi Government was intent upon aggression and the demands
-and negotiations in respect to Danzig were merely a cover and excuse for
-further domination.
-
-Would that be a convenient point to stop?
-
-THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn now until 2 o’clock.
-
- [_A recess was taken until 1400 hours._]
-
-
-
-
- _Afternoon Session_
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Before the Attorney General continues his opening
-statement, the Tribunal wishes me to state what they propose to do as to
-time of sitting for the immediate future. We think it will be more
-convenient that the Tribunal shall sit from 10:00 o’clock in the morning
-until 1:00 o’clock, with a break for 10 minutes in the middle of the
-morning; and that the Tribunal shall sit in the afternoon from 2:00
-o’clock until 5:00 o’clock with a break for 10 minutes in the middle of
-the afternoon; and that there shall be no open sitting of the Tribunal
-on Saturday morning, as the Tribunal has a very large number of
-applications by the defendants’ counsel for witnesses and documents and
-other matters of that sort which it has to consider.
-
-SIR HARTLEY SHAWCROSS: May it please the Tribunal, when we broke off I
-had been saying that the Nazi Government was intent upon aggression, and
-all that had been taking place in regard to Danzig—the negotiations,
-the demands that were being made—were really no more than a cover, a
-pretext and excuse for further domination.
-
-As far back as September 1938 plans for aggressive war against Poland,
-England, and France were well in hand. While Hitler, at Munich, was
-telling the world that the German people wanted peace, and that having
-solved the Czechoslovakian problem, Germany had no more territorial
-problems in Europe, the staffs of his Armed Forces were already
-preparing their plans. On the 26th of September 1938 he had stated:
-
- “We have given guarantees to the states in the West. We have
- assured all our immediate neighbors of the integrity of their
- territory as far as Germany is concerned. That is no mere
- phrase. It is our sacred will. We have no interest whatever in a
- breach of the peace. We want nothing from these peoples.”
-
-And the world was entitled to rely on those assurances. International
-co-operation is utterly impossible unless one can assume good faith in
-the leaders of the various states and honesty in the public utterances
-that they make. But, in fact, within 2 months of that solemn and
-apparently considered undertaking, Hitler and his confederates were
-preparing for the seizure of Danzig. To recognize those assurances,
-those pledges, those diplomatic moves as the empty frauds that they
-were, one must go back to inquire what was happening within the inner
-councils of the Reich from the time of the Munich Agreement.
-
-Written some time in September 1938 is an extract from a file on the
-reconstruction of the German Navy. Under the heading
-
-“Opinion on the Draft Study of Naval Warfare against England,” this is
-stated:
-
- “1. If, according to the Führer’s decision, Germany is to
- acquire a position as a world power, she needs not only
- sufficient colonial possessions but also secure naval
- communications and secure access to the ocean.
-
-
-
- “2. Both requirements can be fulfilled only in opposition to
- Anglo-French interests and would limit their position as world
- powers. It is unlikely that they can be achieved by peaceful
- means. The decision to make Germany a world power, therefore,
- forces upon us the necessity of making the corresponding
- preparations for war.
-
-
-
- “3. War against England means at the same time war against the
- Empire, against France, probably against Russia as well, and a
- large number of countries overseas, in fact, against one-third
- to one-half of the world.
-
-
-
- “It can only be justified and have a chance of success”—and it
- was not moral justification which was being looked for in this
- document—“It can only be justified and have a chance of success
- if it is prepared economically as well as politically and
- militarily, and waged with the aim of conquering for Germany an
- outlet to the ocean.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I think the Tribunal would like to know at what stage you
-propose to put the documents, which you are citing, in evidence.
-
-SIR HARTLEY SHAWCROSS: Well, Sir, my colleagues, my American and my
-British colleagues, were proposing to follow up my own address by
-putting these documents in. The first series of documents, which will be
-put in by my noted colleague, Sir David Maxwell-Fyfe, will be the
-treaties.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I suppose that what you quote will have to be read again.
-
-SIR HARTLEY SHAWCROSS: Well, I am limiting my quotations as far as I
-possibly can. I apprehend that technically you may wish it to be quoted
-again, so as to get it on the record when the document is actually put
-into evidence. But I think it will appear, when the documents themselves
-are produced, that there will be a good deal more in most of them than I
-am actually citing now.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Yes. Very well.
-
-SIR HARTLEY SHAWCROSS: This document on naval warfare against England is
-something which is both significant and new. Until this date the
-documents in our possession disclose preparations for war against
-Poland, England, and France, purporting on the face of them at least to
-be defensive measures to ward off attacks which might result from the
-intervention of those states in the preparatory German aggressions in
-Central Europe. Hitherto aggressive war against Poland, England, and
-France has been contemplated only as a distant objective. Now, in this
-document for the first time, we find a war of conquest by Germany
-against France and England openly recognized as the future aim, at least
-of the German Navy.
-
-On 24 November 1938 an appendix was issued by Keitel to a previous order
-of the Führer. In that appendix were set out the future tasks for the
-Armed Forces and the preparation for the conduct of the war which would
-result from those tasks.
-
- “The Führer has ordered”—I quote—“that besides the three
- eventualities mentioned in the previous directive . . .
- preparations are also to be made for the surprise occupation by
- German troops of the Free State of Danzig.
-
-
-
- “For the preparation the following principles are to be borne in
- mind.”—This is the common pattern of aggression—“The primary
- assumption is the lightning seizure of Danzig by exploiting a
- favorable political situation, and not war with Poland. Troops
- which are going to be used for this purpose must not be held at
- the same time for the seizure of Memel, so that both operations
- can take place simultaneously, should such necessity arise.”
-
-Thereafter, as the evidence which is already before the Tribunal has
-shown, final preparations were taking place for the invasion of Poland.
-On the 3rd of April 1939, 3 days before the issue of the Anglo-Polish
-communiqué, the Defendant Keitel issued to the High Command of the Armed
-Forces a directive in which it was stated that the directive for the
-uniform preparation of war by the Armed Forces in 1939-40, was being
-re-issued and that part relating to Danzig would be out in April. The
-basic principles were to remain the same as in the previous directive.
-Attached to this document were the orders Fall Weiss, the code name for
-the proposed invasion of Poland. Preparation for that invasion was to be
-made, it was stated, so that the operation could be carried out at any
-time from the 1st of September 1939 onwards.
-
-On the 11th of April Hitler issued his directive for the uniform
-preparation of the war by the Armed Forces, 1939-40, and in it he said:
-
- “I shall lay down in a later directive future tasks of the Armed
- Forces and the preparations to be made in accordance with these
- for the conduct of war. Until that directive comes into force
- the Armed Forces must be prepared for the following
- eventualities:
-
-
-
- “1. Safeguarding of the frontiers . . .
-
-
-
- “2. Fall Weiss,
-
-
-
- “3. The annexation of Danzig.”
-
-Then, in an annex to that document which bore the heading “Political
-Hypotheses and Aims,” it was stated that quarrels with Poland should be
-avoided. But should Poland change her policy and adopt a threatening
-attitude towards Germany, a final settlement would be necessary,
-notwithstanding the Polish Pact. The Free City of Danzig was to be
-incorporated in the Reich at the outbreak of the conflict at the latest.
-The policy aimed at limiting the war to Poland, and this was considered
-possible at that time with the internal crises in France and resulting
-British restraint.
-
-The wording of that document—and the Tribunal will study the whole of
-it—does not directly involve the intention of immediate aggression. It
-is a plan of attack “if Poland changes her policy and adopts a
-threatening attitude.” But the picture of Poland, with her wholly
-inadequate armaments, threatening Germany, now armed to the teeth, is
-ludicrous enough, and the real aim of the document emerges in the
-sentence—and I quote: “The aim is then to destroy Polish military
-strength and to create, in the East, a situation which satisfies the
-requirements of defense”—a sufficiently vague phrase to cover designs
-of any magnitude. But even at that stage, the evidence does not suffice
-to prove that the actual decision to attack Poland on any given date had
-yet been taken. All the preparations were being set in train. All the
-necessary action was being proceeded with, in case that decision should
-be reached.
-
-It was within 3 weeks of the issue of that last document that Hitler
-addressed the Reichstag on the 28th of April 1939. In that speech he
-repeated the demands which had already been made upon Poland, and
-proceeded to denounce the German-Polish Agreement of 1934. Leaving
-aside, for the moment, the warlike preparations for aggression, which
-Hitler had set in motion behind the scenes, I will ask the Tribunal to
-consider the nature of this denunciation of an agreement to which, in
-the past, Hitler had attached such importance.
-
-In the first place, of course, Hitler’s denunciation was _per se_
-ineffectual. The text of the agreement made no provision for its
-denunciation by either party until a period of 10 years had come to an
-end. No denunciation could be legally effective until June or July of
-1943, and here was Hitler speaking in April of 1939, rather more than 5
-years too soon.
-
-In the second place, Hitler’s actual attack upon Poland, when it came on
-1 September was made before the expiration of the 6 months’ period after
-denunciation required by the agreement before any denunciation could be
-operative. And in the third place, the grounds for the denunciation
-stated by Hitler in his speech to the Reichstag were entirely specious.
-However one reads its terms, it is impossible to take the view that the
-Anglo-Polish guarantee of mutual assistance against aggression could
-render the German-Polish Pact null and void, as Hitler sought to
-suggest. If that had been the effect of the Anglo-Polish assurances,
-then certainly the pacts which had already been entered into by Hitler
-himself with Italy and with Japan had already invalidated the treaty
-with Poland. Hitler might have spared his breath. The truth is, of
-course, that the text of the English-Polish communiqué, the text of the
-assurances, contains nothing whatever to support the contention that the
-German-Polish Pact was in any way interfered with.
-
-One asks: Why then did Hitler make this trebly invalid attempt to
-denounce his own pet diplomatic child? Is there any other possible
-answer but this:
-
-That the agreement having served its purpose, the grounds which he chose
-for its denunciation were chosen merely in an effort to provide Germany
-with some kind of justification—at least for the German people—for the
-aggression on which the German leaders were intent.
-
-And, of course, Hitler sorely needed some kind of justification, some
-apparently decent excuse, since nothing had happened, and nothing seemed
-likely to happen, from the Polish side, to provide him with any kind of
-pretext for invading Poland. So far he had made demands upon his treaty
-partner which Poland, as a sovereign state, had every right to refuse.
-If dissatisfied with that refusal, Hitler was bound, under the terms of
-the agreement itself, “To seek a settlement”—I am reading the words of
-the pact:
-
- “To seek a settlement through other peaceful means, without
- prejudice to the possibility of applying those methods of
- procedure, in case of necessity, which are provided for such a
- case in the other agreements between them that are in force.”
-
-And that presumably was a reference to the German-Polish Arbitration
-Treaty, signed at Locarno in 1925.
-
-The very facts, therefore, that as soon as the Nazi leaders cannot get
-what they want but are not entitled to from Poland by merely asking for
-it and that, on their side, they made no further attempt to settle the
-dispute “by peaceful means”—in accordance with the terms of the
-agreement and of the Kellogg Pact, to which the agreement pledged both
-parties—in themselves constitute a strong presumption of aggressive
-intentions against Hitler and his associates. That presumption becomes a
-certainty when the documents to which I am about to call the attention
-of the Tribunal are studied.
-
-On the 10th of May Hitler issued an order for the capture of economic
-installations in Poland. On the 16th of May the Defendant Raeder, as
-Commander-in-Chief of the Navy, issued a memorandum setting out the
-Führer’s instructions to prepare for the operation Fall Weiss at any
-time from the 1st of September.
-
-But the decisive document is the record of the conference held by Hitler
-on the 23rd of May 1939, in conference with many high-ranking officers,
-including the Defendants Göring, Raeder, and Keitel. The details of the
-whole document will have to be read to the Tribunal later and I am
-merely summarizing the substantial effect of this part of it now. Hitler
-stated that the solution of the economic problems with which Germany was
-beset at first, could not be found without invasion of foreign states
-and attacks on foreign property. “Danzig”—and I am quoting:
-
- “Danzig is not the subject of the dispute at all. It is a
- question of expanding our living space in the East. There is,
- therefore, no question of sparing Poland, and we are left with
- the decision to attack Poland at the earliest opportunity. We
- cannot expect a repetition of the Czech affair. There will be
- fighting. Our task is to isolate Poland. The success of this
- isolation will be decisive. The isolation of Poland is a matter
- of skillful politics.”
-
-So he explained to his confederates. He anticipated the possibility that
-war with England and France might result, but a two-front war was to be
-avoided if possible. Yet England was recognized—and I say it with
-pride—as the most dangerous enemy which Germany had. “England,” he
-said, I quote, “England is the driving force against Germany . . . the
-aim will always be to force England to her knees.” More than once he
-repeated that the war with England and France would be a life and death
-struggle. “But all the same,” he concluded, “Germany will not be forced
-into war but she would not be able to avoid it.”
-
-On the 14th of June 1939 General Blaskowitz, then Commander-in-Chief of
-the 3rd Army group, issued a detailed battle plan for the Fall Weiss.
-The following day Von Brauchitsch issued a memorandum in which it was
-stated that the object of the impending operation was to destroy the
-Polish Armed Forces. “High policy demands,” he said, “High policy
-demands that the war should be begun by heavy surprise blows in order to
-achieve quick results.” The preparations proceeded apace. On the 22d of
-June the Defendant Keitel submitted a preliminary timetable for the
-operation, which Hitler seems to have approved, and suggested that the
-scheduled maneuver must be camouflaged, “in order not to disquiet the
-population.” On the 3rd of July, Brauchitsch wrote to the Defendant
-Raeder urging that certain preliminary naval moves should be abandoned,
-in order not to prejudice the surprise of the attack. On the 12th and
-13th of August Hitler and Ribbentrop had a conference with Ciano, the
-Italian Foreign Minister.
-
-It was a conference to which the Tribunal will have to have regard from
-several points of view. I summarize now only one aspect of the matter:
-At the beginning of the conversation Hitler emphasized the strength of
-the German position, of Germany’s Western and Eastern Fortifications,
-and of the strategic and other advantages they held in comparison with
-those of England, France, and Poland. Now I quote from the captured
-document itself. Hitler said this:
-
- “Since the Poles through their whole attitude had made it clear
- that, in any case, in the event of a conflict, they would stand
- on the side of the enemies of Germany and Italy, a quick
- liquidation at the present moment could only be of advantage for
- the unavoidable conflict with the Western Democracies. If a
- hostile Poland remained on Germany’s eastern frontier, not only
- would the 11 East Prussian divisions be tied down, but also
- further contingents would be kept in Pomerania and Silesia. This
- would not be necessary in the event of a previous liquidation.”
-
-Then this:
-
- “Generally speaking, the best thing to happen would be to
- liquidate the false neutrals one after the other. This process
- could be carried out more easily if on every occasion one
- partner of the Axis covered the other while it was dealing with
- an uncertain neutral. Italy might well regard Yugoslavia as a
- neutral of that kind.”
-
-Ciano was for postponing the operation. Italy was not ready. She
-believed that a conflict with Poland would develop into a general
-European war. Mussolini was convinced that conflict with the Western
-Democracies was inevitable, but he was making plans for a period 2 or 3
-years ahead. But the Führer said that the Danzig question must be
-disposed of, one way or the other, by the end of August. I quote: “He
-had, therefore, decided to use the occasion of the next political
-provocation which has the form of an ultimatum . . . .”
-
-On the 22d of August Hitler called his Supreme Commanders together and
-gave the order for the attack. In the course of what he said he made it
-clear that the decision to attack had, in fact, been made not later than
-the previous spring. He would give a spurious cause for starting the
-war. And at that time the attack was timed to take place in the early
-hours of the 26th of August. On the day before, on the 25th of August,
-the British Government, in the hope that Hitler might still be reluctant
-to plunge the world into war, and in the belief that a formal treaty
-would impress him more than the informal assurances which had been given
-previously, entered into an agreement, an express agreement for mutual
-assistance with Poland, embodying the previous assurances that had been
-given earlier in the year. It was known to Hitler that France was bound
-by the Franco-Polish Treaty of 1921, and by the Guarantee Pact signed at
-Locarno in 1925 to intervene in Poland’s favor in case of aggression.
-And for a moment Hitler hesitated. The Defendants Göring and Ribbentrop,
-in the interrogations which you will see, have agreed that it was the
-Anglo-Polish Treaty which led him to call off, or rather postpone, the
-attack which was timed for the 26th. Perhaps he hoped that after all
-there was still some chance of repeating what he had called the Czech
-affair. If so, his hopes were short-lived. On the 27th of August Hitler
-accepted Mussolini’s decision not at once to come into the war; but he
-asked for propaganda support and for a display of military activity on
-the part of Italy, so as to create uncertainty in the minds of the
-Allies. Ribbentrop on the same day said that the armies were marching.
-
-In the meantime, and, of course, particularly during the last month,
-desperate attempts were being made by the Western Powers to avert war.
-You will have details of them in evidence, of the intervention of the
-Pope, of President Roosevelt’s message, of the offer by the British
-Prime Minister to do our utmost to create the conditions in which all
-matters in issue could be the subject of free negotiations, and to
-guarantee the resultant decisions. But this and all the other efforts of
-honest men to avoid the horror of a European conflict were predestined
-to failure. The Germans were determined that the day for war had come.
-On the 31st of August Hitler issued a top-secret order for the attack to
-commence in the early hours of the 1st of September.
-
-The necessary frontier incidents duly occurred. Was it, perhaps, for
-that, that the Defendant Keitel had been instructed by Hitler to supply
-Heydrich with Polish uniforms? And so without a declaration of war,
-without even giving the Polish Government an opportunity of seeing
-Germany’s final demands—and you will hear the evidence of the
-extraordinary diplomatic negotiations, if one can call them such, that
-took place in Berlin—without giving the Poles any opportunity at all of
-negotiating or arbitrating on the demands which Nazi Germany was making,
-the Nazi troops invaded Poland.
-
-On the 3rd of September Hitler sent a telegram to Mussolini thanking him
-for his intervention but pointing out that the war was inevitable and
-that the most promising moment had to be picked after cold deliberation.
-And so Hitler and his confederates now before this Tribunal began the
-first of their wars of aggression for which they had prepared so long
-and so thoroughly. They waged it so fiercely that within a few weeks
-Poland was overrun.
-
-On the 23rd of November 1939 Hitler reviewed the situation to his
-military commanders and in the course of what he said he made this
-observation:
-
- “One year later Austria came; this step was also considered
- doubtful. It brought about an essential reinforcement of the
- Reich. The next step was Bohemia, Moravia, and Poland. This step
- also was not possible to accomplish in one move. First of all
- the Western Fortifications had to be finished . . . . Then
- followed the creation of the Protectorate, and with that the
- basis for action against Poland was laid. But I was not quite
- clear at the time whether I should start first against the East
- and then in the West, or vice versa . . . . The compulsion to
- fight with Poland came first. One might accuse me of wanting to
- fight again and again. In struggle, I see the fate of all
- beings.”
-
-He was not sure where to attack first. But that sooner or later he would
-attack, whether it were in the East or in the West, was never in doubt.
-And he had been warned, not only by the British and French Prime
-Ministers but even by his confederate Mussolini, that an attack on
-Poland would bring England and France into the war. He chose what he
-thought was the opportune moment, and he struck.
-
-Under these circumstances the intent to wage war against England and
-France, and to precipitate it by an attack on Poland, is not to be
-denied. Here was defiance of the most solemn treaty obligations. Here
-was neglect of the most pacific assurances. Here was aggression, naked
-and unashamed, which was indeed to arouse the horrified and heroic
-resistance of all civilized peoples, but which, before it was finished,
-was to tear down much of the structure of our civilization.
-
-Once started upon the active achievement of their plan to secure the
-domination of Europe, if not of the world, the Nazi Government proceeded
-to attack other countries, as occasion offered. The first actually to be
-attacked, actually to be invaded, after the attack upon Poland, were
-Denmark and Norway.
-
-On the 9th of April 1940 the German Armed Forces invaded Norway and
-Denmark without any warning, without any declaration of war. It was a
-breach of the Hague Convention of 1907. It was a breach of the
-Convention of Arbitration and Conciliation signed between Germany and
-Denmark on 2 June 1926. It was, of course, a breach of the
-Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928. It was a violation of the Non-Aggression
-Treaty between Germany and Denmark made on the 31st of May 1939. And it
-was a breach of the most explicit assurances which had been given. After
-his annexation of Czechoslovakia had shaken the confidence of the world,
-Hitler attempted to reassure the Scandinavian states. On the 28th of
-April 1939 he affirmed that he had never made any request to any of them
-which was incompatible with their sovereignty and independence. On the
-31st of May 1939 he signed a non-aggression pact with Denmark.
-
-On the 2d of September 1939, the day after he had invaded Poland and
-occupied Danzig, he again expressed his determination, so he said, to
-observe the inviolability and integrity of Norway in an _aide-mémoire_,
-which was handed to the Norwegian Foreign Minister by the German
-Minister in Oslo on that day.
-
-A month later, in a public speech on the 6th of October 1939, he said:
-
- “Germany has never had any conflicts of interest or even points
- of controversy with the northern states, neither has she any
- today. Sweden and Norway have both been offered non-aggression
- pacts by Germany, and have both refused them, solely because
- they do not feel themselves threatened in any way.”
-
-When the invasion of Denmark and Norway was already begun in the early
-morning of 9 April 1940, a German memorandum was handed to the
-governments of those countries attempting to justify the German action.
-Various allegations against the governments of the invaded countries
-were made. It was said that Norway had been guilty of breaches of
-neutrality. It was said that she had allowed and tolerated the use of
-her territorial waters by Great Britain. It was said that Britain and
-France were themselves making plans to invade and occupy Norway and that
-the Government of Norway was prepared to acquiesce in such an event.
-
-I do not propose to argue the question whether or not these allegations
-were true or false. That question is irrelevant to the issues before
-this Court. Even if the allegations were true—and they were patently
-false—they would afford no conceivable justification for the action of
-invading without warning, without declaration of war, without any
-attempt at mediation or conciliation.
-
-Aggressive war is none the less aggressive war because the state which
-wages it believes that other states might, in the future, take similar
-action. The rape of a nation is not justified because it is thought she
-may be raped by another. Nor even in self-defense are warlike measures
-justified except after all means of mediation have been tried and failed
-and force is actually being exercised against the state concerned.
-
-But the matter is irrelevant because, in actual fact, with the evidence
-which we now possess, it is abundantly clear that the invasion of these
-two countries was undertaken for quite different purposes. It had been
-planned long before any question of breach of neutrality or occupation
-of Norway by England could ever have occurred. And it is equally clear
-that the assurances repeated again and again throughout 1939 were made
-for no other purpose than to lull suspicion in these countries, and to
-prevent them taking steps to resist the attack against them which was
-all along in active preparation.
-
-For some years the Defendant Rosenberg, in his capacity as Chief of the
-Foreign Affairs Bureau—APA—of the NSDAP, had interested himself in the
-promotion of Fifth Column activities in Norway and he had established
-close relationship with the Nasjonal Samling, a political group headed
-by the now notorious traitor, Vidkun Quisling. During the winter of
-1938-39, APA was in contact with Quisling, and later Quisling conferred
-with Hitler and with the Defendants Raeder and Rosenberg. In August 1939
-a special 14-day course was held at the school of the Office of Foreign
-Relations in Berlin for 25 followers whom Quisling had selected to
-attend. The plan was to send a number of selected and “reliable” men to
-Germany for a brief military training in an isolated camp. These
-“reliable men” were to be the area and language specialists to German
-special troops who were taken to Oslo on coal barges to undertake
-political action in Norway. The object was a _coup_ in which Quisling
-would seize his leading opponents in Norway, including the King, and
-prevent all military resistance from the beginning. Simultaneously with
-those Fifth Column activities Germany was making her military
-preparations. On the 2d of September 1939, as I said, Hitler had assured
-Norway of his intention to respect her neutrality. On 6 October he said
-that the Scandinavian states were not menaced in any way. Yet on the 3rd
-October the Defendant Raeder was pointing out that the occupation of
-bases, if necessary by force, would greatly improve the German strategic
-position. On the 9th of October Dönitz was recommending Trondheim as the
-main base, with Narvik as an alternative base for fuel supplies. The
-Defendant Rosenberg was reporting shortly afterwards on the possibility
-of a _coup d’état_ by Quisling, immediately supported by German military
-and naval forces. On the 12th of December 1939 the Defendant Raeder
-advised Hitler, in the presence of the Defendants Keitel and Jodl, that
-if Hitler was favorably impressed by Quisling, the OKW should prepare
-for the occupation of Norway, if possible with Quisling’s assistance,
-but if necessary, entirely by force. Hitler agreed, but there was a
-doubt whether action should be taken against the Low Countries or
-against Scandinavia first. Weather conditions delayed the march on the
-Low Countries. In January 1940 instructions were given to the German
-Navy for the attack on Norway. On the 1st of March a directive for the
-occupation was issued by Hitler. The general object was not said to be
-to prevent occupation by English forces but, in vague and general terms,
-to prevent British encroachment in Scandinavia and the Baltic and “to
-guarantee our ore bases in Sweden and to give our Navy and Air Force a
-wider start line against Britain.” But the directive went on (and here
-is the common pattern):
-
- “. . . on principle we will do our utmost to make the operation
- appear as a peaceful occupation, the object of which is the
- military protection of the Scandinavian states . . . . It is
- important that the Scandinavian states as well as the western
- opponents should be taken by surprise by our measures . . . . In
- case the preparations for embarkation can no longer be kept
- secret, the leaders and the troops will be deceived with
- fictitious objectives.”
-
-The form and success of the invasion are well known. In the early hours
-of the 9th of April, seven cruisers, 14 destroyers, and a number of
-torpedo boats and other small craft carried advance elements of six
-divisions, totalling about 10,000 men, forced an entry and landed troops
-in the outer Oslo Fjord, Kristiansand, Stavanger, Bergen, Trondheim, and
-Narvik. A small force of troops was also landed at Arendal and Egersund
-on the southern coast. In addition, airborne troops were landed near
-Oslo and Stavanger in airplanes. The German attack came as a complete
-surprise. All the invaded towns along the coast were captured according
-to plan and with only slight losses. Only the plan to capture the King
-and Parliament failed. But brave as was the resistance, which was
-hurriedly organized throughout the country—nothing could be done in the
-face of the long-planned surprise attack—and on the 10th of June
-military resistance ceased. So another act of aggression was brought to
-completion.
-
-Almost exactly a month after the attack, on Norway, on the 10th of May
-1940, the German Armed Forces, repeating what had been done 25 years
-before, streamed into Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg according
-to plan—a plan that is, of invading without warning and without any
-declaration of war.
-
-What was done was, of course, a breach of the Hague Convention, and is
-so charged. It was a violation of the Locarno Agreement of 1925, which
-the Nazi Government affirmed in 1935, only illegally to repudiate it a
-couple of years later. By that agreement all questions incapable of
-settlement by ordinary diplomatic means were to be referred to
-arbitration. You will see the comprehensive terms of all those treaties.
-It was a breach of the Treaty of Arbitration and Conciliation signed
-between Germany and the Netherlands on the 20th of May 1926. It was a
-breach of a similar treaty with Luxembourg of 11 September 1929. It was
-a breach of the Kellogg-Briand Pact. But those treaties, perhaps, had
-not derived in the minds of the Nazi rulers of Germany any added
-sanctity from the fact that they had been solemnly concluded by the
-governments of pre-Nazi Germany. Let us then consider the specific
-assurances and undertakings which the Nazi rulers themselves gave to
-these states which lay in the way of their plans against France and
-England and which they had always intended to attack. Not once, not
-twice, but 11 times the clearest possible assurances were given to
-Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg. On those assurances, solemnly
-given and formally expressed, these countries were entitled to rely and
-did rely. In respect of the breach of those assurances these defendants
-are charged. On the 30th of January 1937, for instance, Hitler had said:
-
- “As for the rest, I have more than once expressed the desire and
- the hope of entering into similar good and cordial relations
- with our neighbors. Germany has, and here I repeat this
- solemnly, given the assurance time and time again that, for
- instance, between her and France there cannot be any humanly
- conceivable points of controversy. The German Government has
- further given the assurance to Belgium and Holland that it is
- prepared to recognize and to guarantee the inviolability and
- neutrality of these territories.”
-
-After Hitler had remilitarized the Rhineland and had repudiated the
-Locarno Pact, England and France sought to re-establish the position of
-security for Belgium which Hitler’s action had threatened. And they,
-therefore, gave to Belgium on the 24th of April 1937 a specific
-guarantee that they would maintain, in respect of Belgium, the
-undertakings of assistance which they had entered into with her both
-under the Locarno Pact and under the Covenant of the League. On the 13th
-of October 1937 the German Government also made a declaration assuring
-Belgium of its intention to recognize the integrity of that country.
-
-It is, perhaps, convenient to deal with the remaining assurances as we
-review the evidence which is available as to the preparations and
-intentions of the German Government prior to their actual invasion of
-Belgium on the 10th of May 1940.
-
-As in the case of Poland, as in the case of Norway and Denmark, so also
-here the dates speak for themselves.
-
-As early as August of 1938 steps were being taken to utilize the Low
-Countries as bases for decisive action in the West in the event of
-France and England opposing Germany in the aggressive plan which was on
-foot at that time against Czechoslovakia.
-
-In an Air Force letter dated the 25th of August 1938 which deals with
-the action to be taken if England and France should interfere in the
-operation against Czechoslovakia, it is stated:
-
- “It is not expected for the moment that other states will
- intervene against Germany. The Dutch and the Belgian area
- assumes in this connection much more importance for the conduct
- of war in Western Europe than during the World War, mainly as
- advance base for the air war.”
-
-In the last paragraph of that order it is stated:
-
- “Belgium and the Netherlands, when in German hands, represent an
- extraordinary advantage in the prosecution of the air war
- against Great Britain as well as against France . . .”
-
-That was in August 1938. Eight months later, on the 28th of April 1939,
-Hitler is declaring again:
-
- “I was pleased that a number of European states availed
- themselves of this declaration by the German Government to
- express and emphasize their desire to have absolute neutrality.”
-
-A month later, on the 23rd of May 1939, Hitler held that conference in
-the Reich Chancellery, to which I already referred. The minutes of that
-meeting report Hitler as saying:
-
- “The Dutch and Belgian air bases must be occupied by armed
- forces. Declarations of neutrality cannot be considered of any
- value. If England and France want a general conflict on the
- occasion of the war between Germany and Poland they will support
- Holland and Belgium in their neutrality . . . . Therefore, if
- England intends to intervene at the occasion of the Polish war,
- we must attack Holland with lightning speed. It is desirable to
- secure a defense line on Dutch soil up to the Zuider Zee.”
-
-Even after that he was to give his solemn declarations that he would
-observe the neutrality of these countries. On the 26th of August 1939,
-when the crisis in regard to Danzig and Poland was reaching its climax,
-on the very day he had picked for the invasion of Poland, declarations
-assuring the governments concerned of the intention to respect their
-neutrality were handed by the German Ambassadors to the King of the
-Belgians, the Queen of the Netherlands, and to the Government of the
-Grand Duchy of Luxembourg in the most solemn form. But to the Army
-Hitler was saying:
-
- “If Holland and Belgium are successfully occupied and held, a
- successful war against England will be secured.”
-
-On the 1st of September Poland was invaded, and 2 days later England and
-France came into the war against Germany, in pursuance of the treaty
-obligations already referred to. On the 6th of October Hitler renewed
-his assurances of friendship to Belgium and Holland, but on the 9th of
-October, before any kind of accusation had been made by the German
-Government of breaches of neutrality, Hitler issued a directive for the
-conduct of the war. And he said this:
-
- “1) If it becomes evident in the near future that England and
- France, acting under her leadership, are not disposed to end the
- war, I am determined to take firm and offensive action without
- letting much time elapse.
-
-
-
- “2) A long waiting period results not only in the ending of
- Belgian and perhaps also of Dutch neutrality to the advantage of
- the Western Powers, but also strengthens the military power of
- our enemies to an increasing degree, causes confidence of the
- neutrals in final German victory to wane, and does not help to
- bring Italy to our aid as brothers-in-arms.
-
-
-
- “3) I therefore issue the following orders for the further
- conduct of military operations:
-
-
-
- “(a) Preparations should be made for offensive action on the
- northern flank of the Western Front crossing the area of
- Luxembourg, Belgium, and Holland. This attack must be carried
- out as soon and as forcefully as possible.
-
-
-
- “(b) The object of this attack is to defeat as many strong
- sections of the French fighting army as possible, and her ally
- and partner in the fighting, and at the same time to acquire as
- great an area of Holland, Belgium, and northern France as
- possible, to use as a base offering good prospects for waging
- aerial and sea warfare against England and to provide ample
- coverage for the vital district of the Ruhr.”
-
-Nothing could state more clearly or more definitely the object behind
-the invasion of these three countries than that document expresses it.
-
-On the 15th of October 1939 the Defendant Keitel wrote a most-secret
-letter concerning “Fall Gelb” which was the name given to the operation
-against the Low Countries. In it he said that:
-
- “The protection of the Ruhr area by moving aircraft reporting
- service and the air defense as far forward as possible in the
- area of Holland is significant for the whole conduct of the war.
- The more Dutch territory we occupy, the more effective can the
- defense of the Ruhr area be made. This point of view must
- determine the choice of objectives of the Army, even if the Army
- and Navy are not directly interested in such territorial gain.
- It must be the object of the Army’s preparations, therefore, to
- occupy, on receipt of a special order, the territory of Holland,
- in the first instance in the area of the Grebbe-Maas line. It
- will depend on the military and political attitude of the Dutch,
- as well as on the effectiveness of their flooding, whether
- objectives can and must be further extended.”
-
-The Fall Gelb operation had apparently been planned to take place at the
-beginning of November 1939. We have in our possession a series of 17
-letters, dated from 7th November until the 9th May postponing almost
-from day to day the D-Day of the operation, so that by the beginning of
-November all the major plans and preparations had in fact been made.
-
-On the 10th of January 1940 a German airplane force-landed in Belgium.
-In it was found the remains of an operation order which the pilot had
-attempted to burn; setting out considerable details of the Belgian
-landing grounds that were to be captured by the Air Force. Many other
-documents have been found which illustrate the planning and preparation
-for this invasion in the latter half of 1939 and early 1940, but they
-carry the matter no further, and they show no more clearly than the
-evidence to which I have already referred, the plans and intention of
-the German Government and its Armed Forces.
-
-On the 10th of May 1940 at about 0500 hours in the morning, the German
-invasion of Belgium, Holland, and Luxembourg began.
-
-And so once more the forces of aggression moved on. Treaties,
-assurances, the rights of sovereign states meant nothing. Brutal force,
-covered by as great an element of surprise as the Nazis could secure,
-was to seize that which was deemed necessary for striking the mortal
-blow against England, the main enemy. The only fault of these three
-unhappy countries was that they stood in the path of the German invader,
-in his designs against England and France. That was enough, and they
-were invaded.
-
- [_A recess was taken._]
-
-SIR HARTLEY SHAWCROSS: On the 6th of April 1941 German Armed Forces
-invaded Greece and Yugoslavia. Again the blow was struck without warning
-and with the cowardice and deceit which the world now fully expected
-from the self-styled “Herrenvolk”. It was a breach of the Hague
-Convention. It was a breach of the Pact of Paris. It was a breach of a
-specific assurance given by Hitler on the 6th of October 1939.
-
-He had then said this:
-
- “Immediately after the completion of the Anschluss, I informed
- Yugoslavia that from now on the frontier with this country will
- also be an unalterable one and that we desire only to live in
- peace and friendship with her.”
-
-But the plan for aggression against Yugoslavia had, of course, been in
-hand well before that. In the aggressive action eastward towards the
-Ukraine and the Soviet territories, security of the southern flank and
-the lines of communication had already been considered by the Germans.
-
-The history of the events leading up to the invasion of Yugoslavia by
-Germany is well known. At 3 o’clock in the morning of the 28th of
-October 1940 a 3-hour ultimatum had been presented by the Italian
-Government to the Greek Government, and the presentation of that
-ultimatum was immediately followed by the aerial bombardment of Greek
-provincial towns and the advance of Italian troops into Greek territory.
-The Greeks were not prepared. They were at first forced to withdraw. But
-later the Italian advance was at first checked, then driven towards the
-Albanian frontier, and by the end of 1940 the Italian Army had suffered
-severe reverses at Greek hands.
-
-Of the German position in the matter there is, of course, the evidence
-of what occurred when, on the 12th of August 1939, Hitler had this
-meeting with Ciano.
-
-You will remember that Hitler said then:
-
- “Generally speaking, the best thing to happen would be to
- liquidate false neutrals one after the other. This process could
- be carried out more easily if, on every occasion, one partner of
- the Axis covered the other while it was dealing with an
- uncertain neutral. Italy might well regard Yugoslavia as a
- neutral of this kind.”
-
-Then the conference went on and it met again on the 13th of August, and
-in the course of lengthy discussions, Hitler said this:
-
- “In general, however, on success by one of the Axis partners,
- not only strategical but also psychological strengthening of the
- other partner and also of the whole Axis would ensue. Italy
- carried through a number of successful operations in Abyssinia,
- Spain, and Albania, and each time against the wishes of the
- democratic entente. These individual actions have not only
- strengthened Italian local interests, but have also . . .
- reinforced her general position. The same was the case with
- German action in Austria and Czechoslovakia . . . . The
- strengthening of the Axis by these individual operations was of
- the greatest importance for the unavoidable clash with the
- Western Powers.”
-
-And so once again we see the same procedure being followed. That meeting
-had taken place on the 12th and the 13th of August of 1939. Less than 2
-months later, Hitler was giving his assurance to Yugoslavia that Germany
-only desired to live in peace and friendship with her, with the state,
-the liquidation of which by his Axis partner, he had himself so recently
-suggested.
-
-Then came the Italian ultimatum to Greece and war against Greece and the
-Italian reverse.
-
-We have found, amongst the captured documents, an undated letter from
-Hitler to Mussolini which must have been written about the time of the
-Italian aggression against Greece:
-
- “Permit me”—Hitler said—“at the beginning of this letter to
- assure you that within the last 14 days my heart and my thoughts
- have been more than ever with you. Moreover, Duce, be assured of
- my determination to do everything on your behalf which might
- ease the present situation for you. When I asked you to receive
- me in Florence, I undertook the trip in the hope of being able
- to express my views prior to the beginning of the threatening
- conflict with Greece, about which I had received only general
- information. First, I wanted to request you to postpone the
- action, if at all possible, until a more favorable time of the
- year, at all events until after the American presidential
- election. But in any case, however, I wanted to request you,
- Duce, not to undertake this action without a previous
- lightning-like occupation of Crete and, for this purpose, I also
- wanted to submit to you some practical suggestions in regard to
- the employment of a German parachute division and a further
- airborne division . . . Yugoslavia must become disinterested, if
- possible, however, from our point of view, interested in
- co-operating in the liquidation of the Greek question. Without
- assurances from Yugoslavia, it is useless to risk any successful
- operation in the Balkans . . . Unfortunately, I must stress the
- fact that waging a war in the Balkans before March is
- impossible. Hence it would also serve to make any threatening
- influence upon Yugoslavia of no purpose, since the Serbian
- General Staff is well aware of the fact that no practical action
- could follow such a threat before March. Hence, Yugoslavia must,
- if at all possible, be won over by other means and in other
- ways.”
-
-On the 12th of November 1939, in his top-secret order, Hitler ordered
-the OKH to make preparations to occupy Greece and Bulgaria, if
-necessary. Apparently 10 divisions were to be used in order to prevent
-Turkish intervention. I think I said 1939; it should, of course, have
-been the 12th of November 1940. And to shorten the time, the German
-divisions in Romania were to be increased.
-
-On the 13th of December Hitler issued an order to OKW, OKL, OKH, OKM,
-and the General Staff on the operation Marita, as the invasion of Greece
-was to be called. In that order it was stated that the invasion of
-Greece was planned and was to commence as soon as the weather was
-advantageous. A further order was issued on the 11th of January of 1941.
-
-On the 28th of January of 1941 Hitler saw Mussolini. The Defendants
-Jodl, Keitel, and Ribbentrop were present at the meeting. We know about
-it from Jodl’s notes of what took place. We know that Hitler stated that
-one of the purposes of German troop concentrations in Romania was for
-use in the plan Marita against Greece.
-
-On the 1st of March 1941 German troops entered Bulgaria and moved
-towards the Greek frontier. In the face of this threat of an attack on
-Greece by German as well as Italian forces, British troops were landed
-in Greece on the 3rd of March, in accordance with the declaration which
-had been given by the British Government on the 13th of April 1939; that
-Britain would feel bound to give Greece and Romania, respectively, all
-the support in her power in the event of either country becoming the
-victim of aggression and resisting such aggression. Already, of course,
-the Italian operations had made that pledge operative.
-
-On the 25th of March of 1941, Yugoslavia, partly won over by the “other
-means and in other ways” to which Hitler had referred, joined the Three
-Power Pact which had already been signed by Germany, Italy, and Japan.
-The preamble of the pact stated that the three powers would stand side
-by side and work together.
-
-On the same day the Defendant Ribbentrop wrote two notes to the Yugoslav
-Prime Minister assuring him of Germany’s full intention to respect the
-sovereignty and independence of his country. That declaration was just
-another example of the treachery employed by German diplomacy. We have
-already seen the preparations that had been made. We have seen Hitler’s
-attempts to tempt the Italians into an aggression against Yugoslavia. We
-have seen, in January, his own orders for preparations to invade
-Yugoslavia and then Greece. And now, on the 25th of March, he is signing
-a pact with that country and his Foreign Minister is writing assurances
-of respect for her sovereignty and territorial integrity.
-
-As a result of the signing of that pact, the anti-Nazi element in
-Yugoslavia immediately accomplished a _coup d’état_ and established a
-new government. And thereupon, no longer prepared to respect the
-territorial integrity and sovereignty of her ally, Germany immediately
-took the decision to invade. On the 27th of March, 2 days after the
-Three Power Pact had been signed, Hitler issued instructions that
-Yugoslavia was to be invaded and used as a base for the continuance of
-the combined German and Italian operation against Greece.
-
-Following that, further deployment and instructions for the action
-Marita were issued by Von Brauchitsch on the 30th of March 1941.
-
-It was said—and I quote:
-
- “The orders issued with regard to the operation against Greece
- remain valid so far as not affected by this order . . . . On the
- 5th April, weather permitting, the Air Forces are to attack
- troops in Yugoslavia, while simultaneously the attack of the
- 12th Army begins against both Yugoslavia and Greece.”
-
-And as we now know, the invasion actually commenced in the early hours
-of the 6th of April.
-
-Treaties, pacts, assurances, obligations of any kind, are brushed aside
-and ignored wherever the aggressive interests of Germany are concerned.
-
-I turn now to the last act of aggression in Europe—my American
-colleagues will deal with the position in relation to Japan—I turn now
-to the last act of aggression in Europe with which these Nazi
-conspirators are charged, the attack upon Russia.
-
-In August of 1939 Germany, although undoubtedly intending to attack
-Russia at some convenient opportunity, concluded a treaty of
-non-aggression with the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. When
-Belgium and the Low Countries were occupied and France collapsed in June
-of 1940, England—although with the inestimably valuable moral and
-economic support of the United States of America—was left alone in the
-field as the sole representative of democracy in the face of the forces
-of aggression. At that moment only the British Empire stood between
-Germany and the achievement of her aim to dominate the Western World.
-Only the British Empire—and England as its citadel. But it was enough.
-The first, and possibly the decisive, military defeat which the enemy
-sustained was in the campaign against England; and that defeat had a
-profound influence on the future course of the war.
-
-On the 16th of July of 1940 Hitler issued to the Defendants Keitel and
-Jodl a directive—which they found themselves unable to obey—for the
-invasion of England. It started off—and Englishmen will forever be
-proud of it—by saying that:
-
- “Since England, despite her militarily hopeless situation, shows
- no signs of willingness to come to terms, I have decided to
- prepare a landing operation against England and if necessary to
- carry it out. The aim is . . . to eliminate the English homeland
- as a base for the carrying on of the war against Germany . . . .
- Preparations for the entire operation must be completed by
- mid-August.”
-
-But the first essential condition for that plan was, I quote:
-
- “. . . the British Air Force must morally and actually be so far
- overcome that it does not any longer show any considerable
- aggressive force against the German attack.”
-
-The Defendant Göring and his Air Force, no doubt, made the most
-strenuous efforts to realize that condition, but, in one of the most
-splendid pages of our history, it was decisively defeated. And although
-the bombardment of England’s towns and villages was continued throughout
-that dark winter of 1940-41, the enemy decided in the end that England
-was not to be subjugated by these means, and, accordingly, Germany
-turned back to the East, the first major aim unachieved.
-
-On the 22d of June 1941 German Armed Forces invaded Russia, without
-warning, without declaration of war. It was, of course, a breach of the
-usual series of treaties; they meant no more in this case than they had
-meant in the other cases. It was a violation of the Pact of Paris; it
-was a flagrant contradiction of the Treaty of Non-Aggression which
-Germany and Russia had signed on the 23rd of August a year before.
-
-Hitler himself said, in referring to that agreement, that “agreements
-were only to be kept as long as they served a purpose.”
-
-The Defendant Ribbentrop was more explicit. In an interview with the
-Japanese Ambassador in Berlin on the 23rd of February 1941, he made it
-clear that the object of the agreement had merely been, so far as
-Germany was concerned, to avoid a two-front war.
-
-In contrast to what Hitler and Ribbentrop and the rest of them were
-planning within the secret councils of Germany, we know what they were
-saying to the rest of the world.
-
-On the 19th of July, Hitler spoke in the Reichstag:
-
- “In these circumstances”—he said—“I considered it proper to
- negotiate as a first priority a sober definition of interest
- with Russia. It would be made clear once and for all what
- Germany believes she must regard as her sphere of interest to
- safeguard her future and, on the other hand, what Russia
- considers important for her existence. From this clear
- delineation of the sphere of interest there followed the new
- regulation of Russian-German relations. Any hope that now, at
- the end of the term of the agreement, a new Russo-German tension
- could arise is childish. Germany has taken no step which would
- lead her outside her sphere of interest, nor has Russia. But
- England’s hope to achieve an amelioration of her own position
- through the engineering of some new European crisis, is, insofar
- as it is concerned with Russo-German relations, an illusion.
-
- “English statesmen perceive everything somewhat slowly, but they
- too will learn to understand this in the course of time.”
-
-The whole statement was, of course, a tissue of lies. It was not many
-months after it had been made that the arrangements for attacking Russia
-were put into hand. And the Defendant Raeder gives us the probable
-reason for the decision in a note which he sent to Admiral Assmann:
-
- “The fear that control of the air over the Channel in the Autumn
- of 1940 could no longer be attained, a realization which the
- Führer no doubt gained earlier than the Naval War Staff, who
- were not so fully informed of the true results of air raids on
- England (our own losses), surely caused the Führer, as far back
- as August and September”—this was August and September of
- 1940—“to consider whether, even prior to victory in the West,
- an Eastern campaign would be feasible, with the object of first
- eliminating our last serious opponent on the Continent . . . .
- The Führer did not openly express this fear, however, until well
- into September.”
-
-He may not have spoken to the Navy of his intentions until later in
-September, but by the beginning of that month he had undoubtedly told
-the Defendant Jodl about them.
-
-Dated the 6th of September 1940, we have a directive of the OKW signed
-by the Defendant Jodl, and I quote:
-
- “Directions are given for the occupation forces in the East to
- be increased in the following weeks. For security reasons”—and
- I quote—“this should not create the impression in Russia that
- Germany is preparing for an Eastern offensive.”
-
-Directives are given to the German Intelligence Service pertaining to
-the answering of questions by the Russian Intelligence Service, and I
-quote:
-
- “The respective strength of the German troops in the East is to
- be camouflaged by . . . frequent changes in this area . . . .
- The impression is to be created that the bulk of the troops is
- in the south of the Government General and that the occupation
- in the North is relatively small.”
-
-And so we see the beginning of the operations.
-
-On the 12th of November 1940 Hitler issued a directive, signed by the
-Defendant Jodl, in which it was stated that the political task to
-determine the attitude of Russia had begun, but that without reference
-to the result of preparations against the East, which had been ordered
-orally.
-
-It is not to be supposed that the U.S.S.R. would have taken part in any
-conversations at that time if it had been realized that on the very day
-orders were being given for preparations to be made for the invasion of
-Russia, and that the order for the operation, which was called “Plan
-Barbarossa”, was in active preparation. On the 18th of December the
-order was issued, and I quote:
-
- “The German Armed Forces have to be ready to defeat Soviet
- Russia in a swift campaign before the end of the war against
- Great Britain.”
-
-And later, in the same instruction—and I quote again:
-
- “All orders which shall be issued by the High Commanders in
- accordance with this instruction have to be clothed in such
- terms that they may be taken as measures of precaution in case
- Russia should change her present attitude towards ourselves.”
-
-Germany kept up the pretense of friendliness and, on the 10th of January
-1941, well after the Plan Barbarossa for the invasion of Russia had been
-decided upon, Germany signed the German-Russian Frontier Treaty. Less
-than a month later, on the 3rd of February of 1941, Hitler held a
-conference, attended by the Defendants Keitel and Jodl, at which it was
-provided that the whole operation against Russia was to be camouflaged
-as if it was part of the preparation for the “Plan Seelöwe”, as the plan
-for the invasion of England was described.
-
-By March of 1941 plans were sufficiently advanced to include provision
-for dividing the Russian territory into nine separate states to be
-administered under Reich Commissars, under the general control of the
-Defendant Rosenberg; and at the same time detailed plans for the
-economic exploitation of the country were made under the supervision of
-the Defendant Göring, to whom the responsibility in this matter—and it
-is a serious one—had been delegated by Hitler.
-
-You will hear something of the details of these plans. I remind you of
-one document which has already been referred to in this connection.
-
-It is significant that on the 2d of May of 1941 a conference of State
-Secretaries took place in regard to the Plan Barbarossa, and in the
-course of that it was noted:
-
- “1. The war can be continued only if all Armed Forces are fed
- out of Russia in the third year of the war.
-
-
-
- “2. There is no doubt that, as a result, many millions of people
- will be starved to death if we take out of the country the
- things necessary for us.”
-
-But that apparently caused no concern. The “Plan Oldenbourg”, as the
-scheme for the economic organization and exploitation of Russia was
-called, went on. By the 1st of May 1941, the D-Day of the operation had
-been fixed. By the 1st of June preparations were virtually complete and
-an elaborate timetable was issued. It was estimated that, although there
-would be heavy frontier battles, lasting perhaps 4 weeks, after that no
-serious opposition was to be expected.
-
-On the 22d of June, at 3:30 in the morning, the German armies marched
-again. As Hitler said in his proclamation to them, “I have decided to
-give the fate of the German people and of the Reich and of Europe again
-into the hands of our soldiers.”
-
-The usual false pretexts were, of course, given. Ribbentrop stated on
-the 28th of June that the step was taken because of the threatening of
-the German frontiers by the Red Army. It was a lie, and the Defendant
-Ribbentrop knew it was a lie.
-
-On the 7th of June 1941 Ribbentrop’s own Ambassador in Moscow was
-reporting to him, and I quote, that, “All observations show that Stalin
-and Molotov, who are alone responsible for Russian foreign policy, are
-doing everything to avoid a conflict with Germany.” The staff records
-which you will see make it clear that the Russians were making no
-military preparations and that they were continuing their deliveries
-under the Trade Agreement to the very last day. The truth is, of course,
-that the elimination of Russia as a political opponent and the
-incorporation of the Soviet territory in the German Lebensraum had been
-one of the cardinal features of Nazi policy for a very long time,
-subordinated latterly for what the Defendant Jodl called diplomatic
-reasons.
-
-And so, on the 22d of June, the Nazi armies were flung against the power
-with which Hitler had so recently sworn friendship, and Germany embarked
-upon that last act of aggression in Europe, which, after long and bitter
-fighting, was eventually to result in Germany’s own collapse.
-
-That, then, is the case against these defendants, as amongst the rulers
-of Germany, under Count Two of this Indictment.
-
-It may be said that many of the documents which have been referred to
-were in Hitler’s name, and that the orders were Hitler’s orders, and
-that these men were mere instruments of Hitler’s will. But they were the
-instruments without which Hitler’s will could not be carried out; and
-they were more than that. These men were no mere willing tools, although
-they would be guilty enough if that had been their role. They are the
-men whose support had built Hitler up into the position of power he
-occupied; these are the men whose initiative and planning often
-conceived and certainly made possible the acts of aggression done in
-Hitler’s name; and these are the men who enabled Hitler to build up the
-Army, the Navy, the Air Force, the war economy, the political
-philosophy, by which these treacherous attacks were carried out, and by
-which he was able to lead his fanatical followers into peaceful
-countries to murder, to loot, and to destroy. They are the men whose
-cooperation and support made the Nazi Government of Germany possible.
-
-The government of a totalitarian country may be carried on without
-representatives of the people, but it cannot be carried on without any
-assistance at all. It is no use having a leader unless there are also
-people willing and ready to serve their personal greed and ambition by
-helping and following him. The dictator who is set up in control of the
-destinies of his country does not depend on himself alone either in
-acquiring power or in maintaining it. He depends upon the support and
-the backing which lesser men, themselves lusting to share in dictatorial
-power, anxious to bask in the adulation of their leader, are prepared to
-give.
-
-In the criminal courts of our countries, when men are put on their trial
-for breaches of the municipal laws, it not infrequently happens that of
-a gang indicted together in the dock, one has the master mind, the
-leading personality. But it is no excuse for the common thief to say, “I
-stole because I was told to steal”, for the murderer to plead, “I killed
-because I was asked to kill.” And these men are in no different
-position, for all that it was nations they sought to rob, and whole
-peoples which they tried to kill. “The warrant of no man excuseth the
-doing of an illegal act.” Political loyalty, military obedience are
-excellent things, but they neither require nor do they justify the
-commission of patently wicked acts. There comes a point where a man must
-refuse to answer to his leader if he is also to answer to his
-conscience. Even the common soldier, serving in the ranks of his army,
-is not called upon to obey illegal orders. But these men were no common
-soldiers: They were the men whose skill and cunning, whose labor and
-activity made it possible for the German Reich to tear up existing
-treaties, to enter into new ones and to flout them, to reduce
-international negotiations and diplomacy to a hollow mockery, to destroy
-all respect for and effect in international law and, finally, to march
-against the peoples of the world to secure that domination in which, as
-arrogant members of their self-styled master race, they professed to
-believe.
-
-If these crimes were in one sense the crimes of Nazi Germany, they also
-are guilty as the individuals who aided, abetted, counselled, procured,
-and made possible the commission of what was done.
-
-The total sum of the crime these men have committed—so awful in its
-comprehension—has many aspects. Their lust and sadism, their deliberate
-slaughter and degradation of so many millions of their fellow creatures
-that the imagination reels, are but one side of this matter. Now that an
-end has been put to this nightmare, and we come to consider how the
-future is to be lived, perhaps their guilt as murderers and robbers is
-of less importance and of less effect to future generations of mankind
-than their crime of fraud—the fraud by which they placed themselves in
-a position to do their murder and their robbery. That is the other
-aspect of their guilt. The story of their “diplomacy”, founded upon
-cunning, hypocrisy, and bad faith, is a story less gruesome no doubt,
-but no less evil and deliberate. And should it be taken as a precedent
-of behavior in the conduct of international relations, its consequences
-to mankind will no less certainly lead to the end of civilized society.
-
-Without trust and confidence between nations, without the faith that
-what is said is meant and that what is undertaken will be observed, all
-hope of peace and security is dead. The Governments of the United
-Kingdom and the British Commonwealth, of the United States of America,
-of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, and of France, backed by and
-on behalf of every other peace-loving nation of the world, have
-therefore joined to bring the inventors and perpetrators of this Nazi
-conception of international relationship before the bar of this
-Tribunal. They do so, so that these defendants may be punished for their
-crimes. They do so, also, that their conduct may be exposed in all its
-naked wickedness and they do so in the hope that the conscience and good
-sense of all the world will see the consequences of such conduct and the
-end to which inevitably it must always lead. Let us once again restore
-sanity and with it also the sanctity of our obligations towards each
-other.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Attorney, would it be convenient to the prosecutors
-from Great Britain to continue?
-
-SIR HARTLEY SHAWCROSS: The proposal was that my friend, Mr. Sidney
-Alderman, should continue with the presentation of the case with regard
-to the final acts of aggression against Czechoslovakia and that that
-being done, my British colleagues would continue with the presentation
-of the British case. As the Tribunal will appreciate, Counts One and Two
-are in many respects complementary, and my American colleagues and
-ourselves are working in closest cooperation in presenting the evidence
-affecting those counts.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Alderman, would it be convenient for you to go on
-until 5 o’clock?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: Yes. May it please the Tribunal, it is quite convenient
-for me to proceed. I can but feel that it will be quite anticlimactic
-after the address which you just heard.
-
-When the Tribunal rose yesterday afternoon, I had just completed an
-outline of the plans laid by the Nazi conspirators in the weeks
-immediately following the Munich Agreement. These plans called for what
-the German officials called “the liquidation of the remainder of
-Czechoslovakia.” You will recall that 3 weeks after Munich, on 21
-October, the same day on which the administration of the Sudetenland was
-handed over to the civilian authorities, Hitler and Keitel had issued an
-order to the Armed Forces. This document is C-136, Exhibit USA-104.
-
-In this order Hitler and Keitel ordered the beginning of preparations by
-the Armed Forces for the conquest of the remainder of Czechoslovakia.
-You will also recall that 2 months later, on 17 December, the Defendant
-Keitel issued an appendix to the original order directing the
-continuation of these preparations. This document is C-138, Exhibit
-USA-105, and both these documents have already been introduced.
-
-Proceeding on the assumption that no resistance worth mentioning was to
-be expected, this order emphasized that the attack on Czechoslovakia was
-to be well camouflaged so that it would not appear to be a warlike
-action. “To the outside world,” it said, and I quote, “it must appear
-obvious that it is merely an action of pacification and not a warlike
-undertaking.”
-
-Thus, in the beginning of 1939 the basic planning for military action
-against the mutilated Czechoslovak Republic had already been carried out
-by the German High Command.
-
-I turn now to the underhand and criminal methods used by the Nazi
-conspirators to ensure that no resistance worth mentioning would, in
-fact, be met by the German Army. As in the case of Austria and the
-Sudetenland, the Nazi conspirators did not intend to rely on the
-Wehrmacht alone to accomplish their calculated objective of liquidating
-Czechoslovakia. With the German minority separated from Czechoslovakia,
-they could no longer use the cry, “Home to the Reich.” One sizable
-minority, the Slovaks, still remained within the Czechoslovak state.
-
-I should mention at this point that the Czechoslovak Government had made
-every effort to conciliate Slovak extremists in the months after the
-cession of the Sudetenland. Autonomy had been granted to Slovakia, with
-an autonomous Cabinet and Parliament at Bratislava. Nevertheless,
-despite these concessions, it was in Slovakia that the Nazi conspirators
-found fertile ground for their tactics. The picture which I shall now
-draw of Nazi operations in Slovakia is based on the Czechoslovak
-official Government Report, Document Number 998-PS, already admitted in
-evidence as Exhibit USA-91, and of which the Court has already taken
-judicial notice.
-
-Nazi propaganda and research groups had long been interested in
-maintaining close connection with the Slovak autonomist opposition. When
-Bela Tuka, who later became Prime Minister of the puppet state of
-Slovakia, was tried for espionage and treason in 1929, the evidence
-established that he had already established connections with Nazi groups
-within Germany. Prior to 1938 Nazi aides were in close contact with the
-Slovak traitors living in exile and were attempting to establish more
-profitable contacts in the semi-fascist Slovak Catholic People’s Party
-of Monsignor Andrew Hlinka. In February and July 1938 the leaders of the
-Henlein movement conferred with top men of Father Hlinka’s party and
-agreed to furnish one another with mutual assistance in pressing their
-respective claims to autonomy. This understanding proved useful in the
-September agitation when at the proper moment the Foreign Office in
-Berlin wired the Henlein leader, Kundt, in Prague to tell the Slovaks to
-start their demands for autonomy.
-
-This telegram, our Document Number 2858-PS, Exhibit USA-97, has already
-been introduced in evidence and read.
-
-By this time—midsummer 1938—the Nazis were in direct contact with
-figures in the Slovak autonomist movement and had paid agents among the
-higher staff of Father Hlinka’s party. These agents undertook to render
-impossible any understanding between the Slovak autonomists and the
-Slovak parties in the government at Prague.
-
-Hans Karmasin, later to become Volksgruppenführer, had been appointed
-Nazi leader in Slovakia and professed to be serving the cause of Slovak
-autonomy while actually on the Nazi payroll. On 22 November the Nazis
-indiscreetly wired Karmasin to collect his money at the German Legation
-in Prague, and I offer in evidence Document 2859-PS as Exhibit USA-107,
-captured from the German Foreign Office files. I read this telegram
-which was sent from the German Legation at Prague to Pressburg:
-
- “Delegate Kundt asks to notify State Secretary Karmasin he would
- appreciate it if he could personally draw the sum which is being
- kept for him at the treasury of the Embassy.”—signed—“Hencke.”
-
-Karmasin proved to be extremely useful to the Nazi cause. Although it is
-out of its chronological place in my discussion, I should like now to
-offer in evidence Document 2794-PS, a captured memorandum of the German
-Foreign Office which I offer as Exhibit USA-108, dated Berlin, 29
-November 1939.
-
-This document, dated 8 months after the conquest of Czechoslovakia,
-throws a revealing light both on Karmasin and on the German Foreign
-Office, and I now read from this memorandum:
-
- “On the question of payments to Karmasin.
-
-
-
- “Karmasin receives 30,000 marks monthly from the VDA”—Peoples’
- League for Germans Abroad—“until 1 April 1940; from then on
- 15,000 marks monthly.
-
-
-
- “Furthermore, the Central Office for Racial
- Germans”—Volksdeutsche Mittelstelle—“has deposited 300,000
- marks for Karmasin with the German Mission in
- Bratislava”—Pressburg—“on which he could fall back in an
- emergency.
-
-
-
- “Furthermore, Karmasin has received money from Reich Minister
- Seyss-Inquart; for the present it has been impossible to
- determine what amounts had been involved, and whether the
- payments still continue.
-
-
-
- “Therefore, it appears that Karmasin has been provided with
- sufficient money; thus one could wait to determine whether he
- would put up new demands himself.
-
-
-
- “Herewith presented to the Reich Foreign
- Minister.”—signed—“Woermann.”
-
-This document shows the complicity of the German Foreign Office in the
-subsidization of illegal organizations abroad. More important, it shows
-that the Germans still considered it necessary to supply their
-undercover representatives in Pressburg with substantial funds, even
-after the declaration of the so-called Independent State of Slovakia.
-
-Sometime in the winter of 1938-39, the Defendant Göring conferred with
-Durkansky and Mach, two leaders in the Slovak extremist group, who were
-accompanied by Karmasin. The Slovaks told Göring of their desire for
-what they called independence, with strong political, economic, and
-military ties to Germany. They promised that the Jewish problem would be
-solved as it had been solved in Germany; that the Communist Party would
-be prohibited. The notes of the meeting report that Göring considered
-that the Slovak efforts towards independence were to be supported, but
-as the document will show, his motives were scarcely altruistic.
-
-I now offer in evidence Document 2801-PS as Exhibit USA-109, undated
-minutes of a conversation between Göring and Durkansky. This document
-was captured among the files of the German Foreign Office.
-
-I now read these minutes, which are jotted down in somewhat telegraphic
-style. To begin with:
-
- “Durkansky (Deputy Prime Minister) reads out declaration.
- Contents: Friendship for the Führer; gratitude, that through the
- Führer, autonomy has become possible for the Slovaks: The
- Slovaks never want to belong to Hungary. The Slovaks want full
- independence with strongest political, economic, and military
- ties to Germany. Bratislava to be the capital. The execution of
- the plan only possible if the army and police are Slovak.
-
-
-
- “An independent Slovakia to be proclaimed at the meeting of the
- first Slovak Diet. In the case of a plebiscite the majority
- would favor a separation from Prague. Jews will vote for
- Hungary. The area of the plebiscite to be up to the March, where
- a large Slovak population lives.
-
-
-
- “The Jewish problem will be solved similarly to that in Germany.
- The Communist Party to be prohibited.
-
-
-
- “The Germans in Slovakia do not want to belong to Hungary but
- wish to stay in Slovakia.
-
-
-
- “The German influence with the Slovak Government considerable;
- the appointment of a German Minister (member of the Cabinet) has
- been promised.
-
-
-
- “At present negotiations with Hungary are being conducted by the
- Slovaks. The Czechs are more yielding towards the Hungarians
- than the Slovaks.
-
-
-
- “The Field Marshal”—that is Field Marshal Göring—“considers
- that the Slovak negotiations towards independence are to be
- supported in a suitable manner. Czechoslovakia without Slovakia
- is still more at our mercy.
-
-
-
- “Air bases in Slovakia are of great importance for the German
- Air Force for use against the East.”
-
-On 12 February a Slovak delegation journeyed to Berlin. It consisted of
-Tuka, one of the Slovaks with whom the Germans had been in contact, and
-Karmasin, the paid representative of the Nazi conspirators in Slovakia.
-They conferred with Hitler and the Defendant Ribbentrop in the Reich
-Chancellery in Berlin on Sunday, 12 February 1939.
-
-I now offer in evidence Document 2790-PS as Exhibit USA-110, the
-captured German Foreign Office minutes of that meeting:
-
- “After a brief welcome Tuka thanks the Führer for granting this
- meeting. He addresses the Führer with ‘My Führer’ and he voices
- the opinion that he, though only a modest man himself, might
- well claim to speak for the Slovak nation. The Czech courts and
- prison gave him the right to make such a statement. He states
- that the Führer had not only opened the Slovak question but that
- he had been also the first one to acknowledge the dignity of the
- Slovak nation. The Slovakian people will gladly fight under the
- leadership of the Führer for the maintenance of European
- civilization. Obviously future association with the Czechs had
- become an impossibility for the Slovaks from a moral as well as
- an economic point of view.”
-
-Then skipping to the last sentence: “‘I entrust the fate of my people to
-your care.’”—addressing that to the Führer!
-
-During the meeting the Nazi conspirators apparently were successful in
-planting the idea of insurrection with the Slovak delegation. I refer to
-the final sentence of the document, which I have just read, the sentence
-spoken by Tuka, “I entrust the fate of my people to your care.”
-
-It is apparent from these documents that in mid-February 1939 the Nazis
-had a well-disciplined group of Slovaks at their service, many of them
-drawn from the ranks of Father Hlinka’s party. Flattered by the personal
-attention of such men as Hitler and the Defendant Ribbentrop and
-subsidized by German representatives, these Slovaks proved willing tools
-in the hands of the Nazi conspirators.
-
-In addition to Slovaks, the conspirators made use of the few Germans
-still remaining within the mutilated Czechoslovak Republic. Kundt,
-Henlein’s deputy who had been appointed leader of this German minority,
-created as many artificial “focal points of German culture” as possible.
-Germans from the districts handed over to Germany were ordered from
-Berlin to continue their studies at the German University in Prague and
-to make it a center of aggressive Nazism.
-
-With the assistance of German civil servants, a deliberate campaign of
-Nazi infiltration into Czech public and private institutions was carried
-out, and the Henleinists gave full co-operation to Gestapo agents from
-the Reich who appeared on Czech soil. The Nazi political activity was
-designed to undermine and to weaken Czech resistance to the commands
-from Germany.
-
-In the face of continued threats and duress on both diplomatic and
-propaganda levels, the Czech Government was unable to take adequate
-measures against these trespassers upon its sovereignty.
-
-I am using as the basis of my remarks the Czechoslovak official
-Government report, Document Number 998-PS.
-
-In early March, with the date for the final march into Czechoslovakia
-already close at hand, Fifth Column activity moved into its final phase.
-In Bohemia and Moravia the FS, Henlein’s equivalent of the SS, were in
-touch with the Nazi conspirators in the Reich and laid the groundwork of
-the events of 14 and 15 March.
-
-I now offer in evidence Document 2826-PS as Exhibit USA-111. This is an
-article by SS Group Leader Karl Hermann Frank, published in the
-publication _Böhmen and Mähren_, the official periodical of the Reich
-Protector of Bohemia and Moravia, edition May 1941, Page 179.
-
-This is an article written by one of the Nazi leaders in Czechoslovakia
-at the moment of Germany’s greatest military successes. It is a boastful
-article and reveals with a frankness rarely found in the Nazi press both
-the functions which the FS and the SS served and the pride the Nazi
-conspirators took in the activities of these organizations. It is a long
-quotation.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Are you going on with this tomorrow, Mr. Alderman?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: Yes.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Will you take the whole day?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: No, not more than an hour and a half.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: And after that the British prosecutors will go on?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: Yes.
-
- [_The Tribunal adjourned until 5 December 1945 at 1000 hours._]
-
-
-
-
- THIRTEENTH DAY
- Wednesday, 5 December 1945
-
-
- _Morning Session_
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: May it please the Tribunal, when the Tribunal rose
-yesterday afternoon, I had just offered in evidence Document 2826-PS,
-Exhibit USA-111. This was an article by SS Group Leader Karl Hermann
-Frank, published in _Böhmen und Mähren_ (or _Bohemia and Moravia_), the
-official periodical of the Reich Protector of Bohemia and Moravia, the
-issue of March 1941, at Page 79. It is an article which reveals with
-considerable frankness the functions which the FS and SS had, and shows
-the pride which the Nazi conspirators took in the activities of these
-organizations. I read from that article, under the heading “The SS on
-March 15, 1939”:
-
- “A modern people and a modern state are today unthinkable
- without political troops. To these are allotted the special task
- of being the advance guard of the political will and the
- guarantor of its unity. This is especially true of the German
- folk-groups, which have their home in some other people’s state.
- Accordingly the Sudeten German Party had formerly also organized
- its political troop, the Voluntary Vigilantes”—or, in German,
- “Freiwilliger Selbstschutz”, called FS for short.—“This troop
- was trained especially in accordance with the principles of the
- SS, so far as these could be used in this region at that time.
- The troop was likewise assigned here the special task of
- protecting the homeland actively, if necessary. It stood up well
- in its first test in this connection, wherever in the fall
- crisis of 1938 it had to assume the protection of the homeland,
- arms in hand.
-
-
-
- “After the annexation of the Sudeten Gau the tasks of the FS
- were transferred essentially to the German student organizations
- as compact troop formations in Prague and Brünn, aside from the
- isolated German communities which remained in the Second
- Republic. This was also natural because many active students
- from the Sudeten Gau were already members of the SS. The student
- organizations then had to endure this test, in common with other
- Germans, during, the crisis of March 1939 . . . .
-
-
-
- “In the early morning hours of 15 March, after the announcement
- of the planned entry of German troops, German men had to act in
- some localities in order to assure a quiet course of events,
- either by assumption of the police authority, as for instance in
- Brünn, or by corresponding instructions of the police president.
- In some Czech offices men had likewise, in the early hours of
- the morning, begun to burn valuable archives and the material of
- political files. It was also necessary to take measures here in
- order to prevent foolish destruction . . . . How significant the
- many-sided and comprehensive measures were considered by the
- competent German agencies follows from the fact that many of the
- men either on March 15 itself or on the following days were
- admitted into the SS with fitting acknowledgment, in part even
- through the Reich leader of the SS himself or through SS Group
- Leader Heydrich. The activities and deeds of these men were
- thereby designated as accomplished in the interest of the SS
- . . . .
-
-
-
- “Immediately after the corresponding divisions of the SS had
- marched in with the first columns of the German Army and had
- assumed responsibility in the appropriate sectors, the men here
- placed themselves at once at their further disposition and
- became valuable auxiliaries and collaborators.”
-
-I now ask the Court to take judicial notice under Article 21 of the
-Charter of three official documents. These are identified by us as
-Documents D-571, D-572, and 2943-PS. I offer them in evidence,
-respectively, D-571 as Exhibit USA-112; D-572, Exhibit USA-113; and
-2943-PS, which is the _French Official Yellow Book_, at Pages 66 and 67,
-as Exhibit USA-114.
-
-The first two documents are British diplomatic dispatches, properly
-certified to by the British Government, which gave the background of
-intrigue in Slovakia—German intrigue in Slovakia. The third document,
-2943-PS or Exhibit USA-114, consists of excerpts from the _French Yellow
-Book_, principally excerpts from dispatches signed by M. Coulondre, the
-French Ambassador in Berlin, to the French Foreign Office between 13 and
-18 March 1939. I expect to draw on these three dispatches rather freely
-in the further course of my presentation, since the Tribunal will take
-judicial notice of each of these documents, I think; and therefore, it
-may not be necessary to read them at length into the transcript. In
-Slovakia the long-anticipated crisis came on 10 March. On that day the
-Czechoslovakian Government dismissed those members of the Slovak Cabinet
-who refused to continue negotiations with Prague, among them Foreign
-Minister Tiso and Durcansky. Within 24 hours the Nazis seized upon this
-act of the Czechoslovak Government as an excuse for intervention. On the
-following day, March 11, a strange scene was enacted in Bratislava, the
-Slovak capital. I quote from Document D-571, which is USA-112. That is
-the report of the British Minister in Prague to the British Government.
-
- “Herr Bürckel, Herr Seyss-Inquart, and five German generals came
- at about 10 o’clock in the evening of Saturday, the 11th of
- March, into a Cabinet meeting in progress in Bratislava and told
- the Slovak Government that they should proclaim the independence
- of Slovakia. When M. Sidor, the Prime Minister, showed
- hesitation, Herr Bürckel took him on one side and explained that
- Herr Hitler had decided to settle the question of Czechoslovakia
- definitely. Slovakia ought, therefore, to proclaim her
- independence, because Herr Hitler would otherwise disinterest
- himself in her fate. M. Sidor thanked Herr Bürckel for this
- information, but said that he must discuss the situation with
- the Government at Prague.”
-
-A very strange situation that he should have to discuss such a matter
-with his own Government, before obeying instructions of Herr Hitler
-delivered by five German generals and Herr Bürckel and Herr
-Seyss-Inquart.
-
-Events went on moving rapidly, but Durcansky, one of the dismissed
-ministers, escaped with Nazi assistance to Vienna, where the facilities
-of the German broadcasting station were placed at his disposal. Arms and
-ammunition were brought from German offices in Engerau across the Danube
-into Slovakia, where they were used by the FS and the Hlinka Guards to
-create incidents and disorder of the type required by the Nazis as an
-excuse for military action. The German press and radio launched a
-violent campaign against the Czechoslovak Government; and,
-significantly, an invitation from Berlin was delivered in Bratislava.
-Tiso, the dismissed Prime Minister, was summoned by Hitler to an
-audience in the German capital. A plane was awaiting him in Vienna.
-
-At this point, in the second week of March 1939, preparations for what
-the Nazi leaders like to call the liquidation of Czechoslovakia were
-progressing with what to them must have been very satisfying smoothness.
-The military, diplomatic, and propaganda machinery of the Nazi
-conspirators was moving in close co-ordination. All during the process
-of the Fall Grün (or Case Green) of the preceding summer, the Nazi
-conspirators had invited Hungary to participate in this new attack.
-Admiral Horthy, the Hungarian Regent, was again greatly flattered by
-this invitation.
-
-I offer in evidence Document 2816-PS as Exhibit USA-115. This is a
-letter the distinguished Admiral of Hungary, a country which,
-incidentally, had no navy, wrote to Hitler on 13 March 1939, and which
-we captured in the German Foreign Office files.
-
- “Your Excellency, my sincere thanks.
-
-
-
- “I can hardly tell you how happy I am because this headwater
- region—I dislike using big words—is of vital importance to the
- life of Hungary.”—I suppose he needed some headwaters for the
- non-existent navy of which he was admiral.
-
-
-
- “In spite of the fact that our recruits have been serving for
- only 5 weeks we are going into this affair with eager
- enthusiasm. The dispositions have already been made. On
- Thursday, the 16th of this month, a frontier incident will take
- place which will be followed by the big blow on Saturday.”—He
- doesn’t like to use big words; “big blow” is sufficient.
-
-
-
- “I shall never forget this proof of friendship, and Your
- Excellency may rely on my unshakeable gratitude at all times.
- Your devoted friend, Horthy.”
-
-From this cynical and callous letter from the distinguished Admiral
-. . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Was that letter addressed to the Hungarian Ambassador at
-Berlin?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: I thought it was addressed to Hitler, if the President
-please.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: There are some words at the top which look like a
-Hungarian name.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: That is the letter heading. As I understand it, the letter
-was addressed to Adolf Hitler.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: All right.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: And I should have said it was—it ended with the . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Is there anything on the letter which indicates that?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: Only the fact that it was found in the Berlin Foreign
-Office, and the wording of the letter and the address “Your Excellency.”
-We may be drawing a conclusion as to whom it was addressed; but it was
-found in the Berlin Foreign Office.
-
-From that cynical and callous letter it may be inferred that the Nazi
-conspirators had already informed the Hungarian Government of their
-plans for further military action against Czechoslovakia. As it turned
-out the timetable was advanced somewhat. I would draw the inference that
-His Excellency, Adolf Hitler, informed his devoted friend Horthy of this
-change in good time.
-
-On the diplomatic level the Defendant Ribbentrop was quite active. On 13
-March, the same day on which Horthy wrote his letter, Ribbentrop sent a
-cautionary telegram to the German Minister in Prague outlining the
-course of conduct he should pursue during the coming diplomatic
-pressure. I offer in evidence Document 2815-PS as Exhibit USA-116. This
-is the telegram sent by Ribbentrop to the German Legation in Prague on
-13 March.
-
- “Berlin, 13 March 1939.
-
-
-
- “Prague. Telegram in secret code.
-
-
-
- “With reference to telephone instructions given by Kordt today.
- In case you should get any written communication from President
- Hacha, please do not make any written or verbal comments or take
- any other action on them, but pass them on here by cipher
- telegram. Moreover, I must ask you and the other members of the
- legation to make a point of not being available if the Czech
- Government wants to communicate with you during the next few
- days.”—Signed—“Ribbentrop.”
-
-On the afternoon of 13 March Monsignor Tiso, accompanied by Durcansky
-and Herr Meissner and the local Nazi leader, arrived in Berlin in
-response to the summons from Hitler to which I have heretofore referred.
-Late that afternoon Tiso was received by Hitler in his study in the
-Reich Chancellery and presented with an ultimatum. Two alternatives were
-given him: Either declare the independence of Slovakia, or be left
-without German assistance to what were referred to as the emergence of
-Poland and Hungary. This decision Hitler said was not a question of
-days, but of hours. I now offer in evidence Document 2802-PS as Exhibit
-USA-117—again a document captured in the German Foreign Office—German
-Foreign Office minutes of the meeting between Hitler and Tiso on 13
-March. I read the bottom paragraph on Page 2 and the top paragraph on
-Page 3 of the English translation. The first paragraph I shall read is a
-summary of Hitler’s remark. You will note that in the inducements he
-held out to the Slovaks Hitler displayed his customary disregard for the
-truth. I quote:
-
- “Now he had permitted Minister Tiso to come here in order to
- make this question clear in a very short time. Germany had no
- interest east of the Carpathian mountains. It was indifferent to
- him what happened there. The question was whether Slovakia
- wished to conduct her own affairs or not. He did not wish for
- anything from Slovakia. He would not pledge his people, or even
- a single soldier, to something which was not in any way desired
- by the Slovak people. He would like to secure final confirmation
- as to what Slovakia really wished. He did not wish that
- reproaches should come from Hungary that he was preserving
- something which did not wish to be preserved at all. He took a
- liberal view of unrest and demonstration in general, but in this
- connection unrest was only an outward indication of interior
- instability. He would not tolerate it and he had for that reason
- permitted Tiso to come in order to hear his decision. It was not
- a question of days, but of hours. He had stated at that time
- that if Slovakia wished to make herself independent he would
- support this endeavor and even guarantee it. He would stand by
- his word so long as Slovakia would make it clear that she wished
- for independence. If she hesitated or did not wish to dissolve
- the connection with Prague, he would leave the destiny of
- Slovakia to the mercy of events for which he was no longer
- responsible. In that case he would only intercede for German
- interests, and those did not lie east of the Carpathians.
- Germany had nothing to do with Slovakia. She had never belonged
- to Germany.
-
-
-
- “The Führer asked the Reich Foreign Minister”—the Defendant
- Ribbentrop—“if he had any remarks to add. The Reich Foreign
- Minister also emphasized for his part the conception that in
- this case a decision was a question of hours not of days. He
- showed the Führer a message he had just received which reported
- Hungarian troop movements on the Slovak frontiers. The Führer
- read this report, mentioned it to Tiso, and expressed the hope
- that Slovakia would soon decide clearly for herself.”
-
-A most extraordinary interview. Germany had no interest in Slovakia;
-Slovakia had never belonged to Germany; Tiso was invited there. And this
-is what happened: Those present at that meeting included the Defendant
-Ribbentrop, the Defendant Keitel, State Secretary Dietrich, State
-Secretary Keppler, the German Minister of State Meissner. I invite the
-attention of the Tribunal to the presence of the Defendant Keitel on
-this occasion, as on so many other occasions, where purely political
-measures in furtherance of Nazi aggression were under discussion, and
-where apparently there was no need for technical military advice.
-
-While in Berlin the Slovaks also conferred separately with the Defendant
-Ribbentrop and with other high Nazi officials, Ribbentrop very
-solicitously handed Tiso a copy, already drafted in Slovak language, of
-the law proclaiming the independence of Slovakia. On the night of the
-13th a German plane was conveniently placed at Tiso’s disposal to carry
-him home. On 14 March, pursuant to the wishes of the Nazi conspirators,
-the Diet of Bratislava proclaimed the independence of Slovakia. With
-Slovak extremeness acting at the Nazi bidding in open revolt against the
-Czechoslovak Government, the Nazi leaders were now in a position to move
-against Prague. On the evening of the 14th, at the suggestion of the
-German Legation in Prague, M. Hacha, the President of the Czechoslovak
-Republic, and M. Chvalkowsky, his Foreign Minister, arrived in Berlin.
-The atmosphere in which they found themselves might be described as
-somewhat hostile. Since the preceding weekend, the Nazi press had
-accused the Czechs of using violence against the Slovaks, and especially
-against the members of the German minority and citizens of the Reich.
-Both press and radio proclaimed that the lives of Germans were in
-danger. Such a situation was intolerable. It was necessary to smother as
-quickly as possible the focus of trouble, which Prague had become, in
-the heart of Europe.—These peacemakers!
-
-After midnight on the 15th, at 1:15 in the morning, Hacha and
-Chvalkowsky were ushered into the Reich Chancellery. They found there
-Adolf Hitler, the Defendants Ribbentrop, Göring, and Keitel and other
-high Nazi officials. I now offer in evidence Document 2798-PS as Exhibit
-USA-118. This document is the captured German Foreign Office account of
-this infamous meeting. It is a long document. Parts of it are so
-revealing and give so clear a picture of Nazi behavior and tactics that
-I should like to read them in full.
-
-It must be remembered that this account of the fateful conference on the
-night of March 14-15 comes from German sources, and of course it must be
-read as an account biased by its source, or as counsel for the
-defendants said last week “a tendentious account”. Nevertheless, even
-without too much discounting of the report on account of its source, it
-constitutes a complete condemnation of the Nazis, who by pure and simple
-international banditry forced the dissolution of Czechoslovakia. And I
-interpolate to suggest that international banditry has been a crime
-against international law for centuries.
-
-I will first read the headings to the minutes. In the English
-mimeographed version in the document books the time given is an
-incorrect translation of the original. It should read 0115 to 0215:
-
- “Conversation between the Führer and Reich Chancellor and the
- President of Czechoslovakia, Hacha, in the presence of the Reich
- Foreign Minister, Von Ribbentrop, and of the Czechoslovakian
- Foreign Minister, Chvalkowsky, in the Reich Chancellery on 15
- March 1939, 0115 to 0215 hours.”
-
-Others present were General Field Marshal Göring, General Keitel,
-Secretary of the State Von Weizsäcker, Minister of the State Meissner,
-Secretary of the State Dietrich, Counselor of the Legation Hewel. Hacha
-opened the conference. He was conciliatory—even humble, though the
-President of a sovereign state. He thanked Hitler for receiving him and
-he said he knew that the fate of Czechoslovakia rested in the Führer’s
-hands. Hitler replied that he regretted that he had been forced to ask
-Hacha to come to Berlin, particularly because of the great age of the
-President. Hacha was then, I believe, in his seventies. But this
-journey, Hitler told the President, could be of great advantage to his
-country because, and I quote, “It was only a matter of hours until
-Germany would intervene.” I quote now from the top of Page 3 of the
-English translation. You will bear in mind that what I am reading are
-rough notes or minutes of what Adolf Hitler said:
-
- “Slovakia was a matter of indifference to him. If Slovakia had
- kept closer to Germany it would have been an obligation to
- Germany, but he was glad that he did not have this obligation
- now. He had no interests whatsoever in the territory east of the
- Little Carpathian Mountains. He did not want to draw the final
- consequences in the autumn. . .”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Alderman, don’t you think you ought to read the last
-sentence on Page 2?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: Perhaps so; yes. The last sentence from the preceding page
-was:
-
- “For the other countries Czechoslovakia was nothing but a means
- to an end. London and Paris were not in a position to really
- stand up for Czechoslovakia.
-
-
-
- “Slovakia was a matter of indifference to him.”
-
-Then I had read down to:
-
- “But even at that time and also later in his conversations with
- Chvalkowsky he made it clear that he would ruthlessly smash this
- State if Beneš’ tendencies were not completely revised.
- Chvalkowsky understood this and asked the Führer to have
- patience.”—He often bragged of his patience.—“The Führer saw
- this point of view, but the months went by without any change.
- The new regime did not succeed in eliminating the old one
- psychologically. He observed this from the press, mouth-to-mouth
- propaganda, dismissals of Germans, and many other things which,
- to him, were a symbol of the total perspective.
-
-
-
- “At first he had not understood this but when it became clear to
- him he drew his consequences because, had the development
- continued in this way, the relations with Czechoslovakia would
- in a few years have become the same as 6 months ago. Why did
- Czechoslovakia not immediately reduce its Army to a reasonable
- size? Such an army was a tremendous burden for such a state,
- because it only makes sense if it supports the foreign political
- mission of the state. Since Czechoslovakia no longer has a
- foreign political mission such an army is meaningless. He
- enumerated several examples which proved to him that the spirit
- in the Army had not changed. This symptom convinced him that the
- Army also would be a source of a severe political burden in the
- future. Added to this were the inevitable development of
- economic necessities, and, further, the protests of national
- groups which could no longer endure life as it was.”
-
-I now interpolate, if the Tribunal please, to note the significance of
-that language of Adolf Hitler to the President of a supposed sovereign
-state and its Prime Minister, having in his presence General Field
-Marshal Göring, the Commander of the Air Force, and General Keitel. And
-continuing to quote:
-
- “Thus it is that the die was cast on the past Sunday.”—This is
- still the language of Hitler.—“I sent for the Hungarian
- minister and told him that I am withdrawing my hands from this
- country. We were now confronted with this fact. He had given the
- order to the German troops to march into Czechoslovakia and to
- incorporate Czechoslovakia into the German Reich. He wanted to
- give Czechoslovakia fullest autonomy and a life of her own to a
- larger extent than she had ever enjoyed during Austrian rule.
- Germany’s attitude towards Czechoslovakia will be determined
- tomorrow, and the day after tomorrow, and depends on the
- attitude of the Czechoslovakian people and the Czechoslovakian
- military towards the German troops. He no longer trusts the
- Government. He believes in the honesty and straightforwardness
- of Hacha and Chvalkowsky, but doubts that the Government will be
- able to assert itself in the entire nation. The German Army had
- already started out today, and at one barracks where resistance
- was offered, it was ruthlessly broken; another barracks had
- given in at the deployment of heavy artillery.
-
-
-
- “At 6 o’clock in the morning the German Army would invade
- Czechoslovakia from all sides and the German Air Force would
- occupy the Czech airfields. There existed two possibilities. The
- first one would be that the invasion of the German troops would
- lead to a battle. In this case the resistance will be broken by
- all means with physical force. The other possibility is that the
- invasion of the German troops occurs in bearable form. In that
- case, it would be easy for the Führer to give Czechoslovakia in
- the new organization of Czech life a generous life of her own,
- autonomy, and a certain national liberty.
-
-
-
- “We witnessed at the moment a great historical turning-point. He
- would not like to torture and denationalize the Czechs. He also
- did not do all that because of hatred, but in order to protect
- Germany. If Czechoslovakia in the fall of last year would not
- have yielded”—I suppose that is a bad translation for “had not
- yielded”—“the Czech people would have been exterminated. Nobody
- could have prevented him from doing that. It was his will that
- the Czech people should live a full national life and he
- believed firmly that a way could be found which would make
- far-reaching concessions to the Czech desires. If fighting
- should break out tomorrow, the pressure would result in
- counter-pressure. One would annihilate another and it would then
- not be possible any more for him to give the promised
- alleviations. Within 2 days the Czech Army would not exist any
- more. Of course, Germans would also be killed and this would
- result in a hatred which would force him”—that is,
- Hitler—“because of his instinct of self-preservation, not to
- grant autonomy any more. The world would not move a muscle. He
- felt pity for the Czech people when he was reading the foreign
- press. It would leave the impression on him which could be
- summarized in a German proverb: ‘The Moor has done his duty, the
- Moor may go.’
-
-
-
- “That was the state of affairs. There existed two trends in
- Germany, a harder one which did not want any concessions and
- wished, in memory to the past, that Czechoslovakia would be
- conquered with blood, and another one, the attitude of which
- corresponded with his just-mentioned suggestions.
-
-
-
- “That was the reason why he had asked Hacha to come here. This
- invitation was the last good deed which he could offer to the
- Czech people. If it should come to a fight, the bloodshed would
- also force us to hate. But the visit of Hacha could perhaps
- prevent the extreme. Perhaps it would contribute to finding a
- form of construction which would be so far-reaching for
- Czechoslovakia as she could never have hoped for in the old
- Austria. His aim was only to create the necessary security for
- the German people.
-
-
-
- “The hours went past. At 6 o’clock the troops would march in. He
- was almost ashamed to say that there was one German division to
- each Czech battalion. The military action was no small one, but
- planned with all generosity. He would advise him”—that is,
- Adolf Hitler advised poor old Hacha—“now to retire with
- Chvalkowsky in order to discuss what should be done.”
-
-In his reply to this long harangue, Hacha, according to the German
-minutes, said that he agreed that resistance would be useless. He
-expressed doubt that he would be able to issue the necessary orders to
-the Czech Army, in the 4 hours left to him, before the German Army
-crossed the Czech border. He asked if the object of the invasion was to
-disarm the Czech Army. If so, he indicated that might possibly be
-arranged. Hitler replied that his decision was final; that it was well
-known what a decision of the Führer meant. He turned to the circle of
-Nazi conspirators surrounding him, for their support, and you will
-remember that the Defendants Göring, Ribbentrop, and Keitel were all
-present. The only possibility of disarming the Czech Army, Hitler said,
-was by the intervention of the German Army.
-
-I read now one paragraph from Page 4 of the English version of the
-German minutes of this infamous meeting. It is the next to the last
-paragraph on Page 4.
-
- “The Führer states that his decision was irrevocable. It was
- well known what a decision of the Führer meant. He did not see
- any other possibility for disarmament and asked the other
- gentlemen”—that is, including Göring, Ribbentrop, and
- Keitel—“whether they shared his opinion, which was answered in
- the affirmative. The only possibility to disarm the Czech Army
- was by the German Army.”
-
-At this sad point, Hacha and Chvalkowsky retired from the room.
-
-I now offer in evidence Document 2861-PS, an excerpt from the official
-_British War Blue Book_, at Page 24, and I offer it as Exhibit USA-119.
-This is an official document of the British Government, of which the
-Tribunal will take judicial notice under the provisions of Article 21 of
-the Charter. The part from which I read is a dispatch from the British
-Ambassador, Sir Nevile Henderson, describing a conversation with the
-Defendant Göring, in which the events of this early morning meeting are
-set forth.
-
- “Sir N. Henderson to Viscount Halifax, Berlin, May 28, 1939.
-
-
-
- “My Lord: I paid a short visit to Field Marshal Göring at
- Karinhall yesterday.”
-
-Then I skip two paragraphs and begin reading with Paragraph 4. I am
-sorry, I think I better read all of those paragraphs:
-
- “Field Marshal Göring, who had obviously just been talking to
- someone else on the subject, began by inveighing against the
- attitude which was being adopted in England towards everything
- German and, particularly, in respect of the gold held there on
- behalf of the National Bank of Czechoslovakia. Before, however,
- I had time to reply, he was called to the telephone and on his
- return did not revert to this specific question. He complained,
- instead, of British hostility in general, of our political and
- economic encirclement of Germany and the activities of what he
- described as the war party in England. . . .
-
-
-
- “I told the Field Marshal that before speaking of British
- hostility, he must understand why the undoubted change of
- feeling towards Germany in England had taken place. As he knew
- quite well, the basis of all the discussions between Mr.
- Chamberlain and Herr Hitler last year had been to the effect
- that, once the Sudeten were allowed to enter the Reich, Germany
- would leave the Czechs alone and would do nothing to interfere
- with their independence. Herr Hitler had given a definite
- assurance to that effect in his letter to the Prime Minister of
- the 27th September. By yielding to the advice of his ‘wild men’
- and deliberately annexing Bohemia and Moravia, Herr Hitler had
- not only broken his word to Mr. Chamberlain but had infringed
- the whole principle of self-determination on which the Munich
- Agreement rested.
-
-
-
- “At this point, the Field Marshal interrupted me with a
- description of President Hacha’s visit to Berlin. I told Field
- Marshal Göring that it was not possible to talk of free will
- when I understood that he himself had threatened to bombard
- Prague with his airplanes, if Doctor Hacha refused to sign. The
- Field Marshal did not deny the fact but explained how the point
- had arisen. According to him, Doctor Hacha had from the first
- been prepared to sign everything but had said that
- constitutionally he could not do so without reference first to
- Prague. After considerable difficulty, telephonic communication
- with Prague was obtained and the Czech Government had agreed,
- while adding that they could not guarantee that one Czech
- battalion at least would not fire on German troops. It was, he
- said, only at that stage that he had warned Doctor Hacha that,
- if German lives were lost, he would bombard Prague. The Field
- Marshal also repeated, in reply to some comment of mine, the
- story that the advance occupation of Vitkovice had been effected
- solely in order to forestall the Poles who, he said, were known
- to have the intention of seizing this valuable area at the first
- opportunity.”
-
-I also invite the attention of the Tribunal and the judicial notice of
-the Tribunal, to Dispatch Number 77, in the _French Official Yellow
-Book_, at Page 96 of the book, identified as our Document 2943-PS,
-appearing in the Document Book under that number, and I ask that it be
-given an identifying number, Exhibit USA-114. This is a dispatch from M.
-Coulondre, the French Ambassador, and it gives another well-informed
-version of this same midnight meeting. The account, which I shall
-present to the Court, of the remainder of this meeting is drawn from
-these two sources, the _British Blue Book_ and the _French Yellow Book_.
-I think the Court may be interested to read somewhat further at large,
-in those two books, which furnish a great deal of the background of all
-of these matters.
-
-When President Hacha left the conference room in the Reich Chancellery,
-he was in such a state of exhaustion that he needed medical attention
-from a physician who was conveniently on hand for that purpose, a German
-physician. When the two Czechs returned to the room, the Nazi
-conspirators again told them of the power and invincibility of the
-Wehrmacht. They reminded them that in 3 hours, at 6 in the morning . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: You are not reading? I beg your pardon!
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: I am not reading, I am summarizing.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Go on.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: They reminded them that in 3 hours, at 6 in the morning,
-the German Army would cross the border. The Defendant Göring boasted of
-what the Wehrmacht would do if the Czech forces dared to resist the
-invading Germans. If German lives were lost, Defendant Göring said, his
-Luftwaffe would blaze half of Prague into ruins in 2 hours and that,
-Göring said, would be only the beginning.
-
-Under this threat of imminent and merciless attack by land and air, the
-aged President of Czechoslovakia at 4:30 o’clock in the morning, signed
-the document with which the Nazi conspirators confronted him and which
-they had already had prepared. This Document is TC-49, the declaration
-of 15 March 1939, one of the series of documents which will be presented
-by the British prosecutor, and from it I quote this, on the assumption
-that it will subsequently be introduced.
-
- “The President of the Czechoslovakian State . . . entrusts with
- entire confidence the destiny of the Czech people and the Czech
- country to the hands of the Führer of the German Reich”—really
- a rendezvous with destiny.
-
-While the Nazi officials were threatening and intimidating the
-representatives of the Czech Government, the Wehrmacht had in some areas
-already crossed the Czech border.
-
-I offer in evidence Document 2860-PS, another excerpt from the _British
-Blue Book_, of which I ask the Court to take judicial notice. This is a
-speech by Lord Halifax, the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, from
-which I quote one passage:
-
- “It is to be observed”—and the fact is surely not without
- significance—“that the towns of Mährisch-Ostrau and Vitkovice
- were actually occupied by German SS detachments on the evening
- of the 14th March, while the President and the Foreign Minister
- of Czechoslovakia were still on their way to Berlin and before
- any discussion had taken place.”
-
-At dawn on March 15, German troops poured into Czechoslovakia from all
-sides. Hitler issued an order of the day to the Armed Forces and a
-proclamation to the German people, which stated distinctly,
-“Czechoslovakia has ceased to exist.”
-
-On the following day, in contravention of Article 81 of the Treaty of
-Versailles, Czechoslovakia was formally incorporated into the German
-Reich under the name of “The Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia.” The
-decree is Document TC-51, another of the documents which the British
-Delegation will present to the Tribunal later in this week. It was
-signed in Prague on 16 March 1939, by Hitler, Lammers, and the
-Defendants Frick and Von Ribbentrop.
-
-I should like to quote the first sentence of this decree, “The Bohemian
-and Moravian countries belonged for a millennium to the
-Lebensraum”—living space—“of the German people.” The remainder of the
-decree sets forth in bleak detail the extent to which Czechoslovakia
-henceforth was subjected to Germany. A German Protector was to be
-appointed by the German Führer for the so-called “Protectorate”—the
-Defendant Von Neurath. God deliver us from such protectors! The German
-Government assumed charge of their foreign affairs and of their customs
-and of their excises. It was specified that German garrisons and
-military establishments would be maintained in the Protectorate. At the
-same time the extremist leaders in Slovakia who, at German Nazi
-insistence, had done so much to undermine the Czech State, found that
-the independence of their week-old state was itself, in effect,
-qualified.
-
-I offer in evidence Document 1439-PS as Exhibit USA—I need not offer
-that. I think it is a decree in the _Reichsgesetzblatt_, of which I ask
-the Tribunal to take judicial notice, and it is identified as our
-Document 1439-PS. It appears at Page 606, 1939, _Reichsgesetzblatt_,
-Part II.
-
-The covering declaration is signed by the Defendant Ribbentrop, Minister
-of Foreign Affairs, and then there is a heading:
-
- “Treaty of Protection to be extended by the German Reich to the
- State of Slovakia.”
-
-
-
- “The German Government and the Slovakian Government have agreed,
- after the Slovakian State has placed itself under the protection
- of the German Reich, to regulate by treaty the consequences
- resulting from this fact. For this purpose, the undersigned
- representatives of the two governments have agreed on the
- following provisions:
-
-
-
- “Article 1. The German Reich undertakes to protect the political
- independence of the State of Slovakia and integrity of its
- territory.
-
-
-
- “Article 2. For the purpose of making effective the protection
- undertaken by the German Reich, the German Armed Forces shall
- have the right, at all times, to construct military
- installations and to keep them garrisoned in the strength they
- deem necessary, in an area delimited on its western side, by the
- frontiers of the State of Slovakia, and on its eastern side by a
- line formed by the eastern rims of the Lower Carpathians, the
- White Carpathians, and the Javornik Mountains.”—Then I skip—
-
-
-
- “The Government of Slovakia will organize its military forces in
- close agreement with the German Armed Forces.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Wouldn’t that be a convenient time to break off? I
-understand, too, that it would be for the convenience of the Defense
-Counsel if the Tribunal adjourn for an hour and a quarter rather than
-for an hour at midday, and accordingly, the Tribunal will retire at
-12:45 and sit again at 2:00.
-
- [_A recess was taken._]
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: May it please the Tribunal, this secret protocol between
-Germany and Slovakia provided for close economic and financial
-collaboration between Germany and Slovakia. Mineral resources and
-subsoil rights were placed at the disposal of the German Government.
-
-I offer in evidence Document 2793-PS, Exhibit USA-120, and from it I
-read Paragraph 3:
-
- “Investigation, development, and utilization of the Slovak
- natural resources. In this respect the basic principle is that,
- insofar as they are not needed to meet Slovakia’s own
- requirements, they should be placed in first line at Germany’s
- disposal. The entire soil research”—“Bodenforschung” is the
- German word—“will be placed under the Reich Agency for soil
- research.”—that is the Reichsstelle für Bodenforschung—“The
- Government of the Slovak State will soon start an investigation
- to determine whether the present owners of concessions and
- privileges have fulfilled the industrial obligations prescribed
- by law and it will cancel concessions and privileges in cases
- where these duties have been neglected.”
-
-In their private conversations the Nazi conspirators gave abundant
-evidence that they considered Slovakia a mere puppet state—in effect a
-German possession.
-
-I offer in evidence Document R-100 as Exhibit USA-121. This document is
-a memorandum of information given by Hitler to Von Brauchitsch on 25
-March 1939. Much of it deals with problems arising from recently
-occupied Bohemia and Moravia and Slovakia. I quote, beginning at the
-sixth paragraph:
-
- “Colonel General Keitel shall inform Slovak Government via
- Foreign Office that it would not be allowed to keep or garrison
- armed Slovak units (Hlinka Guards) on this side of the border
- formed by the river Waag. They shall be transferred to the new
- Slovak territory. Hlinka Guards should be disarmed.
-
-
-
- “Slovakia shall be requested via Foreign Office to deliver to
- us, against payment, any arms we want and which are still kept
- in Slovakia. This request is to be based upon agreement made
- between Army and Czech troops. For this payment those millions
- should be used which we will pour anyhow into Slovakia.
-
-
-
- “Czech Protectorate:
-
-
-
- “H. Gr.”—the translator’s note indicates that that probably
- means army groups, but I can’t vouch for it—“shall be asked
- again whether the request shall be repeated again for the
- delivery of all arms within a stated time limit and under the
- threat of severe penalties.
-
-
-
- “We take all war material of former Czechoslovakia without
- paying for it. The guns bought by contract before 15 February,
- though, shall be paid for . . . . Bohemia and Moravia have to
- make annual contributions to the German Treasury. Their amount
- shall be fixed on the basis of the expenses earmarked formerly
- for the Czech Army.”
-
-The German conquest of Czechoslovakia, in direct contravention of the
-Munich Agreement, was the occasion for the formal protest by the British
-and French Governments. These documents, Numbers TC-52 and TC-53, dated
-17 March 1939, will be presented to the Tribunal by the British
-prosecutor.
-
-On the same day, 17 March 1939, the Acting Secretary of State of the
-United States Government issued a statement, which I will offer in
-evidence and I invite the Court to take judicial notice of the entire
-volume, Document 2862-PS as Exhibit USA-122, which is an excerpt from
-the official volume entitled _Peace and War: United States Foreign
-Policy, 1931-1941_ issued under the seal of the Department of State of
-the United States of America. Incidentally, this volume which happens to
-be my own copy—and I hope I can get another one—I am placing in
-evidence, because I am quite certain that in its study of the background
-of this whole case, the Court will be very much interested in this
-volume, which is a detailed chronological history of all the diplomatic
-events leading up to and through the second World War of 1941. But what
-I am actually offering in evidence at the moment appears on Pages 454
-and 455 of the volume, a statement by the Acting Secretary of State
-Welles, dated 17 March 1939:
-
- “The Government of the United States has on frequent occasions
- stated its conviction that only through international support of
- a program of order based upon law can world peace be assured.
-
-
-
- “This Government, founded upon and dedicated to the principles
- of human liberty and of democracy, cannot refrain from making
- known this country’s condemnation of the acts which have
- resulted in the temporary extinguishment of the liberties of a
- free and independent people with whom, from the day when the
- Republic of Czechoslovakia attained its independence, the people
- of the United States have maintained specially close and
- friendly relations.
-
-
-
- “The position of the Government of the United States has been
- made consistently clear. It has emphasized the need for respect
- for the sanctity of treaties and of the pledged word, and for
- non-intervention by any nation in the domestic affairs of other
- nations; and it has on repeated occasions expressed its
- condemnation of a policy of military aggression.
-
-
-
- “It is manifest that acts of wanton lawlessness and of arbitrary
- force are threatening the world peace and the very structure of
- modern civilization. The imperative need for the observance of
- the principles advocated by this Government has been clearly
- demonstrated by the developments which have taken place during
- the past 3 days.”
-
-With Czechoslovakia in German hands, the Nazi conspirators had
-accomplished the program they had set themselves in the meeting in
-Berlin on 5 November 1937. You will recall that this program of conquest
-was intended to shorten their frontiers, to increase their industrial
-and food reserves, and to place them in a position, both industrially
-and strategically, from which they could launch more ambitious and more
-devastating campaigns of aggression. In less than a year and a half this
-program had been carried through to the satisfaction of the Nazi
-leaders, and at that point I would again invite the Court’s attention to
-the large chart on the wall. I think it is no mere figure of speech to
-make reference to the wolf’s head, what is known in Anglo-American law
-as _caput lupinum_.
-
-The lower jaw formed near Austria was taken—the red part on the first
-chart—12 March 1938. Czechoslovakia thereby was encircled, and the next
-step was the absorption of the mountainous part, the Sudetenland,
-indicated on the second chart in red. On 1 October 1938 Czechoslovakia
-was further encircled and its defenses weakened, and then the jaws
-clamped in, or the pincers, as I believe General Keitel or General Jodl
-called them—I believe it was General Jodl’s diary—and you see what
-they did to Czechoslovakia. On 15 March 1939 the borders were shortened,
-new bases were acquired, and then Czechoslovakia was destroyed. Bohemia
-and Moravia are in black and Slovakia in what might be called light tan.
-But I have read to you the documents which showed in what condition
-Slovakia was left; and with the German military installations in
-Slovakia, you see how completely the southern border of Poland was
-flanked, as well as the western border, the stage being set for the next
-aggression, which the British prosecutor will describe to you.
-
-Of all the Nazi conspirators the Defendant Göring was the most aware of
-the economic and strategic advantages which would accrue from the
-possession by Germany of Czechoslovakia.
-
-I now offer in evidence Document 1301-PS, which is a rather large file,
-and we offer particularly Item 10 of the document, at Page 25 of the
-English translation. I offer it as Exhibit USA-123; Page 25 of the
-English translation contained the top-secret minutes of a conference
-with Göring in the Luftwaffe Ministry (the Air Ministry). The meeting
-which was held on 14 October 1938, just 2 weeks after the occupation of
-the Sudetenland, was devoted to the discussion of economic problems. As
-of that date, the Defendant Göring’s remarks were somewhat prophetic. I
-quote from the third paragraph, from the bottom of Page 26 of the
-English translation:
-
- “The Sudetenland has to be exploited by every means. General
- Field Marshal Göring counts upon a complete industrial
- assimilation of Slovakia. Czech and Slovakia would become German
- dominions. Everything possible must be taken out. The
- Oder-Danube Canal has to be speeded up. Searches for oil and ore
- have to be conducted in Slovakia, notably by State Secretary
- Keppler.”
-
-In the summer of 1939, after the incorporation of Bohemia and Moravia
-into the German Reich, Defendant Göring again revealed the great
-interest of the Nazi leaders in the Czech economic potential.
-
-I offer in evidence Document R-133 as Exhibit USA-124. This document is
-the minutes, dated Berlin, 27 July 1939, signed by Müller, of a
-conference between Göring and a group of officials from the OKW and from
-other agencies of the German Government concerned with war production.
-This meeting had been held 2 days previously, on 25 July. I read the
-first part of the account of this meeting.
-
- “In a rather long statement the Field Marshal explained that the
- incorporation of Bohemia and Moravia into the German economy had
- taken place, among other reasons, to increase the German war
- potential, by exploitation of the industry there. Directives,
- such as the decree of the Reich Minister for Economics (S 10
- 402/39 of 10 July 1939) as well as a letter with similar meaning
- to the Junkers firm, which might possibly lower the kind and
- extent of the armament measures in the Protectorate are contrary
- to this principle. If it is necessary to issue such directives,
- this should be done only with his consent. In any case, he
- insists,”—that is Defendant Göring insists—“in agreement with
- the directive by Hitler, that the war potential of the
- Protectorate is definitely to be exploited in part or in full
- and is to be directed towards mobilization as soon as possible.”
-
-In addition to strengthening the Nazi economic potential for the
-following wars of aggression, the conquest of Czechoslovakia provided
-the Nazis with new bases from which to wage their next war of
-aggression, the attack on Poland.
-
-You will recall the minutes of the conference between Göring and a
-pro-Nazi Slovak delegation in the winter of 1938-1939. Those minutes are
-Document 2801-PS, which I introduced into evidence earlier, as Exhibit
-USA-109. You will recall the last sentence of those minutes, a statement
-of Defendant Göring’s conclusions. I quote this sentence again, “Air
-bases in Slovakia are of great importance for the German Air Force for
-use against the East.”
-
-I now offer in evidence Document 1874-PS, as Exhibit USA-125. This
-document is the German minutes of a conference which Defendant Göring
-held with Mussolini and Ciano on 15 April 1939, one month after the
-conquest of Czechoslovakia.
-
-In this conference, Göring told his junior partners in the Axis of the
-progress of German preparations for war. He compared the strength of
-Germany with the strength of England and France. Not unnaturally, he
-mentioned the German occupation of Czechoslovakia in this connection. I
-read two paragraphs of these thoughts, on Page 4, Paragraph 2, of the
-German minutes.
-
- “However, the heavy armament of Czechoslovakia shows, in any
- case, how dangerous this could have been, even after Munich, in
- the event of a serious conflict. Because of German action, the
- situation of both Axis countries was ameliorated—among other
- reasons—because of the economic possibilities which resulted
- from the transfer to Germany of the great production capacity of
- Czechoslovakia. That contributes toward a considerable
- strengthening of the Axis against the Western Powers.
-
-
-
- “Furthermore, Germany now need not keep ready a single division
- for protection against that country in case of bigger conflict.
- This, too, is an advantage by which both Axis countries will, in
- the last analysis, benefit.”
-
-Then on Page 5, Paragraph 2, of the German version:
-
- “The action taken by Germany in Czechoslovakia is to be viewed
- as an advantage for the Axis in case Poland should finally join
- the enemies of the Axis powers. Germany could then attack this
- country from two flanks and would be within only 25 minutes
- flying distance from the new Polish industrial center, which had
- been moved further into the interior of the country, nearer to
- the other Polish industrial districts because of its proximity
- to the border. Now, by the turn of events, it is located again
- in the proximity of the border.”
-
-And that flanking on two fronts is illustrated on the four-segment
-chart.
-
-I think the chart itself demonstrates, better than any oral argument,
-the logic and cold calculation, the deliberation of each step to this
-point of the German aggression. More than that, it demonstrates what I
-might call the master fight of the aggressive war case, that is, that
-each conquest of the Nazi conspirators was deliberately planned, as a
-stepping stone to new and more ambitious aggression.
-
-You will recall the words of Hitler, at the conference in the Reich
-Chancellery on 23 May 1939, when he was planning the Polish campaign,
-Document L-79, Exhibit Number USA-27. I quote from it:
-
- “The period which lies behind us has, indeed, been put to good
- use. All measures have been taken in the correct sequence and in
- harmony with our aims.”
-
-It is appropriate to refer to two other speeches of the Nazi leaders. In
-his lecture in Munich on 7 November 1943, the Defendant Jodl spoke as
-follows, and I quote from Page 5 of Document L-172, already received in
-evidence as Exhibit USA-34—on Page 8 of the German text:
-
- “The bloodless solution of the Czech conflict in the autumn of
- 1938 and spring of 1939 and the annexation of Slovakia rounded
- off the territory of Greater Germany in such a way that it now
- became possible to consider the Polish problem on the basis of
- more or less favorable strategic premises.”
-
-In the speech to his military commanders on 23 November 1939, Hitler
-described the process by which he had rebuilt the military power of the
-Reich. This is our Document 789-PS, Exhibit USA-23. I quote one passage
-from the second paragraph:
-
- “The next step was Bohemia, Moravia, and Poland. This step also
- was not possible to accomplish in one campaign. First of all,
- the Western fortifications had to be finished. It was not
- possible to reach the goal in one effort. It was clear to me
- from the first moment, that I could not be satisfied with the
- Sudeten German territory. That was only a partial solution. The
- decision to march into Bohemia was made. Then followed the
- erection of the Protectorate and with that the basis for the
- action against Poland was laid. . . .”
-
-Before I leave the subject of the aggression against Czechoslovakia, I
-should like to submit to the Court a document which became available to
-us too late to be included in our document book. It reached me Saturday,
-late in the afternoon or late at night. This is an official document,
-again from the Czechoslovakian Government, a supplement to the
-Czechoslovakian report, which I had previously offered in evidence. I
-now offer it, identified as Document 3061-PS, as Exhibit USA-126.
-
-The document was furnished us, if the Court please, in the German text
-with an English translation, which didn’t seem to us quite adequate and
-we have had it re-translated into English and the translation has just
-been passed up, I believe, to the Tribunal. That mimeographed
-translation should be appended to our Document Book O.
-
-I shall not read the report; it is about 12 pages long. The Court will
-take judicial notice of it, under the provisions of the Charter. I
-merely summarize. This document gives confirmation and corroboration to
-the other evidence which I presented to the Tribunal. In particular, it
-offers support to the following allegations:
-
-First, the close working relationship between Henlein and the SDP, on
-the one hand, and Hitler and Defendants Hess and Ribbentrop, on the
-other;
-
-Second, the use of the German Legation in Prague to direct the German
-Fifth Column activities;
-
-Third, the financing of the Henlein movement by agencies of the German
-Government, including the German diplomatic representatives at Prague;
-
-Fourth, the use of the Henlein movement to conduct espionage on direct
-orders from the Reich.
-
-In addition, this document gives further details of the circumstances of
-the visit of President Hacha to Berlin on the night of 14 March. It
-substantiates the fact that President Hacha required the medical
-attention of Hitler’s physician and it supports the threat which the
-Defendant Göring made to the Czech Delegation.
-
-Now, if it please the Tribunal, that concludes my presentation of what,
-to me, has always seemed one of the saddest chapters in human history,
-the rape and destruction of the frail little nation of Czechoslovakia.
-
-SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE (Deputy Chief Prosecutor for the United Kingdom):
-May it please the Tribunal, before I tender the evidence which I desire
-to place before the Tribunal, it might be convenient if I explained how
-the British case is to be divided up and who will present the different
-parts.
-
-I shall deal with the general treaties. After that, my learned friend,
-Colonel Griffith-Jones, will deal with Poland. Thirdly, Major Elwyn
-Jones will deal with Norway and Denmark. Fourthly, Mr. Roberts will deal
-with Belgium, Holland, and Luxembourg. Fifthly, Colonel Phillimore will
-deal with Greece and Yugoslavia. After that, my friend, Mr. Alderman, of
-the American Delegation, will deal on behalf of both delegations with
-the aggression against the U.S.S.R. and the U.S.A.
-
-May I also, with the Tribunal’s permission, say one word about the
-arrangements that we have made as to documents. Each of the defendants’
-counsel will have a copy of the document book—of the different document
-books—in English. In fact, 30 copies of the first four of our document
-books have already been placed in the defendants’ Information Center. We
-hope that the last document book, dealing with Greece and Yugoslavia,
-will have the 30 copies placed there today.
-
-In addition, the defendants’ counsel have at least six copies in German
-of every document.
-
-With regard to my own part of the case, the first section on general
-treaties, all the documents on this phase are in the _Reichsgesetzblatt_
-or _Die Dokumente der Deutschen Politik_, of which 10 copies have been
-made available to the defendants’ counsel, so that with regard to the
-portion with which the Tribunal is immediately concerned, the
-defendants’ counsel will have at least 16 copies in German of every
-document referred to.
-
-Finally, there is a copy of the _Reichsgesetzblatt_ and _Die Dokumente_
-available for the Tribunal, other copies if they so desire, but one is
-placed ready for the Tribunal if any member wishes to refer to a German
-text.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Do you propose to call any oral witnesses?
-
-SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: No, My Lord, no oral witnesses.
-
-If the Tribunal please, before I come to the first treaty I want to make
-three quotations to deal with a point which was mentioned in the speech
-of my learned friend, the Attorney General, yesterday.
-
-It might be thought from the melancholy story of broken treaties and
-violated assurances, which the Tribunal has already heard, that Hitler
-and the Nazi Government did not even profess it necessary or desirable
-to keep the pledged word. Outwardly, however, the professions were very
-different. With regard to treaties, on the 18th of October 1933, Hitler
-said, “Whatever we have signed we will fulfill to the best of our
-ability.”
-
-The Tribunal will note the reservation, “Whatever we have signed.”
-
-But on the 21st of May 1935 Hitler said, “The German Government will
-scrupulously maintain every treaty voluntarily signed, even though it
-was concluded before their accession to power and office.”
-
-On assurances Hitler was even more emphatic. In the same speech, the
-Reichstag Speech on May 21, 1935, Hitler accepted assurances as being of
-equal obligation, and the world at that time could not know that that
-meant of no obligation at all. What he actually said was:
-
- “And when I now hear from the lips of a British statesman that
- such assurances are nothing and that the only proof of sincerity
- is the signature appended to collective pacts, I must ask Mr.
- Eden to be good enough to remember that it is a question of an
- assurance in any case. It is sometimes much easier to sign
- treaties with the mental reservations that one will reconsider
- one’s attitude at the decisive hour than to declare before an
- entire nation and with full opportunity one’s adherence to a
- policy which serves the course of peace because it rejects
- anything which leads to war.”
-
-And then he proceeds with the illustration of his assurance to France.
-
-Never having seen the importance which Hitler wished the world to
-believe he attached to treaties, I shall ask the Tribunal in my part of
-the case to look at 15 only of the treaties which he and the Nazis
-broke. The remainder of the 69 broken treaties shown on the chart and
-occurring between 1933 and 1941 will be dealt with by my learned
-friends.
-
-There is one final point as to the position of a treaty in German law,
-as I understand it. The appearance of a treaty in the
-_Reichsgesetzblatt_ makes it part of the statute law of Germany, and
-that is by no means an uninteresting aspect of the breaches which I
-shall put before the Tribunal.
-
-The first treaty to be dealt with is the Convention for the Pacific
-Settlement of International Disputes, signed at The Hague on the 29th of
-July 1899. I ask that the Tribunal take judicial notice of the
-Convention, and for convenience I hand in as Exhibit GB-1 the British
-Document TC-1. The German reference is to the _Reichsgesetzblatt_ for
-1901, Number 44, Sections 401 to 404, and 482 and 483. The Tribunal will
-find the relevant charge in Appendix C as Charge 1.
-
-As the Attorney General said yesterday, these Hague Conventions are only
-the first gropings towards the rejection of the inevitability of war.
-They do not render the making of aggressive war a crime, but their
-milder terms were as readily broken as the more severe agreements.
-
-On 19 July 1899, Germany, Greece, Serbia, and 25 other nations signed a
-convention. Germany ratified the convention on 4 September 1900, Serbia
-on 11 May 1901, and Greece on 4 April 1901.
-
-By Article 12 of the treaty between the Principal Allied and Associated
-Powers and the Serb-Croat-Slovene State, signed at the St.
-Germaine-en-Laye on 10 September 1919, the new Kingdom succeeded to all
-the old Serbian treaties, and later, as the Tribunal knows, changed its
-name to Yugoslavia.
-
-I think it is sufficient, unless the Tribunal wish otherwise, for me to
-read the first two articles only:
-
- “Article 1: With a view to obviating as far as possible recourse
- to force in the relations between states, the signatory powers
- agree to use their best efforts to insure the pacific settlement
- of international differences.
-
-
-
- “Article 2: In case of serious disagreement or conflict, before
- an appeal to arms the signatory powers agree to have recourse,
- as far as circumstances allow, to the good offices or mediation
- of one or more friendly powers.”
-
-After that the Convention deals with machinery, and I don’t think,
-subject to any wish of the Tribunal, that it is necessary for me to deal
-with it in detail.
-
-The second treaty is the Convention for the Pacific Settlement of
-International Disputes, signed at The Hague on the 18th of October 1907.
-Again I ask the Tribunal to take judicial notice of this, and for
-convenience I hand in as Exhibit GB-2 the Final Act of the Conference at
-The Hague, which contains British Documents TC-2, 3, and 4. The
-reference to this Convention in German is to the _Reichsgesetzblatt_ for
-1910, Number 52, Sections 22 to 25; and the relevant charge is Charge 2.
-
-This Convention, was signed at The Hague by 44 nations, and it is in
-effect as to 31 nations, 28 signatories, and 3 adherents. For our
-purposes it is in force as to the United States, Belgium,
-Czechoslovakia, Denmark, France, Germany, Luxembourg, Japan,
-Netherlands, Norway, Poland, and Russia.
-
-By the provisions of Article 91 it replaces the 1899 Convention as
-between the contracting powers. As Greece and Yugoslavia are parties to
-the 1899 Convention and not to the 1907, the 1899 Convention is in
-effect with regard to them, and that explains the division of countries
-in Appendix C.
-
-Again I only desire that the Tribunal should look at the first two
-articles:
-
- “1. With a view to obviating as far as possible recourse to
- force in the relations between states, the contracting powers
- agree to use their best efforts to insure the pacific settlement
- of international differences.”
-
-Then I don’t think I need trouble to read 2. It is the same article as
-to mediation, and again, there are a number of machinery provisions.
-
-The third treaty is the Hague Convention relative to the opening of
-hostilities, signed at the same time. It is contained in the exhibit
-which I put in. Again I ask that judicial notice be taken of it. The
-British Document is TC-3. The German reference is the
-_Reichsgesetzblatt_ for 1910, Number 2, Sections 82 to 102, and the
-reference in Appendix C to Charge 3.
-
-This Convention applies to Germany, Poland, Norway, Denmark, Belgium,
-the Netherlands, Luxembourg, and Russia. It relates to a procedural step
-in notifying one’s prospective opponent before opening hostilities
-against him. It appears to have had its immediate origin in the
-Russo-Japanese war, 1904, when Japan attacked Russia without any
-previous warning. It will be noted that it does not fix any particular
-lapse of time between the giving of notice and the commencement of
-hostilities, but it does seek to maintain an absolutely minimum standard
-of international decency before the outbreak of war.
-
-Again, if I might refer the Tribunal to the first article:
-
- “The contracting powers recognize that hostilities between them
- must not commence without a previous and explicit warning in the
- form of either a declaration of war, giving reasons, or an
- ultimatum with a conditional declaration of war.”
-
-Then there are a number again of machinery provisions, with which I
-shall not trouble the Tribunal.
-
-The fourth treaty is the Hague Convention 5, respecting the rights and
-duties of neutral powers and persons in case of war on land, signed at
-the same time. That is British Document TC-4, and the German reference
-is _Reichsgesetzblatt_ 1910, Number 2, Sections 168 and 176. Reference
-in Appendix C is to Charge 4.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Is it necessary to give the German reference? If it is
-necessary for defendants’ counsel, all right, but if not it need not be
-done.
-
-SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: If I may omit them it will save some time.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Yes.
-
-SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: If any of the defendants’ counsel want any
-specific reference perhaps they will be good enough to ask me.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Yes.
-
-SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Germany was an original signatory to the
-Convention, and the Treaty is in force as a result of ratification or
-adherence between Germany and Norway, Denmark, Belgium, Luxembourg, the
-Netherlands, the U.S.S.R., and the United States.
-
-I call the attention of the Tribunal to the short contents of Article 1,
-“The territory of neutral powers is inviolable.”
-
-A point does arise, however, on this Convention. I want to make this
-clear at once. Under Article 20, the provisions of the present
-Convention do not apply except between the contracting powers, and then
-only if all the belligerents are parties to the Convention.
-
-As Great Britain and France entered the war within 2 days of the
-outbreak of the war between Germany and Poland, and one of these powers
-had not ratified the Convention, it is arguable that its provisions did
-not apply to the second World War.
-
-I do not want the time of the Tribunal to be occupied by an argument on
-that point when there are so many more important treaties to be
-considered. Therefore, I do not press that as a charge of a breach of
-treaty. I merely call the attention of the Tribunal to the terms of
-Article 1 as showing the state of international opinion at that time and
-as an element in the aggressive character of the war which we are
-considering.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Perhaps this would be a good time to break off.
-
- [_A recess was taken until 1400 hours._]
-
-
-
-
- _Afternoon Session_
-
-SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: As the Tribunal adjourned I had come to the
-fifth treaty, the Treaty of Peace between the Allied and Associated
-Powers and Germany, signed at Versailles the 28th of June 1919. I again
-ask the Tribunal to take judicial cognizance of this treaty, and I again
-hand in for convenience Exhibit GB-3, which is a copy of the treaty,
-including the British documents TC-5 to TC-10 inclusive. The reference
-in Appendix C is to Charge 5.
-
-Before I deal with the relevant portions, may I explain very briefly the
-layout of the treaty.
-
-Part I contains the Covenant of the League of Nations, and Part II sets
-the boundaries of Germany in Europe. These boundaries are described in
-detail but Part II makes no provision for guaranteeing these boundaries.
-
-Part III, Articles 31 to 117, with which the Tribunal is concerned,
-contains the political clauses for Europe. In it, Germany guarantees
-certain territorial boundaries in Belgium, Luxembourg, Austria,
-Czechoslovakia, France, Poland, Memel, Danzig, and so forth.
-
-It might be convenient for the Tribunal to note, at the moment, the
-interweaving of this treaty with the next, which is the Treaty for the
-Restoration of Friendly Relations between the United States and Germany.
-
-Parts I, II, and III of the Versailles Treaty are not included in the
-United States treaty. Parts IV, V, VI, VIII, IX, X, XI, XII, XIV, and XV
-are all repeated verbatim in the United States treaty from the Treaty of
-Versailles.
-
-The Tribunal is concerned with Part V—the military, naval, and air
-clauses. Parts VII and XIII are not included in the United States
-treaty.
-
-I don’t think there is any reason to explain what the parts are, but if
-the Tribunal wishes to know about any specific part, I shall be very
-happy to explain it.
-
-The first part that the Tribunal is concerned with is that contained in
-the British Document TC-5, and consists of Articles 42 to 44 dealing
-with the Rhineland. These are very short, and as they are repeated in
-the Locarno Treaty, perhaps I had better read them once, just so that
-the Tribunal will have them in mind.
-
- “Article 42: Germany is forbidden to maintain or construct any
- fortifications either on the left bank of the Rhine or on the
- right bank to the west of a line drawn 50 kilometers to the east
- of the Rhine.
-
-
-
- “Article 43: In the area defined above, the maintenance and the
- assembly of armed forces, either permanently or temporarily, and
- military maneuvers of any kind, as well as the upkeep of all
- permanent works for mobilization, are in the same way forbidden.
-
-
-
- “Article 44: In case Germany violates in any manner whatever the
- provisions of Articles 42 and 43, she shall be regarded as
- committing a hostile act against the powers signatory of the
- present treaty and as calculated to disturb the peace of the
- world.”
-
-I am not going to put in evidence, but I simply draw the Tribunal’s
-attention to a document of which they can take judicial notice, as it
-has been published by the German State, the memorandum of March 7, 1936,
-giving their account of the breach. The matters regarding the breach
-have been dealt with by my friend, Mr. Alderman, and I don’t propose to
-go over the ground again.
-
-The next part of the treaty is in the British Document TC-6, dealing
-with Austria:
-
- “Article 80: Germany acknowledges and will respect strictly the
- independence of Austria within the frontiers which may be fixed
- in a treaty between that state and the Principal Allied and
- Associated Powers; she agrees that this independence shall be
- inalienable, except with the consent of the Council of the
- League of Nations.”
-
-Again in the same way, the proclamation of Hitler dealing with Austria,
-the background of which has been dealt with by my friend, Mr. Alderman,
-is attached as TC-47. I do not intend to read it because the Tribunal
-can again take judicial notice of the public proclamation.
-
-Next is Document TC-8, dealing with Memel:
-
- “Germany renounces, in favor of the Principal Allied and
- Associated Powers, all rights and title over the territories
- included between the Baltic, the northeastern frontier of East
- Prussia as defined in Article 28 of Part II, (Boundaries of
- Germany) of the present treaty, and the former frontier between
- Germany and Russia.
-
-
-
- “Germany undertakes to accept the settlement made by the
- Principal Allied and Associated Powers in regard to these
- territories, particularly insofar as concerns the nationality of
- inhabitants.”
-
-I don’t think that the Tribunal has had any reference to the formal
-document of incorporation of Memel, of which again the Tribunal can take
-judicial notice; and I put in, for convenience, a copy as GB-4. It is
-British Document TC-53A, and it appears in our book. It is very short,
-so perhaps the Tribunal will bear with me while I read it:
-
- “The Transfer Commissioner for the Memel territory, Gauleiter
- und Oberpräsident Erich Koch, effected on 3 April during a
- conference at Memel, the final incorporation of the Memel
- territory into the National Socialist Party Gau of East Prussia
- and into the state administration of the East Prussian
- Regierungsbezirk of Gumbinnen . . . .”
-
-Then, next we come to TC-9, which is the article relating to Danzig,
-Article 100, and I shall read only the first sentence, because the
-remainder consists of geographical boundaries;
-
- “Germany renounces, in favor of the Principal Allied and
- Associated Powers, all rights and title over the territory
- comprised within the following limits . . . .”
-
-—And then the limits are set out and are described in a German map
-attached to the treaty.
-
-Lieutenant Colonel Griffith-Jones, who will deal with this part of the
-case, will formally prove the documents relating to the occupation of
-Danzig, and I shall not trouble the Tribunal with them now.
-
-So if the Tribunal would go on to British Document TC-7—that is Article
-81, dealing with the Czechoslovak State:
-
- “Germany, in conformity with the action already taken by the
- Allied and Associated Powers, recognizes the complete
- independence of the Czechoslovak State, which will include the
- autonomous territory of the Ruthenians to the south of the
- Carpathians. Germany hereby recognizes the frontiers of this
- state as determined by the Principal Allied and Associated
- Powers and other interested states.”
-
-Mr. Alderman has dealt with this matter only this morning, and he has
-already put in an exhibit giving in detail the conference between Hitler
-and President Hacha, and the Foreign Minister Chvalkowsky, at which the
-Defendants Göring and Keitel were present. Therefore, I am not going to
-put in to the Tribunal the British translation of the captured Foreign
-Office minutes, which occurs in TC-48; but I put in formally, as Mr.
-Alderman asked me to this morning, as GB-6, the Document TC-49, which is
-the agreement signed by Hitler and the Defendant Ribbentrop for Germany
-and Dr. Hacha and Dr. Chvalkowsky for Czechoslovakia. It is an agreement
-of which the Tribunal will take judicial notice. I am afraid I can’t
-quite remember whether Mr. Alderman read it this morning; it is Document
-TC-49. He certainly referred to it.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: No, he did not read it.
-
-SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Then perhaps I might read it. Text of the:
-
- “Agreement between the Führer and Reich Chancellor Adolf Hitler
- and the President of the Czechoslovak State Dr. Hacha . . . .
-
-
-
- “The Führer and Reich Chancellor today received in Berlin, at
- their own request, the President of the Czechoslovak State, Dr.
- Hacha, and the Czechoslovak Foreign Minister, Dr. Chvalkowsky,
- in the presence of Herr von Ribbentrop, the Foreign Minister of
- the Reich. At this meeting the serious situation which had
- arisen within the previous territory of Czechoslovakia, owing to
- the events of recent weeks, was subjected to a completely open
- examination. The conviction was unanimously expressed on both
- sides that the object of all their efforts must be to assure
- quiet, order, and peace in this part of Central Europe. The
- President of the Czechoslovak State declared that, in order to
- serve this end and to reach a final pacification, he confidently
- placed the fate of the Czech people and of their country in the
- hands of the Führer of the German Reich. The Führer accepted
- this declaration and expressed his decision to assure to the
- Czech people, under the protection of the German Reich, the
- autonomous development of their national life, in accordance
- with their special characteristics. In witness whereof this
- document is signed in duplicate.”
-
-The signatures I mentioned appear.
-
-The Tribunal will understand that it is not my province to make any
-comment; that has been done by Mr. Alderman. And I am not putting
-forward any of the documents I read as having my support; they are
-merely put forward factually as part of the case.
-
-The next document, which I put in as GB-7, is the British Document
-TC-50. That is Hitler’s proclamation to the German people, dated the
-15th of March 1939. Again, I don’t think that Mr. Alderman read that
-document.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: No, he did not read it.
-
-SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Then I shall read it:
-
- “Proclamation of the Führer to the German people, 15 March 1939.
-
-
-
- “To the German People:
-
-
-
- “Only a few months ago Germany was compelled to protect her
- fellow countrymen, living in well-defined settlements, against
- the unbearable Czechoslovakian terror regime; and during the
- last weeks the same thing has happened on an ever-increasing
- scale. This is bound to create an intolerable state of affairs
- within an area inhabited by citizens of so many nationalities.
-
-
-
- “These national groups, to counteract the renewed attacks
- against their freedom and life, have now broken away from the
- Prague Government. Czechoslovakia has ceased to exist.
-
-
-
- “Since Sunday at many places wild excesses have broken out,
- amongst the victims of which are again many Germans. Hourly the
- number of oppressed and persecuted people crying for help is
- increasing. From areas thickly populated by German-speaking
- inhabitants, which last autumn Czechoslovakia was allowed by
- German generosity to retain, refugees robbed of their personal
- belongings are streaming into the Reich.
-
-
-
- “Continuation of such a state of affairs would lead to the
- destruction of every vestige of order in an area in which
- Germany is vitally interested particularly as for over 1,000
- years it formed a part of the German Reich.
-
-
-
- “In order definitely to remove this menace to peace and to
- create the conditions for a necessary new order in this living
- space, I have today resolved to allow German troops to march
- into Bohemia and Moravia. They will disarm the terror gangs and
- the Czechoslovakian forces supporting them, and protect the
- lives of all who are menaced. Thus they will lay the foundations
- for introducing a fundamental re-ordering of affairs which will
- be in accordance with the 1,000-year-old history and will
- satisfy the practical needs of the German and Czech
- peoples.”—Signed—“Adolf Hitler, Berlin, 15 March 1939.”
-
-Then there is a footnote, an order of the Führer to the German Armed
-Forces of the same date, in which the substance is that they are told to
-march in, to safeguard lives and property of all inhabitants, and not to
-conduct themselves as enemies, but as an instrument for carrying out the
-German Reich Government’s decision.
-
-I put in, as GB-8, the decrees establishing the Protectorate, which is
-TC-51.
-
-I think again, as these are public decrees, the Tribunal can take
-judicial knowledge of them. Their substance has been fully explained by
-Mr. Alderman. With the permission of the Tribunal, I won’t read them in
-full now.
-
-Then again, as Mr. Alderman requested, I put in, as GB-9, British
-Document TC-52, the British protest. If I might just read that to the
-Tribunal—it is from Lord Halifax to Sir Neville Henderson, our
-Ambassador in Berlin:
-
- “Foreign Office, March 17, 1939.
-
-
-
- “Please inform the German Government that His Majesty’s
- Government desire to make it plain to them that they cannot but
- regard the events of the past few days as a complete repudiation
- of the Munich Agreement and a denial of the spirit in which the
- negotiators of that Agreement bound themselves to co-operate for
- a peaceful settlement.
-
-
-
- “His Majesty’s Government must also take this occasion to
- protest against the changes effected in Czechoslovakia by German
- military action, which are in their view, devoid of any basis of
- legality.”
-
-And again at Mr. Alderman’s request, I put in as GB-10 the Document
-TC-53, which is the French protest of the same date, and if I might read
-the third paragraph:
-
- “The French Ambassador has the honor to inform the Minister for
- Foreign Affairs of the Reich, of the formal protest made by the
- Government of the French Republic against the measures which the
- communication of Count de Welczeck records.
-
-
-
- “The Government of the Republic consider, in fact, that in face
- of the action directed by the German Government against
- Czechoslovakia, they are confronted with a flagrant violation of
- the letter and the spirit of the agreement signed at Munich on
- September 29, 1938.
-
-
-
- “The circumstances in which the agreement of March 15 has been
- imposed on the leaders of the Czechoslovak Republic do not, in
- the eyes of the Government of the Republic, legalize the
- situation registered in that agreement.
-
-
-
- “The French Ambassador has the honor to inform His Excellency,
- the Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Reich, that the
- Government of the Republic cannot recognize under these
- conditions the legality of the new situation created in
- Czechoslovakia by the action of the German Reich.”
-
-I now come to Part 5 of the Versailles Treaty, and the relevant matters
-are contained in the British Document TC-10. As considerable discussion
-is centered around them, I read the introductory words:
-
- “Part V, Military, Naval, and Air Clauses: In order to render
- possible the initiation of a general limitation of the armaments
- of all nations, Germany undertakes strictly to observe the
- military, naval, and air clauses which follow.
-
-
-
- “Section 1. Military Clauses. Chapter I. Effectives and Cadres
- of the German Army.
-
-
-
- “Article 159. The German military forces shall be demobilized
- and reduced as prescribed hereinafter.
-
-
-
- “Article 160. (1) By a date which must not be later than March
- 31, 1920, the German Army must not comprise more than seven
- divisions of infantry and three divisions of cavalry.
-
-
-
- “After that date, the total number of effectives in the Army of
- the states constituting Germany must not exceed 100,000 men,
- including officers and establishments of depots. The Army shall
- be devoted exclusively to the maintenance of order within the
- territory and to the control of the frontiers.
-
-
-
- “The total effective strength of officers, including the
- personnel of staffs, whatever their composition, must not exceed
- 4,000.
-
-
-
- “(2) Divisions and Army Corps headquarters staffs, shall be
- organized in accordance with Table Number 1 annexed to this
- Section. The number and strength of the units of infantry,
- artillery, engineers, technical services and troops laid down in
- the aforesaid table constitute maxima which must not be
- exceeded.”
-
-Then there is a description of units that can have their own depots and
-the grouping of divisions under corps headquarters, and then the next
-two provisions are of some importance:
-
- “The maintenance or formation of forces differently grouped or
- of other organizations for the command of troops or for
- preparation for war is forbidden.
-
-
-
- “The great German General Staff and all similar organizations
- shall be dissolved and may not be reconstituted in any form.”
-
-I don’t think I need trouble the Tribunal with Article 161, which deals
-with administrative services.
-
-Article 163 provides the steps by which the reduction will take place,
-and then we come to Chapter 2, dealing with armament, and that provides
-that up till the time at which Germany is admitted as a member of the
-League of Nations, armaments shall not be greater than the amounts fixed
-in Table Number 11.
-
-If the Tribunal will note the second part, Germany agrees that after she
-has become a member of the League of Nations, the armaments fixed in the
-said table shall remain in force until they are modified by the Council
-of the League. Furthermore, she hereby agrees strictly to observe the
-decisions of the Council of the League on this subject.
-
-Then, 165 deals with guns and machine guns, and so forth, and 167 deals
-with notification of guns, and 168, the first part, says:
-
- “The manufacture of arms, munitions, or any war material shall
- only be carried out in factories or works, the location of which
- shall be communicated to and approved by the governments of the
- Principal Allied and Associated Powers, and the number of which
- they retain the right to restrict.”
-
-Article 169 deals with the surrender of material. Number 170 prohibits
-importation; 171 prohibits gas, and 172 provides for disclosure. Then
-173, under the heading, “Recruiting and Military Training” deals with
-one matter, the breach of which is of great importance:
-
- “Universal compulsory military service shall be abolished in
- Germany. The German Army may only be constituted and recruited
- by means of voluntary enlistment.”
-
-Then the succeeding articles deal with the method of enlistment in order
-to prevent a quick rush through the army of men enlisted for a short
-time.
-
-I think that all I need do is to draw the attention of the Tribunal to
-the completeness and detail with which all these points are covered in
-Articles 174 to 179.
-
-Then, passing to TC-10, Article 180. That contains the prohibition of
-fortress works beyond a certain limit and in the Rhineland. The first
-sentence is:
-
- “All fortified works, fortresses, and field works situated in
- German territory to the west of a line drawn 50 kilometers to
- the east of the Rhine shall be disarmed and dismantled.”
-
-I shall not trouble the Tribunal with the tables which show the amounts.
-
-Then we come to the naval clauses. If the Tribunal will be good enough
-to go on four pages, they will come to Article 181, and I will just read
-that to show the way in which the naval limitations are imposed and
-refer briefly to the others.
-
-Article 181 says:
-
- “After the expiration of a period of 2 months from the coming
- into force of the present treaty the German naval forces in
- commission must not exceed:
-
-
-
- “Six battleships of the Deutschland or Lothringen type, six
- light cruisers, 12 destroyers, 12 torpedo boats, or an equal
- number of ships constructed to replace them as provided in
- Article 190.
-
-
-
- “No submarines are to be included.
-
-
-
- “All other warships, except where there is provision to the
- contrary in the present treaty, must be placed in reserve or
- devoted to commercial purposes.”
-
-Then 182 simply deals with the mine sweeping necessary to clear up the
-mines, and 183 limits the personnel to 15,000, including officers and
-men of all grades and corps, and 184 deals with surface ships not in
-German ports, and the succeeding clauses deal with various details, and
-I pass at once to Article 191, which says:
-
- “The construction or acquisition of any submarines, even for
- commercial purposes, shall be forbidden in Germany.”
-
-Article 194 makes corresponding obligations of voluntary engagements for
-longer service, and 196 and 197 deal with naval fortifications and
-wireless stations.
-
-Then, if the Tribunal please, would they pass to Article 198, the first
-of the air clauses. The essential and important sentence is the first:
-
- “The Armed Forces of Germany must not include any military or
- naval air forces.”
-
-I don’t think that I need trouble the Tribunal with the detailed
-provisions which occur in the next four clauses, which are all
-consequential.
-
-Then, the next document, which for convenience is put next to that, is
-the British Document TC-44. For convenience I put in a copy as GB-11,
-but this again is merely ancillary to Mr. Alderman’s argument. It is the
-report of the formal statement made at the German Air Ministry about the
-restarting of the Air Corps, and I respectfully submit that the Tribunal
-can take judicial notice of that.
-
-Similarly, without proving formally the long Document, TC-45, the
-Tribunal can again take judicial notice of the public proclamation,
-which is a well-known public document in Germany, the proclamation of
-compulsory military service. Mr. Alderman has again dealt with this
-fully in his address.
-
-I now come to the sixth treaty, which is the treaty between the United
-States and Germany restoring friendly relations, and I put in a copy as
-Exhibit GB-12. It is Document TC-11, and the Tribunal will find it as
-the second last document in the document book. The purpose of this
-treaty was to complete official cessation of hostilities between the
-United States of America and Germany, and I have already explained to
-the Tribunal that it incorporated certain parts of the Treaty of
-Versailles. The relevant portion for the consideration of the Tribunal
-is Part V, and I have just concluded going through the clauses of the
-Treaty of Versailles which are repeated verbatim in this treaty. I
-therefore, with the approval of the Tribunal, will not read them again,
-but at Page 11 of my copy, they will see the clauses are repeated in
-exactly the same way.
-
-Then I pass to the seventh treaty, which is the Treaty of Mutual
-Guarantee between Germany, Belgium, France, Great Britain, and Italy,
-negotiated at Locarno, October 16, 1925. I ask the Tribunal to take
-judicial notice of that, and I put in as Exhibit GB-13, the British
-Document TC-12.
-
-I was dealing with the Treaty of Locarno, and it might be convenient if
-I just reminded the Tribunal of the treaties that were negotiated at
-Locarno, because they do all go together and are to a certain extent
-mutually dependent.
-
-At Locarno, Germany negotiated five treaties:
-
-(A) The Treaty of Mutual Guarantee between Germany, Belgium, France,
-Great Britain, and Italy; (B) the Arbitration Convention between Germany
-and France; (C) the Arbitration Convention between Germany and Belgium;
-(D) the Arbitration Treaty between Germany and Poland; and (E) an
-Arbitration Treaty between Germany and Czechoslovakia.
-
-Article 10 of the Treaty of Mutual Guarantee provided that it should
-come into force as soon as ratifications were deposited at Geneva, in
-the archives of the League of Nations, and as soon as Germany became a
-member of the League of Nations. The ratifications were deposited on the
-14th September 1926 and Germany became a member of the League of Nations
-on the 10th of September 1926.
-
-The two arbitration conventions and the two arbitration treaties which I
-mentioned provide that they shall enter into force under the same
-conditions as the Treaty of Mutual Guarantee. That is Article 21 of the
-Arbitration Conventions and Article 22 of the Arbitration Treaties.
-
-The most important of the five agreements is the Treaty of Mutual
-Guarantee. One of its purposes was to establish in perpetuity the
-borders between Germany and Belgium, and Germany and France. It contains
-no provision for denunciation or withdrawal therefrom and provides that
-it shall remain in force until the Council of the League of Nations
-decides that the League of Nations ensures sufficient protection to the
-parties to the treaty—an event which never happened—in which case the
-Treaty of Mutual Guarantee shall expire 1 year later.
-
-The general scheme of the Treaty of Mutual Guarantee is that Article 1
-provides that the parties guarantee three things:
-
-The border between Germany and France, the border between Germany and
-Belgium, and the demilitarization of the Rhineland.
-
-Article 2 provides that Germany and France, and Germany and Belgium,
-agree that they will not attack or invade each other with certain
-inapplicable exceptions, and Article 3 provides that Germany and France,
-and Germany and Belgium, agree to settle all disputes between them by
-peaceful means.
-
-The Tribunal will remember, because this point was made by my friend,
-Mr. Alderman, that the first important violation of the Treaty of Mutual
-Guarantee appears to have been the entry of German troops into the
-Rhineland on 7 March 1936. The day after, France and Belgium asked the
-League of Nations Council to consider the question of the German
-re-occupation of the Rhineland and the purported repudiation of the
-treaty, and on the 12th of March, after a protest from the British
-Secretary for Foreign Affairs, Belgium, France, Great Britain, and Italy
-recognized unanimously that the re-occupation was a violation of this
-treaty, and on the 14th of March, the League Council duly and properly
-decided that it was not permissible and that the Rhineland clauses of
-the pact were not voidable by Germany because of the alleged violation
-by France in the Franco-Soviet Mutual Assistance Pact.
-
-That is the background to the treaty with the international
-organizations that were then in force, and if I might suggest them to
-the Tribunal without adding to the summary which I have given, the
-relevant articles are 1, 2, and 3, which I have mentioned, and 4, which
-provides for the bringing of violations before the Council of the
-League, as was done, and 5 I ask the Tribunal to note, because it deals
-with the clauses of the Versailles Treaty which I have already
-mentioned. It says:
-
- “The provisions of Article 3 of the present treaty are placed
- under the guarantee of the High Contracting Parties as provided
- by the following stipulations:
-
-
-
- “If one of the powers referred to in Article 3 refuses to submit
- a dispute to peaceful settlement or to comply with an arbitral
- or judicial decision and commits a violation of Article 2 of the
- present treaty or a breach of Articles 42 or 43 of the Treaty of
- Versailles, the provisions of Article 4 of the present treaty
- shall apply.”
-
-That is the procedure of going to the League or in the case of a
-flagrant breach, of taking more stringent action.
-
-I remind the Tribunal of this provision because of the quotations from
-Hitler which I mentioned earlier, when he said that the German
-Government will scrupulously maintain every treaty voluntarily signed,
-even though they were concluded before their accession to power and
-office. Whatever may be said of the Treaty of Versailles, whatever may
-be argued and has been argued, no one has ever argued for a moment, to
-the best of my knowledge, that Herr Stresemann was in any way acting
-involuntarily when he signed, along with the other representatives, the
-Locarno pact on behalf of Germany. It was signed not only by Herr
-Stresemann, but by Herr Hans Luther, so that there you have a treaty
-freely entered into, which repeats the Rhineland provisions of
-Versailles and binds Germany in that regard. I simply call the attention
-of the Tribunal to Article 8, which deals with the remaining in force of
-the treaty. I might perhaps read it because as I told the Tribunal all
-the other treaties have the same lasting qualities, the same provisions
-as to the time they will last, as the Treaty of Mutual Guarantee. It
-says:
-
- “Article 8. The present treaty shall be registered at the League
- of Nations in accordance with the Covenant of the League. It
- shall remain in force until the Council, acting on a request by
- one or other of the High Contracting Parties notified to the
- other signatory powers 3 months in advance, and voting at least
- by a two-thirds majority, decides that the League of Nations
- ensures sufficient protection to the High Contracting Parties;
- the treaty shall cease to have effect on the expiration of a
- period of 1 year from such decision.”
-
-That is, that in signing this treaty, the German representatives clearly
-placed the question of repudiation or avoidance of the treaty in hands
-other than their own. They were at the time, of course, a member of the
-League, and a member of the Council of the League, but they left the
-repudiation and avoidance to the decision of the League.
-
-Then the next treaty on my list is the Arbitration Treaty between
-Germany and Czechoslovakia, which was one of the Locarno group and to
-which I have already referred, but for convenience I have put in Exhibit
-GB-14, which is British Document TC-14. As a breach of this treaty, as
-charged in Charge 8, of Appendix C, I mentioned the background of the
-treaty, and I shall not go into it again but I think the only clauses
-that the Tribunal need look at, are Article 1, which is the governing
-clause, and says as follows (Document TC-14):
-
- “All disputes of every kind between Germany and Czechoslovakia
- with regard to which the parties are in conflict as to their
- respective rights, and which it may not be possible to settle
- amicably by the normal methods of diplomacy, shall be submitted
- for decision either to an arbitral tribunal, or to the Permanent
- Court of International Justice as laid down hereafter. It is
- agreed that the disputes referred to above include, in
- particular, those mentioned in Article 13 of the Covenant of the
- League of Nations.
-
-
-
- “This provision does not apply to disputes arising out of events
- prior to the present treaty and belonging to the past.
-
-
-
- “Disputes for the settlement of which a special procedure is
- laid down in other conventions in force between the High
- Contracting Parties, shall be settled in conformity with the
- provisions of these conventions.”
-
-Articles 2 to 21 of the machinery. In Article 22 the second sentence
-says it—that’s the present treaty—shall enter into and remain in force
-under the same conditions as the said treaty, which is the Treaty of
-Mutual Guarantee.
-
-Now that, I think, is all I need mention about that treaty. I think I am
-right that my friend, Mr. Alderman, referred to it. It is certainly the
-treaty to which President Beneš unsuccessfully appealed during the
-crisis in the autumn of 1938. Now the ninth treaty which I should deal
-with is not in this document book, and I merely am putting it in
-formally, because my friend, Mr. Roberts, will deal with it and read the
-appropriate parts—if the Tribunal will be good enough to note it
-because it is mentioned in Charge 9 of Appendix C. It is the Arbitration
-Convention between Germany and Belgium also done at Locarno, of which I
-hand in a copy for convenience as GB-15. In fact, I can tell the
-Tribunal all these arbitration conventions are in the same form, and I
-am not going to deal with it because it is essentially part of the case
-concerned with Belgium, the Low Countries, and Luxembourg, which my
-friend, Mr. Roberts, will present. Therefore, I only ask the Tribunal to
-accept the formal document for the moment. And the same applies to the
-tenth treaty, which is mentioned in Charge 10 of Appendix C. That is the
-Arbitration Treaty between Germany and Poland, of which I ask the
-Tribunal to take notice, and I hand in as GB-16. That again will be
-dealt with by my friend, Colonel Griffith-Jones, when he is dealing with
-the Polish case.
-
-I therefore can take the Tribunal straight to a matter which is not a
-treaty, but is a solemn declaration, and that is TC-18, which I now put
-in as Exhibit GB-17, and ask the Tribunal to take judicial notice of, as
-a Declaration of the Assembly of the League of Nations. The importance
-is the date which was the 24th of September 1927. The Tribunal may
-remember that I asked them to take judicial notice of the fact that
-Germany had become a member of the League of Nations on 10 September
-1926, a year before.
-
-The importance of this Declaration is not only its effect in
-international law, to which my learned friend, the Attorney General,
-referred, but the fact that it was unanimously adopted by the Assembly
-of the League, of which Germany was a free, and let me say at once, an
-active member at the time. I think that all I need read of TC-18 is, if
-the Tribunal would be good enough to look at it, the speech which begins
-“M. Sokal of Poland (Rapporteur),” and then the translation after the
-Rapporteur had dealt with the formalities, that this had gone to the
-third committee and been unanimously adopted, and he had been asked to
-act as Rapporteur, he says—the second paragraph:
-
- “The committee was of opinion that, at the present juncture, a
- solemn resolution passed by the Assembly, declaring that wars of
- aggression must never be employed as a means of settling
- disputes between states, and that such wars constitute an
- international crime, would have a salutary effect on public
- opinion, and would help to create an atmosphere favorable to the
- League’s future work in the matter of security and disarmament.
-
-
-
- “While recognizing that the draft resolution does not constitute
- a regular legal instrument, which would be adequate in itself
- and represent a concrete contribution towards security, the
- Third Committee unanimously agreed as to its great moral and
- educative value.”
-
-Then he asked the Assembly to adopt the draft resolution, and I will
-read simply the terms of the resolution, which shows what so many
-nations, including Germany, put forward at that time:
-
- “The Assembly, recognizing the solidarity which unites the
- community of nations, being inspired by a firm desire for the
- maintenance of general peace, being convinced that a war of
- aggression can never serve as a means of settling international
- disputes, and is in consequence an international crime;
- considering that a solemn renunciation of all wars of aggression
- would tend to create an atmosphere of general confidence
- calculated to facilitate the progress of the work undertaken
- . . . with a view to disarmament:
-
-
-
- “Declares: 1. That all wars of aggression are and shall always
- be prohibited: 2. That every pacific means must be employed to
- settle disputes of every description, which may arise between
- states.
-
-
-
- “The Assembly declares that the states, members of the League,
- are under an obligation to conform to these principles.”
-
-After a solemn vote taken in the form of roll call the President
-announced—which you will see at the end of the extract:
-
- “All the delegations having pronounced in favor of the
- declaration submitted by the Third Committee, I declare it
- unanimously adopted.”
-
-The last general treaty which I have to place before the Tribunal is the
-Kellogg-Briand Pact. The Pact of Paris of 1928, which my learned friend,
-the Attorney General, in opening this part of the case read _in extenso_
-and commented on fully, I hand in as Exhibit GB-18—the British Document
-TC-19, which is a copy of that pact. I did not intend, unless the
-Tribunal desired otherwise, that I should read it again, as the Attorney
-General yesterday read it in full, but of course I am at the service of
-the Tribunal and therefore I leave that document before the Tribunal in
-that way.
-
-Now all that remains for me to do is to place before the Tribunal
-certain documents which Mr. Alderman mentioned in the course of his
-address, and left to me. I am afraid that I haven’t placed them in a
-special order, because they don’t really relate to the treaties I have
-dealt with, but to Mr. Alderman’s argument. The first of these I hand in
-as Exhibit GB-19. It is British Document TC-26, and comes just after
-that resolution of the League of Nations to which the Tribunal had just
-been giving attention—TC-26. It is the assurance contained in Hitler’s
-speech on 21 May 1935, and it is very short, and unless the Tribunal has
-it in mind from Mr. Alderman’s speech, I will read it again; I am not
-sure of his reading it:
-
- “Germany neither intends nor wishes to interfere in the domestic
- affairs of Austria, to annex Austria, or to attach that country
- to her. The German people and the German Government have,
- however, the very comprehensible desire, arising out of the
- simple feeling of solidarity due to a common national descent,
- that the right to self-determination should be guaranteed not
- only to foreign nations, but to the German people everywhere. I
- myself believe that no regime which is not anchored in the
- people, supported by the people, and desired by the people, can
- exist permanently.”
-
-The next document which is TC-22, and which is on the next page, I now
-hand in as Exhibit GB-20. It is the copy of the official proclamation of
-the agreement between the German Government and the Government of the
-Federal State of Austria on 11 July 1936, and I am almost certain that
-Mr. Alderman did read this document, but I refer the Tribunal to
-Paragraph 1 of the agreement to remind them of the essential content:
-
- “The German Government recognizes the full sovereignty of the
- Federal State of Austria in the sense of the pronouncements of
- the German Leader and Chancellor of the 21st of May 1935.”
-
-I now have three documents which Mr. Alderman asked me to hand in with
-regard to Czechoslovakia. The first is TC-27, which the Tribunal will
-find two documents further on from the one of Austria, to which I have
-just been referring. That is the German assurance to Czechoslovakia, and
-what I am handing in as GB-21 is the letter from M. Masaryk, Jan
-Masaryk’s son, to Lord Halifax, dated the 12th of March 1938. Again I
-think that if Mr. Alderman did not read this, he certainly quoted the
-statement made by the Defendant Göring, which appears in the third
-paragraph. In the first statement the Field Marshal used the expression,
-“ich gebe Ihnen mein Ehrenwort,” which I understand means, “I give you
-my word of honor,” and if you will look down three paragraphs, after the
-Defendant Göring had asked that there would not be a mobilization of the
-Czechoslovak Army, the communication continues:
-
- “M. Mastny was in a position to give him definite and binding
- assurances on this subject, and today spoke with Baron Von
- Neurath—that is the Defendant Von Neurath—who, among other
- things assured him on behalf of Herr Hitler that Germany still
- considers herself bound by the German-Czechoslovak Arbitration
- Convention concluded at Locarno in October 1925.”
-
-So there I remind the Tribunal that in 1925 Herr Stresemann was speaking
-on behalf of Germany in an agreement voluntarily concluded. Had there
-been the slightest doubt of that, here is the Defendant Von Neurath
-giving the assurance on behalf of Hitler that Germany still considers
-herself bound by the German-Czechoslovak Arbitration Convention on 12
-March 1938, 6 months before Dr. Beneš made a hopeless appeal to it,
-before the crisis in the autumn of 1938. Of course the difficult
-position of the Czechoslovak Government is set out in the last
-paragraph, but M. Masaryk says—and the Tribunal may think with great
-force—in his last sentence:
-
- “They cannot however fail to view with great apprehension the
- sequel of events in Austria between the date of the bilateral
- agreement between Germany and Austria, 11 July 1936, and
- yesterday, 11 March 1938.”
-
-I refrain from comment, but I venture to say that is one of the most
-pregnant sentences relating to this period.
-
-Now the next document which is on the next page is the British Document
-TC-28, which I hand in as Exhibit GB-22. And that is an assurance of the
-26th of September 1938, which Hitler gave to Czechoslovakia, and
-again—the Tribunal will check my memory—I don’t think that Mr.
-Alderman read this but . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: No, I don’t think so.
-
-SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Then I think if he did not, the Tribunal ought
-to have it before them, because it gives very important point as to the
-alleged governing principle of getting Germans back to the Reich, which
-the Nazi conspirators purported to ask for a considerable time, while it
-suited them. It says:
-
- “I have little to explain. I am grateful to Mr. Chamberlain for
- all his efforts, and I have assured him that the German people
- want nothing but peace; but I have also told him that I cannot
- go back beyond the limits of our patience.”
-
-The Tribunal will remember this is between the Godesberg visit and the
-Munich Pact:
-
- “I assured him, moreover, and I repeat it here, that when this
- problem is solved there will be no more territorial problems for
- Germany in Europe. And I further assured him that from the
- moment when Czechoslovakia solves its other problems, that is to
- say, when the Czechs have come to an agreement with their other
- minorities peacefully, and without oppression, I will no longer
- be interested in the Czech State, and that, as far as I am
- concerned, I will guarantee it. We don’t want any Czechs. But I
- must also declare before the German people that in the
- Sudeten-German problem my patience is now at an end. I made an
- offer to Herr Beneš which was no more than the realization of
- what he had already promised. He has now peace or war in his
- hands. Either he will accept this offer and at length give the
- Germans their freedom, or we shall get this freedom for
- ourselves.”
-
-Less than 6 months before the 15th of March Hitler was saying in the
-most violent terms that “he didn’t want any Czechs.” The Tribunal has
-heard the sequel from my friend, Mr. Alderman, this morning. The last
-document which I have been asked to put in, and which I now ask the
-Tribunal to take notice of, and hand in, is Exhibit GB-23, which is the
-British Document TC-23 and a copy of the Munich Agreement of September
-29, 1938. That was signed by Hitler, the late Mr. Neville Chamberlain,
-M. Daladier, and Mussolini, and it is largely a procedural agreement by
-which the entry of German troops into the Sudeten-Deutsche territory is
-regulated. That is shown by the preliminary clause:
-
- “Germany, the United Kingdom, France, and Italy, taking into
- consideration the agreement which has been already reached in
- principle, for the cession to Germany of the Sudeten-German
- territory, have agreed on the following terms and conditions
- governing the said cession and the measures consequent thereon,
- and by this agreement they each hold themselves responsible for
- the steps necessary to secure fulfillment.”
-
-Then I don’t think, unless the Tribunal want me, I need go through the
-steps. In Article 4, it said that “The occupation by stages of the
-predominantly German territory by German troops will begin on 1
-October.” The four territories are marked on a map. And by Article 6,
-“The final determination of the frontiers will be carried out by the
-international commission.” And it provides also for rights of option and
-release from the forces—the Czech forces of Sudeten Germans.
-
-That is what Hitler was asking for in the somewhat rhetorical passage
-which I have just read out, and it will be observed that there is an
-annex to the agreement which is most significant.
-
- “Annex to the Agreement:
-
-
-
- “His Majesty’s Government in the United Kingdom and the French
- Government have entered into the above agreement on the basis
- that they stand by the offer contained in Paragraph 6 of the
- Anglo-French Proposals of the 19th September, relating to an
- international guarantee of the new boundaries of the
- Czechoslovak State against unprovoked aggression.
-
-
-
- “When the question of the Polish and Hungarian minorities in
- Czechoslovakia has been settled, Germany and Italy, for their
- part, will give a guarantee to Czechoslovakia.”
-
-The Polish and Hungarian minorities, not the question of Slovakia which
-the Tribunal heard this morning. That is why Mr. Alderman submitted—and
-I respectfully joined him in his submission—that the action of the 15th
-of March was a flagrant violation of the letter and spirit of that
-agreement.
-
-That, My Lord, is the part of the case which I desired to present.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn now for 10 minutes.
-
-SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: If your Lordship pleases. Thank you.
-
- [_A recess was taken._]
-
-LIEUTENANT COLONEL J. M. G. GRIFFITH-JONES (Junior Counsel for the
-United Kingdom): May it please the Tribunal, Count Two of the Indictment
-charges these defendants with participating in the planning, the
-preparation, the initiation, and waging of various wars of aggression,
-and it charges that those wars are also in breach of international
-treaty. It is our purpose now to present to the Tribunal the evidence in
-respect of those aggressive wars against Poland and against the United
-Kingdom and France.
-
-Under Paragraph (B) of the particulars to Count Two, reference is made
-to Count One in the Indictment for the allegations charging that those
-wars were wars of aggression, and Count One also sets out the
-particulars of the preparations and planning for those wars, and in
-particular those allegations will be found in Paragraph (F) 4. But, My
-Lord, with the Tribunal’s approval I would propose first to deal with
-the allegations of breach of treaties which are mentioned in Paragraph
-(C) of the particulars, and of which the details are set out in Appendix
-C. My Lord, those sections of Appendix C which relate to the war against
-Poland are Section 2, which charges a violation of the Hague Convention
-in respect of the pacific settlement of international disputes, on which
-Sir David has already addressed the Court, and I do not propose, with
-the Court’s approval, to say more than that.
-
-Section 3 of Appendix C and Section 4 charge breaches of the other Hague
-Conventions of 1907. Section 5, Sub-section 4, charges a breach of the
-Versailles Treaty in respect of the Free City of Danzig, and Section 13,
-a breach of the Kellogg-Briand Pact.
-
-All those have already been dealt with by Sir David Maxwell-Fyfe, and it
-remains, therefore, only for me to deal with two other sections of
-Appendix C: Section 10, which charges a breach of the Arbitration Treaty
-between Germany and Poland, signed at Locarno on the 16th of October
-1925; and Section 15 of Appendix C which charges a violation of the
-Declaration of Non-Aggression which was entered into between Germany and
-Poland on the 26th of January 1934.
-
-If the Tribunal would take Part I of the British Document Book Number 2,
-I will describe in a moment how the remaining parts are divided. The
-document book is divided into six parts. If the Tribunal will look at
-Part I for the moment—the document books which have been handed to the
-Counsel for the Defense are in exactly the same order, except that they
-are bound in one and not in six separate covers, in which the Tribunal’s
-documents are bound for convenience.
-
-The German-Polish Arbitration Treaty, the subject matter of Section 10
-of Appendix C, is Document TC-15 and appears the one but end document in
-the book. It has already been put in under the Number GB-16.
-
-My Lord, I would quote the preamble and Articles 1 and 2 from that
-treaty:
-
- “The President of the German Empire and the President of the
- Polish Republic:
-
-
-
- “Equally resolved to maintain peace between Germany and Poland
- by assuring the peaceful settlement of differences which might
- arise between the two countries;
-
-
-
- “Declaring that respect for the rights established by treaty or
- resulting from the law of nations is obligatory for
- international tribunals;
-
-
-
- “Agreeing to recognize that the rights of a state cannot be
- modified save with its consent;
-
-
-
- “And considering that sincere observance of the methods of
- peaceful settlement of international disputes permits of
- resolving, without recourse to force, questions which may become
- the cause of division between states;
-
-
-
- “Have decided. . . .”
-
-Then, go on to Article 1:
-
- “All disputes of every kind between Germany and Poland with
- regard to which the parties are in conflict as to their
- respective rights, and which it may not be possible to settle
- amicably by the normal methods of diplomacy, shall be submitted
- for decision either to an arbitral tribunal or to the Permanent
- Court of International Justice, as laid down hereafter.”
-
-I go straight to Article 2:
-
- “Before any resort is made to arbitral procedure before the
- Permanent Court of International Justice, the dispute may, by
- agreement between the parties, be submitted, with a view to
- amicable settlement, to a permanent international commission,
- styled the Permanent Conciliation Commission, constituted in
- accordance with the present treaty.”
-
-My Lord, thereafter the treaty goes on to lay down the procedure for
-arbitration and for conciliation.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: It is in the same terms, is it not, as the arbitration
-treaty between Germany and Czechoslovakia, and Germany and Belgium?
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: Well—yes, it is, My Lord, both signed at
-Locarno.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Yes.
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: The words of the charge in Section 10, will be
-noted particularly in that Germany did, on or about the 1st of September
-1939, unlawfully attack and invade Poland without first having attempted
-to settle its dispute with Poland by peaceful means.
-
-The only other treaty to which I refer, the German-Polish Declaration of
-the 26th of January 1934, will be found as the last document in Part I
-of the Tribunal’s document book, which is the subject of Section 10 of
-Appendix C:
-
- “The German Government and the Polish Government consider that
- the time has come to introduce a new era in the political
- relations between Germany and Poland by a direct understanding
- between the states. They have therefore decided to establish by
- the present declaration a basis for the future shaping of those
- relations.
-
-
-
- “The two Governments assume that the maintenance and assurance
- of a permanent peace between their countries is an essential
- condition for general peace in Europe.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Do you think it is necessary to read all this? We are
-taking judicial notice of it.
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: I am very much obliged; I am only too anxious
-to shorten this, if I can.
-
-In view of what is later alleged by the Nazi Government, I would
-particularly draw attention to the last paragraph in that declaration.
-
- “The declaration shall remain in effect for a period of 10 years
- counting from the day of exchange of instruments of
- ratification. In case it is not denounced by one of the two
- governments 6 months before the expiration of that period of
- time, it shall continue in effect but can then be denounced by
- either Government at any time 6 months in advance.”
-
-My Lord, I pass then from the breach of treaties to present to the Court
-the evidence upon the planning and preparation of these wars and in
-support of the allegations that they were wars of aggression. For
-convenience, as I say, the documents have been divided into separate
-parts and if the Tribunal would look at the index, the total index to
-their document, which is a separate book, on the front page it will be
-seen how these documents have been divided. Part I is the “Treaties”;
-Part II is entitled “Evidence of German Intentions prior to March 1939.”
-It might perhaps be more accurately described as “pre-March 1939
-evidence,” and it will be with that part that I would now deal.
-
-My Lord, it has been put to the Tribunal that the actions against
-Austria and Czechoslovakia were in themselves part of the preparation
-for further aggression, and I now—dealing with the early history of
-this matter—wish to draw the Court’s particular attention only to those
-parts of the evidence which show that even at that time, before the
-Germans had seized the whole of Czechoslovakia, they were perfectly
-prepared to fight England, Poland, and France, if necessary, to achieve
-those preliminary aims; that they appreciated the whole time that they
-might well have to do so. And, what is more, although not until after
-March 1939 did they commence upon their immediate and specific
-preparations for war against Poland, nevertheless, they had for a
-considerable time before had it in mind specifically to attack Poland
-once Czechoslovakia was completely theirs.
-
-During this period also—and this happens throughout the whole story of
-the Nazi regime in Germany—during this period, as afterwards, while
-they are making their preparations and carrying out their plans, they
-are giving to the outside world assurance after assurance so as to lull
-them out of any suspicion of their real object.
-
-The dates, I think—as the learned Attorney General said in addressing
-you yesterday—the dates in this case, almost more than the documents,
-speak for themselves. The documents in this book are arranged in the
-order in which I will refer to them, and the first that I would refer to
-is Document TC-70, which will go in as GB-25.
-
-It is only interesting to see what Hitler said of the agreement with
-Poland when it was signed in January 1934:
-
- “When I took over the Government on the 30th of January, the
- relations between the two countries seemed to me more than
- unsatisfactory. There was a danger that the existing
- differences, which were due to the territorial clauses of the
- Treaty of Versailles and the mutual tension resulting therefrom,
- would gradually crystallize into a state of hostility which, if
- persisted in, might only too easily acquire the character of a
- dangerous traditional enmity.”
-
-I go down to the one but last paragraph.
-
- “In the spirit of this treaty the German Government is willing
- and prepared also to cultivate economic-political relations with
- Poland in such a way that here, too, the state of unprofitable
- suspicion can be succeeded by a period of useful co-operation.
- It is a matter of particular satisfaction to us that in this
- same year the National Socialist Government of Danzig has been
- enabled to effect a similar clarification of its relations with
- its Polish neighbor.”
-
-That was in 1934. Three years later, again on the 30th of January,
-speaking in the Reichstag, Hitler said—this is Document PS-2368, which
-will be GB-26. I will, if I may, avoid so far as possible repeating
-passages which the Attorney General quoted in his speech the other day.
-The first paragraph, in fact, he quoted to the Tribunal. It is a short
-paragraph but perhaps I might read it now, but I will—dealing with this
-evidence—so far as possible avoid repetition:
-
- “By a series of agreements we have eliminated existing tension
- and thereby contributed considerably to an improvement in the
- European atmosphere. I merely recall an agreement with Poland
- which has worked out to the advantage of both sides . . . . True
- statesmanship will not overlook realities, but consider them.
- The Italian nation and the new Italian State are realities. The
- German nation and the German Reich are equally realities. And to
- my own fellow citizens I would say that the Polish nation and
- the Polish State have also become a reality.”
-
-That was on the 30th of January 1937.
-
-On the 24th of June 1937 we have a top-secret order, C-175, which has
-already been put in as USA-69. It is a top-secret order issued by the
-Reich Minister for War and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces,
-signed “Von Blomberg.” It has at the top, “Written by an officer . . . .
-Outgoing documents in connection with this matter and dealing with it
-. . . are to be written by an officer.” So it is obviously highly
-secret. And with it is enclosed a directive for the unified preparation
-for war of the Armed Forces to come into force on the 1st of August
-1937. The directive enclosed with it is divided into Part 1, “General
-Guiding Principles”; Part 2, “Likely Warlike Eventualities”; Part 3,
-“Special Preparations.”
-
-The Tribunal will remember that the Attorney General quoted the opening
-passages:
-
- “The general political position justifies the supposition that
- Germany need not consider an attack from any side.”
-
-It goes on—the second paragraph:
-
- “The intention to unleash a European war is held just as little
- by Germany. Nevertheless, the politically fluid world situation,
- which does not preclude surprising incidents, demands a
- continuous preparedness for war of the German Armed Forces to
- counter attacks at any time, and to enable the military
- exploitation of politically favorable opportunities, should they
- occur.”
-
-It then goes on to set out the preparations which are to be made, and I
-would particularly draw the Tribunal’s attention to Paragraph 2b:
-
- “The further working on mobilization without public announcement
- in order to put the Armed Forces in a position to begin a war
- suddenly and by surprise both as regards strength and time.”
-
-On the next page, under Paragraph 4:
-
- “Special preparations are to be made for the following
- eventualities: Armed intervention against Austria; warlike
- entanglements with Red Spain.”
-
-And thirdly, and this shows so clearly how they appreciated at that time
-that their actions against Austria and Czechoslovakia might well involve
-them in war:
-
- “England, Poland, and Lithuania take part in a war against us.”
-
-If the Tribunal would turn over to Part 2 of that directive, Page 5 of
-that document:
-
- “For the treatment of probable warlike eventualities
- (concentrations) the following suppositions, tasks, and orders
- are to be considered as basic:
-
-
-
- “1. War on two fronts with focal point in the West.
-
-
-
- “Suppositions. In the West, France is the opponent. Belgium may
- side with France, either at once or later, or not at all. It is
- also possible that France may violate Belgium’s neutrality if
- the latter is neutral. She will certainly violate that of
- Luxembourg.”
-
-I pass to Part 3, which will be found on Page 9 of that Exhibit, and I
-particularly refer to the last paragraph on that page under the heading
-“Special Case—Extension Red-Green”. It will be remembered that Red was
-Spain and Green was Czechoslovakia.
-
- “The military political starting point used as a basis for
- concentration plans Red and Green can be aggravated if either
- England, Poland, or Lithuania . . . join the side of our
- opponents. Thereupon our military position would deteriorate to
- an unbearable, even hopeless extent. The political leadership
- will therefore do everything to keep these countries neutral,
- above all England and Poland.”
-
-Thereafter, it sets out the conditions which are to be the basis for the
-discussion. Before I leave that document, the date will be noted: June
-1937; and it shows clearly that at that date anyway, the Nazi Government
-appreciated the likelihood, if not the probability, of fighting England,
-and Poland, and France, and were perfectly prepared to do so, if they
-had to. On the 5th of November 1937—the Tribunal will remember—Hitler
-held his conference in the Reich Chancellery, the minutes of which have
-been referred to as the Hossbach notes. I refer to only one or two lines
-of that document to draw the attention of the Tribunal to what Hitler
-said in respect to England, Poland, and France. On Page 1 of that
-Exhibit, the middle of the page:
-
- “The Führer then stated: ‘The aim of German policy is the
- security and preservation of the nation and its propagation.
- This is consequently a problem of space.’”
-
-He then went on, you will remember, to discuss what he described
-“participation in world economy,” and at the bottom of Page 2 he said:
-
- “The only way out, and one which may appear imaginary, is the
- securing of greater living space, an endeavor which at all times
- has been the cause of the formation of states and movements of
- nations.”
-
-And at the end of that first paragraph on Page 3:
-
- “The history of all times, Roman Empire, British Empire, has
- proved that every space expansion can be effected only by
- breaking resistance and taking risks. Even setbacks are
- unavoidable. Neither formerly, nor today, has space been found
- without an owner. The attacker always comes up against the
- proprietor.”
-
-My Lord, it is clear that that reference was not only . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: [_Interposing._] It has been read already.
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: My object was only to try to collect, so far as
-England and Poland were concerned, the evidence that had been given. I
-would welcome in actual fact if the Tribunal thought that it was
-unnecessary, I would welcome the opportunity to . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal would wish you not to read anything that has
-been read already.
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: I would pass then to the next document in that
-part of your document book. I put that document in. It was referred to
-by the Attorney General in his address yesterday, and it shows that on
-the same date the Hossbach meeting was taking place, a communiqué was
-being issued as a result of the Polish Ambassador’s audience with
-Hitler, in which it was said in the course of the conversation that it
-was confirmed that Polish-German relations should not meet with
-difficulties because of the Danzig question. That Document is TC-73. I
-put it in as GB-27. On the 2d of January . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: That hasn’t been read before, has it?
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: It was read by the Attorney General in his
-opening.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: In his opening? Very well.
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: On the 2d of January 1938 some unknown person
-wrote a memorandum for the Führer. This document was one of the German
-Foreign Office documents of which a microfilm was captured by Allied
-troops when they came into Germany. It is headed, “Very
-confidential—personal only,” and is called, “Deductions on the Report,
-German Embassy, London, regarding the Future Form of Anglo-German
-Relations”:
-
- “With the realization that Germany will not tie herself to a
- _status quo_ in Central Europe, and that sooner or later a
- military conflict in Europe is possible, the hope of an
- agreement will slowly disappear among Germanophile British
- politicians, insofar as they are not merely playing a part that
- has been given to them. Thus the fateful question arises: Will
- Germany and England eventually be forced to drift into separate
- camps and will they march once more against each other one day?
- To answer this question, one must realize the following:
-
-
-
- “A change of the _status quo_ in the East in the German sense
- can only be carried out by force. As long as France knows that
- England, which so to speak, has taken on a guarantee to aid
- France against Germany, is on her side, France’s fighting for
- her eastern allies is probable, in any case, always possible,
- and thus with it war between Germany and England. This applies
- then even if England does not want war. England, believing she
- must defend her borders on the Rhine, would be dragged in
- automatically by France. In other words, peace or war between
- England and Germany rests solely in the hands of France, who
- could bring about such a war between Germany and England by way
- of a conflict between Germany and France. It follows, therefore,
- that war between Germany and England on account of France can be
- prevented only if France knows from the start that England’s
- forces would not be sufficient to guarantee their common
- victory. Such a situation might force England, and thereby
- France, to accept a lot of things that a strong Anglo-French
- coalition would never tolerate.
-
-
-
- “This position would arise for instance if England, through
- insufficient armament or as a result of threats to her empire by
- a superior coalition of powers, for example, Germany, Italy,
- Japan, thereby tying down her military forces in other places,
- would not be able to assure France of sufficient support in
- Europe.”
-
-The next page goes on to discuss the possibilities of a strong
-partnership between Italy and Japan, and I would pass from my quotation
-to the next page where the writer is summarizing his ideas.
-
-Paragraph 5:
-
- “Therefore, conclusions to be drawn by us.
-
-
-
- “1. Outwardly, further understanding with England in regard to
- the protection of the interests of our friends.
-
-
-
- “2. Formation under great secrecy, but with whole-hearted
- tenacity of a coalition against England, that is to say, a
- tightening of our friendship with Italy and Japan, also the
- winning over of all nations whose interests conform with ours
- directly or indirectly.
-
-
-
- “Close and confidential co-operation of the diplomats of the
- three great powers towards this purpose. Only in this way can we
- confront England, be it in a settlement or in war. England is
- going to be a hard and astute opponent in this game of
- diplomacy.
-
-
-
- “The particular question whether, in the event of a war by
- Germany in Central Europe . . .”—I am afraid the translation of
- this is not very good—“The particular question whether, in the
- event of a war by Germany in Central Europe, France, and thereby
- England, would interfere, depends on the circumstances and the
- time at which such a war commences and ceases, and on military
- considerations which cannot be gone into here.”
-
-And whoever it was that wrote that document appears to be on a fairly
-high level, because he concludes by saying:
-
- “I should like to give the Führer some of these points of view
- verbally:”
-
-That document is GB-28.
-
-Well, I am afraid that the next two documents have gotten into your
-books in the wrong order. If you would refer to 2357-PS which is the one
-following our L-43—it will be remembered that document to the Führer
-which I have just read was dated the 2d of January 1938.
-
-On the 20th of January 1938 Hitler spoke in the Reichstag.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: February, the document said.
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: I beg your pardon—February 1938. That is
-2357-PS, and will be GB-30. In that speech he said:
-
- “In the fifth year following the first great foreign political
- agreement with the Reich, it fills us with sincere gratification
- to be able to state that in our relations with the state, with
- which we had had perhaps the greatest differences, not only has
- there been a _détente_, but in the course of these years there
- has been a constant improvement in relations. This good work,
- which was regarded with suspicion by so many at the time, has
- stood the test, and I may say that since the League of Nations
- finally gave up its continual attempts to unsettle Danzig and
- appointed a man of great personal attainments as the new
- commissioner, the most dangerous spot from this point of view of
- European peace has entirely lost its menacing character. The
- Polish State respects the national conditions in this state, and
- both the City of Danzig and Germany respect Polish rights. And
- so the way to friendly understanding has been successfully
- paved, an understanding which beginning with Danzig has today,
- in spite of the attempts of certain mischief makers, succeeded
- in finally taking the poison out of the relations between
- Germany and Poland and transforming them into a sincere,
- friendly co-operation.
-
-
-
- “To rely on her friendships, Germany will not leave a stone
- unturned to save that ideal which provides the foundation for
- the task which is ahead of us—peace.”
-
-I turn back to the next—to the document which was in your document
-books, the one before that, L-43, which will be GB-29. This is a
-document to which the Attorney General referred yesterday. It is dated
-the 2d of May 1938, and is entitled “Organizational Study of 1930.” It
-comes from the office of the Chief of the Organizational Staff of the
-General Staff of the Air Force, and its purpose is said to be:
-
- “The task is to search, within a framework of very broadly
- conceived conditions, for the most suitable type of organization
- of the Air Force. The result gained is termed ‘Distant
- Objective.’ From this shall be deduced the goal to be reached in
- the second phase of the setting-up process in 1942. This will be
- called ‘Final Objective 1942.’ This in turn yields what is
- considered the most suitable proposal for the reorganization of
- the staffs of the Air Force group commands, air Gaue, air
- divisions, _et cetera_.”
-
-The table of contents, the Tribunal will see, is divided into various
-sections, and Section I is entitled “Assumptions.” If the Tribunal will
-turn over to the next page one finds the assumption under the heading
-“Assumptions I, frontier of Germany, see map, Enclosure 1.”
-
-The Tribunal sees a reproduction of that map on the wall and it will be
-seen that on the 2d of May 1938, the Air Force were envisaging Estonia,
-Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Austria, and Hungary, all
-coming within the bounds of the Reich. The original map is here attached
-to this file and if the Tribunal will look at the original exhibit, it
-will be seen that this organizational study has been prepared with the
-greatest care and thoroughness, with a mass of charts attached as
-appendices.
-
-I would refer also to the bottom of the second page, to the Tribunal’s
-copy of the translation:
-
- “Consideration of the principles of organization on the basis of
- the assumptions for war and peace made in Section I:
-
-
-
- 1) Attack forces: Principal adversaries: England, France,
- Russia.”
-
-And it then goes on to say if all the 144 Geschwader are employed
-against England, they must be concentrated in the western half of the
-Reich; that is to say, they must be deployed in such a way that by
-making full use of their range they can reach all English territory down
-to the last corner.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: It is perhaps involved in the map. I think perhaps you
-should refer to the organization of the Air Force, with group commands
-at Warsaw and Königsberg.
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: I am much obliged. Under the paragraph
-“Assumptions,” Sub-heading 2, “Organization of the Air Force in
-Peacetime,” seven group commands:
-
-1-Berlin, 2-Brunswick, 3-Munich, 4-Vienna, 5-Budapest, 6-Warsaw, and
-7-Königsberg.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Yes.
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: I am very much obliged. And lastly, in
-connection with that document, on Page 4 of the Tribunal’s translation,
-the last paragraph:
-
- “The more the Reich grows in area, and the more the Air Force
- grows in strength, the more imperative it becomes, to have
- locally bound commands . . . .”
-
-I emphasize only the opening, “The more the Reich grows in area, and the
-more the Air Force grows in strength . . .” Now I would say one word on
-that document. The original, I understand, is signed by an officer who
-is not at the top rank in the Air Force and I, therefore, don’t want to
-overemphasize the inferences that can be drawn from it, but it is
-submitted that it at least shows the lines upon which the General Staff
-of the Air Force were thinking at that date.
-
-The Tribunal will remember that in February 1938 the Defendant
-Ribbentrop succeeded Von Neurath as Foreign Minister. We have another
-document from that captured microfilm, which is dated the 26th of August
-1938, when Ribbentrop had become Foreign Minister, and it is addressed
-to him as “the Reich Minister via the State Secretary.” It is a
-comparatively short document and one that I will read in whole:
-
- “The most pressing problem of German policy, the Czech problem,
- might easily, but must not, lead to a conflict with the
- Entente.”—TC-76 becomes GB-31—“Neither France nor England is
- looking for trouble regarding Czechoslovakia. Both would perhaps
- leave Czechoslovakia to herself, if she should, without direct
- foreign interference and through internal signs of
- disintegration due to her own faults, suffer the fate she
- deserves. This process, however, would have to take place step
- by step, and would have to lead to a loss of power in the
- remaining territory, by means of a plebiscite and an annexation
- of territory.
-
-
-
- “The Czech problem is not yet politically acute enough for any
- immediate action, which the Entente would watch inactively, and
- not even if this action should come quickly and surprisingly.
- Germany cannot fix any definite time when this fruit could be
- plucked without too great a risk. She can only prepare the
- desired developments.”
-
-I pass to the last paragraph on that page. I think I can leave out the
-intervening lines, Paragraph 5.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Should you not read the next paragraph, “For this purpose
-. . .”?
-
- LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: “For this purpose the slogan emanating
- from England at present of the right for autonomy of the Sudeten
- Germans, which we have intentionally not used up to now, is to
- be taken up gradually. The international conviction that the
- choice of nationality is being withheld from these Germans will
- do useful spadework, notwithstanding the fact that the chemical
- process of dissolution of the Czech form of states may or may
- not be finally speeded up by mechanical means as well. The fate
- of the actual body of Czechoslovakia, however, would not as yet
- be clearly decided by this, but would nevertheless be definitely
- sealed.
-
-
-
- “This method of approach towards Czechoslovakia is to be
- recommended because of our relationship with Poland. It is
- unavoidable that the German departure from the problems of
- boundaries in the southeast and their transfer to the east and
- northeast must make the Poles sit up. The fact is”—I put in an
- “is” because I think it is obviously left out of the copy that I
- have in front of me.—
-
-
-
- “The fact is that after the liquidation of the Czech question,
- it will be generally assumed that Poland will be the next in
- turn.
-
-
-
- “But the later this assumption sinks in in international
- politics as a firm factor, the better. In this sense, however,
- it is important for the time being, to carry on the German
- policy, under the well-known and proved slogans of ‘the right to
- autonomy’ and ‘racial unity.’ Anything else might be interpreted
- as pure imperialism on our part, and provoke resistance by the
- Entente at an earlier date and more energetically than our
- forces could stand up to.”
-
-That was on the 26th of August 1938, just as the Czech crisis was
-leading up to a Munich settlement. While at Munich, or rather a day or
-two before the Munich Agreement was signed, Herr Hitler made a speech.
-On the 26th of September he said—I think Sir David Maxwell-Fyfe has
-just read this document to the Tribunal. I’ll refer to only two lines of
-it:
-
- “I assured him, moreover, and I repeat it here, that when this
- problem is solved, there will be no more territorial problems
- for Germany in Europe.”
-
-And again, the last document in your book, which is another extract from
-that same speech, I will not read to the Tribunal unless the Tribunal
-desire, because the Attorney General did quote it in full in his address
-yesterday. These two documents are already in, TC-28 as GB-2, and TC-29,
-which is the second extraction of that same speech, as GB-32.
-
-My Lord, I would refer the Tribunal to one more document under this part
-which has already been put in by my American colleagues. It is C-23, now
-USA-49, and which appears before TC-28 in your document book. The
-particular passage of that exhibit, to which I would refer, is a letter
-from Admiral Carls, which appears at the bottom of the second page. It
-is dated some time in September, with no precise date, and is entitled,
-“Opinion on the ‘Draft Study of Naval Warfare against England.’ There is
-full agreement with the main theme of the study.” Again, the Attorney
-General quoted the remainder of that letter yesterday, which the
-Tribunal will remember.
-
- “If, according to the Führer’s decision, Germany is to acquire a
- position of security as a world power she needs not only
- sufficient colonial possessions but also secure naval
- communications and secure access to the ocean.”
-
-That, then, was the position at the time of the Munich Agreement in
-September 1938.
-
-The gains of Munich were not, of course, so great as the Nazi Government
-had hoped and had intended, and as a result, they were not prepared
-straight away to start any further aggressive action against Poland or
-elsewhere, but Your Lordships heard this morning, when Mr. Alderman
-dealt in his closing remarks with the advantages that were gained by the
-seizure of Czechoslovakia, what Jodl and Hitler said on subsequent
-occasions, that Czechoslovakia was only setting the stage for the attack
-on Poland. It is, of course, obvious now that they intended and indeed
-had taken the decision to proceed against Poland as soon as
-Czechoslovakia had been entirely occupied. We know now, from what Hitler
-said in talking to his military commanders at a later date. The Tribunal
-will remember the speech where he said that from the first, he never
-intended to abide by the Munich Agreement but that he had to have the
-whole of Czechoslovakia. As a result, although not ready to proceed in
-full force against Poland after September 1938, they did at once begin
-to approach the Poles on the question of Danzig. Until—as the Tribunal
-will see—until the whole of Czechoslovakia had been taken in March, no
-pressure was put on; but immediately after the Sudetenland had been
-occupied, preliminary steps were taken to stir up trouble with Poland,
-which would and was to lead eventually to their excuse, or so-called
-justification for their attack on that country.
-
-If the Tribunal would turn to Part 3. . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I think it is time to adjourn now until 10 o’clock
-tomorrow morning.
-
- [_The Tribunal adjourned until 6 December at 1000 hours._]
-
-
-
-
- FOURTEENTH DAY
- Thursday, 6 December 1945
-
-
- _Morning Session_
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal has received an urgent request from the
-defendants’ counsel that the Trial should be adjourned at Christmas for
-a period of 3 weeks. The Tribunal is aware of the many interests which
-must be considered in a trial of this complexity and magnitude, and, as
-the Trial must inevitably last for a considerable time, the Tribunal
-considers that it is not only in the interest of the defendants and
-their counsel but of every one concerned in the Trial that there should
-be a recess. On the whole it seems best to take that recess at Christmas
-rather than at a later date when the Prosecution’s case has been
-completed. The Tribunal will therefore rise for the Christmas week and
-over the 1st of January, and will not sit after the session on Thursday,
-the 20th of December, and will sit again on Wednesday, the 2d of
-January.
-
-MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: I should like, in justice to my staff, to note the
-American objection to the adjournment for the benefit of the defendants.
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: May it please the Tribunal, the Tribunal will
-return to Part III of that document book in which I included the
-documents relating to the earlier discussions between the German and
-Polish Governments on the question of Danzig. Those discussions, the
-Tribunal will remember, started almost immediately after the Munich
-crisis in September 1938, and started, in the first place, as cautious
-and friendly discussions until the remainder of Czechoslovakia had
-finally been seized in March of the following year.
-
-I would refer the Tribunal to the first document in that part, TC-73,
-Number 44. That is a document taken from the official _Polish White
-Book_, which I put in as Exhibit GB-27 (a). It gives an account of a
-luncheon which took place at the Grand Hotel, Berchtesgaden, on the 24th
-of October, where Ribbentrop saw Mr. Lipski, the Polish Ambassador to
-Germany:
-
- “In a conversation of the 24th of October, over a luncheon at
- the Grand Hotel, Berchtesgaden, at which M. Hewel was present,
- Von Ribbentrop put forward a proposal for a general settlement
- of issues between Poland and Germany. This included the reunion
- of Danzig with the Reich, while Poland would be assured the
- retention of railway and economic facilities there. Poland would
- agree to the building of an extra-territorial motor road and a
- railway line across Pomorze (northern part of the corridor). In
- exchange Von Ribbentrop mentioned the possibility of an
- extension of the Polish-German Agreement to 25 years and a
- guarantee of Polish-German frontiers.”
-
-I do not think I need read the following lines. I go to the last but one
-paragraph:
-
- “Finally, I said to Von Ribbentrop that I could see no
- possibility of an agreement involving the reunion of the Free
- City with the Reich. I concluded by promising to communicate the
- substance of this conversation to you.”
-
-I would emphasize the submission of the Prosecution as to this part of
-the case and that is that the whole question of Danzig was, indeed, as
-Hitler has himself said, no question at all. Danzig was raised simply as
-an excuse, a so-called justification, not for the seizure of Danzig, but
-for the invasion and seizure of the whole of Poland, and we see it
-starting now. As we progress with the story it will become ever more
-apparent that that is what the Nazi Government were really aiming
-at—only providing themselves with some kind of crisis which would
-provide some kind of justification for walking into the rest of Poland.
-
-I turn to the next document. It is again a document taken from the
-_Polish White Book_, TC-73, Number 45, which will be GB-27 (b). TC-73
-will be the _Polish White Book_, which I shall put in later. That
-document sets out the instructions that Mr. Beck, the Polish Foreign
-Minister, gave to Mr. Lipski to hand to the German Government in reply
-to the suggestion put forward by Ribbentrop at Berchtesgaden on the 24th
-of October. I need not read the first page. The history of Polish-German
-relationship is set out, and the needs of Poland in respect of Danzig
-are emphasized. I turn to the second page of that exhibit, to Paragraph
-6:
-
- “In the circumstances, in the understanding of the Polish
- Government, the Danzig question is governed by two factors: The
- right of the German population of the city and the surrounding
- villages to freedom of life and development, and the fact that
- in all matters appertaining to the Free City as a port it is
- connected with Poland. Apart from the national character of the
- majority of the population, everything in Danzig is definitely
- bound up with Poland.”
-
-It then sets out the guarantees to Poland under the existing statute,
-and I pass to Paragraph 7:
-
- “Taking all the foregoing factors into consideration, and
- desiring to achieve the stabilization of relations by way of a
- friendly understanding with the Government of the German Reich,
- the Polish Government proposes the replacement of the League of
- Nations guarantee and its prerogatives by a bilateral
- Polish-German agreement. This agreement should guarantee the
- existence of the Free City of Danzig so as to assure freedom of
- national and cultural life to its German majority, and also
- should guarantee all Polish rights. Notwithstanding the
- complications involved in such a system, the Polish Government
- must state that any other solution, and in particular any
- attempt to incorporate the Free City into the Reich, must
- inevitably lead to a conflict. This would not only take the form
- of local difficulties, but also would suspend all possibility of
- Polish-German understanding in all its aspects.”
-
-And then finally in Paragraph 8:
-
- “In face of the weight and cogency of these questions, I am
- ready to have final conversations personally with the governing
- circles of the Reich. I deem it necessary, however, that you
- should first present the principles to which we adhere, so that
- my eventual contact should not end in a breakdown, which would
- be dangerous for the future.”
-
-The first stage in those negotiations had been entirely successful from
-the German point of view. They had put forward a proposal, the return of
-the City of Danzig to the Reich, which they might well have known would
-have been unacceptable. It was unacceptable, and the Polish Government
-had warned the Nazi Government that it would be. They had offered to
-enter into negotiations, but they had not agreed, which is exactly what
-the German Government had hoped. They had not agreed to the return of
-Danzig to the Reich. The first stage in producing the crisis had been
-accomplished.
-
-Shortly afterward, within a week or so of that taking place, after the
-Polish Government had offered to enter into discussions with the German
-Government, we find another top-secret order, issued by the Supreme
-Command of the Armed Forces, signed by the Defendant Keitel. It goes to
-the OKH, OKM, and OKW and it is headed, “The First Supplement to the
-Instruction Dated the 21st of October 1938”:
-
- “The Führer has ordered: Apart from the three contingencies
- mentioned in the instructions of that date of 21 October 1938,
- preparations are also to be made to enable the Free State of
- Danzig to be occupied by German troops by surprise . . . .
-
-
-
- “The preparations will be made on the following basis: Condition
- is a quasi-revolutionary occupation of Danzig, exploiting a
- politically favorable situation, not a war against Poland.”
-
-We remember, of course, that at that moment the remainder of
-Czechoslovakia had not been seized and therefore they were not ready to
-go to war with Poland. That document does show how the German Government
-answered the proposal to enter into discussions. That is C-137 and will
-become GB-33.
-
-On the 5th of January 1939 Mr. Beck had a conversation with Hitler. It
-is unnecessary to read the first part of that document, which is the
-next in the Tribunal’s book, TC-73, Number 48, which will become GB-34.
-In the first part of that conversation, of which that document is an
-account, Hitler offers to answer any questions. He says he has always
-followed the policy laid down by the 1934 agreement. He discusses the
-Danzig question and emphasizes that in the German view it must sooner or
-later return to Germany. I quote the last but one paragraph of that
-page:
-
- “Mr. Beck replied that the Danzig question was a very difficult
- problem. He added that in the Chancellor’s suggestion he did not
- see any equivalent for Poland, and that the whole of Polish
- opinion, and not only people thinking politically but the widest
- spheres of Polish society, were particularly sensitive on this
- matter.
-
-
-
- “In answer to this the Chancellor stated that to solve this
- problem it would be necessary to try to find something quite
- new, some new form, for which he used the term Körperschaft,
- which on the one hand would safeguard the interests of the
- German population, and on the other the Polish interests. In
- addition, the Chancellor declared that the Minister could be
- quite at ease, there would be no _faits accomplis_ in Danzig,
- and nothing would be done to render difficult the situation of
- the Polish Government.”
-
-The Tribunal will remember that in the very last document we looked at,
-on the 24th of November, orders had already been received, or issued,
-for preparations to be made for the occupation of Danzig by surprise;
-yet here he is assuring the Polish Foreign Minister that there is to be
-no _fait accompli_ and he can be quite at his ease.
-
-I turn to the next step, Document TC-73, Number 49, which will become
-GB-35, conversation between Mr. Beck and Ribbentrop, on the day after
-the one to which I have just referred between Beck and Hitler.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Did you draw attention to the fact that the last
-conversation took place in the presence of the Defendant Ribbentrop?
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: I am very obliged to you. No, I did not. As I
-say, it was on the next day, the 6th of January. The date in actual fact
-does not appear on the copy I have got in my book. It does appear in the
-_White Book_ itself.
-
- “Mr. Beck asked Ribbentrop to inform the Chancellor that whereas
- previously, after all his conversations and contacts with German
- statesmen, he had been feeling optimistic, today, for the first
- time he was in a pessimistic mood. Particularly in regard to the
- Danzig question, as it had been raised by the Chancellor, he saw
- no possibility whatever of agreement.”
-
-I emphasize this last paragraph:
-
- “In answer Ribbentrop once more emphasized that Germany was not
- seeking any violent solution. The basis of their policy towards
- Poland was still a desire for the further building up of
- friendly relations. It was necessary to seek such a method of
- clearing away the difficulties as would respect the rights and
- interests of the two parties concerned.”
-
-The Defendant Ribbentrop apparently was not satisfied with that one
-expression of good faith. On the 25th of the same month, January 1939,
-some fortnight or three weeks later, he was in Warsaw and made another
-speech, of which an extract is set out in PS-2530, which will become
-GB-36:
-
- “In accordance with the resolute will of the German national
- leader, the continual progress and consolidation of friendly
- relations between Germany and Poland, based upon the existing
- agreement between us, constitute an essential element in German
- foreign policy. The political foresight and the principles
- worthy of true statesmanship, which induced both sides to take
- the momentous decision of 1934, provide a guarantee that all
- other problems arising in the course of the future evolution of
- events will also be solved in the same spirit, with due regard
- to the respect and understanding of the rightful interests of
- both sides. Thus Poland and Germany can look forward to the
- future with full confidence in the solid basis of their mutual
- relations.”
-
-And even so, the Nazi Government must have been still anxious that the
-Poles were beginning to sit up—Your Lordship will remember the
-expression “sit up” used in the note to the Führer—and to assume they
-would be the next in turn, because on the 30th of January Hitler again
-spoke in the Reichstag, 30th of January 1939, and gave further
-assurances of their good faith.
-
-That document, that extract, was read by the Attorney General in his
-address, and therefore, I only put it in now as an exhibit. That is
-TC-73, Number 57, which will become GB-37.
-
-That, then, brings us up to the March 1939 seizure of the remainder of
-Czechoslovakia and the setting up of the Protectorate of Bohemia and
-Moravia.
-
-If the Tribunal will now pass to the next part, Part IV, of that
-document book, I had intended to refer to three documents where Hitler
-and Jodl were setting out the advantage gained through the seizure of
-the remainder of Czechoslovakia. But the Tribunal will remember that Mr.
-Alderman, in his closing remarks yesterday morning, dealt very fully
-with that matter showing what advantages they did gain by that seizure
-and showing on the chart that he had on the wall the immense
-strengthening of the German position against Poland. Therefore, I leave
-that matter. The documents are already in evidence, and if the Tribunal
-should wish to refer to them, they are found in their correct order in
-the story in that document book.
-
-As soon as that occupation had been completed, within a week of marching
-into the rest of Czechoslovakia, the heat was beginning to be turned on
-against Poland.
-
-If the Tribunal would pass to Document TC-73, which is about half way
-through that document book—it follows after Jodl’s lecture, which is a
-long document—TC-73, Number 61. It is headed: “Official Documents
-concerning Polish-German Relations.” This will be GB-38.
-
-On the 21st of March Mr. Lipski again saw Ribbentrop and the nature of
-the conversation was generally very much sharper than that that had been
-held a little time back at the Grand Hotel, Berchtesgaden:
-
- “I saw Ribbentrop today. He began by saying he had asked me to
- call in order to discuss Polish-German relations in their
- entirety.
-
-
-
- “He complained about our press, and the Warsaw students’
- demonstrations during Count Ciano’s visit.”
-
-I think I can go straight on to the larger paragraph, which commences
-with “further”:
-
- “Further, Ribbentrop referred to the conversation at
- Berchtesgaden between you and the Chancellor, in which Hitler
- put forward the idea of guaranteeing Poland’s frontiers in
- exchange for a motor road and the incorporation of Danzig into
- the Reich. He said that there had been further conversations
- between you and him in Warsaw”—that is, between him, of course,
- and Mr. Beck—“He said that there had been further conversations
- between you and him in Warsaw on the subject, and that you had
- pointed out the great difficulties in the way of accepting these
- suggestions. He gave me to understand that all this had made an
- unfavorable impression on the Chancellor, since so far he had
- received no positive reaction whatever on our part to his
- suggestions. Ribbentrop had talked to the Chancellor, only
- yesterday. He stated that the Chancellor was still in favor of
- good relations with Poland, and had expressed a desire to have a
- thorough conversation with you on the subject of our mutual
- relations. Ribbentrop indicated that he was under the impression
- that difficulties arising between us were also due to some
- misunderstanding of the Reich’s real aims. The problem needed to
- be considered on a higher plane. In his opinion, our two States
- were dependent on each other.”
-
-I think it unnecessary that I should read the next page. Briefly,
-Ribbentrop emphasizes the German argument as to why Danzig should return
-to the Reich, and I turn to the first paragraph on the following page:
-
- “I stated”—that is Mr. Lipski—“I stated that now, during the
- settlement of the Czechoslovakian question, there was no
- understanding whatever between us. The Czech issue was already
- hard enough for the Polish public to swallow, for, despite our
- disputes with the Czechs, they were after all a Slav people. But
- in regard to Slovakia, the position was far worse. I emphasized
- our community of race, language, and religion, and mentioned the
- help we had given in their achievement of independence. I
- pointed out our long frontier with Slovakia. I indicated that
- the Polish man in the street could not understand why the Reich
- had assumed the protection of Slovakia, that protection being
- directed against Poland. I said emphatically that this question
- was a serious blow to our relations.
-
-
-
- “Ribbentrop reflected for a moment, and then answered that this
- could be discussed.
-
-
-
- “I promised to refer to you the suggestion of a conversation
- between you and the Chancellor. Ribbentrop remarked that I might
- go to Warsaw during the next few days to talk the matter over.
- He advised that the talk should not be delayed, lest the
- Chancellor should come to the conclusion that Poland was
- rejecting all his offers.
-
-
-
- “Finally, I asked whether he could tell me anything about his
- conversation with the Foreign Minister of Lithuania. Ribbentrop
- answered vaguely that he had seen Mr. Urbszys on the latter’s
- return from Rome, and that they had discussed the Memel
- question, which called for a solution.”
-
-That conversation took place on the 21st of March. It was not very long
-before the world knew what the solution to Memel was. On the next day
-German Armed Forces marched in.
-
-If the Tribunal would turn over—I think the next document is
-unnecessary—turn over to TC-72, Number 17, which becomes GB-39.
-
-As a result of these events, not unnaturally, considerable anxiety was
-growing both in the government of Great Britain and the Polish
-Government, and the two governments therefore had been undertaking
-conversations with each other.
-
-On the 31st of March, the Prime Minister, Mr. Chamberlain, spoke in the
-House of Commons, and he explained that as a result of the conversations
-that had been taking place between the British and Polish Governments—I
-quote from the last but one paragraph of his statement:
-
- “As the House is aware, certain consultations are now proceeding
- with other governments. In order to make perfectly clear the
- position of His Majesty’s Government in the meantime, before
- those consultations are concluded, I now have to inform the
- House that during that period, in the event of any action which
- clearly threatened Polish independence and which the Polish
- Government accordingly considered it vital to resist with their
- national forces, His Majesty’s Government would feel themselves
- bound at once to lend the Polish Government all support in their
- power. They have given the Polish Government an assurance to
- this effect.
-
-
-
- “I may add that the French Government have authorized me to make
- it plain that they stand in the same position in this matter as
- do His Majesty’s Government.”
-
-On the 6th of April, a week later, a formal communiqué was issued by the
-Anglo-Polish Governments which repeated the assurance the Prime Minister
-had given a week before and in which Poland assured Great Britain of her
-support should she, Great Britain, be attacked. I need not read it all.
-In fact, I need not read any of it. I put it in. It is TC-72, Number 18.
-I put it in as GB-40.
-
-The anxiety and concern that the governments of Poland and Great Britain
-were feeling at that time appear to have been well justified. During the
-same week, on the 3rd of April, the Tribunal will see in the next
-document an order signed by Keitel. It emanates from the High Command of
-the Armed Forces. It is dated Berlin, 3rd of April 1939. Its subject is:
-“Directive for the Armed Forces 1939-40”:
-
- “‘Directive for the Uniform Preparation of War by the Armed
- Forces for 1939-40’ is being reissued.
-
-
-
- “Part I (Frontier Defense) and Part III (Danzig) will be issued
- in the middle of April. Their basic principles remain unchanged.
-
-
-
- “Part II, Case White”—which is the code name for the operation
- against Poland—“Part II, Case White, is attached herewith. The
- signature of the Führer will be appended later.
-
-
-
- “The Führer has added the following directives to Case White:
-
-
-
- “1. Preparations must be made in such a way that the operation
- can be carried out at any time from 1st of September 1939
- onwards.”—This is in April, the beginning of April.
-
-
-
- “2. The High Command of the Armed Forces has been directed to
- draw up a precise timetable for Case White and to arrange by
- conferences the synchronized timings among the three branches of
- the Armed Forces.
-
-
-
- “3. The plans of the branches of the Armed Forces and the
- details for the timetable must be submitted to the OKW by the
- 1st of May.”
-
-That document, as the Tribunal will see on the following page under the
-heading “Distribution”, went to the OKH, OKM, OKW.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Are those words at the top part of the document, or are
-they just notes?
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: They are part of the document.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Directives from Hitler and Keitel, preparing for war.
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: I beg your pardon; no, they are not. The
-document starts from under the words “Translation of a document signed
-by Keitel.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Yes, I see.
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: The first words being “top-secret.”
-
-If the Tribunal will look at the second page, following after
-“Distribution”, it will be seen that there follows a translation of
-another document, dated the 11th of April, and that document is signed
-by Hitler:
-
- “I shall lay down in a later directive the future tasks of the
- Armed Forces and the preparations to be made in accordance with
- these for the conduct of the war.”—No question about
- war—“conduct of the war.”
-
-
-
- “Until that directive comes into force, the Armed Forces must be
- prepared for the following eventualities:
-
-
-
- “I. Safeguarding the frontiers of the German Reich, and
- protection against surprise air attacks;
-
-
-
- “II. Case White;
-
-
-
- “III. The Annexation of Danzig.
-
-
-
- “Annex IV contains regulations for the exercise of military
- authority in East Prussia in the event of a warlike
- development.” Again that document goes to the OKH, OKM, OKW.
-
-On the next page of the copy the Tribunal have, the translation of Annex
-I is set out, which is the safeguarding of the frontiers of the German
-Reich, and I would quote from Paragraph (2) under “Special Orders”:
-
- “Legal Basis. It should be anticipated that a state of defense
- or a state of war, as defined in the Reich defense law of the
- 4th of September 1938, will not be declared. All measures and
- demands necessary for carrying out a mobilization are to be
- based on the laws valid in peacetime.”
-
-My Lord, that document is C-120. It becomes GB-41. It contains some
-other later documents to which I shall refer in chronological order.
-
-The statement of the Prime Minister in the House of Commons, followed by
-the Anglo-Polish communiqué of the 6th of April, was seized upon by the
-Nazi Government to urge on, as it were, the crisis which they were
-developing in Danzig between themselves and Poland.
-
-On the 28th of April the German Government issued a memorandum in which
-they alleged that the Anglo-Polish Declaration was incompatible with the
-1934 agreement between Poland and Germany, and that as a result of
-entering into or by reason of entering into that agreement, Poland had
-unilaterally renounced the 1934 agreement.
-
-I would only quote three short passages, or four short passages, from
-that document. It is TC-72, Number 14. It becomes GB-42. Some of these
-passages are worth quoting, if only to show the complete dishonesty of
-the whole document on the face of it:
-
- “The German Government have taken note of the Polish-British
- declaration regarding the progress and aims of the negotiations
- recently conducted between Poland and Great Britain. According
- to this declaration there has been concluded between the Polish
- Government and the British Government a temporary understanding,
- to be replaced shortly by a permanent agreement, which will
- provide for the giving of mutual assistance by Poland and Great
- Britain in the event of the independence of one of the two
- states being directly or indirectly threatened.”
-
-Thereafter, the document sets out in the next three paragraphs the
-history of German friendship towards Poland. I quote from the last
-paragraph, Paragraph 5, on that page:
-
- “The agreement which has now been concluded by the Polish
- Government with the British Government is in such obvious
- contradiction to these solemn declarations of a few months ago
- that the German Government can take note only with surprise and
- astonishment of such a violent and fundamental reversal of
- Polish policy.
-
-
-
- “Irrespective of the manner in which its final formulation may
- be determined by both parties, the new Polish-British agreement
- is intended as a regular pact of alliance which, by reason of
- its general sense and of the present state of political
- relations, is directed exclusively against Germany. From the
- obligation now accepted by the Polish Government, it appears
- that Poland intends, in certain circumstances, to take an active
- part in any possible German-British conflict, in the event of
- aggression against Germany, even should this conflict not affect
- Poland and her interests. This is a direct and open blow against
- the renunciation of all use of force contained in the 1934
- declaration.”
-
-I think I can omit Paragraph 6. Paragraph 7:
-
- “The Polish Government, however, by their recent decision to
- accede to an alliance directed against Germany, have given it to
- be understood that they prefer a promise of help by a third
- power to the direct guarantee of peace by the German Government.
- In view of this, the German Government are obliged to conclude
- that the Polish Government do not at present attach any
- importance to seeking a solution of German-Polish problems by
- means of direct, friendly discussion with the German Government.
- The Polish Government have thus abandoned the path, traced out
- in 1934, to the shaping of German-Polish relations.”
-
-All this would sound very well, if it had not been for the fact that
-orders for the invasion of Poland had already been issued and the Armed
-Forces had been told to draw up a precise timetable.
-
-The document goes on to set out the history of the last negotiations and
-discussions. It sets out the demands of the 21st, which the German
-Government had made; the return of Danzig, the Autobahn, the railway,
-the promise by Germany of the 25 years’ guarantee, and I go down to the
-last but one paragraph on Page 3 of the Exhibit, under the heading (1):
-
- “The Polish Government did not avail themselves of the
- opportunity offered to them by the German Government for a just
- settlement of the Danzig question; for the final safeguarding of
- Poland’s frontiers with the Reich and thereby for permanent
- strengthening of the friendly, neighborly relations between the
- two countries. The Polish Government even rejected German
- proposals made with this object.
-
-
-
- “At the same time the Polish Government accepted, with regard to
- another state, political obligations which are not compatible
- either with the spirit, the meaning, or the text of the
- German-Polish declaration of the 26th of January 1934. Thereby,
- the Polish Government arbitrarily and unilaterally rendered this
- declaration null and void.”
-
-In the last paragraph the German Government says that, nevertheless,
-they are prepared to continue friendly relations with Poland.
-
-On the same day as that memorandum was issued Hitler made a speech in
-the Reichstag, 28 April, in which he repeated, in effect, the terms of
-the memorandum. This is Document TC-72, Number 13, which becomes GB-43.
-I would only refer the Tribunal to the latter part of the second page of
-the translation. He has again repeated the demands and offers that
-Germany made in March, and he goes on to say that the Polish Government
-have rejected his offer and lastly:
-
- “I have regretted greatly this incomprehensible attitude of the
- Polish Government. But that alone is not the decisive fact. The
- worst is that now Poland, like Czechoslovakia a year ago,
- believes under the pressure of a lying international campaign,
- that it must call up troops although Germany, on her part, has
- not called up a single man and had not thought of proceeding in
- any way against Poland. As I have said, this is, in itself, very
- regrettable and posterity will one day decide whether it was
- really right to refuse the suggestion made this once by me.
- This, as I have said, was an endeavor on my part to solve a
- question which intimately affects the German people by a truly
- unique compromise and to solve it to the advantage of both
- countries. According to my conviction, Poland was not a giving
- party in this solution at all, but only a receiving party,
- because it should be beyond all doubt that Danzig will never
- become Polish. The intention to attack, on the part of Germany,
- which was merely invented by the international press, led, as
- you know, to the so-called guarantee offer and to an obligation
- on the part of the Polish Government for mutual assistance
- . . . .”
-
-It is unnecessary, My Lord, to read more of that. It shows us, as I say,
-how completely dishonest was everything that the German Government was
-saying at that time. There was Hitler, probably with a copy of the
-orders for Fall Weiss in his pocket as he spoke, saying that the
-intention to attack, by Germany, was an invention of the international
-press.
-
-In answer to that memorandum and that speech the Polish Government
-issued a memorandum on the 28th of April. It is set out in the next
-exhibit, TC-72, Number 16, which becomes GB-44. It is unnecessary to
-read more than . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: It is stated as the 5th of May, not the 28th of April.
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: I beg your pardon, yes, on the 5th of May.
-
-It is unnecessary to read more than two short paragraphs from that
-reply. I can summarize the document in a word. It sets out the objects
-of the 1934 agreement: to renounce the use of force and to carry on
-friendly relationship between the two countries, to solve difficulties
-by arbitration and other friendly means. The Polish Government
-appreciate that there are difficulties about Danzig and have long been
-ready to carry out discussions. They set out again their part in the
-recent discussions, and I turn to the second page of the document, the
-one but last paragraph or, perhaps, I should go back a little to the top
-of that page, the first half of that page. The Polish Government allege
-that they wrote, as indeed they did, to the German Government on the
-26th of March giving their point of view, that they then proposed joint
-guarantees by the Polish and German Governments of the City of Danzig
-based on the principles of freedom for the local population in internal
-affairs. They said they were prepared to examine the possibilities of a
-motor road and railway facilities and that they received no reply to
-those proposals:
-
- “It is clear that negotiations in which one state formulates
- demands and the other is to be obliged to accept those demands
- unaltered, are not negotiations in the spirit of the declaration
- of 1934 and are incompatible with the vital interests and
- dignity of Poland.”
-
-Which, of course, in a word summarizes the whole position of the Polish
-point of view. And thereafter they reject the German accusation that the
-Anglo-Polish agreement is incompatible with the 1934 German-Polish
-agreement. They state that Germany herself has entered into similar
-agreements with other nations and lastly, on the next page, they too say
-that they are still willing to entertain a new pact with Germany, should
-Germany wish to do so.
-
-If the Tribunal would turn back to the Document C-120, to the first two
-letters, to which I referred only a few minutes ago, it becoming GB-41.
-On the bottom of the page there is a figure 614, on the first page of
-that exhibit, “Directives from Hitler and Keitel Preparing for War and
-the Invasion of Poland”. I would refer to Page 6 of that particular
-exhibit. The page number will be found at the bottom of the page, in the
-center. It is a letter from the Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces,
-signed by Hitler and dated the 10th of May. It goes to OKW, OKH, OKM,
-various branches of the OKW and with it apparently were enclosed
-“Instructions for the Economic War and the Protection of Our Own
-Economy.” I only mention it now to show better that throughout this time
-preparations for the immediate aggression were continuing. That document
-will still be part of the same exhibit.
-
-Again on the next page, which is headed Number C-120(1), I am afraid
-this is a précis only, not a full translation and therefore, perhaps, I
-will not read it. But it is the annex, showing the “Directives for the
-War against the Enemy Economy and Measures of Protection for Our Own
-Economy.”
-
-As we will see later, not only were the military preparations being
-carried out throughout these months and weeks, but economic and every
-other kind of preparation was being made for war at the earliest moment.
-
-I think this period of preparation, translated up to May 1939, finishes
-really with that famous meeting or conference in the Reich Chancellery
-on the 23rd of May about which the Tribunal has already heard. It was
-L-79 and is now Exhibit USA-27; and it was referred to, I think, and has
-been known as the “Schmundt minutes.” It is the last document which is
-in the Tribunal’s document book of this part and I do not propose to
-read anything of it. It has been read already and the Tribunal will
-remember that it was the speech in which Hitler was crying out for
-Lebensraum and said that Danzig was not the dispute at all. It was a
-question of expanding their living space in the East, where he said that
-the decision had been taken to attack Poland.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Would you remind me of the date of it?
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: The 23rd of May 1939. Your Lordship will
-remember that Göring, Raeder, and Keitel, among many others, were
-present. It has three particular lines of which I want to remind the
-Tribunal, where he said:
-
- “If there were an alliance of France, England, and Russia
- against Germany, Italy, and Japan, I would be constrained to
- attack England and France with a few annihilating blows. The
- Führer doubts the possibility of a peaceful settlement with
- England.”
-
-So that, not only has the decision been taken definitely to attack
-Poland, but almost equally definitely to attack England and France,
-also.
-
-I pass to the next period, which I have described as the final
-preparations taken from June up to the beginning of the war, at the
-beginning of September—Part V of the Tribunal’s document book. If the
-Tribunal will glance at the index to the document book, they will find I
-have, for convenience, divided the evidence up under four subheadings:
-
-Final preparations of the Armed Forces; economic preparation; the famous
-Obersalzberg speeches; and the political or diplomatic preparations
-urging on the crisis and the justification for the invasion of Poland.
-
-I refer the Tribunal to the first document in that book, dealing with
-the final preparations of the Armed Forces. It again is an exhibit
-containing various documents, and I refer particularly to the second
-document, dated the 22d of June 1939. This is Document C-126, which will
-become GB-45.
-
-It will be remembered that a precise timetable had been called for. Now,
-here it is:
-
- “The Supreme Command of the Armed Forces has submitted to the
- Führer and Supreme Commander, a ‘preliminary timetable’ for Case
- White based on the particulars so far available from the Navy,
- Army, and Air Force. Details concerning the days preceding the
- attack and the start of the attack were not included in this
- timetable.
-
-
-
- “The Führer and Supreme Commander is, in the main, in agreement
- with the intentions of the Navy, Army, and Air Force and made
- the following comments on individual points:
-
-
-
- “1. In order not to disquiet the population by calling up
- reserves on a larger scale than usual for the maneuvers
- scheduled for 1939, as is intended, civilian establishments,
- employers or other private persons who make inquiries should be
- told that men are being called up for the autumn maneuvers and
- for the exercise units it is intended to form for these
- maneuvers.
-
-
-
- “It is requested that directions to this effect be issued to
- subordinate establishments.”
-
-All this became relevant, particularly relevant, later when we find the
-German Government making allegations of mobilization on the part of the
-Poles. Here we have it in May, or rather June—they are mobilizing, only
-doing so secretly:
-
- “2. For reasons of security, the clearing of hospitals in the
- area of the frontier must not be carried out.”
-
-If the Tribunal will turn to the top of the following page, it will be
-seen that that order is signed by the Defendant Keitel. I think it is
-unnecessary to read any further from that document. There is—which
-perhaps will save turning back, if I might take it rather out of date
-now—the first document on that front page of that exhibit, a short
-letter dated the 2d of August. It is only an extract, I am afraid, as it
-appears in the translation:
-
- “Attached are operational directions for the employment of
- U-boats which are to be sent out to the Atlantic, by way of
- precaution, in the event of the intention to carry out Case
- White remaining unchanged. Commander, U-boats is handing in his
- operation orders by the 12th of August to the operations staff
- of the Navy.”
-
-One must assume that the Defendant Dönitz knew that his U-boats were to
-go out into the Atlantic “by way of precaution in the event of the
-intention to carry out Case White remaining unchanged.”
-
-I turn to the next document in the Tribunal’s book, C-30, which becomes
-GB-46. That is a letter dated the 27th of July. It contains orders for
-the air and sea forces for the occupation of the German Free City of
-Danzig:
-
- “The Führer and Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces has
- ordered the reunion of the German Free State of Danzig with the
- Greater German Reich. The Armed Forces must occupy Danzig Free
- State immediately in order to protect the German population.
- There will be no hostile intention on the part of Poland so long
- as the occupation takes place without the force of arms.”
-
-It then sets out how the occupation is to be effected. All this again
-becomes more relevant when we discuss the diplomatic action of the last
-few days before the war, when Germany was purporting to make specious
-offers for the settlement of the question by peaceful means. I would
-like to offer this as evidence that the decision had been taken and
-nothing was going to move him from that decision. That document, as set
-out, says that, “There will be no hostile intention on the part of
-Poland so long as the occupation takes place without the force of arms.”
-Nevertheless, that was not the only condition upon which the occupation
-was to take place and we find that during July, right up to the time of
-the war, steps were being taken to arm the population of Danzig and to
-prepare them to take part in the coming occupation.
-
-I refer the Tribunal to the next Document, TC-71, which becomes GB-47,
-where there are set out a few only of the reports which were coming back
-almost daily during this period from Mr. Shepherd, the Consul-General in
-Danzig, to the British Foreign Minister. The sum total of those reports
-can be found in the _British Blue Book_. I now would refer to only two
-of them as examples of the kind of thing that was happening.
-
-I refer to the first that appears on that exhibit, dated the 1st of July
-1939.
-
- “Yesterday morning four German army officers in mufti arrived
- here by night express from Berlin to organize Danzig Heimwehr.
- All approaches to hills and dismantled forts, which constitute a
- popular public promenade on the western fringe of the city, have
- been closed with barbed wire and ‘verboten’ notices. The walls
- surrounding the shipyards bear placards: ‘Comrades keep your
- mouths shut lest you regret consequence.’
-
-
-
- “Master of British steamer _High Commissioner Wood_, while he
- was roving Königsberg from the 28th of June to 30th of June,
- observed considerable military activity, including extensive
- shipment of camouflaged covered lorries and similar material, by
- small coasting vessels. On the 28th of June four medium-sized
- steamers, loaded with troops, lorries, field kitchens, and so
- forth, left Königsberg ostensibly returning to Hamburg after
- maneuvers, but actually proceeding to Stettin. Names of steamers
- . . . .”
-
-And again, as another example, the report Number 11, on the next page of
-the exhibit, dated the 10th of July, states:
-
- “The same informant, whom I believe to be reliable, advises me
- that on the 8th of July, he personally saw about 30 military
- lorries with East Prussian license numbers on the Bischofsberg,
- where numerous field kitchens had been placed along the hedges.
- There were also eight large antiaircraft guns in position, which
- he estimated as being of over 3-inch caliber, and three
- six-barreled light antiaircraft machine guns. There were about
- 500 men, drilling with rifles, and the whole place is
- extensively fortified with barbed wire.”
-
-I do not think it is necessary to occupy the Tribunal’s time in reading
-more. Those, as I say, are two reports only, of a number of others that
-can be found in the _British Blue Book_, which sets out the arming and
-preparation of the Free City of Danzig.
-
-On the 12th of August and the 13th of August, when preparations were
-practically complete—and it will be remembered that they had to be
-complete for an invasion of Poland on the 1st of September—we find
-Hitler and the Defendant Ribbentrop at last disclosing their intentions
-to their allies, the Italians.
-
-One of the passages in Hitler’s speech of the 23rd of May, it will be
-remembered—I will not quote it now because the document has been read
-before. However, in a passage in that speech Hitler, in regard to his
-proposed attack on Poland, had said, “Our object must be kept secret
-even from the Italians and the Japanese.”
-
-Now, when his preparations are complete, he discloses his intentions to
-his Italian comrades, and does so in hope that they will join him.
-
-The minutes of that meeting are long, and it is not proposed to read
-more than a few passages. The meeting can be summarized generally by
-saying, as I have, that Hitler is trying to persuade the Italians to
-come into the war with him. The Italians, or Ciano, rather, is most
-surprised. He had no idea, as he says, of the urgency of the matter; and
-they are not prepared. He, therefore, is trying to dissuade Hitler from
-starting off so soon until the Duce can have had a little more time to
-prepare himself.
-
-The value—perhaps the greatest value—of the minutes of that meeting is
-that they show quite clearly the German intention to attack England and
-France ultimately, anyway, if not at the same time as Poland.
-
-I refer the Tribunal to the second page of the exhibit. Hitler is trying
-to show the strength of Germany, the certainty of winning the war; and,
-therefore, he hopes to persuade the Italians to come in:
-
- “At sea, England had for the moment no immediate reinforcements
- in prospect.”—I quote from the top of the second page.—“Some
- time would elapse before any of the ships now under construction
- could be taken into service. As far as the land army was
- concerned, after the introduction of conscription 60,000 men had
- been called to the colors.”
-
-I quote this passage particularly to show the intention to attack
-England. We have been concentrating rather on Poland, but here his
-thoughts are turned entirely towards England:
-
- “If England kept the necessary troops in her own country she
- could send to France, at the most, two infantry divisions and
- one armored division. For the rest she could supply a few bomber
- squadrons, but hardly any fighters, since, at the outbreak of
- war, the German Air Force would at once attack England and the
- English fighters would be urgently needed for the defense of
- their own country.
-
-
-
- “With regard to the position of France, the Führer said that in
- the event of a general war, after the destruction of
- Poland—which would not take long—Germany would be in a
- position to assemble a hundred divisions along the West Wall and
- France would then be compelled to concentrate all her available
- forces from the colonies, from the Italian frontier and
- elsewhere, on her own Maginot Line for the life and death
- struggle which would then ensue. The Führer also thought that
- the French would find it no easier to overrun the Italian
- fortifications than to overrun the West Wall. Here Count Ciano
- showed signs of extreme doubt.”—Doubts which, perhaps, in view
- of the subsequent performances, were well justified.
-
-
-
- “The Polish Army was most uneven in quality. Together with a few
- parade divisions, there were large numbers of troops of less
- value. Poland was very weak in antitank and antiaircraft defense
- and at the moment neither France nor England could help her in
- this respect.”
-
-What this Tribunal will appreciate, of course, is that Poland formed
-such a threat to Germany on Germany’s eastern frontier.
-
- “If, however, Poland were given assistance by the Western Powers
- over a longer period, she could obtain these weapons and German
- superiority would thereby be diminished. In contrast to the
- fanatics of Warsaw and Kraków, the population of their areas is
- indifferent. Furthermore, it was necessary to consider the
- position of the Polish State. Out of 34 million inhabitants, one
- and one-half million were German, about four million were Jews,
- and approximately nine million Ukrainians, so that genuine Poles
- were much less in number than the total population and, as
- already said, their striking power was to be valued variably. In
- these circumstances Poland could be struck to the ground by
- Germany in the shortest time.
-
-
-
- “Since the Poles, through their whole attitude, had made it
- clear that in any case, in the event of a conflict, they would
- stand on the side of the enemies of Germany and Italy, a quick
- liquidation at the present moment could only be of advantage for
- the unavoidable conflict with the Western Democracies. If a
- hostile Poland remained on Germany’s eastern frontier, not only
- would the 11 East Prussian divisions be tied down; but also
- further contingents would be kept in Pomerania and Silesia. This
- would not be necessary in the event of a previous liquidation.”
-
-The argument goes on on those lines.
-
-I pass on to the next page, at the top of the page:
-
- “Coming back to the Danzig question, the Führer said to Count
- Ciano that it was impossible for him to go back now. He had made
- an agreement with Italy for the withdrawal of the Germans from
- South Tyrol, but for this reason he must take the greatest care
- to avoid giving the impression that this Tyrolese withdrawal
- could be taken as a precedent for other areas. Furthermore, he
- had justified the withdrawal by pointing to a general easterly
- and northeasterly direction of a German policy. The east and
- northeast, that is to say the Baltic countries, had been
- Germany’s undisputed sphere of influence since time immemorial,
- as the Mediterranean had been the appropriate sphere for Italy.
- For economic reasons also, Germany needed the foodstuffs and
- timber from these eastern regions.”
-
-Now we get the truth of this matter. It is not the persecution of German
-minorities on the Polish frontiers, but the economic reasons, the need
-for foodstuffs and timber from Poland:
-
- “In the case of Danzig, German interests were not only material,
- although the city had the greatest harbor in the Baltic—the
- transshipment by tonnage was 40 percent of that of Hamburg—but
- Danzig was a Nuremberg of the north, an ancient German city
- awaking sentimental feelings for every German, and the Führer
- was bound to take account of this psychological element in
- public opinion. To make a comparison with Italy, Count Ciano
- should suppose that Trieste was in Yugoslav hands and that a
- large Italian minority was being treated brutally on Yugoslav
- soil. It would be difficult to assume that Italy would long
- remain quiet over anything of this kind.
-
-
-
- “Count Ciano, in replying to the Führer’s statement, first
- expressed the great surprise on the Italian side over the
- completely unexpected seriousness of the position. Neither in
- the conversations in Milan nor in those which took place during
- his Berlin visit had there been any sign, from the German side,
- that the position with regard to Poland was so serious. On the
- contrary, the Minister of Foreign Affairs had said that in his
- opinion the Danzig question would be settled in the course of
- time. On these grounds, the Duce, in view of his conviction that
- a conflict with the Western Powers was unavoidable, had assumed
- that he should make his preparations for this event; he had made
- plans for a period of 2 or 3 years. If immediate conflict was
- unavoidable, the Duce, as he had told Ciano, would certainly
- stand on the German side; but for various reasons he would
- welcome the postponement of a general conflict until a later
- time.”
-
-No question of welcoming the cancellation of a general conflict; the
-only concern of anybody is as to time.
-
- “Ciano then showed, with the aid of a map, the position of Italy
- in the event of a general war. Italy believed that a conflict
- with Poland would not be limited to that country but would
- develop into a general European war.”
-
-Thereafter, during the meeting, Ciano goes on to try to dissuade Hitler
-from any immediate action. I quote two lines from the argument at the
-top of Page 5 of the exhibit:
-
- “For these reasons the Duce insisted that the Axis Powers should
- make a gesture which would reassure people of the peaceful
- intentions of Italy and Germany.”
-
-Then we get the Führer’s answer to those arguments, half-way down Page
-5:
-
- “The Führer answered that for a solution of the Polish problem
- no time should be lost; the longer one waited until the autumn,
- the more difficult would military operations in eastern Europe
- become. From the middle of September weather conditions made air
- operations hardly possible in these areas, while the conditions
- of the roads, which were quickly turned into a morass by the
- autumn rains, would be such as to make them impossible for
- motorized forces. From September to May, Poland was a great
- marsh and entirely unsuited for any kind of military operations.
- Poland could, however, occupy Danzig in October . . . and
- Germany would not be able to do anything about it since they
- obviously could not bombard or destroy the place.”
-
-They couldn’t possibly bombard or destroy any place where there happened
-to be Germans living. Warsaw, Rotterdam, England, London—I wonder
-whether any sentiments of that kind were held in consideration in regard
-to those places.
-
- “Ciano asked how soon, according to the Führer’s view, the
- Danzig question must be settled. The Führer answered that this
- settlement must be made one way or another by the end of August.
- To the question of Ciano as to what solution the Führer
- proposed, Hitler answered that Poland must give up political
- control of Danzig, but that Polish economic interests would
- obviously be reserved and that Polish general behavior must
- contribute to a general lessening of the tension. He doubted
- whether Poland was ready to accept this solution since, up to
- the present, the German proposals had been refused. The Führer
- had made this proposal personally to Beck, at his visit to
- Obersalzberg. They were extremely favorable to Poland. In return
- for the political surrender of Danzig, under a complete
- guarantee of Polish interests, and the establishment of a
- connection between East Prussia and the Reich, Germany would
- have given a frontier guarantee, a 25-year pact of friendship,
- and the participation of Poland in influence over Slovakia. Beck
- had received the proposal with the remark that he was willing to
- examine it. The plain refusal of it came only as a result of
- English intervention. The general Polish aims could be seen
- clearly from the press. They wanted the whole of East Prussia,
- and even proposed to advance to Berlin . . . .”—That was
- something quite different.
-
-The meeting was held over that night, and it continued on the following
-day.
-
-On Page 7, in the middle of the page, it will be seen:
-
- “The Führer had therefore come to two definite conclusions: (1)
- in the event of any further provocation, he would immediately
- attack; (2) if Poland did not clearly and plainly state her
- political intention, she must be forced to do so.”
-
-I go to the last line on that page:
-
- “As matters now stand, Germany and Italy would simply not exist
- further in the world through the lack of space; not only was
- there no more space, but existing space was completely blockaded
- by its present possessors; they sat like misers with their heaps
- of gold and deluded themselves about their riches . . . . The
- Western Democracies were dominated by the desire to rule the
- world and would not regard Germany and Italy as in their class.
- This psychological element of contempt was perhaps the worst
- thing about the whole business. It could only be settled by a
- life and death struggle which the two Axis partners could meet
- more easily because their interests did not clash on any point.
-
-
-
- “The Mediterranean was obviously the most ancient domain for
- which Italy had a claim to predominance. The Duce himself . . .
- had summed up the position to him in the words that Italy,
- because of its geographic location, was already the dominant
- power in the Mediterranean. On the other hand, the Führer said
- that Germany must take the old German road eastwards and that
- this road was also desirable for economic reasons, and that
- Italy had geographical and historical claims to permanency in
- the Mediterranean. Bismarck . . . had recognized it and had said
- as much in his well-known letter to Mazzini. The interests of
- Germany and Italy went in quite different directions and there
- never could be a conflict between them.
-
-
-
- “The Minister of Foreign Affairs added that if the two problems
- mentioned in yesterday’s conversations were settled, Italy and
- Germany would have their backs free for work against the West.
- The Führer said that Poland must be struck down so that for 10
- years”—there appears to have been a query raised in the
- translation—“for so many years long she would have been
- incapable of fighting. In such a case, matters in the west could
- be settled.
-
-
-
- “Ciano thanked the Führer for his extremely clear explanation of
- the situation. He had, on his side, nothing to add and would
- give the Duce full details. He asked for more definite
- information on one point, in order that the Duce might have all
- the facts before him. The Duce might indeed have to make no
- decision because the Führer believed that the conflict with
- Poland could be localized. On the basis of long experience
- he”—Ciano—“quite saw that so far the Führer had always been
- right in his judgment of the position. If, however, Mussolini
- had no decision to make, he had to take certain measures of
- precaution, and therefore Ciano would put the following
- question:
-
-
-
- “The Führer had mentioned two conditions under which he would
- take Poland: (1) if Poland were guilty of serious provocation,
- and (2) if Poland did not make her political position clear. The
- first of these conditions did not depend on the decision of the
- Führer, and German reaction would follow in a moment. The second
- condition required certain decisions as to time. Ciano therefore
- asked what was the date by which Poland must have satisfied
- Germany about her political condition. He realized that this
- date depended upon climatic conditions.
-
-
-
- “The Führer answered that the decision of Poland must be made
- clear at the latest by the end of August. Since, however, the
- decisive part of military operations against Poland could be
- carried out within a period of 14 days, and the final
- liquidation would need another . . . 4 weeks, it could be
- finished at the end of September or the beginning of October.
- These could be regarded as the dates. It followed, therefore,
- that the last date on which he could begin to take action was
- the end of August.
-
-
-
- “Finally, the Führer reassured Ciano that since his youth he had
- favored German-Italian co-operation, and that no other view was
- expressed in his publications. He had always thought that
- Germany and Italy were naturally suited for collaboration, since
- there were no conflicts of interest between them. He was
- personally fortunate to live at a time in which, apart from
- himself, there was one other statesman who would stand out great
- and unique in history; that he could be this man’s friend was
- for him a matter of great personal satisfaction, and if the hour
- of common battle struck, he would always be found on the side of
- the Duce for better or for worse.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: We might adjourn now for 10 minutes.
-
- [_A recess was taken._]
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: If the Tribunal please, I never actually put
-that last document that I was referring to in as an exhibit. It is
-Document TC-77, which becomes GB-48.
-
-Having referred the Tribunal to those documents showing that the
-military preparations were throughout the whole period in hand and
-nearing their completion, I would refer to one letter from the Defendant
-Funk, showing that at the same time the economists had not been idle. It
-is a letter dated the 26th of August 1939, in which Funk is writing to
-his Führer. He says:
-
- “My Führer! I thank you sincerely and heartily for your most
- friendly and kind wishes on the occasion of my birthday. How
- happy and how grateful to you we ought to be for being granted
- the favor of experiencing these overwhelmingly great and
- world-changing times and taking part in the mighty events of
- these days.
-
-
-
- “The information given to me by Field Marshal Göring, that you,
- my Führer, yesterday evening approved in principle the measures
- prepared by me for financing the war and for shaping the
- relationship between wages and prices and for carrying through
- emergency sacrifices, made me deeply happy. I hereby report to
- you, with all respect, that I have succeeded by means of
- precautions taken during the last few months in making the Reich
- Bank internally so strong and externally so unassailable that
- even the most serious shocks in the international money and
- credit market cannot affect us in the least. In the meantime, I
- have quite inconspicuously changed into gold all the assets of
- the Reich Bank and of the whole of the German economy abroad on
- which it was possible to lay hands. Under the proposals I have
- prepared for a ruthless elimination of all consumption which is
- not of vital importance and of all public expenditure and public
- works which are not of importance for the war effort, we will be
- in a position to cope with all demands on finance and economy
- without any serious shocks. I have considered it my duty as the
- general plenipotentiary for economy, appointed by you, to make
- this report and solemn promise to you, my Führer. Heil my
- Führer”—signed—“Walter Funk.”
-
-That document is PS-699, and it goes in as GB-49.
-
-It is difficult in view of that letter to see how the Defendant Funk can
-say that he did not know of the preparations and of the intentions of
-the German Government to wage war.
-
-I come now to the speech which Hitler made on the 22d of August at
-Obersalzberg to his commanders-in-chief. By the end of the third week of
-August, preparations were complete. That speech has already been read to
-the Tribunal. I would, perhaps, ask the Tribunal’s patience if I quoted
-literally half a dozen lines so as to carry the story on in sequence.
-
-On the first page of PS-1014, which is already USA-30, the fourth line:
-
- “Everybody shall have to make a point of it that we were
- determined from the beginning to fight the Western Powers.”
-
-The second paragraph:
-
- “Destruction of Poland is in the foreground. The aim is the
- elimination of living forces, not the arrival at a certain line.
- Even if war should break out in the West, the destruction of
- Poland shall be the primary objective.”
-
-Again, the famous sentence in the third paragraph:
-
- “I shall give a propagandists cause for starting the war, never
- mind whether it be plausible or not. The victor shall not be
- asked later on whether he told the truth or not. In starting and
- making a war, not the right is what matters but victory.”
-
-We are going to see only too clearly how that propagandistic cause,
-which already had been put in hand, was brought to its climax.
-
-I turn to the next page (798-PS, USA-29), the third paragraph:
-
- “It was clear to me that a conflict with Poland had to come
- sooner or later. I had already made this decision in the spring,
- but I thought that I would first turn against the West in a few
- years, and only afterwards against the East.”
-
-I refer to these passages again particularly to emphasize the intention
-of the Nazi Government, not only to conquer Poland, but ultimately, in
-any event, to wage aggressive war against the Western Democracies.
-
-I refer lastly to the last page, a passage which becomes more and more
-significant as we continue the story of the last few days: I quote from
-the fourth paragraph:
-
- “We need not be afraid of a blockade. The East will supply us
- with grain, cattle, coal, lead, and zinc. It is a big aim, which
- demands great efforts. I am only afraid that at the last minute
- some ‘Schweinehund’ will make a proposal for mediation.
-
-
-
- “The political aim is set farther. A beginning has been made for
- the destruction of England’s hegemony. The way is open for the
- soldier, after I have made the political preparations.”
-
-And, again, the very last line becomes significant later:
-
- “Göring answers with thanks to the Führer and the assurance that
- the Armed Forces will do their duty.”
-
-We pass from the military-economic preparations and his exhortations to
-his generals to see how he was developing the position in the diplomatic
-and political field.
-
-On the 23rd of August 1939 the Danzig Senate passed a decree whereby
-Gauleiter Forster was appointed head of the State of the Free City of
-Danzig, a position which did not exist under the statute setting up the
-constitution of the Free City. I put in the next document, which is
-taken from the _British Blue Book_, only as evidence of that event, an
-event that was, of course, aimed at stirring up the feeling in the Free
-City at that time. That is TC-72, Number 62, which becomes GB-50.
-
-At the same time, frontier incidents were being manufactured by the Nazi
-Government with the aid of the SS. The Tribunal has already heard the
-evidence of General Lahousen the other day in which he referred to the
-provision of Polish uniforms to the SS forces for these purposes, so
-that dead Poles could be found lying about the German side of the
-frontier. I refer the Tribunal now to three short reports which
-corroborate the evidence that that gentleman came and gave before you,
-and they are found in the _British Blue Book_. They are reports from the
-British Ambassador in Warsaw.
-
-The first of them, TC-72, Number 53, which becomes GB-51, is dated 26th
-of August.
-
- “A series of incidents again occurred yesterday on German
- frontier.
-
-
-
- “Polish patrol met a party of Germans one kilometer from the
- East Prussian frontier near Pelta. Germans opened fire. Polish
- patrol replied, killing leader, whose body is being returned.
-
-
-
- “German bands also crossed Silesian frontier near Szczyglo,
- twice near Rybnik, and twice elsewhere, firing shots and
- attacking blockhouses and customs posts with machine guns and
- hand grenades. Poles have protested vigorously to Berlin.
-
-
-
- “_Gazeta Polska_, in an inspired lead article today, says these
- are more than incidents. They are clearly prepared acts of
- aggression of para-military disciplined detachments, supplied
- with regular army’s arms, and in one case it was a regular army
- detachment. Attacks more or less continuous.
-
-
-
- “These incidents did not cause Poland to forsake calm and strong
- attitude of defense. Facts spoke for themselves and acts of
- aggression came from German side. This was the best answer to
- the ravings of German press.
-
-
-
- “Ministry for Foreign Affairs state uniformed German detachment
- has since shot a Pole across frontier and wounded another.”
-
-I pass to the next report, TC-72, Number 54, which becomes GB-52. It is
-dated the same date, the 26th of August.
-
- “Ministry for Foreign Affairs categorically deny story recounted
- by Hitler to the French Ambassador that 24 Germans were recently
- killed at Lodz and eight at Bielsko. The story is without any
- foundation whatever.”
-
-And lastly, TC-72, Number 55, which becomes GB-53, the report of the
-next day, the 27th of August.
-
- “So far as I can judge, German allegations of mass ill-treatment
- of German minority by Polish authorities are gross exaggeration,
- if not complete falsification.
-
-
-
- “2. There is no sign of any loss of control of situation by
- Polish civil authorities. Warsaw, and so far as I can ascertain,
- the rest of Poland is still completely calm.
-
-
-
- “3. Such allegations are reminiscent of Nazi propaganda methods
- regarding Czechoslovakia last year.
-
-
-
- “4. In any case it is purely and simply deliberate German
- provocation in accordance with fixed policy that has since
- March”—since the date when the rest of Czechoslovakia was
- seized and they were ready to go against Poland—“that has since
- March exacerbated feeling between the two nationalities. I
- suppose this has been done with the object:
-
-
-
- “(a) Creating war spirit in Germany, (b) impressing public
- opinion abroad, (c) provoking either defeatism or apparent
- aggression in Poland.
-
-
-
- “5. It has signally failed to achieve either of the two latter
- objects.
-
-
-
- “6. It is noteworthy that Danzig was hardly mentioned by Herr
- Hitler.
-
-
-
- “7. German treatment of Czech Jews and Polish minority is
- apparently negligible factor compared with alleged sufferings of
- Germans in Poland where, be it noted, they do not amount to more
- than 10 per cent of the population in any commune.
-
-
-
- “8. In the face of these facts it can hardly be doubted that, if
- Herr Hitler decided on war, it is for the sole purpose of
- destroying Polish independence.
-
- “9. I shall lose no opportunity of impressing on Minister for
- Foreign Affairs necessity of doing everything possible to prove
- that Hitler’s allegations regarding German minority are false.”
-
-And yet, again, we have further corroboration of General Lahousen’s
-evidence in a memorandum, which has been captured, of a conversation
-between the writer and Keitel. It is 795-PS, and it becomes GB-54. That
-conversation with Keitel took place on the 17th of August, and from the
-memorandum I quote the first paragraph:
-
- “I reported my conference with Jost to Keitel. He said that he
- would not pay any attention to this action, as the Führer had
- not informed him, and had only let him know that we were to
- furnish Heydrich with Polish uniforms. He agrees that I instruct
- the General Staff. He says he does not think much of actions of
- this kind. However, there is nothing else to be done if they
- have been ordered by the Führer; that he could not ask the
- Führer how he had planned the execution of this special action.
- In regard to Dirschau, he has decided that this action would be
- executed only by the Army.”
-
-That then, My Lord, was the position at the end of the first week in
-August—I mean at the end of the third week in August. On the 22d of
-August the Russian-German Non-Aggression Pact was signed in Moscow, and
-we have heard in Hitler’s speech of that date to his commanders-in-chief
-how it had gone down as a shock to the rest of the world. In fact, the
-orders to invade Poland were given immediately after the signing of that
-treaty, and the H-hour was actually to be in the early morning of the
-25th of August. Orders were given to invade Poland in the early hours of
-the 25th of August, and that I shall prove in a moment.
-
-Oh the same day—the 23rd of August—that the German-Russian agreement
-was signed in Moscow, news reached England that it was being signed. And
-of course the significance of it from a military point of view as to
-Germany, particularly in the present circumstances, was obvious; and the
-British Government immediately made their position clear in one last
-hope—and that one last hope was that if they did so the German
-Government might possibly think better of it. And I refer to Document
-TC-72, Number 56; it is the first document in the next to the last part
-of the Tribunal document book, in which the Prime Minister wrote to
-Hitler. That document becomes GB-55:
-
- “Your Excellency:
-
- “Your Excellency will have already heard of certain measures
- taken by His Majesty’s Government, and announced in the press
- and on the wireless this evening.
-
-
-
- “These steps have, in the opinion of His Majesty’s Government,
- been rendered necessary by the military movements which have
- been reported from Germany and by the fact that apparently the
- announcement of a German-Soviet agreement is taken in some
- quarters in Berlin to indicate that intervention by Great
- Britain on behalf of Poland is no longer a contingency that need
- be reckoned with. No greater mistake could be made. Whatever may
- prove to be the nature of the German-Soviet agreement, it cannot
- alter Great Britain’s obligation to Poland, which His Majesty’s
- Government have stated in public repeatedly and plainly and
- which they are determined to fulfill.
-
-
-
- “It has been alleged that, if His Majesty’s Government had made
- their position more clear in 1914, the great catastrophe would
- have been avoided. Whether or not there is any force in that
- allegation, His Majesty’s Government are resolved that on this
- occasion there shall be no such tragic misunderstanding.
-
-
-
- “If the case should arise, they are resolved and prepared to
- employ without delay all the forces at their command; and it is
- impossible to foresee the end of hostilities once engaged. It
- would be a dangerous delusion to think that, if war once starts,
- it will come to an early end even if a success on any one of the
- several fronts on which it will be engaged should have been
- secured.”
-
-Thereafter the Prime Minister urged the German Government to try and
-resolve the difficulty without recourse to the use of force; and he
-suggested that a truce should be declared while direct discussions
-between the two Governments, the Polish and German Governments, might
-take place. I quote in Prime Minister Chamberlain’s language:
-
- “At this moment I confess I can see no other way to avoid a
- catastrophe that will involve Europe in war. In view of the
- grave consequences to humanity which may follow from the action
- of their rulers, I trust that Your Excellency will weigh with
- the utmost deliberation the considerations which I have put
- before you.”
-
-On the following day, the 23rd of August, Hitler replied to Prime
-Minister Chamberlain, and that document is TC-72, Number 60, and it
-becomes GB-56. He starts off by saying that Germany has always wanted
-England’s friendship, and has always done everything to get it; on the
-other hand, she has some essential interests which it is impossible for
-Germany to renounce. I quote the third paragraph:
-
- “Germany was prepared to settle the questions of Danzig and of
- the corridor by the method of negotiation on the basis of a
- proposal of truly unparalleled magnanimity. The allegation which
- is disseminated by England regarding a German mobilization
- against Poland”—we see here the complete dishonesty of the
- whole business—“the assertion of aggressive designs towards
- Romania, Hungary, and so forth as well as the so-called
- guarantee declarations, which were subsequently given, had,
- however, dispelled Polish inclination to negotiate on a basis of
- this kind which would have been tolerable for Germany also.
-
-
-
- “The unconditional assurance given by England to Poland, that
- she would render assistance to that country in all circumstances
- regardless of the causes from which a conflict might spring,
- could only be interpreted in that country as an encouragement
- thenceforward to unloosen, under cover of such a charter, a wave
- of appalling terrorism against the one and a half million German
- inhabitants living in Poland.”
-
-Again I cannot help remembering the report by the British Ambassador, to
-which I just referred:
-
- “The atrocities which since then have been taking place in that
- country are terrible for the victims but intolerable for a great
- power such as the German Reich, which is expected to remain a
- passive onlooker during these happenings. Poland has been guilty
- of numerous breaches of her obligations towards the Free City of
- Danzig, has made demands in the character of ultimata, and has
- initiated a process of economic strangulation.”
-
-It goes on to say that “Germany will not tolerate a continuance of the
-persecution” and the fact that there is a British guarantee to Poland
-makes no difference to her determination to end this state of affairs. I
-quote from Paragraph 7:
-
- “The German Reich Government has received information to the
- effect that the British Government has the intention to carry
- out measures of mobilization which, according to the statements
- contained in your own letter, are clearly directed against
- Germany alone. This is said to be true of France as well. Since
- Germany has never had the intention of taking military measures
- other than those of a defensive character against England or
- France and, as has already been emphasized, has never intended,
- and does not in the future intend, to attack England or France,
- it follows that this announcement as confirmed by you, Mr. Prime
- Minister, in your own letter, can only refer to a contemplated
- act of menace directed against the Reich. I, therefore, inform
- your Excellency that in the event of these military
- announcements being carried into effect, I shall order immediate
- mobilization of the German forces.”
-
-If the intention of the German Government had been peaceful, if they
-really wanted peace and not war, what was the purpose of these lies;
-these lies saying that they had never intended to attack England or
-France, carried out no mobilization, statements which, in view of what
-we now have, we know to be lies? What can have been their object if
-their intention had always been for a peaceful settlement of the Danzig
-question only? Then I quote again from the last paragraph:
-
- “The question of the treatment of European problems on a
- peaceful basis is not a decision which rests on Germany, but
- primarily on those who since the crime committed by the
- Versailles dictate have stubbornly and consistently opposed any
- peaceful revision. Only after a change of the spirit on the part
- of the responsible powers can there be any real change in the
- relationship between England and Germany. I have all my life
- fought for Anglo-German friendship; the attitude adopted by
- British diplomacy—at any rate up to the present—has, however,
- convinced me of the futility of such an attempt. Should there be
- any change in this respect in the future, nobody could be
- happier than I.”
-
-On the 25th of August the formal Anglo-Polish Agreement of mutual
-assistance was signed in London. It is unnecessary to read the document.
-The Tribunal will be well aware of its contents where both Governments
-undertake to give assistance to the other in the event of aggression
-against either by any third power. I point to Document TC-73; it is
-Number 91 and it becomes GB-57. I shall refer to the fact of its signing
-again in a moment but perhaps it is convenient while we are dealing with
-a letter between the British Prime Minister and Hitler to refer also to
-a similar correspondence which took place a few days later between the
-French Prime Minister M. Daladier and Hitler. I emphasize these because
-it is desired to show how deliberately the German Government was set
-about their pattern of aggression. “The French Ambassador in Berlin has
-informed me of your personal communication,” written on the 26th of
-August:
-
- “In the hours in which you speak of the greatest responsibility
- which two heads of the Governments can possibly take upon
- themselves, namely, that of shedding the blood of two great
- nations who long only for peace and work, I feel I owe it to
- you, personally, and to both our peoples to say that the fate of
- peace still rests in your hands alone.
-
-
-
- “You cannot doubt but what are my own feelings towards Germany,
- nor France’s peaceful feelings towards your nation. No Frenchman
- has done more than myself to strengthen between our two nations
- not only peace but also sincere co-operation in their own
- interests as well as in those of Europe and of the whole world.
- Unless you credit the French people with a lower sense of honor
- than I credit to the German nation, you cannot doubt that France
- loyally fulfills her obligations toward other powers, such as
- Poland, which, as I am fully convinced, wants to live in peace
- with Germany. These two convictions are fully compatible.
-
-
-
- “Till now there has been nothing to prevent a peaceful solution
- of the international crisis with all honor and dignity for all
- nations, if the same will for peace exists on all sides.
-
-
-
- “Together with the good will of France I proclaim that of all
- her allies. I take it upon myself to guarantee Poland’s
- readiness, which she has always shown, to submit to the mutual
- application of a method of open settlement as it can be imagined
- between the governments of two sovereign nations. With the
- clearest conscience I can assure you that, among the differences
- which have arisen between Germany and Poland over the question
- of Danzig, there is not one which could not be submitted to such
- a method with a purpose of reaching a peaceful and just
- solution.
-
-
-
- “Moreover, I can declare on my honor that there is nothing in
- France’s clear and loyal solidarity with Poland and her allies,
- which could in any way prejudice the peaceful attitude of my
- country. This solidarity has never prevented us, and does not
- prevent us today, from keeping Poland in the same friendly state
- of mind.
-
-
-
- “In so serious an hour I sincerely believe that no high-minded
- human being could understand it if a war of destruction were
- started without a last attempt being made to reach a peaceful
- settlement between Germany and Poland. Your desire for peace
- could, in all certainty, work for this aim without any prejudice
- to German honor. I, who desire good harmony between the French
- and the German people, and who am, on the other hand, bound to
- Poland by bonds of friendship and by a promise, am prepared, as
- head of the French Government, to do everything an upright man
- can do to bring this attempt to a successful conclusion.
-
-
-
- “You and I were in the trenches in the last war. You know, as I
- do, what horror and condemnation the devastations of that war
- have left in the conscience of the people without any regard to
- its outcome. The picture I can see in my mind’s eye of your
- outstanding role as the leader of the German people on the road
- of peace, toward the fulfillment of its task in the common work
- of civilization, leads me to ask for a reply to this suggestion.
-
-
-
- “If French and German blood should be shed again as it was shed
- 25 years ago in a still longer and more murderous war, then each
- of the two nations will fight believing in its own victory. But
- the most certain victors will be destruction and barbarity.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I think we will adjourn now until 2 o’clock.
-
- [_A recess was taken until 1400 hours._]
-
-
-
-
- _Afternoon Session_
-
-COLONEL ROBERT G. STOREY (Executive Trial Counsel for the United
-States): If it please the Tribunal, with the consent of Lieutenant
-Colonel Griffith-Jones, may I make an announcement to the Defense
-Counsel.
-
-At 7:30 in the courtroom this evening, the remainder of the motion
-pictures which the United States will offer in evidence will be shown
-for the Defense Counsel. We urge that all of them come at 7:30.
-
-DR. DIX: I believe I can say on behalf of all members of the Defense
-that they do not consider it necessary that the films be shown to them
-before the proceedings, that is, shown to them twice. We fully and with
-gratitude appreciate the courtesy and readiness to facilitate our work;
-but our evenings are very much taken up by the preparation of our cases
-and by the necessary consultations with our clients.
-
-The question of films is on a level different from that of documents.
-Documents one likes to read in advance or simultaneously or later; but
-since we can hear and take note of the testimony of witnesses only
-during the main proceedings, we are, of course, to an even greater
-degree in a position and prepared to become acquainted with the films
-submitted as evidence only during the proceedings. We believe the
-Prosecution need not take the trouble of showing every film to us on
-some evening before it is shown again in the proceedings. We hope this
-will not be construed as, shall I say, a sort of demonstration in some
-respect, for the reason really is that our time is so fully taken up by
-our preparations that all superfluous work might well be spared both the
-Prosecution and us. I repeat and emphasize that we fully and gratefully
-appreciate the Prosecution’s manifest readiness to facilitate our work,
-and I ask that my words be understood in this light.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Do I understand that you think it will be unnecessary for
-the defendants’ counsel to have a preview of the films, to see them
-before they are produced in evidence? Is that what you are saying?
-
-DR. DIX: Yes, that is what I said.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Colonel Storey, I am not sure that you were here when Dr.
-Dix began his observation; but I understand that what he says is that in
-view of the amount of preparation which the defendants’ counsel have to
-undertake, they do not consider it necessary to have a view of these
-films before they are produced in evidence, but at the same time he
-wishes to express his gratification at the co-operation of the Counsel
-for the Prosecution.
-
-COL. STOREY: Very agreeable. It’s all right with us. We were doing it
-for their benefit.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Very well.
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: When the Tribunal rose for the adjournment, I
-had just read the letter from M. Daladier to Hitler, of the 26th of
-August. On the 27th of August Hitler replied to that letter, and I think
-it unnecessary to read the reply. The sense of it was very much the same
-as that which he wrote to the British Prime Minister in answer to the
-letter that he had received earlier in the week.
-
-Those two letters are taken from the _German White Book_ which I put in
-evidence as GB-58, so perhaps the Tribunal would treat both those
-letters as of the same number. After that, nobody could say that the
-German Government could be in any doubt as to the position that was to
-be taken up by both the British and French Governments in the event of a
-German aggression against Poland.
-
-But the pleas for peace did not end there. On the 24th of August
-President Roosevelt wrote to both Hitler and the President of the Polish
-Republic. I quote only the first few paragraphs of his letter:
-
- “In the message which I sent you on April the 14th, I stated
- that it appeared to be that the leaders of great nations had it
- in their power to liberate their peoples from the disaster that
- impended, but that, unless the effort were immediately made,
- with goodwill on all sides, to find a peaceful and constructive
- solution to existing controversies, the crisis which the world
- was confronting must end in catastrophe. Today that catastrophe
- appears to be very near at hand indeed.
-
-
-
- “To the message which I sent you last April I have received no
- reply, but because my confident belief that the cause of world
- peace—which is the cause of humanity itself—rises above all
- other considerations, I am again addressing myself to you, with
- the hope that the war which impends, and the consequent disaster
- to all peoples, may yet be averted.
-
-
-
- “I therefore urge with all earnestness—and I am likewise urging
- the President of the Republic of Poland—that the Governments of
- Germany and Poland agree by common accord to refrain from any
- positive act of hostility for a reasonable, stipulated period;
- and that they agree, likewise by common accord, to solve the
- controversies which have arisen between them by one of the three
- following methods:
-
-
-
- “First, by direct negotiation; second, by the submission of
- these controversies to an impartial arbitration in which they
- can both have confidence; third, that they agree to the solution
- of these controversies through the procedure of conciliation.”
-
-I think it is unnecessary to read any more of that letter. As I have
-already indicated to the Tribunal, the answer to that was the order to
-his armed forces to invade Poland on the following morning.
-
-That document is Exhibit TC-72, Number 124, which becomes GB-59.
-
-I put in evidence also the next document, TC-72, Number 126, GB-60,
-which is the reply to that letter from the President of the Polish
-Republic, in which he accepts the offer to settle the differences by any
-of the peaceful methods suggested.
-
-On the 25th of August, no reply having been received from the German
-Government, President Roosevelt wrote again:
-
- “I have this hour received from the President of Poland a reply
- to the message which I addressed to Your Excellency and to him
- last night.”
-
-The text of the Polish reply is then set out.
-
- “Your Excellency has repeatedly publicly stated that the aims
- and objects sought by the German Reich were just and reasonable.
-
-
-
- “In his reply to my message the President of Poland has made it
- plain that the Polish Government are willing, upon the basis set
- forth in my message, to agree to solve the controversy which has
- arisen between the Republic of Poland and the German Reich by
- direct negotiation or the process of conciliation.
-
-
-
- “Countless human lives can yet be saved, and hope may still be
- restored that the nations of the modern world may even now
- construct the foundation for a peaceful and happier
- relationship, if you and the Government of the German Reich will
- agree to the pacific means of settlement accepted by the
- Government of Poland. All the world prays that Germany, too,
- will accept.”
-
-But, My Lord, Germany would not accept, nor would she accept the appeals
-by the Pope which appear in the next document.
-
-I am sorry—the President of Poland’s reply, TC-72 becomes Number 127,
-GB-61.
-
-They would not agree to those proposals, nor would they pay heed to the
-Pope’s appeal, which is TC-72, Number 139 on the same date, the 24th of
-August, which becomes GB-62. I do not think it is necessary to read
-that. It is an appeal in similar terms. And there is yet a further
-appeal from the Pope on the 31st of August, TC-72, Number 14, which
-becomes GB-63. It is 141; I beg your pardon. It is TC-72, Number 141. I
-think the printing is wrong in the Tribunal’s translation:
-
- “The Pope is unwilling to abandon hope that pending negotiations
- may lead to a just pacific solution, such as the whole world
- continues to pray for.”
-
-I think it is unnecessary to read the remainder of that. If the Pope had
-realized that those negotiations to which he referred as the “pending
-negotiations” in the last days of August, which we are about to deal
-with now, were completely bogus negotiations, bogus insofar as Germany
-was concerned, and put forward, as indeed they were—and as I hope to
-illustrate to the Tribunal in a moment—simply as an endeavor to
-dissuade England either by threat or by bribe from meeting her
-obligations to Poland, then perhaps he would have saved himself the
-trouble in ever addressing that last appeal.
-
-It will be seen quite clearly that those final German offers, to which I
-now turn, were no offers in the accepted sense of the word at all; that
-there was never any intention behind them of entering into discussions,
-negotiation, arbitration, or any other form of peaceful settlement with
-Poland. They were just an attempt to make it rather easier to seize and
-conquer Poland than appeared likely if England and France observed the
-obligations that they had undertaken.
-
-Perhaps I might, before dealing with the documents, summarize in a word
-those last negotiations.
-
-On the 22d of August, as we have seen, the German-Soviet Pact was
-signed. On the 24th of August, orders were given to his armies to march
-the following morning. After those orders had been given, the news
-apparently reached the German Government that the British and Polish
-Governments had actually signed a formal pact of non-aggression and of
-mutual assistance. Until that time, it will be remembered, the position
-was that the Prime Minister had made a statement in the House and a
-joint communiqué had been issued—I think on the 6th of April—that they
-would in fact assist one another if either were attacked, but no formal
-agreement had been signed.
-
-Now, on the 24th of August after those orders had been given by him, the
-news came that such a formal document had been signed; and the invasion
-was postponed for the sole purpose of making one last effort to keep
-England and France out of the war—not to end the war, not to cancel the
-war, but to keep them out.
-
-And to do that, on the 25th of August, having postponed the invasion,
-Hitler issued a verbal communiqué to Sir Nevile Henderson which, as the
-Tribunal will see, was a mixture of bribe and threat with which he hoped
-to persuade England to keep out.
-
-On the 28th of August Sir Nevile Henderson handed the British
-Government’s reply to that communiqué to Hitler. That reply stressed
-that the difference ought to be settled by agreement. The British
-Government put forward the view that Danzig should be guaranteed and,
-indeed, any agreement come to should be guaranteed by other powers,
-which, of course, in any event would have been quite unacceptable to the
-German Reich.
-
-As I say, one really need not consider what would have been acceptable
-and not acceptable because once it had been made clear—as indeed it was
-in that British Government’s reply of the 28th of August—that England
-would not be put off assisting Poland in the event of German aggression,
-the German Government really had no concern with further negotiation but
-were concerned only to afford themselves some kind of justification and
-to prevent themselves appearing too blatantly to turn down all the
-appeals to reason that were being put forward.
-
-On the 29th of August, in the evening at 7:15, Hitler handed to Sir
-Nevile Henderson the German Government’s answer to the British
-Government’s reply of the 28th. And here again in this document it is
-quite clear that the whole object of it was to put forward something
-which was quite unacceptable. He agrees to enter into direct
-conversations as suggested by the British Government, but he demands
-that those conversations must be based upon the return of Danzig to the
-Reich and also of the whole of the Corridor.
-
-It will be remembered that hitherto, even when he alleged that Poland
-had renounced the 1934 agreement, even then he had put forward as his
-demands the return of Danzig alone and the arrangement for an
-extra-territorial Autobahn and railroad running through the Corridor to
-East Prussia. That was unacceptable then. To make quite certain, he now
-demands the whole of the Corridor; no question of an Autobahn or
-railway. The whole thing must become German.
-
-Even so, even to make doubly certain that the offer would not be
-accepted, he says:
-
- “. . . on those terms I am prepared to enter into discussion;
- but to do so, as the matter is urgent, I expect a
- plenipotentiary with full powers from the Polish Government to
- be here in Berlin by Wednesday, the 30th of August 1939.”
-
-This offer was made at 7:15 p.m. on the evening of the 29th. That offer
-had to be transmitted first to London, and from London to Warsaw; and
-from Warsaw the Polish Government had to give authority to their
-Ambassador in Berlin. So that the timing made it quite impossible to get
-authority to their Ambassador in Berlin by midnight the following night.
-It allowed them no kind of opportunity for discussing the matters at
-all. As Sir Nevile Henderson described it, the offer amounted to an
-ultimatum.
-
-At midnight on the 30th of August at the time by which the Polish
-Plenipotentiary was expected to arrive, Sir Nevile Henderson saw
-Ribbentrop; and I shall read to you the account of that interview, in
-which Sir Nevile Henderson handed a further message to Ribbentrop in
-reply to the message that had been handed to him the previous evening,
-and at which Ribbentrop read out in German a two- or three-page document
-which purported to be the German proposal to be discussed at the
-discussions between them and the Polish Government. He read it out
-quickly in German. He refused to hand a copy of it to the British
-Ambassador. He passed no copy of it at all to the Polish Ambassador. So
-that there was no kind of possible chance of the Poles ever having
-before them the proposals which Germany was so graciously and
-magnanimously offering to discuss.
-
-On the following day, the 31st of August, Mr. Lipski saw Ribbentrop and
-could get no further than to be asked whether he came with full powers.
-When he did not—when he said he did not come with full powers,
-Ribbentrop said that he would put the position before the Führer. But,
-in actual fact, it was much too late to put any position to the Führer
-by that time, because on the 31st of August—I am afraid I am unable to
-give you the exact time—but on the 31st of August, Hitler had already
-issued his Directive Number 1 for the conduct of the war, in which he
-laid down H-Hour as being a quarter to five the following morning, the
-1st of September. And on the evening of the 31st of August at 9 o’clock
-the German radio broadcast the proposals which Ribbentrop had read out
-to Sir Nevile Henderson the night before, saying that these were the
-proposals which had been made for discussion but that, as no Polish
-Plenipotentiary had arrived to discuss them, the German Government
-assumed that they were turned down. That broadcast at 9 o’clock on the
-evening of the 31st of August was the first that the Poles had ever
-heard of the proposals, and the first, in fact, that the British
-Government or their representatives in Berlin knew about them, other
-than what had been heard when Ribbentrop had read them out and refused
-to give a written copy, on the evening of the 30th.
-
-After that broadcast at 9:15, perhaps when the broadcast was in its
-course, a copy of those proposals was handed to Sir Nevile Henderson,
-for the first time.
-
-Having thus summarized for the convenience, I hope, of the Tribunal, the
-timing of events during that last week, I would ask the Tribunal to
-refer briefly to the remaining documents in that document book. I first
-put in evidence an extract from the interrogation of the Defendant
-Göring, which was taken on the 29th of August 1945.
-
-DR. STAHMER: As defense counsel for the Defendant Göring, I object to
-the use of this document which is an extract from testimony given by the
-Defendant Göring. Since the defendant is present here in court, he can
-at any time be called to the stand and give direct evidence on this
-subject before the Tribunal.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Is that your objection?
-
-DR. STAHMER: Yes.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal does not understand the ground of your
-objection, in view of Article 15 (c) and Article 16 (b) and (c) of the
-Charter. Article 15 (c) provides that the Chief Prosecutors shall
-undertake, among others, the duty of “the preliminary examination of all
-necessary witnesses and of the defendants”; and Article 16 provides
-that:
-
- “In order to ensure fair trial for the defendants, the following
- procedure shall be followed: . . . (b) During any preliminary
- examination . . . of a defendant he shall have the right to give
- any explanation relevant to the charges made against him; (c) A
- preliminary examination of a defendant . . . shall be conducted
- in, or translated into, a language which the defendant
- understands.”
-
-Those provisions of the Charter, in the opinion of the Tribunal, show
-that the defendants may be interrogated and that their interrogations
-may be put in evidence.
-
-DR. STAHMER: I was prompted by the idea that when it is possible to call
-a witness, direct examination in court is preferable, since the evidence
-thus obtained is more concrete.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: You certainly have the opportunity of summoning the
-defendant for whom you appear to give evidence himself, but that has
-nothing to do with the admissibility of his interrogation—his
-preliminary examination.
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: This extract is TC-90, which I put in as GB-64.
-I quote from the middle of the first answer. It is at the end of the 7th
-line. The Defendant Göring says there:
-
- “On the day when England gave her official guarantee to Poland,
- the Führer called me on the telephone and told me that he had
- stopped the planned invasion of Poland. I asked him then whether
- this was just temporary or for good. He said ‘No, I will have to
- see whether we can eliminate British intervention.’”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Ought you not read the question before the answer?
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: I go back to the question:
-
- “When the negotiations of the Polish Foreign Minister in London
- brought about the Anglo-Polish Treaty, at the end of March or
- the beginning of April 1939, was it not fairly obvious that a
- peaceful solution was impossible?”—answer—“Yes, it seemed
- impossible after my conviction”—I think that must be a bad
- translation—“according to my conviction.”
-
-
-
- THE PRESIDENT: Yes.
-
-
-
- LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: [_Continuing._] “. . . but not
- according to the convictions of the Führer. When it was
- mentioned to the Führer that England had given her guarantee to
- Poland, he said that England was also guaranteeing Romania, but
- then when the Russians took Bessarabia, nothing happened; and
- this made a big impression on him. I made a mistake here. At
- this time Poland only had the promise of a guarantee. The
- guarantee itself was only given shortly before the beginning of
- the war. On the day when England gave her official guarantee to
- Poland, the Führer called me on the telephone and told me that
- he had stopped the planned invasion of Poland. I asked him then
- whether this was just temporary, or for good. He said, ‘No, I
- will have to see whether we can eliminate British intervention.’
- So, then I asked him, ‘Do you think that it will be any
- different within 4 or 5 days?’ At this same time—I do not know
- whether you know about that, Colonel—I was in communication
- with Lord Halifax by a special courier, outside the regular
- diplomatic channels, to do everything to stop war with England.
- After the guarantee, I held an English declaration of war
- inevitable. I already told him in the spring of 1939, after
- occupying Czechoslovakia, I told him that from now on, if he
- tried to solve the Polish question, he would have to count on
- the enmity of England—1939, that is, after the Protectorate.
-
-
-
- “Question: ‘Is it not a fact that preparations for the campaign
- against Poland were originally supposed to have been completed
- by the end of August 1939?’
-
-
-
- “Answer: ‘Yes.’
-
-
-
- “Question: ‘And that the final issuance of the order for the
- campaign against Poland came sometime between the 15th and 20th
- of August 1939, after the signing of the treaty with Soviet
- Russia?’”—The dates obviously are wrong there.
-
-
-
- “Answer: ‘Yes, that is true.’
-
-
-
- “Question: ‘Is it not also a fact that the start of the campaign
- was ordered for the 25th of August but on the 24th of August in
- the afternoon it was postponed until September the 1st in order
- to await the results of new diplomatic maneuvers with the
- English Ambassador?’
-
-
-
- “Answer: ‘Yes.’”
-
-My only comment upon that document is in respect to the second paragraph
-where Göring is purporting not to want war with England. The Court will
-remember how it was Göring, after the famous speech of the 22d of August
-to his commanders-in-chief, who got up and thanked the Führer for his
-exhortation and assured him that the Armed Forces would play their part.
-
-I omit the next document in the document book, which carries the matter
-a little further, and we go on to Hitler’s verbal communiqué, as it is
-called in the _British Blue Book_, that he handed to Sir Nevile
-Henderson on the 25th of August, after he had heard of the signing of
-the Anglo-Polish agreement, in an endeavor to keep England from meeting
-her obligations. He states in the first paragraph, after hearing the
-British Ambassador, that he is anxious to make one more effort to save
-war. In the second paragraph, he asserts again that Poland’s
-provocations were unbearable; and I quote Paragraph 2:
-
- “Germany was in all circumstances determined to abolish these
- Macedonian conditions on her eastern frontier and, what is more,
- to do so in the interests of quiet and order and also in the
- interests of European peace.
-
-
-
- “The problem of Danzig and the Corridor must be solved. The
- British Prime Minister had made a speech which was not in the
- least calculated to induce any change in the German attitude. At
- the most, the result of this speech could be a bloody and
- incalculable war between Germany and England. Such a war would
- be bloodier than that of 1914 to 1918. In contrast to the last
- war, Germany would no longer have to fight on two fronts.”—One
- sees the threats, veiled threats, appearing in this
- paragraph—“Agreement with Russia was unconditional and
- signified a change in foreign policy of the Reich which would
- last a very long time. Russia and Germany would never again take
- up arms against each other. Apart from this, the agreements
- reached with Russia would also render Germany secure
- economically for the longest possible period of war.
-
-
-
- “The Führer had always wanted Anglo-German understanding. War
- between England and Germany could at best bring some profit to
- Germany, but none at all to England.”
-
-Then we come to the bribe:
-
- “The Führer declared the German-Polish problem must be solved
- and will be solved. He is, however, prepared and determined,
- after the solution of this problem, to approach England once
- more with a large, comprehensive offer. He is a man of great
- decisions; and in this case also, he will be capable of being
- great in his action.”—and then, magnanimously—“He accepts the
- British Empire and is ready to pledge himself personally for its
- continued existence and to place the power of the German Reich
- at its disposal on condition that his colonial demands, which
- are limited, should be negotiated by peaceful means . . . . His
- obligations to Italy remain untouched.”
-
-Again he stresses irrevocable determination never to enter into war with
-Russia. I quote the last two paragraphs:
-
- “If the British Government would consider these ideas, a
- blessing for Germany . . .”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Why do you not read the first few lines of Paragraph 3?
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: Yes; I did summarize it—Paragraph 3:
-
- “He also desired to express the irrevocable determination of
- Germany never again to enter into conflict with Russia.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Yes.
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: I quote the last two paragraphs:
-
- “If the British Government would consider these ideas, a
- blessing for Germany and also for the British Empire might
- result. If they reject these ideas, there will be war. In no
- case will Great Britain emerge stronger; the last war proved it.
- The Führer repeats that he himself is a man of far-reaching
- decisions by which he is bound, and that this is his last offer
- . . . .”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will adjourn and then the matter can be
-investigated.
-
- [_A recess was taken._]
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: I had just finished reading the offer from
-Hitler to the British Government, which was TC-72, Number 68, and which
-becomes GB-65.
-
-The British Government were not, of course, aware of the real object
-that lay behind that message; and, taking it at its face value and
-desirous to enter into discussions, they wrote back on the 28th of
-August saying that they were prepared to enter into discussions. They
-agreed with Hitler that the differences must be settled, and I quote
-from Paragraph 4:
-
- “In the opinion of His Majesty’s Government, a reasonable
- solution of the differences between Germany and Poland could and
- should be effected by agreement between the two countries on
- lines which would include the safeguarding of Poland’s essential
- interests; and they recall that in his speech of the 28th of
- April, the German Chancellor recognized the importance of these
- interests to Poland.
-
- “But, as was stated by the Prime Minister in his letter to the
- German Chancellor of the 22d of August, His Majesty’s Government
- consider it essential for the success of the discussions, which
- would precede the agreement, that it should be understood
- beforehand that any settlement arrived at would be guaranteed by
- other powers. His Majesty’s Government would be ready, if
- desired, to make their contribution to the effective operation
- of such a guarantee.”
-
-I go to the last paragraph on that page, Paragraph 6:
-
- “His Majesty’s Government have said enough to make their own
- attitude plain in the particular matters at issue between
- Germany and Poland. They trust that the German Chancellor will
- not think that, because His Majesty’s Government are scrupulous
- concerning their obligations to Poland, they are not anxious to
- use all their influence to assist the achievement of a solution
- which may commend itself both to Germany and to Poland.”
-
-That, of course, knocked the German hopes on the head. They had failed
-by their tricks and their bribes to dissuade England from observing her
-obligations to Poland, and it was now only a matter of getting out of
-their embarrassment as quickly as possible and saving their face as much
-as possible. The last document becomes GB-66. And I put in also Sir
-Nevile Henderson’s account of that interview, TC-72, Number 75, which
-becomes GB-67.
-
-During that interview, the only importance of it is that Sir Nevile
-Henderson again emphasized the British attitude and that they were
-determined in any event to meet their obligations to Poland. One
-paragraph I would quote, which is interesting in view of the letters
-that were to follow, paragraph 10:
-
- “In the end I asked him two straight questions: ‘Was he willing
- to negotiate directly with the Poles?’ and ‘Was he ready to
- discuss the question of an exchange of population?’ He replied
- in the affirmative as regards the latter, although there I have
- no doubt that he was thinking at the same time of a
- rectification of frontiers. As regards the first, he said he
- could not give me an answer until after he had given the reply
- of His Majesty’s Government the careful consideration which such
- a document deserved. In this connection he turned to Ribbentrop
- and said, ‘We must summon Field Marshal Göring to discuss it
- with him.’”
-
-Then in the next paragraph, again Sir Nevile Henderson finally repeated
-to him very solemnly the main note of the whole conversation, so far as
-he was concerned.
-
-I pass to the next document, which is TC-72, Number 78, which becomes
-GB-68.
-
-The German reply, as I outlined before, was handed to Sir Nevile
-Henderson at 7:15 p.m. on the 29th of August. The reply sets out the
-suggestion submitted by the British Government in their previous note;
-and it goes on to say that the German Government are prepared to enter
-into discussion on the basis that the whole of the Corridor, as well as
-Danzig, are returned to the Reich. I quote particularly the next to the
-last paragraph on the first page of that document:
-
- “The demands of the German Government are in conformity with the
- revision of the Versailles Treaty, which has always been
- recognized as being necessary, in regard to this territory,
- namely: return of Danzig and the Corridor to Germany, the
- safeguarding of the existence of the German national group in
- the territories remaining to Poland.”
-
-It is only just now, as I emphasized before, that that right has been
-recognized for so long. On the 28th of April his demands consisted only
-of Danzig, of an Autobahn, and of the railway.
-
-The Tribunal will remember the position which he is trying to get out of
-now. He is trying to manufacture justification by putting forth
-proposals which under no possible circumstances could either Poland or
-Great Britain accept. But, as I said before, he wanted to make doubly
-certain.
-
-I go to the second page, and start with the third paragraph:
-
- “The British Government attach importance to two considerations:
- (1) That the existing danger of an imminent explosion should be
- eliminated as quickly as possible by direct negotiation; and (2)
- that the existence of the Polish State, in the form in which it
- would then continue to exist, should be adequately safeguarded
- in the economic and political sphere by means of international
- guarantees.
-
-
-
- “On this subject the German Government make the following
- declaration:
-
-
-
- “Though skeptical as to the prospects of a successful outcome,
- they are, nevertheless, prepared to accept the English proposal
- and to enter into direct discussion. They do so, as has already
- been emphasized, solely as the result of the impression made
- upon them by the written statement received from the British
- Government that they, too, desire a pact of friendship in
- accordance with the general lines indicated to the British
- Ambassador.”
-
-And then, to the last but one paragraph:
-
- “For the rest, in making these proposals, the German Government
- have never had any intention of touching Poland’s vital
- interests or questioning the existence of an independent Polish
- State.”
-
-These letters really sound like the letters of some common swindler
-rather than of the government of a great nation.
-
- “The German Government, accordingly, in these circumstances
- agree to accept the British Government’s offer of their good
- offices in securing the dispatch to Berlin of a Polish Emissary
- with full powers. They count on the arrival of this Emissary on
- Wednesday, the 30th August 1939.
-
-
-
- “The German Government will immediately draw up proposals for a
- solution acceptable to themselves and will, if possible, place
- these at the disposal of the British Government before the
- arrival of the Polish negotiator.”
-
-That was at 7:15 in the evening of the 29th of August and as I have
-explained, it allowed little time in order to get the Polish Emissary
-there by midnight the following night. That document was GB-68.
-
-The next document, Sir Nevile Henderson’s account of the interval,
-summarizes what had taken place; and I quote particularly Paragraph 4:
-
- “I remarked that this phrase”—that is the passage about the
- Polish Emissary being there by midnight the following
- night—“sounded like an ultimatum, but after some heated remarks
- both Herr Hitler and Herr Von Ribbentrop assured me that it was
- only intended to stress the urgency of the moment when the two
- fully mobilized armies were standing face to face.”
-
-That was the interview on the evening of the 29th of August. The last
-document becomes GB-69.
-
-Again the British Government replied, and Sir Nevile Henderson handed
-this reply to Ribbentrop at the famous meeting on midnight of the 30th
-of August at the time the Polish Emissary had been expected. I need not
-read at length. The British Government reciprocate the desire for
-improved relations. They stress again that they cannot sacrifice the
-interest of other friends in order to obtain an improvement in the
-situation. They understand, they say, that the German Government accept
-the condition that the settlement should be subject to international
-guarantee. They make a reservation as to the demands that the Germans
-put forward in their last letter and they are informing the Polish
-Government immediately; and lastly, they understand that the German
-Government are drawing up the proposals. That Document TC-72, Number 89,
-will be GB-70. For the account of the interview, we go to the next
-document in the Tribunal’s book, TC-72, Number 92, which becomes GB-71.
-It is not a very long document. It is perhaps worth reading in full:
-
- “I told Herr Ribbentrop this evening that His Majesty’s
- Government found it difficult to advise the Polish Government to
- accept the procedure adumbrated in the German reply and
- suggested that he should adopt the normal contact, i.e. that
- when German proposals were ready, to invite the Polish
- Ambassador to call and to hand him proposals for transmission to
- his Government with a view to immediate opening of negotiations.
- I added that if this basis afforded prospect of settlement, His
- Majesty’s Government could be counted upon to do their best in
- Warsaw to temporize negotiations.
-
-
-
- “Ribbentrop’s reply was to produce a lengthy document which he
- read out in German, aloud, at top speed. Imagining that he would
- eventually hand it to me, I did not attempt to follow too
- closely the 16 or more articles which it contained. Though I
- cannot, therefore, guarantee the accuracy, the main points were
- . . . .”—and I need not read out the main points.
-
-I go to Paragraph 3:
-
- “When I asked Ribbentrop for text of these proposals in
- accordance with undertaking in the German reply of yesterday, he
- asserted that it was now too late as Polish representative had
- not arrived in Berlin by midnight.
-
-
-
- “I observed that to treat the matter in this way meant that the
- request for Polish representative to arrive in Berlin on the
- 30th of August constituted in fact an ultimatum, in spite of
- what he and Herr Hitler had assured me yesterday. This he
- denied, saying that the idea of an ultimatum was a figment of my
- imagination. Why then, I asked, could he not adopt the normal
- procedure and give me a copy of the proposals, and ask the
- Polish Ambassador to call on him just as Hitler had summoned me
- a few days ago, and hand them to him for communication to the
- Polish Government? In the most violent terms Ribbentrop said
- that he would never ask the Ambassador to visit him. He hinted
- that if the Polish Ambassador asked him for interview it might
- be different. I said that I would, naturally, inform my
- Government so at once. Whereupon he said, while those were his
- personal views, he would bring all that I had said to Hitler’s
- notice. It was for the Chancellor to decide.
-
-
-
- “We parted on that note, but I must tell you that Von
- Ribbentrop’s demeanor during an unpleasant interview was aping
- Hitler at his worst. He inveighed incidentally against the
- Polish mobilization, but I retorted that it was hardly
- surprising since Germany had also mobilized as Herr Hitler
- himself had admitted to me yesterday.”
-
-Nevertheless, Sir Nevile Henderson did not know at that time that
-Germany had also already given the orders to attack Poland some days
-before. The following day, the 31st of August at 6:30 in the evening,
-Mr. Lipski, the Polish Ambassador, had an interview with Ribbentrop.
-This document, the next Document TC-73, Number 112, becomes GB-72, and
-is a short account in a report to Mr. Beck:
-
- “I carried out my instructions. Ribbentrop asked if I had
- special plenipotentiary powers to undertake negotiations. I
- said, ‘No’. He then asked whether I had been informed that on
- London’s suggestion the German Government had expressed their
- readiness to negotiate directly with a delegate of the Polish
- Government, furnished with the requisite full powers, who was to
- have arrived on the preceding day, the 30th of August. I replied
- that I had no direct information on the subject. In conclusion,
- Ribbentrop repeated that he had thought I would be empowered to
- negotiate. He would communicate my _démarche_ to the
- Chancellor.”
-
-As I have indicated already, it was too late. The orders had already
-been given on that day to the German Army to invade.
-
-I turn to C-126. It is already in as GB-45. Other portions of it were
-put in, and I refer now to the letter on the second page, for the order
-(most-secret order). It is signed by Hitler and is described as his
-“Directive Number 1 for the Conduct of the War,” dated 31st of August
-1939. Paragraph 1:
-
- “(1) Now that all the political possibilities of disposing by
- peaceful means of a situation on the eastern frontier, which is
- intolerable for Germany, are exhausted, I have determined on a
- solution by force.
-
-
-
- “(2) The attack on Poland is to be carried out in accordance
- with the preparations made for Case White with the alterations
- which result, where the Army is concerned, from the fact that it
- has in the meantime almost completed its dispositions.
-
-
-
- “Allotment of tasks and the operational target remain unchanged.
-
-
-
- “The date of attack: 1st of September 1939; time of attack:
- 4:45”—inserted in red pencil—“this time also applies to the
- operation at Gdynia, Bay of Danzig and the Dirschau Bridge.
-
-
-
- “(3) In the West it is important that the responsibility for the
- opening of hostilities should rest unequivocally with England
- and France. At first, purely local action should be taken
- against insignificant frontier violations.”
-
-There it sets out the details of the order which, for the purpose of
-this Court, it is unnecessary to read. That evening at 9 o’clock the
-German radio broadcast the terms of the German proposals about which
-they were so willing to enter into discussions with the Polish
-Government. It sets out the proposals at length. It will be remembered
-that by this time neither Sir Nevile Henderson nor the Polish Government
-nor their Ambassador had yet been given their written copy of them, and
-it is indeed a document which is tempting to read—or to read extracts
-of it simply as an exhibition or an example of pure hypocrisy. I refer
-to the second paragraph Document TC-72, Number 98, exhibit GB-39:
-
- “Further, the German Government pointed out that they felt able
- to make the basic points regarding the offer of an understanding
- available to the British Government by the time the Polish
- negotiator arrived in Berlin.”
-
-Now, we have heard the manner in which they did that. They then say
-that:
-
- “Instead of a statement regarding the arrival of authorized
- Polish personage, the first answer the Government of the Reich
- received of their readiness for an understanding was the news of
- the Polish mobilization; and only toward 12 o’clock on the night
- of the 30th of August 1939, did they receive a somewhat general
- assurance of British readiness to help towards the commencement
- of negotiations.
-
-
-
- “Although the fact that the Polish negotiator expected by the
- Government of the Reich did not arrive removed the necessary
- conditions for informing His Majesty’s Government of the views
- of the German Government as regards a possible basis for
- negotiation, since His Majesty’s Government themselves had
- pleaded for direct negotiations between Germany and Poland, the
- German Minister for Foreign Affairs Ribbentrop gave the British
- Ambassador, on the occasion of the presentation of the last
- British note, precise information as to the text of the German
- proposals which will be regarded as a basis of negotiation in
- the event of the arrival of the Polish Plenipotentiary.”
-
-And, thereafter, they go on to set out the story, or rather their
-version of the story, of the negotiations over the last few days.
-
-I pass to the next but one document in the Tribunal’s book, TC-54, which
-becomes GB-73. On the 1st of September when his armies were already
-crossing the frontier and the whole of the frontier, he issued this
-proclamation to his Armed Forces:
-
- “The Polish Government, unwilling to establish good neighborly
- relations as aimed at by me, want to force the issue by way of
- arms.
-
-
-
- “The Germans in Poland are being persecuted with bloody terror
- and driven from their homes. Several acts of frontier violation,
- which cannot be tolerated by a great power, show that Poland is
- no longer prepared to respect the Reich’s frontiers. To put an
- end to these mad acts, I can see no other way but from now
- onwards to meet force with force.
-
-
-
- “The German Armed Forces will with firm determination take up
- the struggle for the honor and the vital rights of the
- resuscitated German people.
-
-
-
- “I expect every soldier to be conscious of the high tradition of
- the eternal German soldierly qualities and to do his duty to the
- last.
-
-
-
- “Remember always and in any circumstances that you are the
- representatives of National Socialist Greater Germany.
-
-
-
- “Long live our people and the Reich.”
-
-And so we see that at last Hitler had kept his word to his generals. He
-had afforded them their propagandistic justification; and at that time,
-anyway, it did not matter what people said about it afterwards. “The
-victor shall not be asked later on, whether he told the truth or not.”
-Might is what counts—or victory is what counts and not right.
-
-On that day, the 1st of September, when news came of this violation of
-Polish ground, the British Government in accordance with their treaty
-obligations sent an ultimatum to the German Government in which they
-stated—I quote from the last paragraph:
-
- “I am accordingly to inform your Excellency that unless the
- German Government are prepared to give His Majesty’s Government
- satisfactory assurances that the German Government have
- suspended all aggressive action against Poland and are prepared
- promptly to withdraw their forces from Polish territory, His
- Majesty’s Government in the United Kingdom will without
- hesitation fulfil their obligations to Poland.”
-
-By the 3rd of September no withdrawal had taken place, and so at 9
-o’clock—the document, TC-72, Number 110, I have just referred to will
-be GB-74—at 9 o’clock on the 3rd of September, a final ultimatum was
-handed to the German Minister of Foreign Affairs. I quote from the third
-paragraph:
-
- “Although this communication was made more than 24 hours ago, no
- reply has been received but German attacks upon Poland have been
- continued and intensified. I have accordingly the honor to
- inform you that, unless not later than 11 o’clock British summer
- time today, the 3rd of September, satisfactory assurances to the
- above effect have been given by the German Government and have
- reached His Majesty’s Government in London, a state of war will
- exist between the two countries as from that hour.”
-
-And so it was that at 11 o’clock on the 3rd of September a state of war
-existed between Germany and England and between Germany and France. All
-the appeals to peace, all the appeals to reason we now see completely
-stillborn; stillborn when they were made. Plans, preparations,
-intentions, determination to carry out this assault upon Poland, had
-been going on for months, for years before. It mattered not what anybody
-but the German Government had in mind or whatever rights anybody else
-but the German nation thought they had; and, if there is any doubt left
-at all after what we have seen, I would ask you to look at two more
-documents.
-
-If you would look at the last document first of all, in your document
-book—1831-PS, which becomes GB-75. Even now on the 3rd of September,
-Mussolini offers some chance of peace.
-
-We have here a telegram. It is timed 6:30 hours, and I am afraid I am
-unable to say whether that is 6:30 in the morning or evening; but it is
-dated the 3rd of September, and I quote:
-
- “The Italian Ambassador handed to the State Secretary at the
- Duce’s order the following copy for the Führer and Reich
- Chancellor and for the Reich Minister for Foreign Affairs:
-
-
-
- “‘Italy sends the information, leaving, of course, every
- decision to the Führer, that it still has a chance to call a
- conference with France, England, and Poland on the following
- basis:
-
-
-
- “‘1. An armistice which would leave the army corps where they
- are at present’”—and it will be remembered that on the 3rd of
- September they had advanced a considerable way over the
- frontier—“‘2. calling a conference within 2 or 3 days;—“‘3.
- solution of the Polish-German controversy would be certainly
- favorable for Germany as matters stand today.
-
-
-
- “‘This idea, which originated from the Duce, has its foremost
- exponent in France.
-
-
-
- “‘Danzig is already German and Germany is holding already
- securities which guarantee most of her demands. Besides, Germany
- has had already her “moral satisfaction.” If she would accept
- the plan for a conference, it will achieve all her aims and at
- the same time prevent a war which already today has the aspect
- of being universal and of extremely long duration.’”
-
-But, My Lord, perhaps even Mussolini did not appreciate what all
-Germany’s aims were; and, of course, the offer was turned down in the
-illuminating letter which Hitler was to write in reply. I refer you back
-to the document before that. It is still part of the same Exhibit GB-75.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: As I understand it, the “GB” references you give are not
-on the documents at all; they are the exhibit numbers themselves, which
-are to be put on the document after they have been put in.
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: Yes. That is correct. They will be put in by
-the Court, of course.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Will you try to make clear the references which are on
-the document so that the Tribunal could find the document itself?
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: Yes. The last document was 1831-PS, and it is
-the very last one in the document book. That is the one I have just
-referred to—the telegram from Mussolini. The document to which I am
-about to refer is the one before last in the Tribunal’s book but it has
-the same number on it as the last because it forms part of the same
-exhibit.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I think if you would just explain the system in which the
-exhibits are numbered, it would help us.
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: The exhibits are numbered at the present moment
-before they are put in evidence with a variety of serial numbers, such
-as “PS”, “TC”, “L” and other letters. There is no significance attached
-to that at all. It depends on whom they have been found by and what
-files they have come from. When the documents are put in as exhibits,
-they are marked by the Court with a court number. The documents put in
-by the United States representatives were all prefixed with the letters
-“USA.” The documents which have been put in by the British prosecutors
-have all been prefixed with the letters “GB.” If it would be of any
-assistance to members of the Tribunal, I will have their document books
-marked up this evening with the new court numbers that have been put
-upon them by the Court officials, during the course of the day.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: We will talk about that later.
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: If there is any document missing from any of
-these books, I have a copy.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: You are going to read 1831-PS?
-
-LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: Yes, that is GB-75.
-
- “Duce:
-
-
-
- “I first want to thank you for your last attempt at a mediation,
- I would have been ready to accept, but only under condition that
- there would be a possibility to give me certain guarantees that
- the conference would be successful. Because for the last 2 days
- the German troops are engaged in an extraordinarily rapid
- advance in Poland, it would have been impossible to devaluate
- the bloody sacrifices made thereby by diplomatic intrigues.
- Nevertheless, I believe that a way could have been found if
- England would not have been determined to wage war under all
- circumstances. I have not given in to the English because, Duce,
- I do not believe that peace could have been maintained for more
- than one-half a year or a year. Under these circumstances I
- thought that, in spite of everything, the present moment was
- better for resistance. At present the superiority of the German
- Armed Forces in Poland is so overwhelming in all the fields that
- the Polish Army will collapse in a very short time. I doubt
- whether this fast success could have been achieved in 1 or 2
- years. England and France would have armed their allies to such
- an extent that the crushing technical superiority of the German
- Armed Forces could not have become so apparent any more. I am
- aware, Duce, that the fight which I enter is one for life and
- death. My own fate does not play any role in it at all. But I am
- also aware that one cannot avoid such a struggle permanently and
- that one has to choose, after cold deliberation, the moment for
- resistance in such a way that the probability of success is
- guaranteed; and I believe in this success, Duce, with the
- firmness of a rock. Recently you have given me the kind
- assurance that you think you will be able to help me in a few
- fields. I acknowledge this in advance, with sincere thanks. But
- I believe also—even if we march now over different roads—that
- fate will finally join us. If the National Socialistic Germany
- were destroyed by the Western Democracies, the Fascist Italy
- would also have to face a grave future. I was personally always
- aware of this community of the future of our two governments and
- I know that you, Duce, think the same way. To the situation in
- Poland, I would like to make the brief remark that we lay aside,
- of course, all unimportant things, that we do not waste any man
- on unimportant tasks, but direct all on acts in the light of
- great operational considerations. The northern Polish Army,
- which is in the Corridor, has already been completely encircled
- by our action. It will be either wiped out or will surrender.
- Otherwise, all operations proceed according to plan. The daily
- achievements of the troops are far beyond all expectations. The
- superiority of our Air Force is complete, although scarcely
- one-third of it is in Poland. In the West, I will be on the
- defensive. France can here sacrifice its blood first. Then the
- moment will come when we can confront the enemy also there with
- the full power of the nation. Accept my thanks, Duce, for all
- your assistance which you have given to me in the past; and I
- ask you not to deny it to me in the future.”
-
-That completes the evidence which I propose to offer upon this part of
-the case in respect of the war of aggression against Poland, England,
-and France, which is charged in Count Two.
-
-MAJOR F. ELWYN JONES (Junior Counsel for the United Kingdom): May it
-please the Tribunal, in the early hours of the morning of the 9th of
-April 1940 Nazi Germany invaded Norway and Denmark. It is my duty to
-present to the Tribunal the Prosecution’s evidence which has been
-prepared in collaboration with my American colleague, Major Hinely, with
-regard to these brutal wars of aggression, which were also wars in
-violation of international treaties, agreements, and assurances. With
-the Court’s permission I would like, first of all, to deal with the
-treaties and agreements and assurances that were in fact violated by
-these two invasions of Norway and Denmark.
-
-The invasions were, of course, in the first instance violations of the
-Hague Convention and of the Kellogg-Briand Pact. My learned friend, Sir
-David Maxwell-Fyfe, has already dealt with those matters in the course
-of his presentation of the evidence. In addition to these general
-treaties, there were specific agreements between Germany and Norway and
-Denmark. In the first instance there was the Treaty of Arbitration and
-Conciliation between Germany and Denmark, which was signed at Berlin on
-2 June 1926. The Court will find that treaty, TC-17, on the first page
-of British Document Book Number 3; and to that exhibit it may be
-convenient to give the Number GB-76. I am proposing to read only the
-first article of that treaty, which is in these terms:
-
- “The contracting parties undertake to submit to the procedure of
- arbitration or conciliation, in conformity with the present
- treaty, all disputes of any nature whatsoever which may arise
- between Germany and Denmark, and which it has not been possible
- to settle within a reasonable period by diplomacy or to bring
- with the consent of both parties, before the Permanent Court of
- International Justice.
-
-
-
- “Disputes for the solution of which a special procedure has been
- laid down in other conventions in force between the contracting
- parties shall be settled in accordance with the provisions of
- such conventions.”
-
-Then there follows in the remaining articles the establishment of the
-machinery for arbitration.
-
-I would next refer to the Treaty of Non-Aggression between Germany and
-Denmark, which was signed by the Defendant Ribbentrop on the 31st of May
-1939 which, as the Tribunal will recollect, was 10 weeks after the Nazi
-seizure of Czechoslovakia. The Court will find that as Document TC-24 in
-the document book and it will now bear the Exhibit Number GB-77.
-
-With the Court’s permission, in view of the identity of the signatory of
-that treaty, I would like to read the Preamble and Articles 1 and 2.
-
- “The Chancellor of the German Reich and His Majesty, the King of
- Denmark and Iceland, being firmly resolved to maintain peace
- between Denmark and Germany in all circumstances, have agreed to
- confirm this resolve by means of a treaty and have appointed as
- their Plenipotentiaries: The Chancellor of the German Reich
- . . . and His Majesty, the King of Denmark and Iceland . . . .”
-
-Article 1 reads as follows:
-
- “The German Reich and the Kingdom of Denmark shall in no case
- resort to war or to any other use of force, one against the
- other.
-
-
-
- “Should action of the kind referred to in Paragraph 1 be taken
- by a third power against one of the contracting parties, the
- other contracting party shall not support such action in any
- way.”
-
-Then Article 2 deals with the ratification of the treaty, and the second
-paragraph states:
-
- “The treaty shall come into force on the exchange of the
- instruments of ratification and shall remain in force for a
- period of 10 years from that date . . . .”
-
-As the Tribunal will observe, the treaty is dated the 31st of May 1939.
-At the bottom of the page there appears the signature of the Defendant
-Ribbentrop. The Tribunal will shortly see that less than a year after
-the signature of this treaty the invasion of Denmark by the Nazi forces
-was to show the utter worthlessness of treaties to which the Defendant
-Ribbentrop put his signature.
-
-With regard to Norway, the Defendant Ribbentrop and the Nazi
-conspirators were party to a similar perfidy. In the first instance I
-would refer to Document TC-30, which is the next document in the British
-Document Book 3 and which will bear the Exhibit Number GB-78. The
-Tribunal will observe that that is an assurance given to Denmark,
-Norway, Belgium, and the Netherlands on the 28th of April 1939. That, of
-course, was after the annexation of Czechoslovakia had shaken the
-confidence of the world; and this was presumably an attempt, now
-submitted by the Prosecution to be a dishonest attempt, to try to
-reassure the Scandinavian States. The assurance is in a speech by Hitler
-and reads:
-
- “. . . I have given binding declarations to a large number of
- states. None of these states can complain that even a trace of a
- demand contrary thereto has ever been made to them by Germany.
- None of the Scandinavian statesmen, for example, can contend
- that a request has ever been put to them by the German
- Government or by German public opinion which was incompatible
- with the sovereignty and integrity of their state.
-
-
-
- “I was pleased that a number of European states availed
- themselves of these declarations by the German Government to
- express and emphasize their desire too for absolute neutrality.
- This applies to the Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland, Denmark,
- _et cetera_.”
-
-A further assurance was given by the Nazi Government on the 2d of
-September 1939 which, as the Tribunal will recollect, was the day after
-the Nazi invasion of Poland. The Court will observe the next document in
-British Document Book 3 is the Document TC-31, which will be Exhibit
-GB-79. That is an _aide-mémoire_ that was handed to the Norwegian
-Foreign Minister by the German Minister in Oslo on the 2d of September
-1939. It reads:
-
- “The German Reich Government are determined, in view of the
- friendly relations which exist between Norway and Germany, under
- no circumstances to prejudice the inviolability and integrity of
- Norway and to respect the territory of the Norwegian State. In
- making this declaration, the Reich Government naturally expect
- on their side that Norway will observe an unimpeachable
- neutrality towards the Reich and will not tolerate any breaches
- of Norwegian neutrality by any third party. Should the attitude
- of the Royal Norwegian Government differ from this so that any
- such breach of neutrality by a third party occurs, the Reich
- Government would then obviously be compelled to safeguard the
- interest of the Reich in such a way as the resulting situation
- might dictate.”
-
-There follows, finally, the further German assurance to Norway, which
-appears as the next document in the book, TC-32, which will be Exhibit
-GB-80. That is a speech by Hitler on the 6th of October 1939; and if the
-Court will observe Paragraph 2 at the top of the page, the extract from
-the speech reads as follows:
-
- “Germany has never had any conflicts of interest or even points
- of controversy with the Northern States; neither has she any
- today. Sweden and Norway have both been offered non-aggression
- pacts by Germany and have both refused them solely because they
- did not feel themselves threatened in any way.”
-
-Those are clear and positive assurances which Germany gave. The Court
-will see that violation of those assurances is charged in Paragraph XXII
-of Appendix C of the Indictment at Page 43. The Court will notice that
-there is a minor typographical error in the date of the first assurance
-which is alleged in the Indictment to have been given on the 3rd of
-September 1939. The Court will see from Document TC-31, which is Exhibit
-GB-79, that the assurance was in fact given on the 2d of September 1939.
-
-Now those treaties and assurances were the diplomatic background to the
-brutal Nazi aggression on Norway and Denmark, and the evidence which the
-Prosecution will now place before the Court will in my submission
-establish beyond reasonable doubt that these assurances were simply
-given to lull suspicion and cause the intended victims of Nazi
-aggression to be unprepared to meet the Nazi attack. For we now know
-that as early as October 1939 these conspirators and their confederates
-were plotting the invasion of Norway, and the evidence will indicate
-that the most active conspirators in that plot were the Defendants
-Raeder and Rosenberg.
-
-The Norwegian invasion is, in one respect, not a typical Nazi aggression
-in that Hitler had to be persuaded to embark upon it. The chief
-instruments of persuasion were Raeder and Rosenberg; Raeder because he
-thought Norway strategically important and because he coveted glory for
-his Navy, Rosenberg because of his political connections in Norway which
-he sought to develop.
-
-As the Tribunal will shortly see, in the Norwegian Vidkun Quisling the
-Defendant Rosenberg found a very model of the Fifth Column agent, the
-very personification of perfidy.
-
-The evidence as to the early stages of the Nazi conspiracy to invade
-Norway is found in a letter which the Defendant Raeder wrote on the 10th
-of January 1944 to Admiral Assmann, the official German naval historian.
-
-I put in this letter, the document C-66, which will be Exhibit GB-81,
-and which the Court will find further on in this book of documents. I
-should explain that in this book of documents the documents are inserted
-in the numerical order of the series to which they belong and not in the
-order of their submission to the Court. I am trusting that that will be
-a more convenient form of bundling them together than to set them down
-in the order of presentation.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: 66?
-
-MAJOR JONES: C-66. It is headed, “Memorandum to Admiral Assmann; for his
-own information; not to be used for publication.”
-
-The Court will observe that the first page deals with Barbarossa. If the
-Tribunal turns to the next page headed “(b) Weserübung,” the Tribunal
-will find from documents which I shall shortly be submitting to the
-Court that Weserübung was the code name for the invasion of Norway and
-Denmark.
-
-I will omit the first sentence. The document which, as I have said, is a
-communication from the Defendant Raeder to Assmann reads as follows:
-
- “During the weeks preceding the report on the 10th of October
- 1939, I was in correspondence with Admiral Carls, who, in a
- detailed letter to me, first pointed out the importance of an
- occupation of the Norwegian coast by Germany. I passed this
- letter on to C/SKL”—which is the Chief of Staff of the Naval
- War Staff—“for their information and prepared some notes based
- on this letter . . . for my report to the Führer, which I made
- on the 10th of October 1939, since my opinion was absolutely
- identical with that of Admiral Carls, while at that time SKL was
- more dubious about the matter. In these notes I stressed the
- disadvantages which an occupation of Norway by the British would
- have for us: Control of the approaches to the Baltic,
- outflanking of our naval operations and of our air attacks on
- Britain, pressure on Sweden. I also stressed the advantages for
- us of the occupation of the Norwegian coast: Outlet to the North
- Atlantic, no possibility of a British mine barrier, as in the
- years 1917-18. Naturally, at the time, only the coast and bases
- were considered; I included Narvik, though Admiral Carls, in the
- course of our correspondence, thought that Narvik could be
- excluded . . . . The Führer saw at once the significance of the
- Norwegian problem; he asked me to leave the notes and stated
- that he wished to consider the question himself.”
-
-I will pause in the reading of that document at that point and return to
-it later so that the story may be revealed to the Court in a
-chronological order.
-
-That report of Raeder, in my submission, shows that the whole evolution
-of this Nazi campaign against Norway affords a good example of the
-participation of the German High Command in the Nazi conspiracy to
-attack inoffensive neighbors.
-
-This letter, an extract from which I have just read, has revealed that
-Raeder reported to Hitler on the 10th of October 1939 . . .
-
-THE TRIBUNAL (Mr. Biddle): When was that report?
-
-MAJOR JONES: The report, C-66, was made in January 1944 by the Defendant
-Raeder to Assmann, who was the German naval historian, and so,
-presumably, was for the purposes of history.
-
-Before Raeder’s report of 10 October 1939 was made to the Führer, Raeder
-got a second opinion on the Norwegian invasion. On the 3rd of October
-Raeder made out the questionnaire to which I now invite the Court’s
-attention. It is Document C-122 and the Court will find it next but one
-to C-66 in the document book. That will now be Exhibit GB-82.
-
-That, as the Tribunal will observe, is headed “Gaining of Bases in
-Norway (extract from War Diary)” and bears the date of the 3rd of
-October 1939. It reads:
-
- “The Chief of the Naval Operations Staff”—who was the Defendant
- Raeder—“considers it necessary that the Führer be informed as
- soon as possible of the opinions of the Naval Operations Staff
- on the possibilities of extending the operational base to the
- north. It must be ascertained whether it is possible to gain
- bases in Norway under the combined pressure of Russia and
- Germany, with the basic aim of improving our strategic and
- operational position. The following questions must be given
- consideration:
-
-
-
- “(a) What places in Norway can be considered as bases?
-
-
-
- “(b) Can bases be gained by military force against Norway’s will
- if it is impossible to carry this out without fighting?
-
-
-
- “(c) What are the possibilities of defense after the occupation?
-
-
-
- “(d) Will the harbors have to be developed completely as bases
- or have they already decisive advantages suitable for supply
- position?”
-
-Then there follows in parenthesis:
-
- “The Commander of the U-boat Fleet”—which is a reference, of
- course, to the Defendant Dönitz—”. . . considers such harbors
- already extremely useful as equipment and supply bases at which
- Atlantic U-boats can call temporarily.”
-
-And then Question (e):
-
- “What decisive advantages would exist for the conduct of the war
- at sea in gaining bases in north Denmark, e.g. Skagen?”
-
-There is, in our possession, a document C-5, to find which it will be
-necessary for the Court to go back in the document book to the first of
-the C exhibits. This will be Exhibit GB-83.
-
-This is a memorandum written by the Defendant Dönitz on Norwegian bases.
-It presumably relates to the questionnaire of the Defendant Raeder
-which, as I have indicated, was in circulation at about that time. The
-document is headed, “Commander of the U-boat Fleet; Operations
-Division,” and is marked “most secret.” The subject is “Base in Norway.”
-
-Then there are set out “suppositions,” “advantages and disadvantages,”
-and, over one page, “conclusions”. I am proposing to read the last
-paragraph, III:
-
- “The following is therefore proposed:
-
-
-
- “(1) Establishment of a base in Trondheim, including:
-
- “a) Possibility of supplying fuel, compressed air, oxygen,
- provisions;
-
-
-
- “b) Repair opportunities for normal overhaul work after an
- encounter;
-
-
-
- “c) Good opportunities for accommodating U-boat crews;
-
-
-
- “d) Flak protection, L.A. antiaircraft armament, patrol and M/S
- units.
-
-
-
- “(2) Establishment of the possibility of supplying fuel in
- Narvik as an alternative.”
-
-That is a Dönitz memorandum.
-
-Now, as the Tribunal saw in the report of Raeder to Assmann, in October
-1939, Hitler was merely considering the Norwegian aggression and had not
-yet committed himself to it, although, as the Tribunal will see very
-shortly, Hitler was most susceptible to any suggestions of aggression
-against the territory of another country.
-
-The documents will show that the Defendant Raeder persevered in pressing
-his point of view with regard to Norway, and at this stage he found a
-powerful ally in the Defendant Rosenberg.
-
-The Nazi employment of traitors and the stimulation of treachery as a
-political weapon are now unhappily proven historical facts, but should
-proof be required of that statement it is found in the remarkable
-document which I now invite the Court to consider. I refer to Document
-007-PS, which is after the TC and D series in the document book. That
-will be Exhibit GB-84.
-
-That is headed on Page 1, “Brief Report on Activities of the Foreign
-Affairs Bureau of the Party”—Aussenpolitisches Amt der NSDAP—“from
-1933 to 1943.” It reads:
-
- “When the Foreign Affairs Bureau”—Aussenpolitisches Amt—“was
- established on the 1st of April 1933, the Führer directed that
- it should not be expanded to a large bureaucratic agency; but
- should rather develop its effectiveness through initiative and
- suggestions.
-
-
-
- “Corresponding to the extraordinarily hostile attitude adopted
- by the Soviet Government in Moscow from the beginning, the
- newly-established bureau devoted particular attention to
- internal conditions in the Soviet Union as well as to the
- effects of world Bolshevism, primarily in other European
- countries. It entered into contact with the most variegated
- groups inclining towards National Socialism in combatting
- Bolshevism, focussing its main attentions on nations and states
- bordering on the Soviet Union. On the one hand those nations and
- states constituted an insulating ring encircling the Bolshevist
- neighbor; on the other hand they were the laterals of German
- living space and took up a flanking position towards the Western
- Powers, especially Great Britain. In order to wield the desired
- influence by one means or another”—and the Court will shortly
- see the significance of that phrase—“the bureau was compelled
- to use the most varying methods, taking into consideration the
- completely different living conditions, the ties of blood and
- intellect, and historical dependence of the movements observed
- by the bureau in those countries.
-
-
-
- “In Scandinavia a progressively more outspoken pro-Anglo-Saxon
- attitude based on economic considerations had become more
- dominant after the World War of 1914-18. There the bureau put
- the entire emphasis on influencing general cultural relations
- with the Nordic peoples. For this purpose it took the Nordic
- Society in Lübeck under its protection. The Reich conventions of
- this society were attended by many outstanding personalities,
- especially from Finland. While there were no openings for purely
- political co-operation in Sweden and Denmark, an association
- based on Greater Germanic ideology was found in Norway. Very
- close relations, which led to further consequences, were
- established with its founder.”
-
-If the Court will turn to the end of the main part of the statement
-which is 4 pages forward—in the intervening pages, I may say, there is
-an account of the activity of Rosenberg’s bureau in various parts of
-Europe, and indeed of the world, which I am not proposing to call the
-Tribunal’s attention to at this stage—but if the Tribunal will look at
-the last paragraph of the main body of the report which bears the
-signature of the Defendant Rosenberg, the last two sentences read:
-
- “With the outbreak of war it was entitled to consider its task
- as terminated. The exploitation of the many personal connections
- in many lands can be resumed under a different guise.”
-
-If the Tribunal will turn to the annex to the document, which is on the
-next page, the Tribunal will appreciate what “exploitation of personal
-connections” involved.
-
-Annex I to the document is headed, “Brief Report on Activities of the
-Foreign Affairs Bureau of the Nazi Party from 1933 to 1943.” It is
-headed, “The Political Preparation of the Military Occupation of Norway
-during the War Years 1939-40,” and it reads:
-
- “As previously mentioned, of all political groupings in
- Scandinavia only Nasjonal Samling, led in Norway by the former
- Minister of War and retired major, Vidkun Quisling, deserved
- serious political attention. This was a fighting political group
- possessed by the idea of a Greater Germanic community. Naturally
- all ruling powers were hostile and attempted to prevent by any
- means its success among the population. The bureau maintained
- constant relation with Quisling and attentively observed the
- attacks he conducted with tenacious energy on the middle class,
- which had been taken in tow by the English. From the beginning
- it appeared probable that without revolutionary events which
- would stir the population from their former attitude no
- successful progress of Nasjonal Samling was to be expected.
- During the winter 1938-39 Quisling was privately visited by a
- member of the bureau. When the political situation in Europe
- came to a head in 1939, Quisling made an appearance at the
- convention of the Nordic Society in Lübeck in June. He expounded
- his conception of the situation and his apprehensions concerning
- Norway. He emphatically drew attention to the geopolitically
- decisive importance of Norway in the Scandinavian area and to
- the advantages that would accrue to the power dominating the
- Norwegian coast in case of a conflict between the Greater German
- Reich and Great Britain.
-
-
-
- “Assuming that his statements would be of special interest to
- the Marshal of the Reich, Göring, for aero-strategical reasons,
- Quisling was referred to State Secretary Körner by the bureau.
- The Staff Director of the bureau handed the Chief of the Reich
- Chancellery a memorandum for transmission to the Führer . . . .”
-
-In a later part of the document, which I shall read at a later stage of
-my presentation of the evidence, if I may, the Court will see how
-Quisling came into contact with Raeder. The Prosecution’s submission
-with regard to this document is that it is another illustration of the
-close interweaving between the political and the military leadership of
-the Nazi State, of the close link between the professional soldiers and
-the professional thugs.
-
-The Defendant Raeder, in his report to Admiral Assmann, admitted his
-collaboration with Rosenberg; and I will invite the Court’s attention
-once more to Document C-66, which is Exhibit GB-81. In the page headed
-“Weserübung,” the second paragraph of the Raeder report reads as
-follows:
-
- “In the further developments, I was supported by Commander
- Schreiber, Naval Attaché in Oslo, and the M-Chief personally—in
- conjunction with the Rosenberg organization. Thus we got in
- touch with Quisling and Hagelin, who came to Berlin in the
- beginning of December and were taken to the Führer by me—with
- the approval of Reichsleiter Rosenberg . . . .”
-
-I will later draw the attention of the Tribunal to the developments in
-December.
-
-The details of the manner in which the Defendant Raeder did make contact
-personally with Quisling are not very clear. But I would draw the
-Court’s attention to the Document C-65, which precedes . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Would you read the end of that paragraph?
-
-MAJOR JONES: With your Lordship’s permission, I would like to revert to
-that in a later stage in my unfolding of the evidence.
-
-In the Document C-65, which will be Exhibit GB-85, we have a report of
-Rosenberg to Raeder in which the full extent of Quisling’s preparedness
-for treachery and his potential usefulness to the Nazi aggressors was
-reported and disclosed to the Defendant Raeder.
-
-Paragraph 1 of that report deals with matters which I have already dealt
-with in reading Rosenberg’s statement, 007-PS. But if the Court will
-look at the second paragraph of Exhibit GB-85, C-65, it reads as
-follows:
-
- “The reasons for a _coup_, on which Quisling made a report,
- would be provided by the fact that the Storthing”—that is to
- say the Norwegian parliament—“had, in defiance of the
- constitution, passed a resolution prolonging its own life which
- is to become operative on January 12th. Quisling still retains
- in his capacity as a long-standing officer and a former Minister
- of War the closest relations with the Norwegian Army. He showed
- me the original of a letter which he had received only a short
- time previously from the commanding officer in Narvik, Colonel
- Sunlo. In this letter Colonel Sunlo frankly lays emphasis on the
- fact that if things went on as they were going at present,
- Norway was finished.”
-
-If the Court will turn to the next page of that document, the last two
-paragraphs, the details of a treacherous plot to overthrow the
-government of his own country, by the traitor Quisling in collaboration
-with the Defendant Rosenberg, will be indicated to the Court.
-
- “A plan has been put forward which deals with the possibility of
- a _coup_ and which provides for a number of selected Norwegians
- to be trained in Germany with all possible speed for such a
- purpose, being allotted their exact tasks and provided with
- experienced and die-hard National Socialists who are practiced
- in such operations. These trained men should then proceed with
- all speed to Norway where details would then require to be
- further discussed. Some important centers in Oslo would have to
- be taken over forthwith, and at the same time, the German Fleet
- together with suitable contingents of the German Army would go
- into operation when summoned specially by the new Norwegian
- Government in a specified bay at the approaches to Oslo.
- Quisling has no doubts that such a _coup_, having been carried
- out with instantaneous success, would immediately bring him the
- approval of those sections of the army with which he at present
- has connections; and thus it goes without saying that he has
- never discussed a political fight with them. As far as the King
- is concerned, he believes that he would respect it as an
- accomplished fact.”
-
-How wrong Quisling was in that anticipation was shown, of course, by
-subsequent developments. The last sentence reads:
-
- “Quisling gives figures of the number of German troops required
- which accord with German calculations.”
-
-The Tribunal may think that there are no words in the whole vocabulary
-of abuse sufficiently strong to describe that degree of treachery.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Is that document dated?
-
-MAJOR JONES: That document does not bear a date.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: We will break off now.
-
- [_The Tribunal adjourned until 7 December 1945 at 1000 o’clock._]
-
-
-
-
- FIFTEENTH DAY
- Friday, 7 December 1945
-
-
- _Morning Session_
-
-MAJOR JONES: May it please the Tribunal, yesterday afternoon when the
-Tribunal adjourned I was dealing with the stage of the Nazi conspiracy
-against Norway at which the activities of the Defendants Raeder and
-Rosenberg converged. And the Court will remember that I submitted in
-evidence Document C-65, which was a report from the Defendant Rosenberg
-to Raeder regarding Quisling and ending with the infamous words,
-“Quisling gives figures of the number of German troops required which
-accord with German calculations.”
-
-The Court has already received in evidence and has heard read material
-parts of Document C-66, which was the report of Raeder to Admiral
-Assmann which disclosed how, in December of 1939, the Defendant Raeder
-did in fact meet Quisling and Hagelin.
-
-I now invite the Court to look at Document C-64 which, for the purpose
-of the record, will be Exhibit GB-86. The Court will observe that that
-is a report by Raeder of a meeting of the Naval Staff with Hitler on the
-12th of December 1939, at 1200 hours, in the presence of the Defendants
-Keitel and Jodl, and Puttkammer, who at this time was adjutant to
-Hitler.
-
-The report is headed “Norwegian Question,” and the first sentence reads:
-
- “Commander-in-Chief, Navy”—who of course was the Defendant
- Raeder—“has received Quisling and Hagelin. Quisling creates the
- impression of being reliable.”
-
-And then there follows, in the next two paragraphs, a statement of
-Quisling’s views, views with which the Court is by now familiar because
-of my reading of extracts from the Document 007-PS; but I draw the
-Court’s attention to the fourth paragraph in Document C-64, beginning:
-
- “The Führer thought of speaking to Quisling personally so that
- he might form an impression of him. He wanted to see Rosenberg
- once more beforehand, as the latter has known Quisling for a
- long while. Commander-in-Chief, Navy”—that is, of course,
- Raeder—“suggests that if the Führer forms a favorable
- impression, the OKW should obtain permission to make plans with
- Quisling for the preparation and carrying out of the occupation:
- (a) By peaceful means—that is to say, German forces summoned by
- Norway; (b) to agree to do so by force.”
-
-That was the 12th of December, the meeting at which Raeder made this
-report to Hitler.
-
-If the Court will now look at Document C-66, which is Raeder’s record of
-these transactions for the purpose of history, the Court will observe,
-in the last sentence of the second paragraph of the section of C-66
-headed “(b) Weserübung,” these words:
-
- “. . . thus we got in touch with Quisling and Hagelin, who came
- to Berlin at the beginning of December, and were taken to the
- Führer by me with the approval of Reichsleiter Rosenberg.”
-
-And then the Court will observe a note at the end of the page:
-
- “At the crucial moment R”—presumably Rosenberg—“hurt his foot,
- so that I visited him in his house on the morning of the 14th
- December.”
-
-That is, of course, Raeder’s note; and it indicates the extent of his
-contact in this conspiracy. The report continues:
-
- “On the grounds of the Führer’s discussion with Quisling and
- Hagelin on the afternoon of the 14th of December 1939, the
- Führer gave the order that preparations for the Norwegian
- operation were to be made by the Supreme Command of the Armed
- Forces.
-
-
-
- “Until that moment the naval operations staff had taken no part
- in the development of the Norwegian question and continued to be
- somewhat skeptical about it. The preparations which were
- undertaken by Captain Krancke in the Supreme Command of the
- Armed Forces were founded, however, on a memorandum of the naval
- war staff.”
-
-The Court may well think that the note of the Defendant Raeder referring
-to the crucial moment was an appropriate one because the Court will see
-that on that day, the 14th of December, Hitler gave the order that
-preparations for the Norwegian operation were to be begun by the Supreme
-Command of the Armed Forces.
-
-If the Court will now turn to Document 007-PS, which is further on in
-the document book and which the Court will remember is Rosenberg’s
-report on the activities of his organization—it is after the “D”
-documents—if the Court will turn to about 10 lines from the bottom of
-the first page of Annex I dealing with Norway, the Court will see that
-there were further meetings between Quisling and the Nazi chiefs in
-December; and I am going to read now the section beginning:
-
- “As a result of these steps Quisling was granted a personal
- audience with the Führer on the 16th of December, and once more
- on the 18th of December. In the course of this audience the
- Führer emphasized repeatedly that he personally would prefer a
- completely neutral attitude of Norway as well as of the whole of
- Scandinavia. He did not intend to enlarge the theater of war and
- to draw still other nations into the conflict.”
-
-As I have said in opening the presentation of this part of the case,
-here was an instance where pressure had to be brought to bear on Hitler
-to induce him to take part in these operations.
-
-The report continues:
-
- “Should the enemy attempt”—there is a mis-translation here—“to
- extend the war, however, with the aim of achieving further
- throttling and intimidation of the Greater German Reich, he
- would be compelled to gird himself against such an undertaking.
- In order to counterbalance increasing enemy propaganda activity,
- the Führer promised Quisling financial support of this movement,
- which is based on Greater Germanic ideology. Military
- exploitation of the question now raised was assigned to the
- special military staff which transmitted special missions to
- Quisling. Reichsleiter Rosenberg was to take over political
- exploitation. Financial expenses were to be defrayed by the
- Ministry for Foreign Affairs”—that is to say, by Ribbentrop’s
- organization—“the Minister for Foreign Affairs”—that is to
- say, Ribbentrop—“being kept continuously informed by the
- Foreign Affairs Bureau”—which, of course, was Rosenberg’s
- organization.
-
-
-
- “Chief of Section Scheidt was charged with maintaining liaison
- with Quisling. In the course of further developments he was
- assigned to the Naval Attaché in Oslo . . . . Orders were given
- that the whole matter be handled with strictest secrecy.”
-
-Here again the Court will note the close link between the Nazi
-politicians and the Nazi service chiefs.
-
-The information that is available to the Prosecution as to the events of
-January 1940 is not full, but the Court will see that the agitation of
-the Defendants Raeder and Rosenberg did bear fruit, and I now invite the
-Court to consider a letter of Keitel’s, Document C-63, which for the
-purposes of the record will be Exhibit GB-87. The Court will observe
-that that is an order—a memorandum—signed by the Defendant Keitel
-dated the 27th of January 1940. It is marked “Most secret, five copies;
-reference, Study ‘N’;”—which was another code name for the Weserübung
-preparations—“access only through an officer.” It is indicated that
-“C-in-C of the Navy”—that is to say, the Defendant Raeder—“has a
-report on this.” The document reads:
-
- “The Führer and Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces wishes
- that Study ‘N’ should be further worked on under my direct and
- personal guidance, and in the closest conjunction with the
- general war policy. For these reasons the Führer has
- commissioned me to take over the direction of further
- preparations.
-
-
-
- “A working staff has been formed at the Supreme Command of the
- Armed Forces headquarters for this purpose, and this represents
- at the same time the nucleus of a future operational staff.”
-
-Then, at the end of the memorandum:
-
- “All further plans will be made under the cover name
- Weserübung.”
-
-I should like respectfully to draw the Tribunal’s attention to the
-importance of that document, to the signature of Keitel upon it, and to
-the date of this important decision.
-
-Prior to this date, the 27th of January 1940, the planning of the
-various aspects of the invasion of Norway and Denmark had been confined
-to a relatively small group, whose aim had been to persuade Hitler of
-the desirability of undertaking this Norwegian operation. The issuance
-of this directive of Keitel’s on the 27th January 1940 was the signal
-that the Supreme Command of the German Armed Forces, the OKW, had
-accepted the proposition of the group that was pressing for this
-Norwegian adventure, and turned the combined resources of the German
-military machine to the task of producing practical and co-ordinated
-plans for the Norwegian operation.
-
-The Court will observe that from January onward the operational planning
-for the invasion of Norway and Denmark was started through the normal
-channels.
-
-And now I would refer the Court to some entries in the diary of the
-Defendant Jodl, to see how the preparations progressed. That is Document
-Number 1809-PS, which will be for the purposes of the record Exhibit
-GB-88. That, the Court will observe, is the last document in the
-document book.
-
-There is a slight confusion in the order in which the entries are set
-out in the diary because the first three pages relate to entries which
-will be dealt with in another part of the case.
-
-I invite the Court’s attention to Page 3 of these extracts from Jodl’s
-diary beginning at the bottom February the 6th. The entry under the date
-line of February the 6th 1940 starts, “New idea: Carry out ‘H’ and Weser
-Exercise only, and guarantee Belgium’s neutrality for the duration of
-the war.”
-
-I would like to repeat that entry if I may be permitted to do so. “New
-idea: Carry out ‘H’ and Weser Exercise only, and guarantee Belgium’s
-neutrality for the duration of the war.”
-
-The next entry to which I invite the Court’s attention is the entry of
-the 21st of February.
-
-THE TRIBUNAL (Mr. Biddle): What does that mean, to “carry out ‘H’”?
-
-MAJOR JONES: That is a reference to another code word, “Hartmut,” which
-the Court will see disclosed in a subsequent document. That is another
-code word for this Norwegian and Danish operation.
-
-The entry of February 21st in Jodl’s diary reads:
-
- “Führer has talked with General Von Falkenhorst and charges him
- with preparation of Weser Exercise. Falkenhorst accepts gladly.
- Instructions issued to the three branches of the Armed Forces.”
-
-Then the next entry, on the next page . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: “Weser Exercise”—is that Norway too?
-
-MAJOR JONES: That is Norway too, My Lord, yes. That is a translation of
-“Weserübung.”
-
-The entry on the next page, under the date of February the 28th:
-
- “I propose first to the Chief of OKW and then to the Führer that
- Case Yellow”—which as the Court knows is the code name for the
- invasion of the Netherlands—“and Weser Exercise”—the invasion
- of Norway and Denmark—“must be prepared in such a way that they
- will be independent of one another as regards both time and
- forces employed. The Führer completely agrees, if this is in any
- way possible.”
-
-So that the Court will observe that the new idea of February the 6th
-that the neutrality of Belgium might be preserved had been abandoned by
-February the 28th.
-
-The next entry is of February the 29th—I am not troubling the Court
-with further entries of the 28th of February, which relate to the forces
-to be employed in the invasion of Norway and Denmark. February 29th, the
-second paragraph:
-
- “Führer also wishes to have a strong task force in Copenhagen
- and a plan elaborated in detail showing how individual coastal
- batteries are to be captured by shock troops. Warlimont, Chief
- of Land Defense, instructed to make out immediately the order of
- the Army, Navy, and Air Force; and Chief ‘WZ’ to make out a
- similar order regarding the strengthening of the staff.”
-
-And there for the moment, I will leave the entries in Jodl’s diary and
-refer the Court to the vital Document C-174, which for the purposes of
-the record will be Exhibit GB-89. The Court will see from that document
-that it is Hitler’s operation order to complete the preparations for the
-invasion of Norway and Denmark. It bears the date of the 1st of March
-1940, and it is headed, “The Führer and Supreme Commander of the Armed
-Forces; most secret.” Then, “Directive for Case Weserübung”:
-
- “The development of the situation in Scandinavia requires the
- making of all preparations for the occupation of Denmark and
- Norway by a part of the German Armed Forces—Weser Exercise.
- This operation should prevent British encroachment on
- Scandinavia and the Baltic; further, it should guarantee our ore
- base in Sweden and give our Navy and Air Force a wider start
- line against Britain.”
-
-The second part of Paragraph 1 reads:
-
- “In view of our military and political power in comparison with
- that of the Scandinavian States, the force to be employed in the
- Weser Exercise will be kept as small as possible. The numerical
- weakness will be balanced by daring actions and surprise
- execution. On principle we will do our utmost to make the
- operation appear as a peaceful occupation, the object of which
- is the military protection of the neutrality of the Scandinavian
- States. Corresponding demands will be transmitted to the
- governments at the beginning of the occupation. If necessary,
- demonstrations by the Navy and the Air Force will provide the
- necessary emphasis. If, in spite of this, resistance should be
- met with, all military means will be used to crush it.”
-
-There follows, in Paragraph 2 on the next page:
-
- “I put in charge of the preparations and the conduct of the
- operation against Denmark and Norway the commanding general of
- the 21st Army Corps, General Von Falkenhorst.”
-
-Paragraph 3:
-
- “The crossing of the Danish border and the landings in Norway
- must take place simultaneously. I emphasize that the operations
- must be prepared as quickly as possible. In case the enemy
- seizes the initiative against Norway, we must be able to apply
- immediately our own counter measures.
-
-
-
- “It is most important that the Scandinavian States as well as
- the western opponents should be taken by surprise by our
- measures. All preparations, particularly those of transport and
- of readiness, drafting, and embarkation of the troops, must be
- made with this factor in mind.
-
-
-
- “In case the preparations for embarkation can no longer be kept
- secret, the leaders and the troops will be deceived with
- fictitious objectives.”
-
-Then Paragraph 4 on the next page, “The Occupation of Denmark,” which is
-given the code name of “Weserübung Süd”:
-
- “The task of Group XXI: Occupation by surprise of Jutland and of
- Fünen immediately after occupation of Zealand.
-
-
-
- “Added to this, having secured the most important places, the
- group will break through as quickly as possible from Fünen to
- Skagen and to the east coast.”
-
-Then there follow other instructions with regard to the operation.
-Paragraph 5:
-
- “Occupation of Norway, ‘Weserübung Nord’”:
-
-
-
- “The task of the Group XXI: Capture by surprise of the most
- important places on the coast by sea and airborne operations.
-
-
-
- “The Navy will take over the preparation and carrying out of the
- transport by sea of the landing troops.”
-
-And there follows a reference to the part of the Air Force, and I would
-like particularly to draw the Court’s attention to that reference. This
-is Paragraph 5 on Page 3 of Hitler’s directive:
-
- “The Air Force, after the occupation has been completed, will
- ensure air defense and will make use of Norwegian bases for air
- warfare against Britain.”
-
-I am underlining that entry at this stage because I shall be referring
-to it in connection with a later document.
-
-Whilst these preparations were being made and just prior to the final
-decision of Hitler . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Did you draw our attention to the defendant by whom it
-was initialed, Frick, on the first page of that document.
-
-MAJOR JONES: That is an initial by Fricke. That is a different person
-altogether. That is a high functionary in the German Admiralty and has
-no connection with the defendant who is before the Tribunal.
-
-As I was saying, My Lord, while these decisions were being made reports
-were coming in through Rosenberg’s organization from Quisling; and if
-the Court will again turn for the last time to Document 007-PS, which is
-Rosenberg’s report, the Tribunal will observe the kind of information
-which Rosenberg’s organization was supplying at this time. The third
-paragraph, “Quisling’s reports”—that is in Annex I in Rosenberg’s
-report, the section dealing with Norway, Page 6 on my copy—referring to
-the second page of the annex, the paragraph beginning with:
-
- “Quisling’s reports transmitted to his representative in
- Germany, Hagelin, and dealing with the possibility of
- intervention by the Western Powers in Norway, with tacit consent
- of the Norwegian Government, became more urgent by January.
- These increasingly better substantiated communications were in
- sharpest contrast to the view of the German Legation in Oslo
- which relied on the desire for neutrality of the then Norwegian
- Nygardsvold Cabinet and was convinced of that government’s
- intention and readiness to defend Norway’s neutrality. No one in
- Norway knew that Quisling’s representative for Germany
- maintained closest relations with him; he therefore succeeded in
- gaining a foothold within governmental circles of the
- Nygardsvold Cabinet and in listening to the Cabinet members’
- true views. Hagelin transmitted what he had heard to the
- bureau”—Rosenberg’s bureau—“which conveyed the news to the
- Führer through Reichsleiter Rosenberg. During the night of the
- 16th to 17th February English destroyers attacked the German
- steamer _Altmark_ in Jössingfjord.”
-
-The Tribunal will remember that that is a reference to the action by the
-British destroyer _Cossack_ against the German naval auxiliary vessel
-_Altmark_ which was carrying 300 British prisoners captured on the high
-seas to Germany through Norwegian territorial waters. The position of
-the British Delegation with regard to that episode is that the use that
-was being made by the _Altmark_ of Norwegian territorial waters was in
-fact a flagrant abuse in itself of Norwegian neutrality and the action
-taken by _H.M.S. Cossack_ which was restricted to rescuing the 300
-British prisoners on board—no attempt being made to destroy the
-_Altmark_ or to capture the armed guards on board of her—was fully
-justified under international law.
-
-Now the Rosenberg report which I interrupted to give that statement of
-the British view on the _Altmark_ episode—the Rosenberg report
-continues:
-
- “The Norwegian Government’s reaction to this question permitted
- the conclusion that certain agreements had been covertly arrived
- at between the Norwegian Government and the Allies. Such
- assumption was confirmed by reports of Chief of Section Scheidt,
- who in turn derived his information from Hagelin and Quisling.
- But even after this incident the German Legation in Oslo
- championed the opposite view and went on record as believing in
- the good intentions of the Norwegians.”
-
-And so the Tribunal will see that the Nazi Government preferred the
-reports of the traitor Quisling to the considered judgment of German
-diplomatic representatives in Norway. The result of the receipt of
-reports of that kind was the Hitler decision to invade Norway and
-Denmark. The culminating details in the preparations for the invasion
-are again found in Jodl’s diary, which is the last document in the
-document book. I will refer the Court to the entry of the 3rd of March.
-
- “The Führer expressed himself very sharply on the necessity of a
- swift entry into N”—which is Norway—“with strong forces.
-
-
-
- “No delay by any branch of the Armed Forces. Very rapid
- acceleration of the attack necessary.”
-
-Then the last entry on March the 3rd:
-
- “Führer decides to carry out Weser Exercise before Case Yellow
- with a few days interval.”
-
-So that the important issue of strategy which had been concerning the
-German High Command for some time had been decided by this date, and the
-fate of Scandinavia was to be sealed before the fate of the Low
-Countries; and the Court will observe from those entries of March 3 that
-by that date Hitler had become an enthusiastic convert to the idea of a
-Norwegian aggression.
-
-The next entry in Jodl’s diary of the 5th of March:
-
- “Big conference with the three commanders-in-chief about Weser
- Exercise; Field Marshal in a rage because not consulted till
- now. Won’t listen to anyone and wants to show that all
- preparations so far made are worthless.
-
-
-
- “Result:
-
-
-
- “(a) Stronger forces to Narvik; (b) Navy to leave ships in the
- ports (_Hipper_ or _Lützow_ in Trondheim); (c) Christiansand can
- be left out at first; (d) six divisions envisaged for Norway;
- (e) a foothold to be gained immediately in Copenhagen also.”
-
-Then the next entry to which I desire to draw the Court’s attention is
-the entry of the 13th of March, which the Court may think is one of the
-most remarkable in the whole documentation of this case:
-
- “Führer does not give order yet for ‘W.’”—Weser Exercise—
-
-
-
- “He is still looking for justification.”
-
-The entry of the next day, the 14th of March, shows a similar
-pre-occupation on the part of Hitler with seeking justification for this
-flagrant aggression. It reads:
-
- “English keep vigil in the North Sea with 15 to 16 submarines;
- doubtful whether reason to safeguard own operations or prevent
- operations by Germans. Führer has not yet decided what reason to
- give for Weser Exercise.”
-
-And then I would like the Court to look at the entry for the 21st of
-March, which by inadvertence has been included in the next page at the
-bottom of Page 6:
-
-“Misgivings of Task Force 21 . . .”
-
-The Court has seen from documents that I have put in already that Task
-Force 21 was Falkenhorst’s force, which was detailed to conduct this
-invasion.
-
- “Misgivings of Task Force 21 about the long interval between
- taking up readiness positions at 0530 hours and closing of
- diplomatic negotiations. Führer rejects any earlier negotiations
- as otherwise calls for help go out to England and America. If
- resistance is put up it must be ruthlessly broken. The political
- plenipotentiaries must emphasize the military measures taken and
- even exaggerate them.”
-
-Comment upon that entry is, I think, unnecessary. The next entry, if the
-Court will turn to Page 5, of the 28th of March, the third sentence:
-
- “Individual naval officers seem to be lukewarm concerning the
- Weser Exercise and need a stimulus. Also Falkenhorst and the
- other three commanders are worrying about matters which are none
- of their business. Krancke sees more disadvantages than
- advantages.
-
-
-
- “In the evening the Führer visits the map room and roundly
- declares that he won’t stand for the Navy clearing out of the
- Norwegian ports right away. Narvik, Trondheim, and Oslo will
- have to remain occupied by naval forces.”
-
-There the Court will observe that Jodl, as ever, is the faithful
-collaborator of Hitler.
-
-Then April the 2d:
-
- “1530 hours. Commander-in-Chief of the Air Force,
- Commander-in-Chief of the Navy, and General Von Falkenhorst with
- the Führer. All confirm preparations completed. Führer orders
- carrying out of the Weser Exercise for April the 9th.”
-
-Then the last entry in the next page, the 4th of April:
-
- “Führer drafts the proclamations. Pieckenbrock, Chief of
- Military Intelligence I, returns with good result from the talks
- with Quisling in Copenhagen.”
-
-Until the very last the treachery of Quisling continued most active.
-
-The Prosecution has in its possession a large number of operation orders
-that were issued in connection with the aggression against Norway and
-Denmark, but I propose only to draw the Court’s attention to two of them
-to illustrate the extent of the secrecy and the deception that was used
-by the defendants and their confederates in the course of that
-aggression. I would now draw the Court’s attention to Document C-115,
-which for the purpose of the record will be Exhibit GB-90. First of all
-I will draw the Court’s attention to the second paragraph, “General
-Orders,” with a date, “4th of April 1940”:
-
- “The barrage-breaking vessels”—Sperrbrecher—“will penetrate
- inconspicuously and with lights on into Oslo Fjord disguised as
- merchant steamers.
-
-
-
- “Challenge from coastal signal stations and look-outs are to be
- answered by the deceptive use of the names of English steamers.
- I lay particular stress on the importance of not giving away the
- operation before zero hour.”
-
-Then the next entry is an order for reconnaissance forces dated the 24th
-of March 1940, “Behavior during entrance into the harbor.” The third
-paragraph is the part to which I wish to draw the Court’s attention:
-
- “The disguise as British craft must be kept up as long as
- possible. All challenges in Morse by Norwegian ships will be
- answered in English. In answer to questions a text with
- something like the following content will be chosen:
-
-
-
- “‘Calling at Bergen for a short visit; no hostile intent.’
-
-
-
- “Challenges to be answered, with names of British warships:
-
-
-
- “_Köln_—_H.M.S. Cairo; Königsberg-_-_H.M.S. Calcutta;
- Bremse_—_H.M.S. Faulkner; Karl Peters_—_H.M.S. Halcyon;
- Leopard_—British destroyer; _Wolf_—British destroyer;
- S-boats—British motor torpedo boats.
-
-
-
- “Arrangements are to be made enabling British war flags to be
- illuminated. Continual readiness for making smoke screen.”
-
-And then finally the next order dated the 24th of March 1940, Annex 3,
-“From Flag Officer, Reconnaissance Forces; most secret.” Next page, page
-two:
-
- “Following is laid down as guiding principle should one of our
- own units find itself compelled to answer the challenge of
- passing craft. To challenge in case of the _Köln_—‘_H.M.S.
- Cairo_’; then to order to stop—‘(1) Please repeat last signal,
- (2) Impossible to understand your signal’; in case of a warning
- shot—‘Stop firing, British ship, good friend’; in case of an
- inquiry as to destination and purpose—‘Going Bergen, chasing
- German steamers.’”
-
-Then I would draw the Court’s attention to Document C-151, which for the
-purposes of the record will be Exhibit GB-91, which is a Dönitz order in
-connection with this operation. If the Court will observe, it is headed:
-
- “Top secret, Operation Order—‘Hartmut.’ Occupation of Denmark
- and Norway.
-
-
-
- “This order comes into force on the code word Hartmut. With its
- coming into force the orders hitherto valid for the boats taking
- part lose their validity.
-
-
-
- “The day and hour are designated as Weser-Day and Weser-Hour,
- and the whole operation is known as Weser Exercise.
-
-
-
- “The operation ordered by the code word has as its objective the
- rapid surprise landing of troops in Norway. Simultaneously
- Denmark will be occupied from the Baltic and from the land
- side.”
-
-And there is at the end of that paragraph another contribution by Dönitz
-to this process of deception:
-
- “The naval force will, as they enter the harbor, fly the British
- flag until the troops have landed except, presumably, at
- Narvik.”
-
-The Tribunal now knows as a matter of history that on the 9th of April
-1940 the Nazi onslaught on the unsuspecting and almost unarmed people of
-Norway and Denmark was launched. When the invasions had already begun a
-German memorandum was handed to the Governments of Norway and Denmark
-attempting to justify the German action; and I would like to draw the
-Court’s attention to Document TC-55, Exhibit GB-92. That is at the
-beginning of the book of documents—the sixth document of the book. I am
-not proposing to read the whole of that memorandum; I have no doubt the
-defending counsel will deal with any parts which they consider relevant
-to the defense. The Court will observe that it is alleged that England
-and France were guilty in their maritime warfare of breaches of
-international law and that Britain and France were making plans
-themselves to invade and occupy Norway and that the Government of Norway
-was prepared to acquiesce in such a situation.
-
-The memorandum states—and I would now draw the Court’s attention to
-Page 3 of the memorandum to the paragraph just below the middle of the
-page beginning “The German Troops”:
-
- “The German troops, therefore, do not set foot on Norwegian soil
- as enemies. The German High Command does not intend to make use
- of the points occupied by German troops as bases for operations
- against England as long as it is not forced to do so by measures
- taken by England and France; German military operations aim much
- more exclusively at protecting the north against proposed
- occupation of Norwegian strong points by English-French forces.”
-
-In connection with that statement I would remind the Court that in his
-operation order of the 1st of March Hitler had then given orders to the
-Air Force to make use of Norwegian bases for air warfare against
-Britain. That is the 1st of March. And this is the memorandum which was
-produced as an excuse on the 9th of April. The last two paragraphs of
-the German memorandum to Norway and Denmark, the Court may think, are a
-classic Nazi combination of diplomatic hypocrisy and military threat.
-They read:
-
- “The Reich Government thus expect that the Royal Norwegian
- Government and the Norwegian people will respond with
- understanding to the German measures and offer no resistance to
- them. Any resistance would have to be and would be broken by all
- possible means by the German forces employed, and would
- therefore lead only to absolutely useless bloodshed. The Royal
- Norwegian Government are therefore requested to take all
- measures with the greatest speed to ensure that the advance of
- the German troops can take place without friction and
- difficulty. In the spirit, of the good German-Norwegian
- relations that have always existed, the Reich Government declare
- to the Royal Norwegian Government that Germany has no intention
- of infringing by her measures the territorial integrity and
- political independence of the Kingdom of Norway now or in the
- future.”
-
-What the Nazis meant by the protection of the Kingdom of Norway was
-shown by their conduct on the 9th of April. I now refer the Court to
-Document TC-56, which will be Exhibit GB-93, which is a report by the
-Commander-in-Chief of the Royal Norwegian Forces. It is at the beginning
-of the document book, the last of the TC documents.
-
-I will not trouble the Court with the first page of the report. If the
-Tribunal will turn to the second page:
-
- “The Germans, considering the long lines of communications and
- the threat of the British Navy, clearly understood the necessity
- of complete surprise and speed in the attack. In order to
- paralyze the will of the Norwegian people to defend their
- country and at the same time to prevent Allied intervention, it
- was planned to capture all the more important towns along the
- coast simultaneously. Members of the Government and Parliament
- and other military and civilian people occupying important
- positions were to be arrested before organized resistance could
- be put into effect and the King was to be forced to form a new
- government with Quisling as its head.”
-
-The next paragraph was read by the learned British Attorney General in
-his speech and I will only refer to the last paragraph but one:
-
- “The German attack came as a surprise and all the invaded towns
- along the coast were captured according to plan with only slight
- losses. In the Oslofjord, however, the cruiser _Blücher_,
- carrying General Engelbrecht and parts of his division,
- technical staffs, and specialists who were to take over the
- control of Oslo, was sunk. The plan to capture the King and
- members of the Government and Parliament failed. In spite of the
- surprise of the attack resistance was organized throughout the
- country.”
-
-That is a brief picture of what occurred in Norway.
-
-What happened in Denmark is described in a memorandum prepared by the
-Royal Danish Government, a copy of which I hand in as Exhibit GB-94 and
-an extract from which is in Document D-628, which follows the C
-documents.
-
- “Extracts from the memorandum concerning Germany’s attitude
- towards Denmark”—before and during the occupation—“prepared by
- the Royal Danish Government.
-
-
-
- “On the 9th of April 1940 at 0420 hours”—in the morning that
- is—“the German Minister appeared at the private residence of
- the Danish Minister for Foreign Affairs accompanied by the Air
- Attaché of the Legation. The appointment had been made by a
- telephone call from the German Legation to the Secretary General
- of the Ministry for Foreign Affairs at 4 o’clock the same
- morning. The Minister said at once that Germany had positive
- proof that Great Britain intended to occupy bases in Denmark and
- Norway. Germany had to safeguard Denmark against this. For this
- reason German soldiers were now crossing the frontier and
- landing at various points in Zealand, including the port of
- Copenhagen; in a short time German bombers would be over
- Copenhagen; their orders were not to bomb until further notice.
- It was now up to the Danes to prevent resistance, as any
- resistance would have the most terrible consequences. Germany
- would guarantee Denmark territorial integrity and political
- independence. Germany would not interfere with the internal
- government of Denmark but wanted only to make sure of the
- neutrality of the country. For this purpose the presence of the
- German Wehrmacht in Denmark was required during the war . . . .
-
-
-
- “The Minister for Foreign Affairs declared in reply that the
- allegation concerning British plans to occupy Denmark was
- completely without foundation; there was no possibility of
- anything like that. The Minister for Foreign Affairs protested
- against the violation of Denmark’s neutrality which, according
- to the German Minister’s statement, was in progress. The
- Minister for Foreign Affairs declared further that he could not
- give a reply to the demands, which had to be submitted to the
- King and the Prime Minister, and further observed that the
- German Minister knew as everybody else that the Danish Armed
- Forces had orders to oppose violations of Denmark’s neutrality
- so that fighting presumably had already taken place. In reply
- the German Minister expressed that the matter was very urgent,
- not least to avoid air bombardment.”
-
-What happened thereafter is described in a dispatch from the British
-Minister in Copenhagen to the British Foreign Secretary, which the
-Tribunal will find in D-627, the document preceding the one which I have
-just read. That document, for the purposes of the record, will be GB-95.
-That dispatch reads:
-
- “The actual events of the 9th April have been pieced together by
- members of my staff, from actual eye-witnesses or from reliable
- information subsequently received and are given below. Early in
- the morning towards 5 o’clock three small German transports
- steamed into the approach to Copenhagen harbor while a number of
- airplanes circled overhead. The northern battery guarding the
- harbor approach fired a warning shot at these planes when it was
- seen that they carried German markings. Apart from this the
- Danes offered no further resistance, and the German vessels
- fastened alongside the quays in the Free Harbor. Some of these
- airplanes proceeded to drop leaflets over the town urging the
- population to keep calm and co-operate with the Germans. I
- enclose a specimen of this leaflet, which is written in a
- bastard Norwegian-Danish, a curiously un-German disregard of
- detail, together with a translation. Approximately 800 soldiers
- landed with full equipment and marched to Kastellet, the old
- fortress of Copenhagen and now barracks. The door was locked so
- the Germans promptly burst it open with explosives and rounded
- up all the Danish soldiers within together with the womenfolk
- employed in the mess. The garrison offered no resistance, and it
- appears that they were taken completely by surprise. One officer
- tried to escape in a motor car, but his chauffeur was shot
- before they could get away. He died in hospital 2 days later.
- After seizing the barracks a detachment was sent to Amalienborg,
- the King’s palace, where they engaged the Danish sentries on
- guard wounding three, one of them fatally . . . . Meanwhile a
- large fleet of bombers flew over the city at low altitude.”
-
-Then, the last paragraph of the dispatch reads:
-
- “It has been difficult to ascertain exactly what occurred in
- Jutland . . . . It is clear, however, that the enemy invaded
- Jutland from the south at dawn on the 9th of April and were at
- first resisted by the Danish forces, who suffered casualties
- . . . . The chances of resistance were weakened by the extent to
- which the forces appear to have been taken by surprise. The
- chief permanent official of the Ministry of War, for instance,
- motored into Copenhagen on the morning of the 9th of April and
- drove blithely past a sentry who challenged him in blissful
- ignorance that this was not one of his own men. It took a
- bullet, which passed through the lapels of his coat, to
- disillusion him.”
-
-The German memorandum to the Norwegian and Danish Governments spoke of
-the German desire to maintain the territorial integrity and political
-independence of those two small countries.
-
-I will close by drawing the Court’s attention to two documents which
-indicate the kind of territorial integrity and political independence
-the Nazi conspirators contemplated for the victims of their aggression.
-I will first draw the Court’s attention to an entry in Jodl’s diary,
-which is the last document in the book, on the last page of the book,
-the entry dated 19th April:
-
- “Renewed crisis. Envoy Brauer”—that is the German Minister to
- Norway—“is recalled. Since Norway is at war with us, the task
- of the Foreign Office is finished. In the Führer’s opinion force
- has to be used. It is said that Gauleiter Terboven will be given
- a post. Field Marshal”—which, as the Court will see from the
- other entries, is presumably a reference to the Defendant
- Göring—“is moving in the same direction. He criticizes as
- defect that we did not take sufficiently energetic measures
- against the civilian population, that we could have seized
- electrical plant, that the Navy did not supply enough troops.
- The Air Force cannot do everything.”
-
-The Court will see from that entry and the reference to Gauleiter
-Terboven that already by the 19th of April rule by Gauleiter had
-replaced rule by Norwegians.
-
-The final document is Document C-41, which will be Exhibit GB-96, which
-is a memorandum dated the 3rd of June 1940 signed by Fricke, who, of
-course, has no connection with the Defendant Frick. Fricke was at that
-date the head of the operations division of the German naval war staff,
-a key appointment in the very nerve center of German naval operations.
-That is why, as the Tribunal noticed, he came to be initialing the
-important naval documents.
-
-That memorandum is as I have said, dated 3rd June 1940 and relates to
-questions of territorial expansion and bases:
-
- “These problems are pre-eminently of a political character and
- comprise an abundance of questions of a political type, which it
- is not the Navy’s province to answer, but they also materially
- affect the strategic possibilities open—according to the way in
- which this question is answered—for the subsequent use and
- operation of the Navy.
-
-
-
- “It is too well known to need further mention that Germany’s
- present position in the narrows of the Heligoland Bight and in
- the Baltic—bordered as it is by a whole series of states and
- under their influence—is an impossible one for the future of
- Greater Germany. If over and above this one extends these
- strategic possibilities to the point that Germany shall not
- continue to be cut off for all time from overseas by natural
- geographical facts, the demand is raised that somehow or other
- an end shall be put to this state of affairs at the end of the
- war.
-
-
-
- “The solution could perhaps be found among the following
- possibilities:
-
-
-
- “1) The territories of Denmark, Norway, and northern France
- acquired during the course of the war continue to be so occupied
- and organized that they can in the future be considered as
- German possessions.
-
-
-
- “This solution will recommend itself for areas where the
- severity of the decision tells, and should tell, on the enemy
- and where a gradual germanizing of the territory appears
- practicable.
-
-
-
- “2) The taking over and holding of areas which have no direct
- connection with Germany’s main body and which, like the Russian
- solution in Hangö, remain permanently as an enclave in the
- hostile state. Such areas might be considered possible around
- Brest and Trondheim . . . .
-
-
-
- “3) The power of Greater Germany in the strategic areas acquired
- in this war should result in the existing population of these
- areas feeling themselves and being politically, economically,
- and militarily completely dependent on Germany. If the following
- results are achieved—that expansion is undertaken (on a scale I
- shall describe later) by means of the military measures for
- occupation taken during the war, that French powers of
- resistance (popular unity, mineral resources, industry, armed
- forces) are so broken that a revival must be considered out of
- the question, that the smaller states such as the Netherlands,
- Denmark, and Norway are forced into a dependence on us which
- will enable us in any circumstances and at any time easily to
- occupy these countries again—then in practice the same, but
- psychologically much more, will be achieved.”
-
-Then Fricke recommends:
-
- “The solution given in 3), therefore, appears to be the proper
- one—that is, to crush France, to occupy Belgium and part of
- northern and eastern France, to allow the Netherlands, Denmark,
- and Norway to exist on the basis indicated above.”
-
-Then, the culminating paragraph of this report of Fricke reads as
-follows:
-
- “Time will show how far the outcome of the war with England will
- make an extension of these demands possible.”
-
-The submission of the Prosecution is that that and other documents which
-have been submitted to the Court tear apart the veil of the Nazi
-pretenses. These documents reveal the menace behind the good-will of
-Göring; they expose as fraudulent the diplomacy of Ribbentrop; they show
-the reality behind the ostensible political ideology of tradesmen in
-treason like Rosenberg; and finally and above all, they render sordid
-the professional status of Keitel and of Raeder.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will now adjourn.
-
- [_A recess was taken._]
-
-MR. ROBERTS: May it please the Tribunal, it is my duty to present that
-part of Count Two which relates to the allegations with regard to
-Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg. In Charges II, III, IV, IX,
-XI, XIII, XIV, XVIII, XIX, and XXIII there are charges of violating
-certain treaties and conventions and violating certain assurances. So
-far as the treaties are concerned, some of them have been put in
-evidence already, and I will indicate that when I come to them. May I,
-before I come to the detail, remind the Tribunal of the history of these
-unfortunate countries, the Netherlands and Belgium; especially Belgium,
-which for so many centuries was the cockpit of Europe.
-
-The independence of Belgium was guaranteed as the Tribunal will
-remember, in 1839 by the great European powers. That guarantee was
-observed for 75 years until it was shamelessly broken in 1914 by the
-Germans, who brought all the horrors of war to Belgium and all the even
-greater horrors of a German occupation of Belgium. History was to repeat
-itself in a still more shocking fashion some 25 years after in 1940 as
-the Tribunal already knows.
-
-The first treaty which was mentioned in these charges is the Hague
-Convention of 1907. That has been put in by my learned friend, Sir
-David, and I think I need say nothing about it.
-
-The second treaty is the Locarno Convention, the Arbitration and
-Conciliation Convention of 1925. My Lord, that was between Germany and
-Belgium. That was put in by Sir David. It is GB-15, and I think I need
-say nothing more about that.
-
-Belgium’s independence and neutrality was guaranteed by Germany in that
-document.
-
-My Lords, the next treaty is the Hague Arbitration Convention of May
-1926 between Germany and the Netherlands. That Document I ought formally
-to put in. It is in the _Reichsgesetzblatt_, which perhaps I may call
-RGB in the future for brevity; and it, no doubt, will be treated as a
-public document. But in my bundle of documents, which goes in the order
-in which I propose to refer to them, I think it is more convenient for
-the presentation of my case. That is the second or third document,
-TC-16.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: It is Book 4, is it?
-
-MR. ROBERTS: It is Book 4, My Lord. This is the Convention of
-Arbitration and Conciliation between Germany and the Netherlands signed
-at The Hague in May 1926. Your Lordships have the document; perhaps I
-need read only Article I:
-
- “The contracting parties”—those are the Netherlands and the
- German Reich—“undertake to submit all disputes of any nature
- whatever which may arise between them which it has not been
- possible to settle by diplomacy and which have not been referred
- to the Permanent Court of International Justice to be dealt with
- by arbitration or conciliation as provided.”
-
-And then, My Lords, there follow all the clauses which deal merely with
-the machinery of conciliation, which are unnecessary for me to read. May
-I just draw attention to the last article, Article 21, which provides
-that the Convention shall be valid for 10 years, and then shall remain
-in force for successive periods of 5 years until denounced by either
-party. And this treaty never was denounced by Germany at all.
-
-I put that document in as Document TC-16, which will be Exhibit GB-97;
-and a certified copy is put in and a translation for the Court.
-
-As the Tribunal already knows, in 1928 the Kellogg-Briand Pact was made
-at Paris, by which all the powers renounced recourse to war. That is put
-in as GB-18, and I need not, I think, put it in or refer to it again.
-
-Then the last treaty—all of which, of course, belong to the days of the
-Weimar Republic—is the Arbitration Treaty between Germany and
-Luxembourg executed in 1929. That is Document TC-20 in the bundle. It is
-two documents further on than the one the Tribunal has last referred to.
-That is the Treaty of Arbitration and Conciliation between Germany and
-Luxembourg signed at Geneva in 1929. May I just read the first few words
-of Article 1, which are familiar:
-
- “The contracting parties undertake to settle by peaceful means
- in accordance with the present treaty all disputes of any nature
- whatever which may arise between them and which it may not be
- possible to settle by diplomacy.”
-
-And then there follow the clauses dealing with the machinery for
-peaceful settlement of disputes, which follow the common form.
-
-My Lord, those were the treaty obligations. May I put in that last
-treaty, TC-20, which will be Exhibit GB-98.
-
-My Lord, those were the treaty obligations between Germany and Belgium
-at the time when the Nazi Party came into power in 1933; and as you have
-heard from my learned friend, Hitler adopted and ratified the
-obligations of Germany under the Weimar Republic with regard to the
-treaties which had been entered into. My Lord, nothing more occurred to
-alter the position of Belgium until in March 1936. Germany reoccupied
-the Rhineland, announced, of course, the resumption of conscription, and
-so on. And Hitler on the 7th of March 1936 purported in a speech to
-repudiate the obligations of the German Government under the Locarno
-Pact; the reason given being the execution of the Franco-Soviet Pact of
-1935. Sir David has dealt with that and has pointed out that there was
-no legal foundation for this claim to be entitled to renounce
-obligations under the Locarno Pact. But Belgium was, of course, left in
-the air in the sense that it had entered itself into various obligations
-under the Locarno Pact in return for the liabilities which other nations
-acknowledged; and now one of those liabilities, namely, the liability of
-Germany to observe the pact, had been renounced.
-
-And so My Lord, on the 30th of January 1937, perhaps because Hitler
-realized the position of Belgium and of the Netherlands, Hitler, in the
-next document in the bundle, TC-33 and 35, which I hand in and which
-will be Exhibit GB-99, gave the solemn assurance—he used the word
-“solemn”—to Belgium and to the Netherlands. That has already been read
-by the Attorney General and so I don’t want to read it again. But the
-Tribunal will see that it is a full guarantee. In April of 1937 in a
-document which is not before the Court, France and England released
-Belgium from her obligations under the Locarno Pact. It is a matter of
-history and it does occur in an exhibit, but it hasn’t been copied.
-Belgium, of course, gave guarantees of strict independence and
-neutrality; and France and England gave guarantees of assistance should
-Belgium be attacked. And it was because of that that Germany on the 13th
-of October 1937—in the next document—gave a very clear and
-unconditional guarantee to Belgium—Document TC-34, which I offer in
-evidence as Exhibit GB-100—the German declaration of the 13th of
-October 1937, which shows the minutes:
-
- “I have the honor on behalf of the German Government to make the
- following communication to Your Excellency:
-
-
-
- “The German Government have taken cognizance with particular
- interest of the public declaration in which the Belgian
- Government define the international position of Belgium. For
- their part they have repeatedly given expression, especially
- through the declaration of the Chancellor of the German Reich in
- his speech of the 30th of January 1937, to their own point of
- view. The German Government have also taken cognizance of the
- declaration made by the British and French Governments on the
- 24th of April 1937.”
-
-That is a document to which I have previously referred.
-
- “Since the conclusion of a treaty to replace the Treaty of
- Locarno may still take some time and being desirous of
- strengthening the peaceful aspirations of the two countries, the
- German Government regard it as appropriate to define now their
- own attitude towards Belgium. To this end they make the
- following declaration:
-
-
-
- “First: The German Government have taken note of the views which
- the Belgian Government have thought fit to express. That is to
- say, (a) of the policy of independence which they intend to
- exercise in full sovereignty; (b) of their determination to
- defend the frontiers of Belgium with all their forces against
- any aggression or invasion and to prevent Belgian territory from
- being used for purposes of aggression against another state as a
- passage or as a base of operation by land, by sea, or in the
- air, and to organize the defense of Belgium in an efficient
- manner to this purpose.
-
-
-
- “Second: The German Government consider that the inviolability
- and integrity of Belgium are common interests of the Western
- Powers. They confirm their determination that in no
- circumstances will they impair this inviolability and integrity,
- and that they will at all times respect Belgian territory
- except, of course, in the event of Belgium’s taking part in a
- military action directed against Germany in an armed conflict in
- which Germany is involved.
-
-
-
- “Third: The German Government, like the British and French
- Governments, are prepared to assist Belgium should she be
- subjected to an attack or to invasion.”
-
-And then, on the following page:
-
- “The Belgian Government have taken note with great satisfaction
- of the declaration communicated to them this day by the German
- Government. They thank the German Government warmly for this
- communication.”
-
-My Lord, may I pause there to emphasize that document. There in October
-of 1937 is Germany giving a solemn guarantee to this small nation of its
-peaceful aspiration towards her and its assertion that the integrity of
-the Belgian frontier was a common interest between her and Belgium and
-the other Western Powers.
-
-You have before you to try the leaders of the German Government and the
-leaders of the German Armed Forces. One doesn’t have to prove, does one,
-that every one of those accused must have known perfectly well of that
-solemn undertaking given by his government? Every one of these accused
-in their various spheres of activity—some more actively than the
-others—were party to the shameless breaking of that treaty two and a
-half years afterwards, and I submit that on the ordinary laws of
-inference and justice all those men must be fixed as active
-participators in that disgraceful breach of faith which brought misery
-and death to so many millions.
-
-Presumably it will be contended on the part, for instance, of Keitel and
-Jodl that they were merely honorable soldiers carrying out their duty.
-This Tribunal, no doubt, will inquire what code of honor they observe
-which permits them to violate the pledged word of their country.
-
-That this declaration of October 1937 meant very little to the leaders
-and to the High Command of Germany can be seen by the next document,
-which is Document PS-375 in the bundle. It is already an exhibit,
-USA-84, and has been referred to many times already. May I just
-refer—or remind the Tribunal—to one sentence or two. The document
-comes into existence on the 25th of August 1938 at the time when the
-Czechoslovakian drama was unfolding, and it was uncertain at that time
-whether there would be war with the Western Powers. It is top secret,
-prepared by the 5th section of the General Staff of the German Air
-Force. The subject: “Extended Case Green—Estimate of the Situation.”
-Probably the more correct words would be: “Appreciation of the Situation
-with Special Consideration of the Enemy.” Apparently some staff officer
-had been asked to prepare this appreciation. In view of the fact that it
-has been read before, I think I need only read the last paragraph which
-is Paragraph H and it comes at the bottom of Page 6, the last page but
-one of the document. Now H, “Requests to Armed Forces Supreme Command,
-Army and Navy”. This, you see, was an appreciation addressed by an Air
-Force staff officer. So these are requests to the Army and Navy. And
-then if one turns over the page, Number 4:
-
- “Belgium and the Netherlands would, in German hands, represent
- an extraordinary advantage in the prosecution of the air war
- against Great Britain as well as against France. Therefore it is
- held to be essential to obtain the opinion of the Army as to the
- conditions under which an occupation of this area could be
- carried out and how long it would take. And in this case it
- would be necessary to reassess the commitment against Great
- Britain.”
-
-The point that the Prosecution desires to make on that document is that
-it is apparently assumed by the staff officer who prepared this, and
-assumed quite rightly, that the leaders of the German nation and the
-High Command would not pay the smallest attention to the fact that
-Germany had given her word not to invade Holland or Belgium. They are
-recommending it as a militarily advantageous thing to do, strong in the
-knowledge that if the commanders and the Führer agree with that view
-treaties are to be completely ignored. Such, I repeat, was the honor of
-the German Government and of their leaders.
-
-Now in March of 1939 as has been proved, the remainder of Czechoslovakia
-was peacefully annexed; and then came the time for further guarantees in
-the next document, the assurances—TC-35 and 39—which were given to
-Belgium and the Netherlands on the 28th of April 1939.
-
-Those have been read by my learned friend, Major Elwyn Jones. They bear
-the number GB-78. I need not read them again.
-
-There is also a guarantee to Luxembourg, which is on the next page,
-TC-42 (a). That was given in the same speech by Hitler in the Reichstag
-where Hitler was dealing with a communication from Mr. Roosevelt who was
-feeling a little uneasy on the other side of the Atlantic as to Hitler’s
-intentions. May I, before I read this document, say that I believe the
-Tribunal will be seeing a film of the delivery by Hitler of this part of
-this speech; and you will have the privilege of seeing Hitler in one of
-his jocular moods, because this was greeted and was delivered in a
-jocular vein. And you will see in the film that the Defendant Göring who
-sits above Hitler in the Reichstag appreciates very much the joke, the
-joke being this: That it is an absurd suggestion to make that Germany
-could possibly go to war with any of its neighbors—and that was the
-point of the joke that everybody appears to have appreciated very much.
-
-Now, if I may read this document:
-
- “Finally Mr. Roosevelt demands the readiness to give him an
- assurance that the German fighting forces will not attack the
- territory or possessions of the following independent nations
- and above all that they will not march into them. And he goes on
- to name the following as the countries in question:
-
-
-
- “Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Norway, Sweden, Denmark,
- Holland, Belgium, Great Britain, Ireland, France, Portugal,
- Spain, Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Poland, Hungary,
- Romania, Yugoslavia, Russia, Bulgaria, Turkey, Iraq, Arabia,
- Syria, Palestine, Egypt, and Iran.
-
-
-
- “Answer: I started off by taking the trouble to find out in the
- case of the countries listed firstly, whether they feel
- themselves threatened and secondly, and particularly, whether
- this question Mr. Roosevelt has asked us was put as the result
- of a démarche by them or at least with their consent.
-
-
-
- “The answer was a general negative, which in some cases took the
- form of a blunt rejection. Actually this counter-question of
- mine could not be conveyed to some of the states and nations
- listed, since they are not at present in possession of their
- liberty (as for instance Syria) but are occupied by the military
- forces of democratic states and therefore deprived of all their
- rights.
-
-
-
- “Thirdly, apart from that, all the states bordering on Germany
- have received much more binding assurances and above all much
- more binding proposals than Mr. Roosevelt asked of me in his
- peculiar telegram.”
-
-You will see that although that is sneering at Mr. Roosevelt, it is
-suggesting in the presence, certainly, of the accused Göring as being
-quite absurd that Germany should nurture any warlike feeling against her
-neighbors. But the hollow falsity of that and the preceding guarantee is
-shown by the next document. May I put this document, TC-42 (a) in as
-Exhibit GB-101.
-
-The next document (L-79) which is Hitler’s conference of the 23rd of May
-has been referred to many times and is Exhibit USA-27. Therefore I need
-only very shortly remind the Tribunal of two passages. First of all, on
-the first page it is interesting to see who was present: The Führer,
-Göring, Admiral Raeder, Brauchitsch, Colonel General Keitel, and various
-others who are not accused. Colonel Warlimont was there. He, I
-understand, was Jodl’s deputy.
-
-Well now, the purpose of the conference was an analysis of the
-situation. Then may I refer to the third page down at the bottom. The
-stencil number is 819:
-
- “What will this struggle be like?”
-
-And then these words:
-
- “The Dutch and Belgian air bases must be occupied by armed
- force. Declarations of neutrality must be ignored.”
-
-Then, at the bottom:
-
- “Therefore, if England intends to intervene in the Polish war,
- we must occupy Holland with lightning speed. We must aim at
- securing a new defense line on Dutch soil up to the Zuyder Zee.”
-
-There is that decision made, “Declarations of neutrality must be
-ignored,” and there is the Grand Admiral present, and there is the Air
-Minister and Chief of the German Air Force, and there is General Keitel
-present. They all appear, and all their subsequent actions show that
-they acquiesced in that: Give your word and then break it. That is their
-code of honor. And you will see that at the end of the meeting, the very
-last page—the stencil number is 823—Field Marshal Göring asked one or
-two questions.
-
-There was the decision of the 23rd of May. Is it overstating the matter
-to submit that any syllable of guarantee, any assurance given after that
-is just purely hypocrisy, is just the action—apart from the
-multiplicity of the crimes here—of the common criminal?
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Roberts, I think we would like you so far as possible
-to confine yourself to the document.
-
-MR. ROBERTS: Yes, My Lord, then we go to the 22d of August, 798-PS. That
-has already been put in and is Exhibit USA-29. My Lord, that was
-Hitler’s speech of the 22d of August. It has been read and re-read. I,
-My Lord, refer only to one passage, and that is at the bottom of the
-second page:
-
- “Attack from the west from the Maginot Line: I consider this
- impossible.
-
-
-
- “Another possibility is the violation of Dutch, Belgian, and
- Swiss neutrality. I have no doubts that all these states as well
- as Scandinavia will defend their neutrality by all available
- means.”
-
-My Lord, I desire to emphasize the next sentence:
-
- “England and France will not violate the neutrality of these
- countries.”
-
-Then I desire to comment: I ask Your Lordship to bear that sentence in
-mind, that correct prophecy, when remembering the excuses given for the
-subsequent invasion of Belgium and the Netherlands.
-
-My Lord, the next documents are TC-36, 40, and 42. Those are three
-assurances. Number 36 is by the Ambassador of Germany to the Belgian
-Government:
-
- “In view of the gravity of the international situation, I am
- expressly instructed by the head of the German Reich to transmit
- to Your Majesty the following communication:
-
-
-
- “Though the German Government are at present doing everything in
- their power to arrive at a peaceful solution of the questions at
- issue between the Reich and Poland, they nevertheless desire to
- define clearly here and now the attitude which they propose to
- adopt towards Belgium should a conflict in Europe become
- inevitable.
-
-
-
- “The German Government are firmly determined to abide by the
- terms of the declaration contained in the German note of October
- 13, 1937. This provides in effect that Germany will in no
- circumstances impair the inviolability and integrity of Belgium
- and will at all times respect Belgian territory. The German
- Government renew this undertaking, however, in the expectation
- that the Belgian Government for their part will observe an
- attitude of strict neutrality and that Belgium will tolerate no
- violations on the part of a third power, but that on the
- contrary, she will oppose it with all the forces at her
- disposal. It goes without saying that if the Belgian Government
- were to adopt a different attitude the German Government would
- naturally be compelled to defend their interests in conformity
- with the new situation thus created.”
-
-My Lord, may I make one short comment on the last part of that document?
-I submit it is clear that the decision having been made to violate the
-neutrality, as we know, those last words were put in to afford some
-excuse in the future.
-
-That document will be Exhibit GB-102.
-
-My Lord, TC-40, the next document, is a similar document communicated to
-Her Majesty the Queen of the Netherlands on the same day, the 26th of
-August 1939. Subject to the Tribunal’s direction, I don’t think I need
-read it. It is a public document in the German document book, and it has
-exactly the same features.
-
-That will be Exhibit GB-103.
-
-Then My Lords, TC-42, the next document (Exhibit GB-104) is a similar
-document relating to Luxembourg. That is dated the 26th of August, the
-same day. I am not certain; it has two dates. I think it is the 26th of
-August. My Lords, that is in the same terms a complete guarantee with
-the sting in the tail as in the other two documents. Perhaps I need not
-read it.
-
-My Lords, as the Tribunal knows, Poland was occupied by means of the
-lightning victory; and in October German Armed Forces were free for
-other tasks. The first step that was taken so far as the Netherlands and
-Belgium are concerned is shown by the next document, which is, I think,
-in as GB-80; but the two central portions refer to Belgium and the
-Netherlands. It is the next document in Your Lordships’ bundle: Number
-4.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: TC-32?
-
-MR. ROBERTS: Yes. It begins with TC-32, and then if you go to the next
-one, My Lords will see TC-37 on the same page—and then TC-41; both 37
-and 41 refer to this matter. Now, this is a German assurance on the 6th
-of October 1939:
-
- “Belgium.
-
- “Immediately after I had taken over the affairs of the state I
- tried to create friendly relations with Belgium. I renounced any
- revision or any desire for revision. The Reich has not made any
- demands which would in any way be likely to be considered in
- Belgium as a threat.”
-
-My Lord, there is a similar assurance to the Netherlands—the next part
-of the document:
-
- “The new Reich has endeavored to continue the traditional
- friendship with the Netherlands. It has not taken over any
- existing differences between the two countries and has not
- created any new ones.”
-
-I submit it is impossible to overemphasize the importance of those
-assurances of Germany’s good faith.
-
-My Lord, the value of that good faith is shown by the next document
-which is of the very next day, the 7th of October. Those two guarantees
-were the 6th of October. Now we come to Document 2329-PS dated the 7th
-of October. It is from the Commander-in-Chief of the Army, Von
-Brauchitsch, and it is addressed to his Army groups. He said, third
-paragraph:
-
- “The Dutch border between Ems and Rhine is to be observed only.
-
-
-
- “At the same time Army Group B has to make all preparations
- according to special orders for immediate invasion of Dutch and
- Belgian territory if the political situation so demands.”
-
-“If the political situation so demands”—the day after the guarantee!
-
-It is quite clear from the next document. I put in the last document;
-that bears an original typewritten signature of Von Brauchitsch, and it
-will be Exhibit GB-105.
-
-My Lord, the next document is in two parts. Both are numbered C-62. The
-first part is dated the 9th of October 1939, 2 days after the document I
-have read. My Lord, that was all read by the Attorney General in opening
-down to the bottom of Paragraph (b). Therefore, I won’t read it again.
-May I remind the Tribunal just of one sentence.
-
- “Preparations should be made for offensive action on the
- northern flank of the Western Front crossing the area of
- Luxembourg, Belgium, and the Netherlands. This attack must be
- carried out as soon and as forcefully as possible.”
-
-In the next paragraph, may I just read six words:
-
- “The object of this attack is . . . to acquire as great an area
- of Holland, Belgium, and northern France as possible.”
-
-That document is signed by Hitler himself. It is addressed to the three
-accused: The Supreme Commander of the Army, Keitel; Navy, Raeder; and
-Air Minister, Commander-in-Chief of the Air Force, Göring. That appears
-from the distribution.
-
-I will hold that document over and will put that other one in with it.
-
-My Lord, the next document is the 15th of October 1939. It is from the
-Supreme Command of the Armed Forces. It is signed by Keitel in what is
-to some of us his familiar red pencil signature, and it is again
-addressed to Raeder and Göring and to the General Staff of the Army.
-
-Now that also has been read by the Attorney General; may I just remind
-the Tribunal that at the bottom of the page:
-
- “It must be the object of the Army’s preparations to occupy—on
- receipt of a special order—the territory of Holland in the
- first instance as far as the Grebbe-Maas”—or Meuse—“line”.
-
-The second paragraph deals with taking possession of the West Frisian
-Islands.
-
-It is clear, in my submission, beyond discussion that from that moment
-the decision to violate the neutrality of these three countries had been
-made. All that remained was to work out the details, to wait until the
-weather became favorable, and in the meantime, to give no hint that
-Germany’s word was about to be broken again. Otherwise these small
-countries might have had some chance of combining among themselves and
-with their neighbors.
-
-It will be Exhibit GB-106.
-
-Well, the next document is a Keitel directive. It is Document 440-PS
-(Exhibit GB-107). It, again, is sent to the Supreme Command of the Army,
-the Navy, and the Air Force; and it gives details of how the attack is
-to be carried out. I want to read only a very few selected passages.
-Paragraph 2 on the first page:
-
- “Contrary to previously issued instructions, all action intended
- against Holland may be carried out without a special order when
- the general attack will start.
-
-
-
- “The attitude of the Dutch Armed Forces cannot be anticipated
- ahead of time.”
-
-And then may I comment here: Would Your Lordship note this as a German
-concession?
-
- “Wherever there is no resistance the entry should carry the
- character of a peaceful occupation.”
-
-Then Paragraph (b) of the next paragraph:
-
- “At first the Dutch area including the West Frisian Islands
- . . . is to be occupied up to the Grebbe-Maas line.”
-
-The next two paragraphs, I need not read them, deal with action against
-the Belgian harbor; and in Paragraph 5):
-
- “The 7th Airborne Division”—they were parachutists—“will be
- committed for the airborne operation after the possession of
- bridges across the Albert Canal”—which is in Belgium as the
- Court knows—“is assured.”
-
-And then in Paragraph 6) (b) Luxembourg is mentioned. It is mentioned in
-Paragraph 5) as well. The signature is “Keitel,” but that is typed. It
-is authenticated by a staff officer.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Is that document in?
-
-MR. ROBERTS: GB-107, My Lord.
-
-Then the next document is C-10 (Exhibit GB-108) and it is dated the 28th
-of November 1939. That is a signature of Keitel in his red pencil and it
-is addressed to the Army, Navy, and Air Force. It deals with the fact
-that if a quick break-through should fail north of Liége—I think, My
-Lord, only machinery for carrying out the attack.
-
-Paragraph 2) shows clearly that the Netherlands is to be violated. It
-speaks of “the occupation of Walcheren Island and thereby Flushing,” and
-the “taking of one or more of the Meuse crossings between Namur and
-Dinant.”
-
-That will be 108.
-
-My Lord, the documents show that from November until March of 1940 the
-High Command and the Führer were waiting for favorable weather before
-A-Day, as they called it. That was the attack on Luxembourg, Belgium,
-and the Netherlands.
-
-My Lord, the next document, C-72, consists of 18 documents which range
-in date from the 7th of November until the 9th of May 1940. They are
-certified photostats I put in and they are all signed either by Keitel
-personally or by Jodl personally, and I don’t think it is necessary for
-me to read them. The Defense, I think, have all had copies of them, but
-they show that successively A-Day is being postponed for about a week,
-having regard to the weather reports. That will be Exhibit GB-109.
-
-My Lord, on the 10th of January 1940, as the Attorney General informed
-the Tribunal, a German airplane made a forced landing in Belgium. The
-occupants endeavored to burn the orders of which they were in
-possession, but they were only partially successful. And the next
-document I offer is Document TC-58 (a); it will be Exhibit GB-110. The
-original is a photostat certified by the Belgian Government which, of
-course, came into possession of the original.
-
-My Lord, I can summarize it. They are orders to the Commander of the 2d
-Air Force Fleet (Luftflotte) clearly for offensive action against
-France, Holland, and Belgium. One looks at the bottom of the first page.
-It deals with the disposition of the Belgian Army. The Belgian Army
-covers the Liége-Antwerp Line with its main force, its lighter forces in
-front of the Meuse-Schelde Canal. Then it deals with the disposition of
-the Dutch Army; and then if you turn over the page Number 3, you see
-that the German western army directs its attack between the North Sea
-and the Moselle with the strongest possible airforce support through the
-Belgian-Luxembourg region.
-
-My Lord, I think I need read no more. The rest are operational details
-as to the bombing of the various targets in Belgium and in Holland.
-
-My Lord, the next document I think is rather out of place for my
-purpose. My learned friend, Major Elwyn Jones, put in Jodl’s diary,
-which is GB-88, and I desire to refer very, very briefly to some
-extracts which are printed first in bundle Number 4.
-
-If one looks at the entry for the 1st of February 1940 and then some
-lines down . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: 1809-PS?
-
-MR. ROBERTS: Yes, that’s right, My Lord, and GB-88.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: We haven’t got the GB numbers on the documents.
-
-MR. ROBERTS: I am sorry, My Lord, it’s my mistake.
-
-If Your Lordship will look about eight lines down it says, “1700 hours
-General Jeschonnek”—and then:
-
- “1) Behavior of parachute units. In front of The Hague they have
- to be strong enough to break in if necessary by sheer brute
- force. The 7th Division intends to drop units near the town.
-
-
-
- “2) Political mission contrasts to some extent with violent
- action against the Dutch Air Force.”
-
-My Lord, I think the rest I need not read; it is operational detail.
-
-“2d February”—I refer again to Jodl’s entry under “a” as to “landings
-can be made in the center of The Hague.”
-
-If Your Lordship will turn over the page—I omit February the 5th—you
-come to 26th February:
-
- “Führer raises the question whether it is better to undertake
- the Weser Exercise before or after Case Yellow.”
-
-And then on the 3rd of March, the last sentence:
-
- “Führer decides to carry out Weser Exercise before Case Yellow
- with a few days’ interval.”
-
-And then My Lord, there is an entry to which I desire to call Your
-Lordship’s attention, on May the 8th, that is, 2 days before the
-invasion—the top of the page:
-
- “Alarming news from Holland, cancelling of furloughs,
- evacuations, road-blocks, other mobilization measures. According
- to reports of the intelligence service the British have asked
- for permission to march in, but the Dutch have refused.”
-
-My Lord, may I make two short comments on that? The first is that the
-Germans are rather objecting because the Dutch are actually making some
-preparations to resist their invasion: “Alarming news” as they wrote.
-The second point is that Jodl is there recording that the Dutch
-according to their intelligence reports are still adhering properly to
-their neutrality. But I need not read any more of the diary extracts.
-
-My Lord, that is the story except for the documents which were presented
-to Holland and to Belgium and to Luxembourg after the invasion was a
-_fait accompli_, because as history now knows at 4:30 a.m. on the 10th
-of May these three small countries were violently invaded with all the
-fury of modern warfare. No warning was given to them by Germany and no
-complaint was made by Germany of any breaches of any neutrality before
-this action was taken.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Perhaps this will be a convenient place to break off
-until 2 o’clock.
-
-MR. ROBERTS: If Your Lordship pleases.
-
- [_A recess was taken until 1400 hours._]
-
-
-
-
- _Afternoon Session_
-
-MR. ROBERTS: May it please the Tribunal, when the Court adjourned I had
-just come to the point at 4:30 a.m. on the 10th of May 1940 when the
-Germans invaded these three small countries without any warning—a
-violation which, the Prosecution submits, it is clear from the documents
-had been planned and decided upon months before.
-
-My Lord, before I close this part of the case, may I refer to three
-documents in conclusion. My Lord, the invasion having taken place at
-4:30 in the morning in each of the three countries, the German
-Ambassadors called upon representatives of the three governments some
-hours later and handed in a document which was similar in each case and
-which is described as a memorandum or an ultimatum. My Lord, an account
-of what happened in Belgium is set out in our Document TC-58, which is
-about five documents from the end of the bundle. It is headed, “Extract
-from Belgium—The Official Account of What Happened 1939-1940,” and I
-hand in an original copy, certified by the Belgian Government, which is
-Exhibit GB-111.
-
-My Lord, might I read short extracts? I read the third paragraph:
-
- “From 4:30 a.m. information was received which left no shadow of
- doubt: the hour had struck. Aircraft were first reported in the
- east. At 5 o’clock came news of the bombing of two Netherlands’
- airdromes, the violation of the Belgian frontier, the landing of
- German soldiers at the Eben-Emael Fort, the bombing of the
- Jemelle station.”
-
-My Lord, then I think I can go to two paragraphs lower down:
-
- “At 8:30 a.m. the German Ambassador came to the Ministry of
- Foreign Affairs. When he entered the Minister’s room, he began
- to take a paper from his pocket. M. Spaak”—that is the Belgian
- Minister—“stopped him: ‘I beg your pardon, Mr. Ambassador. I
- will speak first.’ And in an indignant voice, he read the
- Belgian Government’s protest: ‘Mr. Ambassador, the German Army
- has just attacked our country. This is the second time in 25
- years that Germany has committed a criminal aggression against a
- neutral and loyal Belgium. What has just happened is perhaps
- even more odious than the aggression of 1914. No ultimatum, no
- note, no protest of any kind has ever been placed before the
- Belgian Government. It is through the attack itself that Belgium
- has learned that Germany has violated the undertakings given by
- her on October 13th 1937 and renewed spontaneously at the
- beginning of the war. The act of aggression committed by Germany
- for which there is no justification whatever will deeply shock
- the conscience of the world. The German Reich will be held
- responsible by history. Belgium is resolved to defend herself.
- Her cause, which is the cause of Right, cannot be vanquished.’”
-
-Then I think I shall omit the next paragraph: “The Ambassador read the
-note . . . .” And in the last paragraph:
-
- “In the middle of this communication M. Spaak, who had by his
- side the Secretary-General, interrupted the Ambassador: ‘Hand me
- the document,’ he said. ‘I should like to spare you so painful a
- task.’ After studying the note, M. Spaak confined himself to
- pointing out that he had already replied by the protest he had
- just made.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal would like you to read what the Ambassador
-read.
-
-MR. ROBERTS: I am sorry. I was thinking of the next document I was going
-to read. I read the last paragraph on the first page:
-
- “The Ambassador was then able to read the note he had brought:
-
-
-
- “‘I am instructed by the Government of the Reich,’ he said, ‘to
- make the following declaration:
-
-
-
- “‘In order to forestall the invasion of Belgium, Holland, and
- Luxembourg, for which Great Britain and France have been making
- preparations clearly aimed at Germany, the Government of the
- Reich are compelled to ensure the neutrality of the three
- countries mentioned by means of arms. For this purpose the
- Government of the Reich will bring up an armed force of the
- greatest size so that resistance of any kind will be useless.
- The Government of the Reich guarantee Belgium’s European and
- colonial territory as well as her dynasty on condition that no
- resistance is offered. Should there be any resistance, Belgium
- will risk the destruction of her country and the loss of her
- independence. It is, therefore, in the interests of Belgium that
- the population be called upon to cease all resistance and that
- the authorities be given the necessary instructions to make
- contact with the German Military Command.’”
-
-My Lord, the so-called ultimatum handed in some hours after the invasion
-had started is Document TC-57, which is the last document but three in
-the bundle. It is the document I handed in and it becomes Exhibit
-GB-112. My Lord, it is a long document and I will read to the Tribunal
-such parts as the Tribunal thinks advisable:
-
- “The Reich Government”—it begins—“have for a long time had no
- doubts as to what was the chief aim of British and French war
- policy. It consists of the spreading of the war to other
- countries and of the misuse of their peoples as auxiliary and
- mercenary troops for England and France.
-
-
-
- “The last attempt of this sort was the plan to occupy
- Scandinavia with the help of Norway, in order to set up a new
- front against Germany in this region. It was only Germany’s last
- minute action which upset this project. Germany has furnished
- documentary evidence of this before the eyes of the world.
-
-
-
- “Immediately after the British-French action in Scandinavia
- miscarried, England and France took up their policy of war
- expansion in another direction. In this respect, while the
- retreat . . . from Norway was still going on, the English Prime
- Minister announced that, as a result of the altered situation in
- Scandinavia, England was once more in a position to go ahead
- with the transfer of the full weight of her Navy to the
- Mediterranean, and that English and French units were already on
- the way to Alexandria. The Mediterranean now became the center
- of English-French war propaganda. This was partly to gloss over
- the Scandinavian defeat and the big loss of prestige before
- their own people and before the world, and partly to make it
- appear that the Balkans had been chosen for the next theater of
- war against Germany.
-
-
-
- “In reality, however, this apparent shifting to the
- Mediterranean of English-French war policy had quite another
- purpose. It was nothing but a diversion maneuver in grand style
- to deceive Germany as to the direction of the next
- English-French attack. For, as the Reich Government have long
- been aware, the true aim of England and France is the carefully
- prepared and now immediately imminent attack on Germany in the
- West, so as to advance through Belgium and Holland to the region
- of the Ruhr.
-
-
-
- “Germany has recognized and respected the inviolability of
- Belgium and Holland, it being, of course, understood that these
- two countries in the event of a war of Germany against England
- and France would maintain the strictest neutrality.
-
-
-
- “Belgium and the Netherlands have not fulfilled this condition.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Roberts, do you think it is necessary to read this in
-full?
-
-MR. ROBERTS: No, I don’t. I was going to summarize these charges. If
-your Lordship would be good enough to look at the bottom of the first
-page, you will see the so-called ultimatum complaining of the hostile
-expressions in the Belgian and Netherlands press; and then, My Lord, in
-the second paragraph over the page there is an allegation of the
-attempts of the British Intelligence to bring a revolution in Germany
-with the assistance of Belgium and the Netherlands.
-
-Then, My Lord, in Paragraph 3 reference is made to military preparation
-of the two countries; and in Paragraph 4 it is pointed out that Belgium
-has fortified the Belgian-German frontier.
-
-A complaint is made in regard to Holland in Paragraph 5 that British
-aircraft have flown over the Netherlands’ country.
-
-There are, My Lord, other charges made against the neutrality of these
-two countries although no instances are given. I don’t think I need
-refer to anything on Page 3 of the document.
-
-Page 4, My Lord—I would like, if I might, to read the middle paragraph:
-
- “In this struggle for existence, forced upon the German people
- by England and France, the Reich Government are not disposed to
- await submissively the attack by England and France and to allow
- them to carry the war over Belgium and the other Netherlands
- into German territory.”
-
-And, My Lord, I just emphasize this sentence and then I read no further:
-
- “They have, therefore, now issued the command to German troops
- to ensure the neutrality of these countries by all the military
- means at the disposal of the Reich.”
-
-My Lord, it is unnecessary, in my submission, to emphasize the falsity
-of that statement. The world now knows that for months preparations had
-been made to violate the neutrality of these three countries. This
-document is saying the orders to do so have now been issued.
-
-My Lord, a similar document, similar in terms altogether was handed to
-the representatives of the Netherlands Government; My Lord, TC-60—that
-will be GB-113, which is the last document but one in the bundle. My
-Lord, that is a memorandum to the Luxembourg Government, which enclosed
-with it a copy of the document handed to the Governments of Belgium and
-the Netherlands.
-
-My Lord, I only desire to emphasize the second paragraph of TC-60:
-
- “In defense against the imminent attack the German troops have
- now received the order to safeguard the neutrality of these two
- countries . . . .”
-
-My Lord, the last document, TC-59, which I formerly put in, that is
-GB-111.
-
-My Lord, that is the dignified protest of the Belgian Government against
-the crime which was committed against her. My Lord, those are the facts
-supporting the charges of the violation of treaties and assurances
-against these three countries and supporting the allegation of the
-making of an aggressive war against them. My Lord, in the respectful
-submission of the Prosecution here the story is a very plain, a very
-simple one, a story of perfidy, dishonor, and shame.
-
-COLONEL H. J. PHILLIMORE (Junior Counsel for the United Kingdom): May it
-please the Tribunal, it is my task to present the evidence on the wars
-of aggression and wars in breach of treaties against Greece and
-Yugoslavia. The evidence which I shall put in to the Tribunal has been
-prepared in collaboration with my American colleague, Lieutenant Colonel
-Krucker.
-
-The invasion of Greece and Yugoslavia by the Germans, which took place
-in the early hours of the morning of the 6th of April 1941, constituted
-direct breaches of the Hague Convention of 1899 on the Pacific
-Settlement of International Disputes and of the Kellogg-Briand Pact of
-1928. Those breaches are charged, respectively, at Paragraphs I and XIII
-of Appendix C of the Indictment. Both have already been put in by my
-learned friend, Sir David Maxwell-Fyfe, who also explained the
-obligation of the German Government to the Governments of Yugoslavia and
-Greece under those pacts.
-
-In the case of Yugoslavia the invasion further constituted a breach of
-an express assurance by the Nazis, which is charged at Paragraph XXVI of
-Appendix C. This assurance was originally given in a German Foreign
-Office release made in Berlin on the 28th of April 1938 but was
-subsequently repeated by Hitler himself on the 6th of October 1939 in a
-speech he made in the Reichstag, and it is in respect of this last
-occasion that the assurance is specifically pleaded in the Indictment.
-
-May I ask the Tribunal to turn now to the first document in the document
-book, which is Book Number 5. The first document is 2719-PS, which is
-part of the document which has already been put in as Exhibit GB-58.
-This is the text of the German Foreign Office release on the 28th of
-April 1938, and I would read the beginning and then the last paragraph
-but one on the page:
-
- “Berlin, the 28th of April 1938. The State Secretary of the
- German Foreign Office to the German Diplomatic Representatives.
-
-
-
- “As a consequence of the reunion of Austria with the Reich we
- have now new frontiers with Italy, Yugoslavia, Switzerland,
- Liechtenstein and Hungary. These frontiers are regarded by us as
- final and inviolable. On this point the following special
- declarations have been made . . . .”
-
-And then to the last paragraph:
-
- “3. Yugoslavia. The Yugoslav Government have been informed by
- authoritative German quarters that German policy has no aims
- beyond Austria, and that the Yugoslav frontier would in any case
- remain untouched. In his speech made at Graz on the 3rd of April
- of that year the Führer and Chancellor stated that in regard to
- the reunion of Austria, Yugoslavia and Hungary had adopted the
- same attitude as Italy. We were happy to have frontiers there
- which relieved us of all anxiety about providing military
- protection for them.”
-
-Then, if I may, I will pass to the second document in the book, TC-92,
-and offer that as Exhibit GB-114. This is an extract from a speech made
-by Hitler on the occasion of the dinner in honor of the Prince Regent of
-Yugoslavia on June 1, 1939. I will read the extract in full:
-
- “The German friendship for the Yugoslav nation is not only a
- spontaneous one. It gained depth and durability in the midst of
- the tragic confusion of the World War. The German soldier then
- learned to appreciate and respect his extremely brave opponent.
- I believe that this feeling was reciprocated. This mutual
- respect finds confirmation in common political, cultural, and
- economic interests. We therefore look upon your Royal Highness’
- present visit as a living proof of the accuracy of our view, and
- at the same time, on that account we derive from it the hope
- that German-Yugoslav friendship may continue further to develop
- in the future and to grow ever closer.
-
-
-
- “In the presence of your Royal Highness, however, we also
- perceive a happy opportunity for a frank and friendly exchange
- of views which—and of this I am convinced—in this sense can
- only be fruitful to our two peoples and States. I believe this
- all the more because a firmly established reliable relationship
- of Germany and Yugoslavia, now that owing to historical events
- we have become neighbors with common boundaries fixed for all
- time, will not only guarantee lasting peace between our two
- peoples and countries but can also represent an element of calm
- to our nerve-racked continent. This peace is the goal of all who
- are disposed to perform really constructive work.”
-
-As we now know this speech was made at the time when Hitler had already
-decided upon the European war. I think I am right in saying it was a
-week after the Reich Chancellery conference, known as the Schmundt note,
-to which the Tribunal has been referred more than once. The reference to
-“nerve-racked continent” might perhaps be attributed to the war of
-nerves which Hitler had himself been conducting for many months.
-
-Now I pass to a document which is specifically pleaded at Paragraph XXVI
-as the assurance breached; it is the next document in the bundle,
-TC-43—German assurance to Yugoslavia of the 6th of October 1939. It is
-part of the document which has already been put in as Exhibit GB-80.
-This is an extract from the _Dokumente der Deutschen Politik_:
-
- “Immediately after the completion of the Anschluss I informed
- Yugoslavia that from now on the frontier with this country would
- also be an unalterable one and that we only desire to live in
- peace and friendship with her.”
-
-Despite the obligation of Germany under the Convention of 1899 and the
-Kellogg-Briand Pact and under the assurances which I have read, the fate
-of both Greece and Yugoslavia had, as we now know, been sealed ever
-since the meeting between Hitler and the Defendant Ribbentrop and Ciano
-at Obersalzberg, on the 12th and 13th of August 1939.
-
-We will pass to the next document in the bundle, which is TC-77. That
-document has already been put in as GB-48; and the passages to which I
-would draw Your Lordship’s attention already have been quoted, I think,
-by my learned friend, the Attorney General. Those passages are on Page 2
-in the last paragraph from “Generally speaking . . .” until “. . .
-neutral of this kind,” and then again on Pages 7 and 8, the part quoted
-by the Attorney General and emphasized particularly by Colonel
-Griffith-Jones at the foot of Page 7 on the second day of the meeting,
-the words beginning “In general, however, success by one of the Axis
-partners . . .” to “. . . Italy and Germany would have their backs free
-for work against the West.”
-
-Both of those passages have been quoted before; and if I might sum up
-the effect of the meeting as revealed by the document as a whole, it
-shows Hitler and the Defendant Ribbentrop, only 2 months after the
-dinner to the Prince Regent, seeking to persuade the Italians to make
-war on Yugoslavia at the same time that Germany commences hostilities
-against Poland, as Hitler had decided to do in the very near future.
-Ciano, while evidently in entire agreement with Hitler and Ribbentrop as
-to the desirability of liquidating Yugoslavia and himself anxious to
-secure Salonika, stated that Italy was not yet ready for a general
-European war.
-
-Despite all the persuasion which Hitler and the Defendant Ribbentrop
-exerted at the meeting, it became necessary for the Nazi conspirators to
-reassure their intended victim, Yugoslavia, since in fact Italy
-maintained her position and did not enter the war when the Germans
-invaded Poland, while the Germans themselves were not yet ready to
-strike in the Balkans. It was just for this reason that on the 6th of
-October through Hitler’s speech they repeated the assurance they had
-given in April 1938. It is, of course, a matter of history that after
-the defeat of the Allied armies in May and June 1940 the Italian
-Government declared war on France and that subsequently at 3 o’clock in
-the morning of the 28th October 1940 the Italian Minister at Athens
-presented the Greek Government with a 3 hours’ ultimatum upon the expiry
-of which Italian troops were already invading the soil of Greece.
-
-If I may quote to the Tribunal the words in which His Majesty’s Minister
-reported that event, “The President of the Council has assured himself
-an outstanding . . .”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: You have referred to a document?
-
-COL. PHILLIMORE: It is not in any of my documents. It is merely carrying
-the story to the next document:
-
- “The President of the Council has assured himself an outstanding
- place in Greek history, and whatever the future may bring, his
- foresight in quietly preparing his country for war, and his
- courage in resisting without demur the Italian ultimatum when
- delivered in the small hours of that October morning will surely
- obtain an honorable mention in the story of European statecraft.
- He means to fight until Italy is completely defeated, and this
- reflects the purpose of the whole Greek nation.”
-
-I turn now to the next document in the bundle. That is 2762-PS, a letter
-from Hitler to Mussolini, which I put in as GB-115. Although not dated,
-I think it is clear from the contents that it was written shortly after
-the Italian invasion of Greece. It has been quoted in full by the
-Attorney General, but I think it would assist the Tribunal if I read
-just the last two paragraphs of the extract:
-
- “Yugoslavia must become disinterested if possible, however, from
- our point of view interested in co-operating in the liquidation
- of the Greek question. Without assurances from Yugoslavia, it is
- useless to risk any successful operation in the Balkans.
-
-
-
- “Unfortunately I must stress the fact that waging a war in the
- Balkans before March is impossible. Therefore any threatening
- move towards Yugoslavia would be useless since the impossibility
- of a materialization of such threats before March is well known
- to the Serbian General Staff. Therefore Yugoslavia must, if at
- all possible, be won over by other means and other ways.”
-
-You may think the reference in the first two lines to his
-thoughts—having been with Mussolini for the last 14 days—probably
-indicates that it was written in about the middle of November, shortly
-after the Italian attack.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Could you give us the date of the Italian attack?
-
-COL. PHILLIMORE: 28th October 1940.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Thank you.
-
-COL. PHILLIMORE: As the Tribunal will see from the succeeding document,
-it was at this time that Hitler was making his plans for the offensive
-in the spring of 1941, which included the invasion of Greece from the
-north. This letter shows that it was an integral part of those plans
-that Yugoslavia should be induced to co-operate in them or at least to
-maintain a disinterested attitude toward the liquidation of the other
-Balkan states.
-
-I pass now to the next document in the bundle, 444-PS, which becomes
-Exhibit GB-116. It is a top-secret directive issued from the Führer’s
-headquarters, signed by Hitler, initialed by the Defendant Jodl, and
-dated the 12th of November 1940. I will read the first two lines and
-then pass to Paragraph 4 on the third page:
-
- “Directive Number 18. The preparatory measures of Supreme
- Headquarters for the prosecution of the war in the near future
- are to be made along the following lines . . .”
-
-Omitting the serious dealings with operations against Gibraltar and an
-offensive against Egypt, I will read Paragraph 4 on the third page:
-
- “Balkans . . . The Commander-in-Chief of the Army will make
- preparations for occupying the Greek mainland north of the
- Aegean Sea in case of need, entering through Bulgaria, and thus
- make possible the use of German Air Force units against targets
- in the eastern Mediterranean, in particular against those
- English air bases which are threatening the Romanian oil area.
-
-
-
- “In order to be able to face all eventualities and to keep
- Turkey in check, the use of an army group of an approximate
- strength of 10 divisions is to be the basis for the planning and
- the calculations of deployment. It will not be possible to count
- on the railway leading through Yugoslavia for moving these
- forces into position.
-
-
-
- “So as to shorten the time needed for the deployment,
- preparations will be made for an early increase in the German
- Army mission in Romania, the extent of which must be submitted
- to me.
-
-
-
- “The Commander-in-Chief of the Air Force will make preparations
- for the use of German Air Force units in the southeast Balkans
- and for aerial reconnaissance on the southern border of Bulgaria
- in accordance with the intended ground operations.”
-
-I don’t think I need trouble the Tribunal with the rest. The next
-document in the bundle, 1541-PS, which I offer in evidence as Exhibit
-GB-117, is the directive issued for the actual attack on Greece. Before
-reading it, it might be convenient if I summarized the position of the
-Italian invading forces at that time as this is one of the factors
-mentioned by Hitler in the directive. I can put it very shortly. I again
-use the words in which His Majesty’s Minister reported:
-
- “The morale of the Greek Army throughout has been of the
- highest, and our own naval and land successes at Taranto and in
- the western desert have done much to maintain it.
-
-
-
- “With relatively poor armaments and the minimum of equipment and
- modern facilities they have driven back or captured superior
- Italian forces more frequently than not at the point of the
- bayonet. The modern Greeks have thus shown that they are not
- unworthy of the ancient traditions of their country and that
- they, like their distant forefathers, are prepared to fight
- against odds to maintain their freedom.”
-
-In fact the Italians were getting the worst of it, and it was time that
-Hitler came to the rescue. Accordingly this directive was issued on 13
-December 1940; it is top-secret Directive Number 20 for the Operation
-Marita. The distribution included, of course, the Commander of the Navy,
-that would, of course, be the Defendant Raeder; one to the Commander of
-the Air Force, which would be the Defendant Göring; one to the Supreme
-Command of the Armed Forces, Keitel; and one to the Command Staff, which
-I take it, would be the Defendant Jodl. I shall read the first two
-paragraphs and then summarize the next two, if I may:
-
- “The result in the battles of Albania is not yet decisive.
- Because of a dangerous situation in Albania it is doubly
- necessary that the British endeavor to create air bases under
- the protection of a Balkan front—which would be dangerous above
- all to Italy as well as to the Romanian oil fields—be foiled.
-
-
-
- “My plan, therefore, is (a) to form a slowly increasing task
- force in southern Romania within the next months (b) after the
- setting in of favorable weather—probably in March—to send this
- task force for the occupation of the Aegean north coast by way
- of Bulgaria and, if necessary, to occupy the entire Greek
- mainland (Operation Marita). The support of Bulgaria is to be
- expected.”
-
-The next paragraph gives the forces for the operation, and Paragraph 4
-deals with the Operation Marita itself. Paragraph 5 states:
-
- “The military preparations which will produce exceptional
- political results in the Balkans demand the exact control of all
- the necessary measures by the High Command. The transport
- through Hungary and the arrival in Romania will be reported step
- by step by the High Command of the Armed Forces and are to be
- explained at first as a strengthening of the German Army mission
- in Romania. Consultations with the Romanians or the Bulgarians
- which may point to our intentions as well as notification of the
- Italians are each subject to my consent, also the sending of
- scouting missions and advanced parties.”
-
-I think I need not trouble the Tribunal with the rest. The next
-document, 448-PS, which I put in as Exhibit GB-118, is again a
-top-secret directive carrying the plan a little further; it deals with
-decidedly different aspects, the direct support of the Italian forces in
-Albania. I read, if I may, the first short paragraph and then the
-paragraph at the foot of the page.
-
- “The situation in the Mediterranean theater of operations
- demands German assistance for strategical, political, and
- psychological reasons due to employment of superior forces by
- England against our allies.”
-
-And in Paragraph 3 after dealing with the forces to be transferred to
-Albania the directive sets out what the duties of the German forces will
-be:
-
- “a) To serve in Albania for the time being as a reserve for an
- emergency case should new crises arise there.
-
-
-
- “b) To ease the burden of the Italian Army group when later
- attacking with the aim:
-
-
-
- “To tear open the Greek defense front on a decisive point for a
- far-reaching operation.
-
-
-
- “To open up the straits west of Salonika from the back in order
- to support thereby the frontal attack of List’s army.”
-
-That directive was signed by Hitler and, as can be seen on the original
-which I have put in, it was initialed by both the Defendant Keitel and
-the Defendant Jodl. Here again, of course, a copy went to the Defendant
-Raeder, and I take it that the copy sent to foreign intelligence would
-probably reach the Defendant Ribbentrop.
-
-I pass to C-134, the next document in the bundle, which becomes Exhibit
-GB-119. This records a conference which took place on the 19th and 20th
-of January between the Defendant Keitel and the Italian General Guzzoni
-and which was followed by a meeting between Hitler and Mussolini at
-which the Defendants Ribbentrop, Keitel, and Jodl were present.
-
-I need not trouble the Tribunal with the meeting with the Italians, but
-if you would pass to Page 3 of the document, there is a paragraph there
-in the speech, which the Führer made, which is perhaps just worth
-reading—the speech by the Führer on the 20th of January 1941, in the
-middle of Page 3. It sets out that the speech was made after the
-conference with the Italians and then shows who was present.
-
-On the German side I would call your attention to the presence of the
-Minister for Foreign Affairs, the Chief of the Supreme Command of the
-Armed Forces, and the Chief of the Armed Forces Operational Staff. That
-is, of course, the Defendants Ribbentrop, Keitel and Jodl; and on the
-Italian side, the Duce, Ciano, and then three generals. It is the last
-paragraph that I would wish to read:
-
- “The massing of troops in Romania serves a threefold purpose:
-
-
-
- “a. An operation against Greece;
-
-
-
- “b. Protection of Bulgaria against Russia and Turkey;
-
-
-
- “c. Safeguarding the guarantee to Romania.
-
-
-
- “Each of these tasks requires its own group of forces;
- altogether, therefore, very strong forces whose deployment far
- from our base requires a long time.
-
-
-
- “Desirable that this deployment is completed without
- interference from the enemy. Therefore disclose the game as late
- as possible. The tendency will be to cross the Danube at the
- last possible moment and to line up for attack at the earliest
- possible moment.”
-
-I pass to the next document, 1746-PS, which I offer as GB-120. That
-document is in three parts. It consists, in the first place, of a
-conference between Field Marshal List and the Bulgarians on the 8th of
-February. The second part and the third part deal with later events, and
-I will, if I may, come back to them at an appropriate time. I would read
-the first and the last paragraphs on the first page of this document:
-
- “Minutes of questions discussed between the representatives of
- the Royal Bulgarian General Staff and the German High
- Command—General Field Marshal List—in connection with the
- possible movement of German troops through Bulgaria and their
- commitment against Greece and possibly against Turkey, if she
- should involve herself in the war.”
-
-And then the last paragraph on the page shows the plan being concerted
-with the Bulgarians—Paragraph 3:
-
- “The Bulgarian and the German General Staffs will take all
- measures in order to camouflage the preparation of the
- operations and to assure in this way the most favorable
- conditions for the execution of the German operations as
- planned.
-
- “The representatives of the two general staffs consider it
- suitable to inform their governments that it will be advisable
- of necessity to take secrecy and surprise into consideration
- when the Three Power Treaty is signed by Bulgaria, in order to
- assure the success of the military operations.”
-
-I pass then to the next document, C-59. I offer that as Exhibit GB-121.
-It is a further top-secret directive of the 19th of February. I need
-not, I think, read it. All that is set out of importance is the date for
-the Operation Marita. It sets out that the bridge across the Danube is
-to be begun on the 28th of February, the river crossed on the 2d of
-March, and the final orders to be issued on the 26th of February at the
-latest.
-
-It is perhaps worth noting that on the original which I have put in, the
-actual dates are filled in in the handwriting of the Defendant Keitel.
-
-It is perhaps just worth setting out the position of Bulgaria at this
-moment. Bulgaria adhered to the Three Power Pact on the 1st of March
-. . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: What year?
-
-COL. PHILLIMORE: In 1941, and on the same day the entry of German troops
-into Bulgaria began in accordance with the Plan Marita and the
-directives to which I have referred the Tribunal.
-
-The landing of British troops in Greece on the 3rd of March in
-accordance with the guarantee given in the spring of 1939 by His
-Majesty’s Government may have accelerated the movement of the German
-forces; but, as the Tribunal will have seen, the invasion of Greece had
-been planned long beforehand and was already in progress at this time.
-
-I pass now to the next document in the bundle, C-167, which I put in as
-GB-122. I am afraid it is not a very satisfactory copy, but the original
-which I have put in shows that both the Defendants Keitel and Jodl were
-present at the interview with Hitler which this extract records. It is a
-short extract from a report by the Defendant Raeder on an interview with
-Hitler in the presence of the Defendants Keitel and Jodl. It is perhaps
-interesting as showing the ruthless nature of the German intention.
-
- “The Commander-in-Chief of the Navy asks for confirmation that
- the whole of Greece will have to be occupied even in the event
- of a peaceful settlement.
-
-
-
- “Führer: The complete occupation is a prerequisite of any
- settlement.”
-
-The above document . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Is it dated?
-
-COL. PHILLIMORE: It took place on the 18th of March at 1600 hours.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Is that on the original document?
-
-COL. PHILLIMORE: Yes, on the original document.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Yes.
-
-COL. PHILLIMORE: The document I have referred to shows, it is submitted,
-that the Nazi conspirators in accordance with their principle of
-liquidating any neutral who did not remain disinterested had made every
-preparation by the end of January and were at this date in the process
-of moving the necessary troops to ensure the final liquidation of
-Greece, which was already at war with and getting the better of their
-Italian allies.
-
-They were not, however, yet ready to deal with Yugoslavia towards which
-their policy accordingly remained one of lulling the unsuspecting
-victim. On the 25th of March 1941 in accordance with this policy, the
-adherence of Yugoslavia to the Three Power Pact was secured. This
-adherence followed a visit on the 15th of February 1941 by the Yugoslav
-Premier Cvetković and the Foreign Minister Cinkar-Markovic to the
-Defendant Ribbentrop at Salzburg and subsequently to Hitler at
-Berchtesgaden, after which these ministers were induced to sign the Pact
-at Vienna on the 25th of March. On this occasion the Defendant
-Ribbentrop wrote the two letters of assurance, which are set out in the
-next document in the bundle, 2450-PS, which I put in as GB-123. If I
-might read from half-way down the page:
-
- “Notes of the Axis Governments to Belgrade.
-
-
-
- “At the same time when the protocol on the entry of Yugoslavia
- to the Tri-Partite Pact was signed, the Governments of the Axis
- Powers sent to the Yugoslavian Government the following
- identical notes:
-
-
-
- “‘Mr. Prime Minister:
-
-
-
- “‘In the name of the German Government and at their behest I
- have the honor to inform Your Excellency of the following:
-
-
-
- “‘On the occasion of the Yugoslavian entry today into the
- Tri-Partite Pact the German Government confirm their
- determination to respect the sovereignty and territorial
- integrity of Yugoslavia at all times.’”
-
-That letter was signed by the Defendant Ribbentrop, who you will
-remember, was present at the meeting in August of 1939 when he and
-Hitler tried to persuade the Italians to invade Yugoslavia. In fact it
-was 11 days after this letter was written that the Germans did invade
-Yugoslavia and 2 days after the letter was written that they issued the
-necessary order.
-
-If I might read the second letter:
-
- “Mr. Prime Minister:
-
- “With reference to the conversations that occurred in connection
- with the entry of Yugoslavia into the Tri-Partite Pact, I have
- the honor to confirm to Your Excellency herewith in the name of
- the Reich Cabinet”—Reichsregierung—“that in the agreement
- between the Axis Powers and the Royal Yugoslavian Government the
- Governments of the Axis Powers during this war will not direct a
- demand to Yugoslavia to permit the march or transportation of
- troops through Yugoslavian national territory.”
-
-The position at this stage, the 25th of March 1941, was therefore, that
-German troops were already in Bulgaria moving towards the Greek
-frontier, while Yugoslavia had, to use Hitler’s own term in his letter
-to Mussolini, “become disinterested” in the cleaning-up of the Greek
-question.
-
-The importance of the adherence of Yugoslavia to the Three Power Pact
-appears very clearly from the next document in the bundle, 2765-PS,
-which I put in as GB-124. It is an extract from the minutes of a meeting
-between Hitler and Ciano, and if I might just read the first paragraph:
-
- “The Führer first expressed his satisfaction with Yugoslavia’s
- joining the Tri-Partite Pact and the resulting definition of her
- position. This is of special importance in view of the proposed
- military action against Greece, for if one considers that for
- 350 to 400 kilometers the important line of communication
- through Bulgaria runs within 20 kilometers of the Yugoslav
- border, one can judge that with a dubious attitude of Yugoslavia
- an undertaking against Greece would have been militarily an
- extremely foolhardy venture.”
-
-Again it is a matter of history that on the night of the 26th of March,
-when the two Yugoslav Ministers returned to Belgrade, General Simovic
-and his colleagues effected their removal by a _coup d’état_; and
-Yugoslavia emerged on the morning of the 27th of March ready to defend,
-if need be, her independence. The Yugoslav people had found themselves.
-
-The Nazis reacted to this altered situation with lightning rapidity, and
-the immediate liquidation of Yugoslavia was decided on.
-
-I ask the Tribunal to turn back to 1746-PS, which I put in as GB-120, to
-the second part on Page 3 of the document consisting of a record of a
-conference of Hitler and the German High Command on the situation in
-Yugoslavia dated 27th of March 1941.
-
-It shows that those present included the Führer; the Reich Marshal, that
-is of course, the Defendant Göring; Chief, OKW, that is the Defendant
-Keitel; Chief of the Wehrmacht Führungsstab, that is the Defendant Jodl.
-Then over the page—“later on the following persons were added.” I call
-the Tribunal’s attention to the fact that those who came in later
-included the Defendant Ribbentrop.
-
-If I might read the part of Hitler’s statement set out on Page 4:
-
- “The Führer describes Yugoslavia’s situation after the _coup
- d’état_. Statement that Yugoslavia was an uncertain factor in
- regard to the coming Marita action and even more in regard to
- the Barbarossa undertaking later on. Serbs and Slovenes were
- never pro-Germans.”
-
-I think I can pass on to the second paragraph:
-
- “The present moment is for political and military reasons
- favorable for us to ascertain the actual situation in the
- country and the country’s attitude towards us. For if the
- overthrow of the government would have happened during the
- Barbarossa action, the consequences for us probably would have
- been considerably more serious.”
-
-And then the next paragraph to which I would particularly draw the
-Tribunal’s attention:
-
- “The Führer is determined, without waiting for possible loyalty
- declarations of the new government, to make all preparations in
- order to destroy Yugoslavia militarily and as a national unit.
- No diplomatic inquiries will be made nor ultimatums presented.
- Assurances of the Yugoslav Government which cannot be trusted
- anyhow in the future will be taken note of. The attack will
- start as soon as the means and troops suitable for it are ready.
-
-
-
- “It is important that actions will be taken as fast as possible.
- An attempt will be made to let the bordering states participate
- in a suitable way. An actual military support against Yugoslavia
- is to be requested of Italy, Hungary, and in certain respects of
- Bulgaria too. Romania’s main task is the protection against
- Russia. The Hungarian and the Bulgarian Ministers have already
- been notified. During the day a message will still be addressed
- to the Duce.
-
-
-
- “Politically it is especially important that the blow against
- Yugoslavia is carried out with unmerciful harshness and that the
- military destruction is done in a lightning-like undertaking. In
- this way Turkey would become sufficiently frightened and the
- campaign against Greece later on would be influenced in a
- favorable way. It can be assumed that the Croats will come to
- our side when we attack. A corresponding political treatment
- (autonomy later on) will be assured to them. The war against
- Yugoslavia should be very popular in Italy, Hungary, and
- Bulgaria, as territorial acquisitions are to be promised to
- these states; the Adriatic coast for Italy, the Banat for
- Hungary, and Macedonia for Bulgaria.
-
-
-
- “This plan assumes that we speed up the schedule of all
- preparations and use such strong forces that the Yugoslav
- collapse will take place within the shortest time.”
-
-Well, of course, the Tribunal will have noted that in that third
-paragraph—2 days after the pact had been signed and the assurances
-given—because there has been a _coup d’état_ and it is just possible
-that the operations against Greece may be affected, the destruction of
-Yugoslavia is decided upon without any question of taking the trouble to
-ascertain the views of the new government.
-
-Then there is one short passage on Page 5, the next page of the
-document, which I would like to read:
-
- “5) The main task of the Air Force is to start as early as
- possible with the destruction of the Yugoslavian Air Force
- ground installations and to destroy the capital Belgrade in
- attacks by waves . . . .”
-
-I pause there to comment; we now know, of course, how ruthlessly this
-bombing was done when the residential areas of Belgrade were bombed at 7
-o’clock on the following Sunday morning, the morning of the 6th.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The 6th of April?
-
-COL. PHILLIMORE: The 6th of April.
-
-Then again still in the same document, the last part of it, Part V at
-Page 5; a tentative plan is set out, drawn up by the Defendant Jodl and
-I would read one small paragraph at the top of the following page, Page
-6:
-
- “In the event that the political development requires an armed
- intervention against Yugoslavia, it is the German intention to
- attack Yugoslavia in a concentric way as soon as possible, to
- destroy her armed forces, and to dissolve her national
- territory.”
-
-I read that because the plan is issued from the office of the Defendant
-Jodl.
-
-Now passing to the next document in the bundle, C-127, I put that in as
-Exhibit GB-125. It is an extract from the order issued after the meeting
-from the minutes of which I have just read, that is the meeting of the
-27th of March recorded in 1746-PS, Part II. It is worth reading the
-first paragraph:
-
- “The military Putsch in Yugoslavia has altered the political
- situation in the Balkans. Yugoslavia must, in spite of her
- protestations of loyalty, for the time being be considered as an
- enemy and therefore be crushed as speedily as possible.”
-
-I pass to the next document, 1835-PS, which I put in evidence as GB-126.
-It is an original telegram containing a letter from Hitler to Mussolini
-forwarded through the German Ambassador in Rome by Hitler and the
-Defendant Ribbentrop. It is written to advise Mussolini of the course
-decided on and under the guise of somewhat fulsome language the Duce is
-given his orders. If I might read the first five paragraphs:
-
- “Duce, events force me to give you, Duce, by this the quickest
- means, my estimation of the situation and the consequences which
- may result from it.
-
-
-
- “(1) From the beginning I have regarded Yugoslavia as the most
- dangerous factor in the controversy with Greece. Considered from
- the purely military point of view, German intervention in the
- war in Thrace would not be at all justified as long as the
- attitude of Yugoslavia remains ambiguous, and she could threaten
- the left flank of the advancing columns on our enormous front.
-
-
-
- “(2) For this reason I have done everything and honestly have
- endeavored to bring Yugoslavia into our community bound together
- by mutual interests. Unfortunately these endeavors did not meet
- with success, or they were begun too late to produce any
- definite result. Today’s reports leave no doubt as to the
- imminent turn in the foreign policy of Yugoslavia.
-
-
-
- “(3) I do not consider this situation as being catastrophic, but
- nevertheless a difficult one, and we on our part must avoid any
- mistake if we do not want in the end to endanger our whole
- position.
-
-
-
- “(4) Therefore I have already arranged for all necessary
- measures in order to meet a critical development with necessary
- military means. The change in the deployment of our troops has
- been ordered also in Bulgaria. Now I would cordially request
- you, Duce, not to undertake any further operations in Albania in
- the course of the next few days. I consider it necessary that
- you should cover and screen the most important passes from
- Yugoslavia into Albania with all available forces.
-
-
-
- “These measures should not be considered as designed for a long
- period of time, but as auxiliary measures designed to prevent
- for at least 14 days to 3 weeks a crisis arising.
-
-
-
- “I also consider it necessary, Duce, that you should reinforce
- your forces on the Italian-Yugoslav front with all available
- means and with utmost speed.
-
-
-
- “(5) I also consider it necessary, Duce, that everything which
- we do and order be shrouded in absolute secrecy and that only
- personalities who necessarily must be notified know anything
- about them. These measures will completely lose their value
- should they become known . . . .”
-
-Then he goes on to emphasize further the importance of secrecy.
-
-I pass to R-95; the next document in the bundle, which I put in as
-Exhibit GB-127. It was referred to by my learned friend, the Attorney
-General. It is an operational order signed by General Von Brauchitsch
-which is merely passing to the armies the orders contained in Directive
-Number 25, which was the Document C-127, an extract of which I put in as
-Exhibit GB-125. I won’t trouble the Tribunal with reading it.
-
-I pass to TC-93, which has already been put in with TC-92 as GB-114. The
-invasion of Greece and Yugoslavia took place on this morning, the 6th of
-April, on which Hitler issued the proclamation from which this passage
-is an extract:
-
- “From the beginning of the struggle it has been England’s
- steadfast endeavor to make the Balkans a theater of war. British
- diplomacy did, in fact, using the model of the World War,
- succeed in first ensnaring Greece by a guarantee offered to her
- and then finally in misusing her for Britain’s purposes.
-
-
-
- “The documents published today afford”—that refers to the
- _German White Book_ which they published of all the documents
- leading up to the invasion—“The documents published today
- afford a glimpse of a practice which in accordance with very old
- British recipes is a constant attempt to induce others to fight
- and bleed for British interests.
-
-
-
- “In the face of this I have always emphasized that: (1) The
- German people have no antagonism to the Greek people but that
- (2) we shall never as in the World War tolerate a power
- establishing itself on Greek territory with the object, at a
- given time, of being able to advance thence from the southeast
- into German living space. We have swept the northern flank free
- of the English; we are resolved not to tolerate such a threat in
- the south.”
-
-Then the paragraph to which I would draw the Tribunal’s particular
-attention:
-
- “In the interests of a genuine consolidation of Europe it has
- been my endeavor since the day of my assumption of power above
- all to establish a friendly relationship with Yugoslavia. I have
- consciously put out of mind everything that once took place
- between Germany and Serbia. I have not only offered the Serbian
- people the hand of the German people, but in addition have made
- efforts as an honest broker to assist in bridging all
- difficulties which existed between the Yugoslav State and
- various nations allied to Germany.”
-
-One can only think that when he issued that proclamation Hitler must
-momentarily have forgotten the meeting with Ciano in August of 1939 and
-the meeting with the Defendant Ribbentrop and the others on 27th March a
-few days earlier.
-
-I pass to the last document in the bundle. It is a document which has
-already been put in, L-172, and it was put in as Exhibit USA-34. It is a
-record of a lecture delivered by the Defendant Jodl on 7th November
-1943. At Page 4 there is a short passage which sets out his views two
-and a half years later on the action taken in April 1941. I refer to
-Paragraph 11 on Page 4:
-
- “What was, however, less acceptable was the necessity of
- affording our assistance as an ally in the Balkans in
- consequence of the ‘extra-turn’ of the Italians against Greece.
- The attack which they launched in the autumn of 1940 from
- Albania with totally inadequate means was contrary to all
- agreement but in the end led to a decision on our part
- which—taking a long view of the matter—would have become
- necessary in any case sooner or later. The planned attack on
- Greece from the north was not executed merely as an operation in
- aid of an ally. Its real purpose was to prevent the British from
- gaining a foothold in Greece and from menacing our Romanian oil
- area from that country.”
-
-If I might summarize the story:
-
-The invasion of Greece was decided on at least as early as December or
-November 1940 and planned for the end of March or the beginning of April
-1941. No consideration was at any time given to any obligations under
-treaties or conventions which might make such invasion a breach of
-international law. Care was taken to conceal the preparations so that
-the German forces might have an unsuspecting victim.
-
-In the meanwhile Yugoslavia, although to be liquidated in due course,
-was clearly better left for a later stage. Every effort was made to
-secure her co-operation for the offensive against Greece or at least to
-ensure that she would abstain from any interference.
-
-The _coup d’état_ of General Simovic upset this plan and it was then
-decided that irrespective of whether or not his government had any
-hostile intentions towards Germany, or even of supporting the Greeks,
-Yugoslavia must be liquidated.
-
-It was not worth while to take any steps to ascertain Yugoslavia’s
-intentions when it would be so little trouble now that the German troops
-were deployed to destroy her militarily and as a national unit.
-Accordingly in the early hours of Sunday morning, the 6th of April,
-German troops marched into Yugoslavia without warning and into Greece
-simultaneously with the formality of handing a note to the Greek
-Minister in Berlin informing him that the German forces were entering
-Greece to drive out the British. M. Koryzis, the Greek Minister, in
-replying to information of the invasion from the German Embassy, replied
-that history was repeating itself and that Greece was being attacked by
-Germany in the same way as by Italy. Greece returned, he said, the same
-reply as in the preceding October.
-
-That concludes the evidence in respect of Greece and Yugoslavia. But as
-I have the honor to conclude the British case I would like, if the
-Tribunal would allow me, to draw their attention, very shortly indeed,
-to one common factor which runs through the whole of this aggression. I
-can do it, I think, in 5 minutes.
-
-It is an element in the diplomatic technique of aggression which was
-used with singular consistency not only by the Nazis themselves but also
-by their Italian friends. Their technique was essentially based upon
-securing the maximum advantage from surprise even though only a few
-hours of unopposed military advance into the country of the unsuspecting
-victim could thus be secured. Thus there was, of course, no declaration
-of war in the case of Poland.
-
-The invasion of Norway and of Denmark began in the small hours of the
-night of April 8-9 and was well under way as a military operation before
-the diplomatic explanations and excuses were presented to the Danish
-Foreign Minister at 4:20 a.m. on the morning of the 9th and to the
-Norwegian Minister between half past 4 and 5 on that morning.
-
-The invasion of Belgium, Luxembourg, and Holland began not later than 5
-o’clock, in most cases earlier in the small hours of the 10th of May,
-while the formal ultimatum delivered in each case with the diplomatic
-excuses and explanations was not presented until afterwards.
-
-In the case of Holland the invasion began between 3 and 4 in the
-morning. It was not until about 6 when The Hague had already been bombed
-that the German Minister asked to see M. Van Kleffens. In the case of
-Belgium where the bombing began at 5, the German Minister did not see M.
-Spaak until 8.
-
-The invasion of Luxembourg began at 4 and it was at 7 when the German
-Minister asked to see M. Beck.
-
-Mussolini copied this technique. It was 3 o’clock on the morning of the
-28th of October in 1940 when his Minister in Athens presented a 3-hour
-ultimatum to General Metaxas.
-
-The invasions of Greece and Yugoslavia, as I have said, both began in
-the small hours of April 6, 1941. In the case of Yugoslavia no
-diplomatic exchange took place even after the event, but a proclamation
-was issued by Hitler—a proclamation from which I read an extract—at 5
-o’clock that Sunday morning some 2 hours before Belgrade was bombed.
-
-In the case of Greece, once again, it was at 20 minutes past 5 that M.
-Koryzis was informed that German troops were entering Greek territory.
-
-The manner in which this long series of aggressions was carried out is
-in itself further evidence of the essentially aggressive and treacherous
-character of the Nazi regime. Attack without warning at night to secure
-an initial advantage and proffer excuses or reasons afterwards. Their
-method of procedure is clearly the method of the barbarian, of the state
-which has no respect for its own pledged word nor for the rights of any
-people but its own.
-
-One is tempted to speculate whether this technique was evolved by the
-honest broker himself or by his honest clerk, the Defendant Ribbentrop.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Alderman, will you be ready to go on after a short
-adjournment? That’s what you were intending to do?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: Yes.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: We’ll adjourn for 10 minutes.
-
- [_A recess was taken._]
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: May it please the Tribunal, before proceeding with the
-presentation of the evidence relating to the aggression against the
-Soviet Union, I shall take about 15 minutes to offer two further
-documents relating to the aggression against Austria.
-
-These two documents are stapled in a supplementary book, supplement to
-Document Book N. Both documents are correspondence of the British
-Foreign Office. They have been made available to us through the courtesy
-of our British colleagues.
-
-First I offer in evidence Document 3045-PS as Exhibit USA-127. This is
-in two parts. The first is a letter dated 12 March 1938, from Ambassador
-Nevile Henderson at the British Embassy, Berlin, to Lord Halifax. It
-reads:
-
- “My Lord:
-
- “With reference to your telegram Number 79 of March 11th, I have
- the honor to transmit to Your Lordship herewith a copy of a
- letter which I addressed to Baron Von Neurath in accordance with
- the instructions contained therein and which was delivered on
- the same evening.
-
-
-
- “The French Ambassador addressed a similar letter to Baron Von
- Neurath at the same time.”
-
-The enclosure is the note of March 11th from the British Embassy to
-Defendant Von Neurath and it reads as follows:
-
- “Dear Reich Minister:
-
- “My Government are informed that a German ultimatum was
- delivered this afternoon at Vienna demanding, _inter alia_, the
- resignation of the Chancellor and his replacement by the
- Minister of the Interior, a new Cabinet of which two-thirds of
- the members were to be National Socialists and the readmission
- of the Austrian Legion to the country with the duty of keeping
- order in Vienna.
-
-
-
- “I am instructed by my Government to represent immediately to
- the German Government that if this report is correct His
- Majesty’s Government in the United Kingdom feel bound to
- register a protest in the strongest terms against such use of
- coercion backed by force against an independent state in order
- to create a situation incompatible with its national
- independence.
-
-
-
- “As the German Minister for Foreign Affairs has already been
- informed in London, such action is found to produce the greatest
- reactions of which it is impossible to foretell the issues.”
-
-I now offer Document 3287-PS, as Exhibit Number USA-128. This consists
-of a transmittal from the British Embassy, Berlin, to the British
-Foreign Office of Defendant Von Neurath’s letter of response dated 12
-March 1938. The letter is identified in the document with the letter
-“L”.
-
-First the Defendant Von Neurath objected to the fact that the British
-Government were undertaking the role of protector of Austria’s
-independence. I quote from the second paragraph of his letter:
-
- “In the name of the German Government I must point out here that
- the Royal British Government have no right to assume the role of
- a protector of Austria’s independence. In the course of
- diplomatic consultations on the Austrian question, the German
- Government never left any doubt with the Royal British
- Government that the formation of relations between Germany and
- Austria could not be considered anything but the inner concern
- of the German people and that it did not affect a third power.”
-
-Then in response to the assertions regarding Germany’s ultimatum, Von
-Neurath set out what he stated to be the true version of events. I quote
-the last two long paragraphs of the letter; in the English translation I
-start at the bottom of Page 1 of the letter:
-
- “Instead, the former Austrian Chancellor announced on the
- evening of the 9th of March the surprising and arbitrary
- resolution decided on by himself to hold an election within a
- few days which, under the prevailing circumstances and
- especially according to the details provided for the execution
- of the election, could and was to have the sole purpose of
- oppressing politically the predominant majority of the
- population of Austria. As could have been foreseen, this
- procedure, being a flagrant violation of the agreement of
- Berchtesgaden, led to a very critical point in Austria’s
- internal situation. It was only natural that the members of the
- then Austrian Cabinet who had not taken part in the decision for
- an election protested very strongly against it. Therefore a
- crisis of the Cabinet occurred in Vienna which, on the 11th of
- March, resulted in the resignation of the former Chancellor and
- in the formation of a new Cabinet. It is untrue that the Reich
- used forceful pressure to bring about this development.
- Especially the assertion which was spread later by the former
- Chancellor that the German Government had presented the Federal
- President with a conditional ultimatum, is a pure invention;
- according to the ultimatum he had to appoint a proposed
- candidate as Chancellor and to form a Cabinet conforming to the
- proposals of the German Government otherwise the invasion of
- Austria by German troops was held in prospect. The truth of the
- matter is that the question of sending military or police forces
- from the Reich was only brought up when the newly formed
- Austrian Cabinet addressed a telegram, already published by the
- press, to the German Government urgently asking for the dispatch
- of German troops as soon as possible in order to restore peace
- and in order to avoid bloodshed. Faced with the immediately
- threatening danger of a bloody civil war in Austria, the German
- Government then decided to comply with the appeal addressed to
- it.
-
-
-
- “This being the state of affairs, it is impossible that the
- attitude of the German Government as asserted in your letter
- could lead to some unforseeable reactions. A complete picture of
- the political situation is given in the proclamation which, at
- noon today, the German Reich Chancellor has addressed to the
- German people. Dangerous reactions to this situation can take
- place only if eventually a third party should try to exercise
- its influence contrary to the peaceful intentions and legitimate
- aims of the German Government on the shaping of events in
- Austria, which would be incompatible with the right of
- self-government of the German people.”
-
-That ends the quotation.
-
-Now in the light of the evidence which has already been presented to the
-Tribunal, this version of the events given by the Defendant Von Neurath
-is a hollow mockery of the truth.
-
-We have learned, from the portions quoted from Document 1780-PS, Exhibit
-Number USA-72, Jodl’s diary, the entry for March 10, 1938, the fact that
-Von Neurath was taking over the duties of the Foreign Office while
-Ribbentrop was detained in London, that the Führer wished to send an
-ultimatum to the Austrian Cabinet, that he had dispatched a letter to
-Mussolini of his reasons for taking action, and that army mobilization
-orders were given.
-
-We have seen the true facts about the ultimatum from two different
-documents. I refer to 812-PS, Exhibit Number USA-61, report of Gauleiter
-Rainer to Reichskommissar Bürckel, dated 6 July 1939, which was
-transmitted to the Defendant Seyss-Inquart on 22 August 1939. The
-portions reporting on the events of March 11 have already been read to
-the Tribunal.
-
-I also refer to Document 2949-PS, Exhibit USA-76, the transcripts of
-Göring’s telephone conversations, relevant portions of which I have
-already read to the Tribunal.
-
-These documents emphatically show and with unmistakable clarity, that
-the German Nazis did present an ultimatum to the Austrian Government
-that they would send troops across the border if Schuschnigg did not
-resign and if Defendant Seyss-Inquart were not appointed Chancellor.
-
-These documents also show that the impetus of the famous telegram came
-from Berlin and not from Vienna, that Göring composed the telegram and
-Seyss-Inquart did not even have to send it, but merely said “agreed.”
-
-The transcript of Göring’s telephone call to Ribbentrop is indicated as
-Part W of that document. In it the formula was developed and recited for
-English consumption that there had been no ultimatum and that the German
-troops crossed the border in response only to the telegram.
-
-And now in this document from which I have just read we find the same
-bogus formula coming from the pen of the Defendant Von Neurath. He was
-at the meeting of November 5, 1937, of which we have the Hossbach
-minutes, Exhibit USA-25. And so he knew very well the firmly held Nazi
-ideas with respect to Austria and Czechoslovakia. And yet in the period
-after March 10, 1938 when he was handling the foreign affairs for this
-conspiracy and particularly after the invasion of Austria, he played out
-his part in making false representations. He gave an assurance to Mr.
-Mastny regarding the continued independence of Austria. I refer to the
-document introduced by Sir David Maxwell-Fyfe, Document TC-27, Exhibit
-GB-21.
-
-And we see him here still handling foreign affairs, although using the
-letterhead of the Secret Cabinet Council as the exhibit shows, reciting
-this diplomatic fable with respect to the Austrian situation, a story
-also encountered by us in the transcript of the Göring-Ribbentrop
-telephone call, all in furtherance of the aims of what we call the
-conspiracy.
-
-Now, if the Tribunal please, it might have been fitting and appropriate
-for me to present the case on collaboration with Japan and the attack on
-the United States on this December 7, 1945, the fourth anniversary of
-the attack on Pearl Harbor. However, our plan was to proceed
-chronologically so that part of the case must wait its turn for the
-presentation next week.
-
-We now come to the climax of this amazing story of wars of aggression,
-perhaps one of the most colossal mis-estimates in history, when Hitler’s
-intuition led him and his associates to launch an aggressive war against
-the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
-
-In my last appearance before the Tribunal I presented an account of the
-aggression against Czechoslovakia. In the meantime our British
-colleagues have given you the evidence covering the formulation of the
-plan to attack Poland and the preparations and initiation of actual
-aggressive war. In addition they have laid before the Tribunal the story
-of the expansion of the war into a general war of aggression involving
-the planning and execution of attacks on Denmark, Norway, Belgium and
-the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Yugoslavia, Greece; and in doing so the
-British Prosecution has marshalled and presented to the Court various
-international treaties, agreements, and assurances, and the evidence
-establishing the breaching of those treaties and assurances.
-
-I should like to present to the Tribunal now the account of the last but
-one of the defendants’ acts of aggression, the invasion of the U.S.S.R.
-The section of the Indictment in which this crime is charged is Count
-One, Section IV (F), Paragraph 6, German invasion on 22 June 1941 of the
-U.S.S.R. territory in violation of the Non-Aggression Pact of 23 August
-1939. The first sentence of this paragraph is the one with which we
-shall be concerned today. It reads:
-
- “On 22 June 1941 the Nazi conspirators deceitfully denounced the
- Non-Aggression Pact between Germany and the U.S.S.R. and without
- any declaration of war invaded Soviet territory thereby
- beginning a war of aggression against the U.S.S.R.”
-
-The documents having a bearing on this phase of the case are contained
-in document book marked “P,” which we now hand to the Court.
-
-First, if the Tribunal please, the inception of the plan. As a point of
-departure for the story of aggression against the Soviet Union, I should
-like to take the date 23 August 1939. On that date just a week before
-the invasion of Poland, the Nazi conspirators caused Germany to enter
-into the Treaty of Non-Aggression with the U.S.S.R. which is referred to
-in this section of the Indictment which I have just quoted. This treaty,
-Document Number TC-25, will be introduced in evidence by our British
-colleagues, but it contains two articles which I should like to bring to
-the attention of the Tribunal. Article I provides as follows:
-
- “The two contracting parties undertake to refrain from any act
- of violence, any aggressive action, or any attack against one
- another, whether individually or jointly with other powers.”
-
-Article V provides that, should disputes or conflicts arise between the
-contracting parties regarding questions of any kind whatsoever, the two
-parties would clear away these disputes or conflicts solely by friendly
-exchanges of view or, if necessary, by arbitration commissions.
-
-It is well to keep these solemn pledges in mind during the course of the
-story which is to follow. This treaty was signed for the German
-Government by the Defendant Ribbentrop. Its announcement came as
-somewhat of a surprise to the world since it appeared to constitute a
-reversal of the previous trend of Nazi foreign policy. The explanation
-for this about-face has been provided, however, by no less eminent a
-witness than the Defendant Ribbentrop himself in a discussion which he
-had with the Japanese Ambassador Oshima in Fuschl on 23 February 1941. A
-report of that conference was forwarded by Ribbentrop to certain German
-diplomats in the field for their strictly confidential and purely
-personal information. This report we now have. It is Number 1834-PS. I
-offer it in evidence as Exhibit USA-129, the original German document.
-
-On Page 2 of the English translation, Ribbentrop tells Oshima the reason
-for the pact with the U.S.S.R. That is Page 2 of the German:
-
- “Then when it came to war the Führer decided on a compromise
- with Russia—as a necessity for avoiding a two-front war.”
-
-In view of the spirit of opportunism which motivated the Nazis in
-entering into this solemn pledge of arbitration and non-aggression, it
-is not very surprising to find that they regarded it as they did all
-treaties and pledges, as binding on them only so long as it was
-expedient for them to be bound. That they did so regard it is evidenced
-by the fact that even while the campaign in the West was still in
-progress they began to consider the possibility of launching a war of
-aggression against the U.S.S.R.
-
-In a speech to Reichs- and Gauleiter at Munich in November 1943, which
-is set forth in our Document L-172 already in evidence as Exhibit Number
-USA-34, the Defendant Jodl admitted—and I shall read from Page 7 of the
-English translation, which is at Page 15 of the original German text:
-
- “Parallel with all these developments realization was steadily
- growing of the danger drawing constantly nearer from the
- Bolshevik East—that danger which has been only too little
- perceived in Germany and of late, for diplomatic reasons, had
- deliberately to be ignored. However, the Führer himself has
- always kept this danger steadily in view and even as far back as
- during the Western campaign had informed me of his fundamental
- decision to take steps against this danger the moment our
- military position made it at all possible.”
-
-At the time this decision was made, however, the Western campaign was
-still in progress, and so any action in the East necessarily had to be
-postponed for the time being. On 22 June 1940, however, the
-Franco-German armistice was signed at Compiègne, and the campaign in the
-West with the exception of the war against Britain came to an end. The
-view that Germany’s key to political and economic domination lay in the
-elimination of the U.S.S.R. as a political factor and in the acquisition
-of Lebensraum at her expense had long been basic in Nazi ideology. As we
-have seen, this idea had never been completely forgotten even while the
-war in the West was in progress. Now flushed with the recent success of
-their arms and yet keenly conscious of both their failure to defeat
-Britain and the needs of their armies for food and raw materials, the
-Nazis began serious consideration of the means for achieving their
-traditional ambition by conquering the Soviet Union.
-
-The situation in which Germany now found herself made such action appear
-both desirable and practical. As early as August of 1940 General Thomas
-received a hint from the Defendant Göring that planning for a campaign
-against the Soviet Union was already under way. Thomas at that time was
-the Chief of the “Wirtschaftsrüstungsamt” of the OKW.
-
-I should, perhaps, mention that this office is generally referred to in
-the German documents by the abbreviation Wi Rü.
-
-General Thomas tells of receiving this information from Göring in his
-draft of a work entitled _Basic Facts for a History of German War and
-Armament Economy_, which he prepared during the summer of 1944. This
-book is our Document 2353-PS and has already been admitted into evidence
-as Exhibit USA-35. I am sorry, it was marked that for identification
-purposes. I now offer it in evidence as Exhibit Number USA-35.
-
-On Pages 313 to 315 of this work Thomas discusses the Russo-German Trade
-Agreement of 1939 and relates how, since the Soviets were delivering
-quickly and well under this agreement and were requesting war materials
-in return, there was much pressure in Germany until early in 1940 for
-increased delivery on the part of the Germans. However, at Page 315 he
-has the following to say about the change of heart expressed by the
-German leaders in August of 1940. I read from Page 9 of the English
-translation:
-
- “On August 14 the Chief of the Wirtschaftsrüstungsamt during a
- conference with Reich Marshal Göring, was informed that the
- Führer desired punctual delivery to the Russians only until
- spring 1941. Later on we were to have no further interest in
- completely satisfying the Russian demands. This allusion moved
- the Chief of the Wirtschaftsrüstungsamt to give priority to
- matters concerning Russian war economy.”
-
-I shall refer to this statement again later when I discuss the
-preparation for the economic exploitation of Soviet territory expected
-to be captured. At that time, too, I shall introduce evidence which will
-show that in November of 1940 Göring informed Thomas that a campaign was
-planned against the U.S.S.R.
-
-Preparations for so large an undertaking as an invasion of the Soviet
-Union necessarily entailed even these many months in advance of the date
-of execution, certain activity in the East in the way of construction
-projects and strengthening of forces. Such activity could not be
-expected to pass unnoticed by the Soviet Intelligence Service.
-Counter-intelligence measures were obviously called for.
-
-In an OKW directive signed by the Defendant Jodl and issued to the
-counter-intelligence service abroad on 6 September 1940, such measures
-were ordered. This directive is our Number 1229-PS and I offer it in
-evidence as Exhibit USA-130, a photostat of the captured German
-document. This directive pointed out that the activity in the East must
-not be permitted to create the impression in the Soviet Union that an
-offensive was being prepared, and outlined the line for the
-counter-intelligence people to take to disguise this fact. The text of
-the directive indicates by implication the extent of the preparations
-already under way, and I should like to read it to the Tribunal:
-
- “The Eastern territory will be manned stronger in the weeks to
- come. By the end of October the status shown on the enclosed map
- is supposed to be reached.
-
- “These regroupings must not create the impression in Russia that
- we are preparing an offensive in the East. On the other hand,
- Russia will realize that strong and highly trained German troops
- are stationed in the Government General, in the Eastern
- Provinces and in the Protectorate; she should draw the
- conclusion that we can at any time protect our
- interests—especially in the Balkans—with strong forces against
- Russian seizure.
-
-
-
- “For the work of our own intelligence service as well as for the
- answer to questions of the Russian Intelligence Service, the
- following directives apply:
-
-
-
- “1) The respective total strength of the German troops in the
- East is to be veiled as far as possible by giving news about a
- frequent change of the army units there. This change is to be
- explained by movements into training camps, regroupings, _et
- cetera_.
-
-
-
- “2) The impression is to be created that the center of the
- massing of troops is in the southern part of the Government, in
- the Protectorate, and in Austria, and that the massing in the
- north is relatively unimportant.
-
-
-
- “3) When it comes to the equipment situation of the units,
- especially of the armored divisions, things are to be
- exaggerated, if necessary.
-
-
-
- “4) By suitable news the impression is to be created that the
- antiaircraft protection in the East has been increased
- considerably after the end of the campaign in the West and that
- it continues to be increased with captured French material on
- all important targets.
-
-
-
- “5) Concerning improvements on railroads, roads, airdromes, _et
- cetera_, it is to be stated that the work is kept within normal
- limits, is needed for the improvement of the newly won eastern
- territories, and serves primarily economical traffic.
-
-
-
- “The Supreme Command of the Army (OKH) decides to what extent
- correct details, i.e., numbers of regiments, manning of
- garrisons, _et cetera_, will be made available to the defense
- for purposes of counter espionage.
-
-
-
- “The Chief of the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces, by order
- of”—signed—“Jodl.”
-
-Early in November of 1940 Hitler reiterated his previous orders and
-called for a continuation of preparations, promising further and more
-definite instructions as soon as this preliminary work produced a
-general outline of the Army’s operational plan. This order was contained
-in a top-secret directive from the Führer’s headquarters, Number 18,
-dated 12 November 1940, signed by Hitler and initialed by Jodl. It is
-Number 444-PS in our numbered series and is already in evidence as
-Exhibit Number GB-116.
-
-The directive begins by saying:
-
- “The preparatory measures of supreme headquarters for the
- prosecution of the war in the near future are to be made along
- the following lines . . . .”
-
-It then outlines plans for the various theaters and the policy regarding
-relations with other countries and says regarding the U.S.S.R.—and I
-read now from Page 3, Paragraph Number 5 of the English translation:
-
- “Political discussions have been initiated with the aim of
- clarifying Russia’s attitude for the time being. Irrespective of
- the results of these discussions all preparations for the East
- which have already been verbally ordered will be continued.
-
-
-
- “Instructions on this will follow as soon as the general outline
- of the Army’s operational plans have been submitted to, and
- approved by me.”
-
-On the 5th of December 1940 the Chief of the General Staff of the Army,
-at that time General Halder, reported to the Führer concerning the
-progress of the plans for the coming operation against the U.S.S.R. A
-report of this conference with Hitler is contained in captured Document
-Number 1799-PS. This is a folder containing many documents all labeled
-annexes and all bearing on Fall Barbarossa, the plan against the
-U.S.S.R. This folder was discovered in the War Diary of the
-Wehrmachtführungsstab and was apparently an enclosure to that diary.
-
-The report I am here referring to is Annex Number 1 and is dated
-December 1940.
-
-I now offer in evidence Document Number 1799-PS as United States Exhibit
-Number 131. I should also like to read into the record a few sentences
-from the report of 5 December 1940 as they indicate the state of the
-planning for this act of aggression six and a half months before it
-occurred.
-
- “Report to the Führer on 5 December 1940.
-
-
-
- “The Chief of the General Staff of the Army then reported about
- the planned operation in the East. He expanded at first on the
- geographical fundamentals. The main war industrial centers are
- in the Ukraine, in Moscow and in Leningrad.”
-
-Then skipping:
-
- “The Führer declares that he has agreed with the discussed
- operational plans and adds the following:
-
-
-
- “The most important goal is to prevent the Russians from
- withdrawing on a closed front. The eastward advance should be
- combined until the Russian Air Force will be unable to attack
- the territory of the German Reich and on the other hand the
- German Air Force will be enabled to conduct raids to destroy
- Russian war industrial territory. In this way we should be able
- to achieve the annihilation of the Russian Army and to prevent
- its regeneration. The first commitment of the forces should take
- place in such a way as to make the annihilation of strong enemy
- units possible.”
-
-Then, skipping again:
-
- “It is essential that the Russians should not take up positions
- in the rear again. The number of 130 to 140 divisions as planned
- for the entire operation is sufficient.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Would that be a good time to break off?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: Very convenient, Sir.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Then we shall not sit in open session tomorrow. We will
-sit again on Monday at 10 o’clock.
-
- [_The Tribunal adjourned until 10 December 1945 at 1000 hours._]
-
-
-
-
- SIXTEENTH DAY
- Monday, 10 December 1945
-
-
- _Morning Session_
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal has received a letter from Dr. Dix on behalf
-of the Defendant Schacht. In answer to that the Tribunal wishes the
-defendants’ counsel to know that they will be permitted to make one
-speech only in accordance with Article 24 (h) of the Charter, and this
-speech will be at the conclusion of all the evidence.
-
-At the conclusion of the case for the Prosecution, the defendants’
-counsel will be invited to submit to the Tribunal the evidence they
-propose to call; but they will be strictly confined to the names of the
-witnesses and the matters to which their evidence will be relevant, and
-this submission must not be in the nature of a speech. Is that clear? In
-case there should be any misunderstanding, what I have just said will be
-posted up on the board in the defendants’ Counsel Room so that you can
-study it there.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: May it please the Tribunal, when the Tribunal rose Friday,
-I had just reached the point in my discussion of aggression against the
-U.S.S.R. where, with the campaign in the West at an end, the Nazi
-conspirators had begun the development of their plans to attack the
-Soviet Union. Preliminary high level planning and action was in
-progress. Hitler had indicated earlier in November that more detailed
-and definite instructions would be issued. These would be issued as soon
-as the general outline of the Army’s operational plans had been
-submitted to him and approved by him. We had thus reached the point in
-the story indicated on the outline submitted last Friday as Part 3 of
-the Plan Barbarossa.
-
-By the 18th of December 1940, the general outline of the Army’s
-operational plan having been submitted to Hitler, the basic strategical
-directive to the High Command of the Army, Navy, and the Air Force for
-Barbarossa—Directive Number 21—was issued. This directive, which for
-the first time marks the plan to invade the Soviet Union, was
-specifically referred to in an order although the order was classified
-top secret. It also marked the first use of the code word Barbarossa to
-denote this operation.
-
-The directive is Number 446-PS, and was offered in evidence in the
-course of my opening statement as Exhibit USA-31. Since it was fully
-discussed at that time, it is, I believe, sufficient now merely to
-recall to the Tribunal two or three of the most significant sentences in
-that document. Most of these sentences appear on Page 1 of the English
-translation. One of the most significant, I believe, is this sentence
-with which the order begins:
-
- “The German Armed Forces must be prepared to crush Soviet Russia
- in a quick campaign even before the end of the war with
- England.”
-
-On the same page it is stated:
-
- “Preparations requiring more time to start are, if this has not
- yet been done, to begin presently and are to be completed by 15
- May 1941. Great caution has to be exercised that the intention
- of the attack will not be recognized.”
-
-The directive then outlines the broad strategy on which the intended
-invasion was to proceed and the parts that the various services (Army,
-Navy, and Air Force) were to play therein, and calls for oral reports to
-Hitler by the commanders-in-chief, closing as follows:
-
- “V.”—that is on Page 2—“I am expecting the reports of the
- commanders-in-chief on their further plans based on this letter
- of instructions.
-
-
-
- “The preparations planned by all branches of the Armed Forces
- are to be reported to me through the High Command, also in
- regard to their time.”
-
-Signed by Hitler, and initialed by Jodl, Keitel, Warlimont, and one
-illegible name.
-
-It is perfectly clear both from the contents of the order itself as well
-as from its history, which I have outlined, that this directive was no
-mere planning exercise by the staff. It was an order to prepare for an
-act of aggression, which was intended to occur and which actually did
-occur.
-
-The various services which received the order certainly understood it as
-an order to prepare for action, and did not view it as a hypothetical
-staff problem. This is plain from the detailed planning and preparation
-which they immediately undertook in order to implement the general
-scheme set forth in this basic directive.
-
-So we come to the military planning and preparation for the
-implementation of Plan Barbarossa. The Naval War Diary for 13 January
-1941 indicates the early compliance of the OKM with that part of
-Directive Number 21 which ordered progress in preparation to be reported
-to Hitler through the High Command of the Armed Forces. This entry in
-the War Diary is Document C-35 in our numbered series, and I offer it in
-evidence as Exhibit USA-132.
-
-This document contains a substantial amount of technical information
-concerning the Navy’s part in the coming campaign and the manner in
-which it was preparing itself to play the part. I feel, however, that it
-will be sufficient for the establishment of our point that the Navy was
-actively preparing for the attack at this early date, to read only a
-small portion of the entry into the record, beginning on Page 1 of the
-English translation, which is Page 401 of the Diary itself. The entry
-reads:
-
- “30 January 1941.
-
-
-
- “7. Talk by Ia about the plans and preparations for the
- Barbarossa Case to be submitted to the High Command of Armed
- Forces.”
-
-I should note that “Ia” is in this case the abbreviation for a deputy
-chief of naval operations. Then follows a list of the Navy’s objectives
-in the war against Russia. Under the latter many tasks for the Navy are
-listed, but I think one is sufficiently typical to give the Tribunal an
-idea of all. I quote from the top of Page 2 of the English translation:
-
- “II. Objectives of War Against Russia . . . .
-
-
-
- “d) To harass the Russian fleet by surprise blows as: 1)
- Lightning-like actions at the outbreak of the war by air force
- units against strong points and combat vessels in the Baltic,
- Black Sea, and Polar Sea.”
-
-The purpose of the offer of this document is merely that it indicates
-the detailed thinking and planning which was being carried out to
-implement Barbarossa almost six months before the operation actually got
-under way. It is but another piece in the mosaic of evidence which
-demonstrates beyond question of doubt that the invasion of the Soviet
-Union was one of the most cold-bloodedly premeditated attacks on a
-neighboring power in the history of the world. Similarly the Naval War
-Diary for the month of February contains at least several references to
-the planning and preparation for the coming campaign. Extracts of such
-references are contained in Document C-33, which I am now offering in
-evidence as Exhibit USA-133.
-
-I think it will be sufficient to quote for the record as typical the
-entry for 19 February 1941, which appears at Page 3 of the English
-translation and at Page 248 of the Diary itself.
-
- “In regard to the impending operation Barbarossa for which all
- S-boats in the Baltic will be needed, a transfer can only be
- considered after conclusion of the Barbarossa operations.”
-
-On the 3rd of February 1941 the Führer held a conference to assess the
-progress thus far made in the planning for Barbarossa. The conference
-also discussed the plans for “Sonnenblume,” which was the code name for
-the North African operation—“Sunflower.” Attending this conference
-were, in addition to Hitler: The Chief of the Supreme Command of the
-Armed Forces, the Defendant Keitel; the Chief of the Armed Forces
-Operations Staff, the Defendant Jodl; the Commander-in-Chief of the
-Army, Brauchitsch; the Chief of the Army General Staff, Halder; as well
-as several others, including Colonel Schmundt, Hitler’s Adjutant.
-
-A report of this conference is contained in our Document Number 872-PS,
-which I now offer as Exhibit USA-134.
-
-During the course of this conference the Chief of the Army General Staff
-gave a long report about enemy strength as compared with their own
-strength and the general overall operational plans for the invasion.
-This report was punctuated at various intervals by comments from the
-Führer.
-
-At Page 4 of the English translation of the conference plan, which is at
-Page 5 of the German original, there is an interesting extract, which,
-although written in a semi-shorthand, is at least sufficiently clear to
-inform us that elaborate timetables had already been set out for the
-deployment of troops as well as for industrial operations. I quote:
-
- “The proposed time schedule is charted on the map. First
- Deployment Echelon”—Aufmarschstaffel—“now being transferred,
- Front-Interior-East. Second Deployment Echelon from the middle
- of March gives 3 divisions for reinforcement in the West, but
- Army groups and Army High Commands are withdrawn from the West.
- In the East there are already considerable reinforcements though
- still in the rear area. From now on, ‘Attila’”—I might state
- here parenthetically that this was the code word for the
- operation for the occupation of unoccupied France—“Attila can
- be carried out only with difficulty. Economic traffic is
- hampered by transport movements. From the beginning of April,
- Hungary will be approached about the march-through. Third
- Deployment Echelon, from the middle of April. ‘Felix’ is now no
- longer possible, as the main part of the artillery has been
- shipped.”—Felix was the name for the proposed operation against
- Gibraltar.—“In industry the full capacity timetable is in
- force. No more camouflage. Fourth Deployment Echelon, from 25.
- IV to 15. V, withdraws considerable forces from the West
- (‘Seelöwe’ can no longer be carried out).”—“Seelöwe” (or Sea
- Lion) was a code word for the planned operation against England,
- and “Marita,” which we shall see a little later in the
- quotation, was the code word for the action against
- Greece.—“The concentration of troops in the East is clearly
- apparent. The full capacity timetable is maintained. The
- complete picture of the disposition of forces on the map shows 8
- Marita divisions.
-
-
-
- “Commander-in-Chief, Army, requests that he no longer have to
- assign 5 control divisions for this; but might hold them ready
- as reserves for commander in the West.
-
-
-
- “Führer: ‘When Barbarossa commences the world will hold its
- breath and make no comment.’”
-
-This much, I believe, when read with the conference conclusions, which I
-shall read in a moment, is sufficient to show that the Army as well as
-the Navy regarded Barbarossa as an action directive and were far along
-with their preparations even as early as February 1941—almost 5 months
-prior to 22 June, the date the attack was actually launched. The
-conference report summarized the conclusions of the conference, insofar
-as they affected Barbarossa, as follows; I am now reading from Page 6 of
-the English translation, which is on Page 7 of the German:
-
- “Conclusions:
-
-
-
- “1. Barbarossa.
-
-
-
- “a. The Führer on the whole is in agreement with the operational
- plan. When it is being carried out it must be remembered that
- the main aim is to gain possession of the Baltic States and
- Leningrad.
-
-
-
- “b. The Führer desires that the operation map and the plan of
- the deployment of forces be sent to him as soon as possible.
-
-
-
- “c. Agreements with neighboring states who are taking part may
- not be concluded until there is no longer any necessity for
- camouflage. The exception is Romania with regard to reinforcing
- the Moldau.
-
-
-
- “d. It must, in any case, be possible to carry out Attila. (With
- the means available.)
-
-
-
- “e. The concentration for Barbarossa will be carried out as a
- feint for Sea Lion and the subsidiary measure Marita.”
-
-On 13th March 1941 the Defendant Keitel signed an operational directive
-to Führer Order Number 21, which was issued in the form of “Directives
-for Special Areas.” This detailed operational order is Number 447-PS in
-our numbered series, and I now offer it in evidence as Exhibit USA-135.
-
-This order which was issued more than 3 months in advance of the attack
-indicates how complete were the plans on practically every phase of the
-operation. Section I of the directive is headed, “Area of Operations and
-Executive Power,” and outlines who was to be in control of what and
-where. It states that while the campaign is in progress in territory
-through which the Army is advancing, the Supreme Commander of the Army
-has the executive power. During this period, however, the Reichsführer
-SS is entrusted with “special tasks.” This assignment is discussed in
-Paragraph 2b, which appears on Page 1 of the English translation and
-reads as follows:
-
- “b) In the area of operations of the Army the Reichsführer SS
- is, on behalf of the Führer, entrusted with special tasks for
- the preparation of the political administration—tasks which
- result from the struggle which has to be carried out between two
- opposing political systems. Within the realm of these tasks the
- Reichsführer SS shall act independently and under his own
- responsibility. The executive power invested in the Supreme
- Commander of the Army (OKH) and in agencies determined by him
- shall not be affected by this. It is the responsibility of the
- Reichsführer SS that through the execution of his tasks military
- operations shall not be disturbed. Details shall be arranged
- directly through the OKH with the Reichsführer SS.”
-
-The order then states that in time political administration will be set
-up under Commissioners of the Reich, and discusses the relationship of
-these officials to the Army. This is contained in Paragraph 2c and
-Paragraph 3, parts of which I should like to read:
-
- “c) As soon as the area of operations has reached sufficient
- depth, it is to be limited in the rear. The newly occupied
- territory in the rear of the area of operations is to be given
- its own political administration. For the present it is to be
- divided on the basis of nationality and according to the
- positions of the Army groups into North (Baltic countries),
- Center (White Russia), and South (Ukraine). In these territories
- the political administration is taken care of by Commissioners
- of the Reich who receive their orders from the Führer.
-
-
-
- “3) For the execution of all military tasks within the areas
- under the political administration in the rear of the area of
- operations, commanding officers who are responsible to the
- Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces (OKW) shall be in command.
-
-
-
- “The commanding officer is the supreme representative of the
- Armed Forces in the respective areas and the bearer of the
- military sovereign rights. He has the tasks of a territorial
- commander and the rights of a supreme Army commander or a
- commanding general. In this capacity he is responsible primarily
- for the following tasks:
-
-
-
- “a) Close co-operation with the Commissioner of the Reich in
- order to support him in his political tasks; b) exploitation of
- the country and securing its economic values for use by German
- industry.”
-
-The directive also outlines the responsibility for the administration of
-economy in the conquered territory, a subject I will develop more fully
-later in my presentation. This provision is also in Section I, Paragraph
-4, which I shall read:
-
- “4) The Führer has entrusted the uniform direction of the
- administration of economy in the area of operations and in the
- territories of political administration to the Reich Marshal,
- who has delegated the Chief of the ‘Wi Rü Amt’ with the
- execution of the task. Special orders on that will come from the
- OKW/Wi Rü Amt.”
-
-The second section deals with matters of personnel, supply, and . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Alderman, will you tell us at some time who these
-people are? Who is the Reich Marshal?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: The Reich Marshal is the Defendant Göring.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: And who was the Reichsführer of the SS at that time?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: Himmler.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Himmler?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: Yes.
-
-The second section deals with matters of personnel, supply, and
-communication traffic, and I shall not read it here.
-
-Section III of the order deals with the relations with certain other
-countries, and states in part as follows—I am reading from Page 3 of
-the English translation:
-
- “III. Regulations regarding Romania, Slovakia, Hungary, and
- Finland.
-
-
-
- “9) The necessary arrangements with these countries shall be
- made by the OKW together with the Foreign Office and according
- to the wish of the respective high commands. In case it should
- become necessary during the course of the operations to grant
- special rights, applications for this purpose are to be
- submitted to the OKW.”
-
-The document closes with a section regarding Sweden, which is also on
-Page 3 of the English Translation:
-
- “IV. Directives regarding Sweden.
-
-
-
- “12) Since Sweden can only become a transient area for troops,
- no special authority is to be granted to the commander of the
- German troops. However, he is entitled and compelled to secure
- the immediate protection of railroad transports against sabotage
- and attacks.
-
-
-
- “The Chief of the High Command of the Armed Forces,”—signed—
-
-
-
- “Keitel.”
-
-As was hinted in the original Barbarossa order, Directive Number 21,
-which I discussed earlier, the plan originally contemplated that the
-attack would take place about the 15th of May 1941. In the meantime,
-however, the Nazi conspirators found themselves involved in a campaign
-in the Balkans, and were forced to delay Barbarossa for a few weeks.
-Evidence of this postponement is found in a document, which bears our
-Number C-170. This document has been identified by the Defendant Raeder
-as a compilation of official extracts from the Naval War Staff War
-Diary. It was prepared by naval archivists who had access to the
-Admiralty files, and contains file references to the papers which were
-the basis for each entry.
-
-I offer that document in evidence as Exhibit USA-136.
-
-Although I shall refer to this document again later, I should like at
-present to read only an item which appears in the second paragraph of
-Item 142 on Page 19 of the English translation and which is in the text
-in a footnote on Page 26 in the German original. This item is dated 3
-April 1941, and reads as follows:
-
- “Balkan operation delay; Barbarossa now in about 5 weeks. All
- measures which can be construed as offensive actions are to be
- stopped according to the Führer’s order.”
-
-By the end of April, however, things were sufficiently straightened out
-to permit the Führer to definitely set D-Day as the 22d of June—more
-than 7 weeks away. Document Number 873-PS in our series is a top-secret
-report of a conference with the Chief of the Section
-“Landesverteidigung” of the “Wehrmacht Führungsstab” on April 30, 1941.
-I now offer that document in evidence as Exhibit USA-137.
-
-I think it will be sufficient to read the first two paragraphs of this
-report:
-
- “1) Timetable Barbarossa. The Führer has decided:
-
-
-
- “Action Barbarossa begins on 22 June. From 23 May maximal troop
- movements performance schedule. At the beginning of operations
- the OKH reserves will have not yet reached the appointed areas.
-
-
-
- “2) Proportion of actual strength in the Plan Barbarossa:
-
-
-
- “Sector North, German and Russian forces approximately of the
- same strength; Sector Middle, great German superiority; Sector
- South, Russian superiority.”
-
-Early in June, practically 3 weeks before D-Day, preparations for the
-attack were so complete that it was possible for the High Command to
-issue an elaborate timetable showing in great detail the disposition and
-missions of the Army, Navy, and Air Force.
-
-This timetable is Document Number C-39 in our series, and I offer it in
-evidence now as Exhibit USA-138.
-
-This document was prepared in 21 copies, and the one offered here was
-the third copy which was given to the High Command of the Navy; Page 1
-is in the form of a transmittal, and reads as follows:
-
- “Top secret; Supreme Command of the Armed Forces; Nr. 44842/41
- top military secret WFSt/Abt. L (I Op.); Führer’s headquarters;
- for chiefs only, only through officer; 21 copies; I Op.
- 00845/41; received 6 June; no enclosures.
-
-
-
- “The Führer has authorized the appended timetable as a
- foundation for further preparations for Plan Barbarossa. If
- alterations should be necessary during execution, the Supreme
- Command of the Armed Forces must be informed.
-
-
-
- “Chief of Supreme Command of the Armed Forces”—signed—
- “Keitel.”
-
-I shall not bother to read to you the distribution list which indicates
-where the 21 copies went.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Alderman, the Tribunal does not think it necessary
-that you should read all those preliminary matters at the head of these
-documents, “top secret,” “only through officer,” and then the various
-reference numbers and file information when you give identification of a
-document.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: Yes, Sir.
-
-The next two pages of the document are in the form of a text outlining
-the state of preparations as of the 1st of June 1941. The outline is in
-six paragraphs covering the status on that date under six headings:
-General, Negotiations with friendly states, Army, Navy, Air Force, and
-Camouflage.
-
-I think it unnecessary to read into the record any of this textual
-material. The remainder of the paper is in tabular form with seven
-columns headed from left to right at the top of each page: Date, Serial
-number, Army, Air Force, Navy, OKW, Remarks. Most interesting among the
-items appearing on this chart . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Alderman, will you read the first paragraph, for that
-seems to be important. There are two lines there.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: Yes.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The heading “General” on Page 2.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: Yes, Sir.
-
- “1. General. The timetable for the maximum massing of troops in
- the East will be put into operation on the 22d of May.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Yes.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: Most interesting among the items appearing on this chart,
-in my opinion, are those appearing on Pages 9 and 10. These are at Page
-8 of the German version. At the bottom of Page 9 it is provided in the
-columns for Army, Navy, and Air Force—and I quote:
-
- “Up to 1300 hours is latest time at which operation can be
- cancelled.”
-
-Under the column headed OKW appears the note that—and again I quote:
-
- “Cancelled by code word ‘Altona’ or further confirmation of
- start of attack by code word ‘Dortmund’.”
-
-In the Remarks column appears the statement that:
-
- “Complete absence of camouflage of formation of Army point of
- main effort, concentration of armor and artillery must be
- reckoned with.”
-
-The second entry on Page 10 of the chart for the 22d of June, under
-Serial number 31, gives a notation which cuts across the columns for the
-Army, Air Force, Navy, and OKW, and provides as follows, under the
-heading:
-
- “Invasion Day. H-Hour for the start of the invasion by the Army
- and crossing of the frontier by the Air Forces: 0330 hours.”
-
-In the Remarks column, it states that:
-
- “Army assembly independent of any lateness in starting on the
- part of the Air Force owing to weather.”
-
-The other parts of the chart are similar in nature to those quoted and
-give, as I have said, great detail concerning the disposition and
-missions of the various components of the Armed Forces.
-
-On 9 June 1941 the order of the Führer went out for final reports on
-Barbarossa to be made in Berlin on 14 June 1941, which was just 8 days
-before D-Day. This order is signed by Hitler’s Adjutant, Schmundt, and
-is C-78 in our numbered series of documents. I offer it in evidence now
-as Exhibit USA-139.
-
-I read from Page 1 the matter under the heading “Conference Barbarossa”:
-
- “1. The Führer and Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces has
- ordered reports on Barbarossa by the commanders of Army groups,
- armies, and naval and air commanders of equal rank.
-
-
-
- “2. The reports will be made on Saturday, 14 June 1941, at the
- Reich Chancellery, Berlin.
-
-
-
- “3. Timetable:
-
-
-
- “a) 1100 hours, “Silver Fox”; b) 1200 hours-1400 hours, Army
- Group South; c) 1400 hours-1530 hours, lunch party for all
- participants in conference; d) from 1530 hours, Baltic, Army
- Group North, Army Group Center, in this order.”
-
-It is signed by Schmundt.
-
-There is attached a list of participants and the order in which they
-will report which I shall not read. The list includes, however, a large
-number of the members of the Defendant High Command and General Staff
-group as of that date. Among those to participate were, of course, the
-Defendants Göring, Keitel, Jodl, and Raeder.
-
-I believe that the documents which I have introduced and quoted from are
-more than sufficient to establish conclusively the premeditation and
-cold-blooded calculation which marked the military preparations for the
-invasion of the Soviet Union. Starting almost a full year before the
-commission of the crime, the Nazi conspirators planned and prepared
-every military detail of their aggression against the Soviet Union with
-all of that thoroughness and meticulousness which has come to be
-associated with the German character. Although several of these
-defendants played specific parts in this military phase of the planning
-and preparation for the attack, it is natural enough that the leading
-roles were performed, as we have seen, by the military figures: the
-Defendants Göring, Keitel, Jodl, and Raeder.
-
-Next, preparation for plunder—plans for the economic exploitation and
-spoliation of the Soviet Union.
-
-Not only was there detailed preparation for the invasion from a purely
-military standpoint, but equally elaborate and detailed planning and
-preparation was undertaken by the Nazi conspirators to ensure that their
-aggression would prove economically profitable.
-
-A little later in my presentation I shall discuss with the Tribunal the
-motives which led these conspirators to attack, without provocation, a
-neighboring power. I shall at that time show that the crime was
-motivated by both political and economic considerations. The economic
-basis, however, may be simply summarized at this point as the greed of
-the Nazi conspirators for the raw material, food, and other supplies
-which their neighbor possessed and which they conceived of themselves as
-needing for the maintenance of their war machine. To these defendants
-such a need was translated indubitably as a right, and they early began
-planning and preparing with typical care and detail to ensure that every
-bit of the plunder which it would be possible to reap in the course of
-their aggression would be exploited to their utmost benefit.
-
-I have already put into the record evidence showing that as early as
-August of 1940 General Thomas, the chief of the B Group Army, received a
-hint from the Defendant Göring about a possible attack on the U.S.S.R.
-which prompted him to begin considering the Soviet war economy. I also
-said at that time that I would later introduce evidence that in November
-1940—8 months before the attack—Thomas was categorically informed by
-Göring of the planned operation in the East and preliminary preparations
-were commenced for the economic plundering of the territories to be
-occupied in the course of such operation. Göring, of course, played the
-overall leading role in this activity by virtue of his position at the
-head of the Four Year Plan.
-
-Thomas describes his receipt of the knowledge and this early planning at
-Page 369 of his draft, which is our Document 2353-PS introduced earlier
-as Exhibit USA-35; the part I shall read is at Pages 10 and 11 of the
-English translation:
-
- “In November 1940 the Chief of Wi Rü together with Secretaries
- of State Körner, Neumann, Backe, and General Von Hanneken were
- informed by the Reich Marshal of the action planned in the East.
-
-
-
- “By reason of these directives the preliminary preparations for
- the action in the East were commenced by the office of Wi Rü at
- the end of 1940.
-
-
-
- “The preliminary preparations for the action in the East
- included first of all the following tasks:
-
-
-
- “1. Obtaining of a detailed survey of the Russian armament
- industry, its location, its capacity, and its associate
- industries.
-
-
-
-
- “2. Investigation of the capacities of the different big
- armament centers and their dependency one on the other.
-
-
-
- “3. Determining the power and transport system for the industry
- of the Soviet Union.
-
- “4. Investigation of sources of raw materials and petroleum
- (crude oil).
-
-
-
- “5. Preparation of a survey of industries other than armament
- industries in the Soviet Union.
-
-
-
- “These points were concentrated in one big compilation, ‘War
- Economy of the Soviet Union,’ and illustrated with detailed
- maps.”—I am still quoting.—“Furthermore a card index was made
- containing all the important factories in Soviet Russia and a
- lexicon of economy in the German-Russian language for the use of
- the German war economy organization.
-
-
-
- “For the processing of these problems a task staff, ‘Russia,’
- was created, first in charge of Lieutenant Colonel Luther and
- later on in charge of Major General Schubert. The work was
- carried out according to the directives from the chief of the
- office, respectively”—I suppose—“by the group of departments
- for foreign territories”—Ausland—“with the co-operation of all
- departments, economy offices, and any other persons possessing
- information on Russia. Through these intensive preparative
- activities an excellent collection of material was made which
- proved of the utmost value later on for carrying out the
- operations and for administering the territories.”
-
-That ends the quotation.
-
-By the end of February 1941 this preliminary planning had proceeded to a
-point where a broader plan of organization was needed, and so General
-Thomas held a conference with his subordinates on 28 February 1941 to
-call for such a plan. A memorandum of this conference, classified top
-secret and dated 1 March 1941, was captured, and is our Document
-1317-PS. I now offer it in evidence as Exhibit USA-140. The text of this
-memorandum reads as follows:
-
- “The general ordered that a broader plan of organization be
- drafted for the Reich Marshal.
-
-
-
- “Essential Points:
-
-
-
- “1. The whole organization to be subordinate to the Reich
- Marshal. Purpose: Support and extension of the measures of the
- Four Year Plan.
-
-
-
- “2. The organization must include everything concerning war
- economy, excepting only food which is said to be made already a
- special mission of State Secretary Backe.
-
-
-
- “3. Clear statement that the organization is to be independent
- of the military or civil administration. Close co-ordination,
- but instructions direct from the central office in Berlin.
-
-
-
- “4. Scope of activities to be divided into two steps: a)
- Accompanying the advancing troops directly behind the front
- lines in order to avoid the destruction of supplies and to
- secure the removal of important goods; b) Administration of the
- occupied industrial districts and exploitation of economically
- complementary districts.”
-
-And then, on the bottom of Page 1:
-
- “5. In view of the extended field of activity the term ‘war
- economy inspection’ is to be used in preference to armament
- inspection.
-
-
-
- “6. In view of the great field of activity the organization must
- be generously equipped and personnel must be correspondingly
- numerous. The main mission of the organization will consist of
- seizing raw materials and taking over all important
- exploitations. For the latter mission reliable persons from
- German concerns will be interposed suitably from the beginning,
- since successful operation from the beginning can only be
- performed by the aid of their experience. (For example: lignite,
- ore, chemistry, petroleum).
-
-
-
- “After the discussion of further details Lieutenant Colonel
- Luther was instructed to make an initial draft of such an
- organization within a week.
-
-
-
- “Close co-operation with the individual sections in the building
- is essential. An officer must still be appointed for the Wi and
- Rü with whom the operational staff can remain in constant
- contact. Wi is to give each section chief and Lieutenant Colonel
- Luther a copy of the new plan regarding Russia.
-
-
-
- “Lieutenant General Schubert is to be asked to be in Berlin the
- second half of next week. Also, the four officers who are
- ordered to draw up the individual armament inspections are to
- report to the office chief at the end of the
- week.—Signed—Hamann.”
-
-Hamann, who signed the report, is listed among those attending as a
-captain and apparently the junior officer present, so presumably it fell
-naturally enough to Hamann to prepare the notes on the conference.
-
-The authority and mission of this organization which Thomas was
-organizing at the direction of Göring was clearly recognized by Keitel
-in his operational order of 13 March 1941. This order is Number 447-PS,
-and I have already offered it in evidence earlier as Exhibit USA-135. At
-that time I quoted the paragraph in the order in which it was stated
-that the Führer had entrusted the uniform direction of the
-administration of economy in the areas of operation and political
-administration to the Reich Marshal who in turn had delegated his
-authority to the Chief of the Wi Rü Amt.
-
-The organizational work called for by General Thomas at the meeting on
-28 February apparently proceeded apace, and on 29 April 1941 a
-conference was held with various branches of the Armed Forces to explain
-the organizational set-up of the Economic Staff “Oldenburg.” Oldenburg
-was the code name given to this economic counterpart of Plan Barbarossa.
-A report of this conference is captured Document Number 1157-PS, and I
-now offer it in evidence as Exhibit USA-141. Section 1 of this
-memorandum deals with the general organization of Economic Staff
-Oldenburg as it had developed by this time, and I should like to read
-most of that section into the record. The report begins:
-
- “Conference with the Branches of the Armed Forces at 1000 hours
- on Tuesday, 29th April 1941.
-
-
-
- “1. Welcome. Purpose of the meeting: Introduction to the
- organizational structure of the economic section of the
- undertaking Barbarossa-Oldenburg.
-
-
-
- “As already known, the Führer, contrary to previous procedure,
- has ordered for this drive the uniform concentration in one hand
- of all economic operations and has entrusted the Reich Marshal
- with the overall direction of the economic administration in the
- area of operations and in the areas under political
- administration.
-
-
-
- “The Reich Marshal has delegated this function to an Economic
- General Staff working under the director of the Economic
- Armament Office (Chief, Wi Rü Amt).
-
-
-
- “Under the Reich Marshal and the Economic General Staff the
- supreme central authority in the area of the drive itself is
- the”—and then a heading—“Economic Staff Oldenburg for special
- duties under the command of Lieutenant General Schubert. His
- subordinate authorities, geographically subdivided, are: 5
- economic inspectorates, 23 economic commands, and 12 district
- offices which are distributed among important places within the
- area of the economic command.
-
-
-
- “These offices are used in the military rear area. The idea is
- that in the territory of each army group an economic
- inspectorate is to be established at the seat of the commander
- of the military rear area, and that this inspectorate will
- supervise the economic exploitation of the territory.
-
-
-
- “A distinction must be made between the military rear area and
- the battle area proper on the one hand, and the rear area of the
- army on the other hand. In the latter, economic matters are
- dealt with by the Group IV Economy”—IV Wi—“of the Army
- Headquarters Command, that is, the liaison officer of the
- Economic Armament Office within the Supreme Command of the Armed
- Forces assigned to the Army Headquarters Command. For the battle
- area he has attached to him technical battalions, reconnaissance
- and recovery troops for raw materials, mineral oil, agricultural
- machinery, in particular, tractors and means of production.
-
-
-
- “In the rear area of the Army situated between the battle and
- the military rear area, Group IV Economy with the various field
- commands are placed at the disposal of the liaison officer of
- the Economic Armament Office for the support of the specialists
- of the Army Headquarters Command, who are responsible for
- supplying the troops from the country’s resources and for
- preparing the subsequent general economic exploitation.
-
-
-
- “While these units move with the troops, economic inspectorates,
- economic commands and their sub-offices remain established in
- the locality.
-
-
-
- “The new feature inherent in the organization under the command
- of the Economic Staff Oldenburg is that it does not only deal
- with military industry but comprises the entire economic field.
- Consequently all offices are no longer to be designated as
- offices of the military industries or armaments but quite
- generally as economic inspectorates, economic commands, _et
- cetera_.
-
-
-
- “This also corresponds with the internal organization of the
- individual offices which, from the Economic Staff Oldenburg down
- to the economic commands, requires a standard subdivision into
- three large groups, i. e. Group M, dealing with troop
- requirements, armaments, industrial transport organization;
- Group L, which concerns itself with all questions of feeding and
- agriculture, and Group W, which is in charge of the entire field
- of trade and industry, including raw materials and supplies;
- further, questions of forestry, finance and banking, enemy
- property, commerce and exchange of commodities, and manpower
- allocation.
-
-
-
- “Secretary of State Backe is appointed Commissioner for Food and
- Agriculture in the General Staff; the problems falling within
- the field of activities of Group W are dealt with by General Von
- Hanneken.”
-
-The remainder of the document deals with local subdivisions, personnel
-and planning problems, and similar details, which I think it unnecessary
-to put into the record.
-
-These documents portray vividly the coldly calculated method with which
-those Nazis prepared months in advance to rob and loot their intended
-victim. They show that the conspirators not only planned to stage a
-wanton attack on a neighbor to whom they had pledged security, but they
-also intended to strip that neighbor of his food, his factories, and all
-his means of livelihood.
-
-As I shall point out more fully later when I discuss the question of
-motivation, these men made their plans for plunder being fully aware
-that to carry them out would necessarily involve ruin and starvation for
-millions of the inhabitants of the Soviet Union.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: This would be a good time to adjourn.
-
- [_A recess was taken._]
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: May the Tribunal please, I have been informed by the
-interpreters that I have been speaking at a great speed this morning, so
-I shall try to temper the speed.
-
-Next, the politics of destruction; preparation for the political phase
-of the aggression. As I have already indicated and as I shall develop
-more fully later in this discussion, there were both economic and
-political reasons motivating the action of the conspirators in invading
-the Soviet Union. I have already discussed the extent of the planning
-and preparations for the economic side of the aggression. Equally
-elaborate planning and preparation were engaged in by the conspirators
-to ensure the effectuation of the political aims of their aggression. It
-is, I believe, sufficient at this point to describe that political aim
-as the elimination of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics as a
-powerful political factor in Europe and the acquisition of Lebensraum.
-
-For the accomplishment of this purpose the Nazi conspirators selected as
-their agent the Defendant Rosenberg. As early as the 2d of April 1941
-Rosenberg or a member of his staff prepared a memorandum on the U.S.S.R.
-This memorandum speculates on the possibility of a disagreement with the
-U.S.S.R. which would result in a quick occupation of an important part
-of that country. This memorandum then considers what the political goal
-of such occupation should be and suggests ways for reaching such a goal.
-
-The memorandum is Number 1017-PS in our series, and I offer it in
-evidence now as Exhibit USA-142.
-
-Beginning with the second paragraph it reads, under the subject
-“U.S.S.R.”;
-
- “A military conflict with the U.S.S.R. will result in an
- extraordinarily rapid occupation of an important and large
- section of the U.S.S.R. It is very probable that military action
- on our part will very soon be followed by the military collapse
- of the U.S.S.R. The occupation of these areas would then present
- not so many military as administrative and economic
- difficulties. Thus arises the first question:
-
-
-
- “Is the occupation to be determined by purely military or
- economic needs respectively, or is the laying of political
- foundations for a future organization of the area also a factor
- in determining how far the occupation shall be extended? If so,
- it is a matter of urgency to fix the political goal which is to
- be attained, for it will without doubt also have an effect on
- military operations.
-
-
-
- “If the political overthrow of the eastern empire, in the weak
- condition it would be at the time, is set as the goal of
- military operations, one may conclude that:
-
-
-
- “1) The occupation must comprise areas of vast proportions.
-
-
-
- “2) From the very beginning the treatment of individual sections
- of territory should, in regard to administration as well as
- economics and ideology, be adapted to the political ends we are
- striving to attain.
-
-
-
- “3) Again, extraordinary questions concerning these vast areas
- such as, in particular, the ensuring of essential supplies for
- the continuation of war against England, the maintenance of
- production which this necessitates, and the great directives for
- the completely separate areas, should best be dealt with all
- together in one place.
-
-
-
- “It should again be stressed here that, in addition, all the
- arguments which follow only hold good, of course, once the
- supplies from the area to be occupied, which are essential to
- Greater Germany for the continuance of the war, have been
- assured.
-
-
-
- “Anyone who knows the East sees in a map of Russia’s population
- the following national or geographical units:
-
-
-
- “(a) Greater Russia, with Moscow as its center; (b) White
- Russia, with Minsk or Smolensk as its capital; (c) Estonia,
- Latvia, and Lithuania; (d) The Ukraine and the Crimea, with Kiev
- as its center; (e) The Don area, with Rostov as its capital; (f)
- The area of the Caucasus; (g) Russian Central Asia or Russian
- Turkestan.”
-
-The memorandum then proceeds to discuss each of the areas or
-geographical units in some detail, and I shall not read those pages. At
-the end of the paper, however, the writer sums up his thoughts and
-briefly outlines his plan. I should like to read that portion into the
-record. It is at the bottom of Page 4 of the English translation under
-the heading “Summary”:
-
- “The following systematic constructional plan is evolved from
- the points briefly outlined here:
-
-
-
- “(1) The creation of a central department for the occupied areas
- of the U.S.S.R. to be confined more or less to war time. Working
- in agreement with the higher and supreme Reich authorities, it
- would be the task of this department:
-
-
-
- “(a) To issue binding political instructions to the separate
- administration areas, having in mind the situation existing at
- the time and the goal which is to be achieved;
-
-
-
- “(b) To secure for the Reich supplies essential to the war from
- all the occupied areas;
-
-
-
- “(c) To make preparations for, and to supervise the carrying out
- in main outline of, the primarily important questions for all
- areas, as for instance, those of finance and funds, transport,
- and the production of oil, coal, and food.
-
-
-
- “(2) The carrying out of sharply defined decentralization in the
- separate administration areas, grouped together by race or by
- reason of political economy for the carrying out of the totally
- dissimilar tasks assigned to them.
-
-
-
- “As against this, an administrative department regulating
- matters in principle and to be set up on a purely economic
- basis, as is at present envisaged, might very soon prove to be
- inadequate and fail in its purpose. Such a central office would
- be compelled to carry out a common policy for all areas,
- dictated only by economic considerations, and this might impede
- the carrying out of the political task and, in view of its being
- run on purely bureaucratic lines, might possibly even prevent
- it.
-
-
-
- “The question therefore arises whether the opinions which have
- been set forth should not, purely for reasons of expediency, be
- taken into consideration from the very beginning when organizing
- the administration of the territory on a basis of war economy.
- In view of the vast spaces and the difficulties of
- administration which arise from that alone, and also in view of
- the living conditions created by Bolshevism, which are totally
- different from those of Western Europe, the whole question of
- the U.S.S.R. would require different treatment from that which
- has been applied in the individual countries of Western Europe.”
-
-THE TRIBUNAL (Mr. Biddle): Is that signed?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: It is not signed. No, Sir.
-
-THE TRIBUNAL (Mr. Biddle): Is it in the Defendant Rosenberg’s
-handwriting?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: It was in the Rosenberg file.
-
-THE TRIBUNAL (Mr. Biddle): Is there anything to indicate that he wrote
-it?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: No. I said it was evidently prepared by Rosenberg or under
-his authority. We captured the whole set of Rosenberg files, which
-constitutes really a large library.
-
-It is evident that the “presently envisaged administration operating on
-a purely economic basis” to which this memorandum objects was the
-Economic Staff Oldenburg, which I have already described as having been
-set up under Göring and General Thomas.
-
-Rosenberg’s statement—if this be his statement—of the political
-purpose of the invasion and his analysis of the achieving of it
-apparently did not fall on deaf ears. By a Führer order, dated 20 April
-1941, Rosenberg was named commissioner for the central control of
-questions connected with the east European region. This order is part of
-the correspondence regarding Rosenberg’s appointment, which has been
-given the Number 865-PS in our series. I ask that this file, all
-relating to the same subject and consisting of four letters, all of
-which I shall read or refer to, be admitted in evidence as Exhibit
-USA-143.
-
-The order itself reads as follows—it is the first item on the English
-translation of 865-PS:
-
- “I name Reichsleiter Alfred Rosenberg as my commissioner for the
- central control of questions connected with the east European
- region. An office, which is to be furnished in accordance with
- his orders, is at the disposal of Reichsleiter Rosenberg for the
- carrying out of the duties thereby entrusted to him. The
- necessary money for this office is to be taken out of the Reich
- Chancellery Treasury in a lump sum.
-
-
-
- “Führer’s headquarters, 20th April 1941. The Führer, signed,
- Adolf Hitler; Reich Minister and Head of Reich Chancellery,
- signed, Dr. Lammers.”
-
-This particular copy of the Führer’s order was enclosed in a letter
-which Dr. Lammers wrote to the Defendant Keitel requesting his
-co-operation for Rosenberg and asking that Keitel appoint a deputy to
-work with Rosenberg. This letter reads as follows—it is on the
-stationery of the Reich Minister and the Head of the Reich Chancellery,
-Berlin, 21 April 1941. I omit the salutation:
-
- “Herewith I am sending you a copy of the Führer’s decree of the
- 20th of this month by which the Führer appointed Reichsleiter
- Alfred Rosenberg as his commissioner for the central control
- connected with the east European region. In this capacity
- Reichsleiter Rosenberg is to make the necessary preparations for
- the probable emergency with all speed. The Führer wishes that
- Rosenberg shall be authorized for this purpose to obtain the
- closest co-operation of the highest Reich authorities, receive
- information from them, and summon the representatives of the
- highest Reich authorities to conferences. In order to guarantee
- the necessary secrecy of the commission and the measures to be
- undertaken, for the time being, only those of the highest Reich
- authorities should be informed on whose co-operation
- Reichsleiter Rosenberg will primarily depend. They are: The
- Commissioner for the Four Year Plan”—that is Göring—“the Reich
- Minister of Economics, and you yourself”—that is
- Keitel—“Therefore, may I ask you in accordance with the
- Führer’s wishes to place your co-operation at the disposal of
- Reichsleiter Rosenberg in the carrying out of the task imposed
- upon him. It is recommended in the interests of secrecy that you
- name a representative in your office with whom the office of the
- Reichsleiter can communicate and who, in addition to your usual
- deputy, should be the only one to whom you should communicate
- the contents of this letter.
-
-
-
- “I should be obliged if you would acknowledge the receipt of
- this letter.
-
- “Heil Hitler, Yours very sincerely, signed, Dr. Lammers.”
-
-In the next letter Keitel writes Lammers acknowledging receipt of his
-letter and telling of his compliance with the request. Keitel also
-writes Rosenberg telling him of the action he has taken. Now, the letter
-to Dr. Lammers—I shall read the text:
-
- “Dear Reich Minister:
-
- “I acknowledge receipt of the copy of the Führer’s decree in
- which the Führer appointed Reichsleiter Alfred Rosenberg as his
- commissioner for the central control of questions connected with
- the east European region. I have named General of the Artillery
- Jodl, head of the Armed Forces Operational Staff, as my
- permanent deputy, and Major General Warlimont as his deputy to
- Reichsleiter Rosenberg.”
-
-And the letter to Reichsleiter Rosenberg on the same date:
-
- “The head of the Reich Chancellery has sent me a copy of the
- Führer’s decree, by which he has appointed you his commissioner
- for the central control of questions connected with the east
- European region. I have charged General of the Artillery Jodl,
- head of the Armed Forces Operational Staff, and his deputy,
- Major General Warlimont, with the solving of these questions as
- far as they concern the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces. Now
- I ask you, as far as your office is concerned, to deal with them
- only.”
-
-Immediately upon receipt of the order from Hitler Rosenberg began
-building his organization, conferring with the various ministries,
-issuing his instructions, and generally making the detailed plans and
-preparations necessary to carry out his assigned mission. Although
-Rosenberg’s files, which were captured intact, were crowded with
-documents evidencing both the extent of the preparation and its purpose,
-I believe that the citation of a small number which are typical should
-be sufficient for the Tribunal and the record. All of those I shall now
-discuss were found in the Defendant Rosenberg’s files.
-
-Our document numbered 1030-PS is a memorandum, dated 8 May 1941,
-entitled, “General Instructions for all Reich Commissioners in the
-Occupied Eastern Territories.” I offer that in evidence as Exhibit
-USA-144.
-
-In these instructions to his chief henchmen Rosenberg outlines the
-political aims and purposes of the attack. In the second and third
-paragraphs of the English translation, which appear on Page 2 of the
-German, the following remarks appear:
-
- “The only possible political goal of war can be the aim to free
- the German Reich from the ‘grossrussisch’ pressure for centuries
- to come. This does not only correspond with German interests but
- also with historical justice, for Russian imperialism was in a
- position to accomplish its policy of conquest and oppression
- almost unopposed, whilst it threatened Germany again and again.
- Therefore, the German Reich has to beware of starting a campaign
- against Russia with a historical injustice, meaning the
- reconstruction of a great Russian empire, no matter of what
- kind. On the contrary, all historical struggles of the various
- nationalities against Moscow and Leningrad have to be
- scrutinized for their bearing on the situation today. This has
- been done on the part of the National Socialist movement to
- correspond to the Leader’s political testament as laid down in
- his book, that now the military and political threat in the East
- shall be eliminated forever.
-
-
-
- “Therefore this huge area must be divided according to its
- historical and racial conditions into Reich commissions each of
- which bears within itself a different political aim. The Reich
- Commission Eastland”—Ostland—“including White Ruthenia, will
- have the task to prepare, by way of development into a
- Germanized protectorate, a progressively closer cohesion with
- Germany. The Ukraine shall become an independent state in
- alliance with Germany, and Caucasia with the contiguous northern
- territories a federal state with a German plenipotentiary.
- Russia proper must put her own house in order for the future.
- These general viewpoints are explained in the following
- instructions for each Reich commissioner. Beyond that there are
- still a few general considerations which possess validity for
- all Reich commissioners.”
-
-The fifth paragraph of the English translation, Page 7 of the German,
-presents a fascinating rationalization of a contemplated robbery. It
-reads:
-
- “The German people have achieved, in the course of centuries,
- tremendous accomplishments in the eastern European area. Nearly
- all its land and houses were confiscated without
- indemnification; hundreds of thousands (in the south on the
- Volga) starved or were deported or, as in the Baltic
- territories, deprived of the fruits of their cultural work
- during the past 700 years. The German Reich must proclaim the
- principle that after the occupation of the Eastern Territories
- the former German assets are the property of the people of
- Greater Germany, irrespective of the consent of the former
- individual proprietors, where the German Reich may reserve the
- right (assuming that it has not already been done during
- resettlement) to arrange a just settlement. The manner of
- compensation and restitution of this national property will be
- subject to different treatment by each Reich commission.”
-
-Document Number 1029-PS in our series is an “Instruction for a Reich
-Commissioner Ostland.” It is typical of the type of instruction which
-was issued to each of the appointed commissioners (or Kommissars), and
-is amazingly frank in outlining intentions of the Nazi conspirators
-toward the country they intended to occupy in the course of their
-aggression. I offer this document in evidence as Exhibit USA-145. I
-should like to read into the record the first three paragraphs. It
-begins:
-
- “All the regions between Narva and Tilsit have constantly been
- in close relationship with the German people. A 700-year-old
- history has moulded the inner sympathies of the majority of the
- races living there in a European direction and has in spite of
- all Russian threats added this region to the living space of
- Greater Germany.
-
-
-
- “The aim of a Reich commissioner for Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania,
- and White Ruthenia”—last words added in pencil—“must be to
- strive to achieve the form of a German Protectorate and then
- transform the region into part of the Greater German Reich by
- germanizing racially possible elements, colonizing Germanic
- races, and banishing undesirable elements. The Baltic Sea must
- become a Germanic inland sea under the guardianship of Greater
- Germany.
-
-
-
- “For certain cattle-raising products the Baltic region was a
- land of surplus; and the Reich commissioner must endeavor to
- make this surplus once more available to the German people and,
- if possible, to increase it. With regard to the process of
- germanizing or resettling, the Estonian people are strongly
- germanized to the extent of 50 percent by Danish, German, and
- Swedish blood, and can be considered as a kindred nation. In
- Latvia the section capable of being assimilated is considerably
- smaller than in Estonia. In this country stronger resistance
- will have to be reckoned with and banishment on a larger scale
- will have to be envisaged. A similar development may have to be
- reckoned with in Lithuania, for here too the immigration of
- racial Germans is called for in order to promote very extensive
- germanization (on the East Prussian border).”
-
-Skipping a paragraph, the next paragraph is also interesting and reads
-as follows:
-
- “The task of a Reich commissioner with his seat of office in
- Riga will therefore largely be an extraordinarily positive one.
- A country which 700 years ago was captured by German Knights,
- built up by the Hanseatic League, and by reason of a constant
- influx of German blood together with Swedish elements was a
- predominantly germanized land, is to be established as a mighty
- German borderland. The preliminary cultural conditions are
- available everywhere; and the German Reich will be able to
- guarantee the right to a later settlement to all those who have
- distinguished themselves in this war, to the descendants of
- those who gave their lives during the war, and also to all who
- fought in the Baltic campaign, never once lost courage, fought
- on in the hour of despair, and delivered Baltic civilization
- from Bolshevism. For the rest the solution of the colonization
- problem is not a Baltic question but one which concerns Greater
- Germany, and it must be settled on these lines.”
-
-These two directives are, I think, sufficiently typical of the lot to
-show the Tribunal the extent of the planning and preparation for this
-phase of the aggression as well as the political purpose it was hoped
-would be achieved thereby. However, on 28 June 1941, less than a week
-after the invasion, Rosenberg himself prepared a full report of his
-activities since his appointment on the 20th of April. One might almost
-think he had so meticulously recorded his activities in order to be of
-assistance to this prosecution.
-
-This report is numbered 1039-PS, and I now offer it in evidence as
-Exhibit USA-146. To me the most interesting things about this report are
-its disclosures concerning the number of these defendants who worked
-with and assisted Rosenberg in the planning and preparation for this
-phase of the aggression and the extent to which practically all of the
-ministries and offices of both state and Party are shown to have been
-involved in this operation. The report was found in the Defendant
-Rosenberg’s files; and although it is rather long, it is of sufficient
-importance in implicating persons, groups, and organizations, that it
-must, I believe, be read in full in order that it may be made part of
-the record. It is headed, “Report on the Preparatory Work in Eastern
-European Territories”:
-
- “Immediately after the notification of individual supreme Reich
- offices regarding the Führer’s Decree of 20.4.41 a conference
- with the Chief of the OKW”—Armed Forces High Command—“took
- place”—That is the Defendant Keitel—“After presentation of the
- various political aims in the proposed Reich commissions and
- presentation of personal requirements for the East, the chief of
- the OKW explained that reservation”—UK-Stellung—“would be too
- complicated in this case and that this matter could be carried
- out best by direct assignment”—Abkommandierung—“by command of
- the Chief of the OKW. General Field Marshal Keitel then issued
- an appropriate command which established the basis for the
- coming requirements. He named as deputy and liaison officer
- General Jodl and Major General Warlimont. The negotiations which
- then commenced relative in all questions of the Eastern
- territory including personal needs”—relative to, I suppose it
- is—“were carried on by the gentlemen of the OKW in
- collaboration with officials of my office.
-
-
-
- “A conference took place with Admiral Canaris to the effect that
- under the given confidential circumstances my office could in no
- way deal with any representatives of the people of the east
- European area. I asked him to do this insofar as the military
- intelligence required it and then to name persons to me who
- could count as political personalities, over and above the
- military intelligence, in order to arrange for their eventual
- commitment later. Admiral Canaris said that naturally also my
- wish not to recognize any political groups among the emigrants
- would be considered by him and that he was planning to proceed
- in accordance with my indications.
-
-
-
- “Later on I informed General Field Marshal Von Brauchitsch and
- Grossadmiral Raeder about the historical and political
- conceptions of the Eastern problem. In further conferences we
- agreed to appoint a representative of my office to the Supreme
- Commander of the Army, respectively to the Chief Quartermaster,
- and to the Army groups for questions relative to political
- configuration and requests of the OKW. In the meantime this has
- been done.
-
-
-
- “Already at the outset there was a discussion with Minister of
- Economics”—Reichswirtschaftsminister—“Funk”—the Defendant
- Funk—“who appointed as his permanent deputy Ministerial
- Director Dr. Schlotterer. Almost daily conferences were then
- held with Dr. Schlotterer with reference to the war economic
- intentions of the Economic Operational Staff East. In this
- connection I had conferences with General Thomas, State
- Secretary Körner, State Secretary Backe, Ministerial Director
- Riecke, General Schubert, and others.
-
-
-
- “Far-reaching agreement was reached in the eastern questions as
- regards direct technical work now and in the future. A few
- problems regarding the general relationship of the proposed
- Reich ministry toward the Four Year Plan are still open and will
- be subject, after submission, to the decision of the Führer. In
- principle I declared that I in no way intended to found an
- economic department in my office; economics would rather be
- handled substantially and practically by the Reich
- Marshal”—that is the Defendant Göring—“and the persons
- appointed by him. However, the two responsible department heads,
- namely, Ministerial Director Dr. Schlotterer for industrial
- economy and Ministerial Director Riecke for food economy, would
- be placed in my office as permanent liaison men to co-ordinate
- here political aims with the economic necessities in a
- department which would still have to unite with other persons
- for such co-ordinating work, depending on labor conditions as
- they may arise later on (political leadership of labor unions,
- construction, _et cetera_).
-
-
-
- “After notification of the Reich Foreign Minister, the latter
- appointed Geheimrat Grosskopf as permanent liaison man to my
- office. For the requested representation in the political
- department of my office (headed by Reichsamtsleiter Dr.
- Leibbrandt), the Foreign Ministry released Consul General Dr.
- Bräutigam, who is known to me for many years, speaks Russian,
- and worked for years in Russia. Negotiations, which if necessary
- will be placed before the Führer, are under way with the Foreign
- Office regarding its wishes for the assignment of its
- representatives to the future Reich commissioners (or
- Kommissars).
-
-
-
- “The Propaganda Ministry”—that is Goebbels—“appointed State
- Secretary Gutterer as permanent liaison man, and a complete
- agreement was reached to the effect that the decisions on all
- political and other essays, speeches, proclamations, _et
- cetera_, would be made in my office; a great number of
- substantial works for propaganda would be delivered and the
- papers prepared by the Propaganda Ministry would be modified
- here, if necessary. The whole practical employment of propaganda
- will undisputedly be subject to the Reich Ministry of Public
- Enlightenment and Propaganda. For the sake of closer
- co-operation the Propaganda Ministry assigns yet another person
- directly under my department, ‘Enlightenment and Press,’ and in
- addition appoints a permanent press liaison man. All these
- activities have been going on for some time, and without
- attracting attention to my office in any way this co-ordination
- on contents and terminology takes place continually every day.
-
-
-
- “Thorough discussions took place with Reich Minister Ohnesorge
- concerning future transmission of communication and setting up
- of all technical necessities in future occupied territories;
- with Reich Minister Seldte on the supply of labor forces, with
- Reich Minister Frick”—that is the Defendant Frick—“(State
- Secretary Stuckart) in detailed form on the assignment of
- numerous necessary officials for the commissions. According to
- the present estimate there will be four Reich commissions as
- approved by the Führer. I shall propose to the Führer for
- political and other reasons to set up a suitable number of
- general commissions (24), main commissions (about 80), and
- regional commissions (over 900). A general commission would
- correspond to a former general government; a main commission to
- a main government.
-
-
-
- “A regional commission contains three or four
- districts”—Kreise—“In view of the huge spaces that is the
- minimum number which appears necessary for a future civil
- government or administration. A portion of the officials has
- already been requested on the basis of the above-named command
- of the Chief of the OKW.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Alderman, speaking for myself I don’t understand why
-it is necessary to read this document in full. You have already shown
-that there was a plan for dividing Russia up into a number of
-commissions.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: Quite true. I should like merely to point out two of three
-other individual defendants who are referred to in this document and as
-to whom the document shows that they were in immediate complicity with
-this whole scheme. The first of those, about three paragraphs further
-down, the Reich Youth Leader—that is the Defendant Baldur Von Schirach.
-Then of course Gruppenführer SS Heydrich, about the next paragraph . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Well, he is not a defendant.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: No, Sir. His organization is, however, if the Tribunal
-please, charged as a criminal organization.
-
-In the next paragraph, the Defendant Ministerial Director Fritzsche, who
-worked under Goebbels.
-
-Without a long discussion of further evidence I might summarize the
-individual implication in this fashion. Those of the individual
-defendants now on trial which this report personally involves are
-Keitel, Jodl, Raeder, Funk, Göring, Ribbentrop, Frick, Schirach, and
-Fritzsche. The organizations involved by this report include the
-following:
-
-OKW, OKH, OKM, Ministry of the Interior, Ministry of Economics, Reich
-Foreign Ministry, Propaganda Ministry, Ministry of Labor, Ministry of
-Communications, the Reich Physicians’ Union, Ministry of Munitions and
-Armaments, Reich Youth Leadership, Reich Organization Leadership, German
-Labor Front, the SS, the SA, and the Reich Press Chief.
-
-At a later stage in the Trial, and in other connections, I should like
-to ask the Tribunal to consider that that document with which I have
-just been dealing be considered a part of the record to the extent that
-it involves these individuals.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I think you can treat it as all being in evidence.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: At a later stage in the Trial and in other connections,
-evidence will be introduced concerning the manner in which all of this
-planning and preparation for the elimination of the Union of Soviet
-Socialist Republics as a political factor was actually carried out. The
-planned execution of intelligentsia and other Russian leaders was, for
-example, but a part of the actual operation of the program to destroy
-the Soviet Union politically and make impossible its early resurrection
-as a European power.
-
-Having thus elaborately prepared on every side for the invasion of the
-Soviet Union, the Nazi conspirators proceeded to carry out their plans;
-and on 22 June 1941 hurled their armies across the borders of the
-U.S.S.R. In announcing this act of perfidy to the world Hitler issued a
-proclamation on the day of the attack. The text of this statement has
-already been brought to the Tribunal’s attention by my British
-colleagues, and I should like merely to refer to it in passing here by
-quoting therefrom this one sentence, “I have therefore today decided to
-give the fate of Europe again into the hands of our soldiers.”
-
-This announcement told the world that the die had been cast—the plans
-darkly conceived almost a full year before and secretly and continuously
-developed since then, had now been brought to fruition. These
-conspirators, having carefully and completely planned and prepared this
-war of aggression, now proceeded to initiate and wage it.
-
-That brings us to the consideration of the motives for the attack.
-Before going into the positive reasons I should like first to point out
-that not only was Germany bound by a solemn covenant not to attack the
-U.S.S.R., but throughout the entire period from August 1939 to the
-invasion in 1941 the Soviet Union was faithful to its agreements with
-Germany and displayed no aggressive intentions toward territories of the
-German Reich. General Thomas, for example, points out in his draft of
-“Basic Facts for a History of the German War and Armaments Economy,”
-which is our Document Number 2353-PS and which I put in evidence earlier
-as Exhibit USA-35, that insofar as the German-Soviet Trade Agreement of
-11 August 1939 was concerned, the Soviets carried out their deliveries
-thereunder up to the very end.
-
-Thomas points out that deliveries by the Soviets were usually made
-quickly and well; and since the food and raw materials being thus
-delivered were considered essential to the German economy, efforts were
-made to keep up their side too. However, as preparations for the
-campaign proceeded, the Nazis cared less about complying with their
-obligations under that agreement. At Page 315 of his book Thomas says,
-and I read from Page 9 of the English translation:
-
- “Later on the urgency of the Russian deliveries diminished, as
- preparations for the campaign in the East were already under
- way.”
-
-By that, clearly he speaks of German deliveries to Russia, not as to
-what the Russians delivered.
-
- “The Russians carried out their deliveries as planned right up
- to the start of the attack; even during the last few days
- transports of india-rubber from the Far East were completed by
- express transit trains.”
-
-Again at Page 404 this author brings this point out even more forcefully
-when he states—and I shall read the first paragraph on Page 14 of the
-English translation:
-
- “In addition to the Italian negotiations until June 1941, the
- negotiations with Russia were accorded a great deal of
- attention.
-
-
-
- “The Führer issued the directive that, in order to camouflage
- German troop movements, the orders Russia has placed in Germany
- must be filled as promptly as possible. Since the Russians only
- made grain deliveries when the Germans delivered orders placed
- by the Russians and since, in the case of the individual firms,
- these deliveries to Russia made it impossible for them to fill
- orders for the German Armed Forces, it was necessary for the Wi
- Rü office to enter into numerous individual negotiations with
- German firms in order to co-ordinate Russian orders with those
- of the Germans from the standpoint of priority. In accordance
- with the wishes of the Foreign Office German industry was
- instructed to accept all Russian orders even if it were
- impossible to fill them within the limits of the time set for
- manufacture and delivery. Since, in May especially, large
- deliveries had to be made to the Navy, the firms were instructed
- to allow the equipment to go through the Russian Acceptance
- Commission, then however, to make such a detour during its
- transportation as to make it impossible for it to be delivered
- over the frontier prior to the beginning of the German attack.”
-
-Not only was the Soviet Union faithful to the treaty obligations with
-Germany but the evidence shows that she had no aggressive intentions
-toward any German territory. Our Document Number C-170, which is in
-evidence as Exhibit USA-136, is as I have previously stated, a file on
-Russo-German relations found in the files of the Naval High Command
-covering the entire period from the treaty to the attack. The entries in
-this file demonstrate conclusively the point I have just stated. It
-will, I think, be sufficient to read to the Tribunal a few entries which
-include reports from the German Ambassador in Moscow as late as June
-1941. I shall read the first entry, 165 on Page 21 of the English
-translation; that is 4 June:
-
- “Outwardly, no change in the relationship Germany-Russia;
- Russian deliveries continue to full satisfaction. Russian
- Government is endeavoring to do everything to prevent a conflict
- with Germany.”
-
-In entry 167 on Page 22 of the English translation, it says:
-
- “6 June. Ambassador in Moscow reports . . . Russia will only
- fight if attacked by Germany. Situation is considered in Moscow
- much more serious than up to now. All military preparations have
- been made quietly—as far as can be recognized, only defensive.
- Russian policy still strives as before to produce the best
- possible relationship to Germany.”
-
-The next one is entry 169, also on Page 22; the date, 7 June:
-
- “From the report of the Ambassador in Moscow . . . all
- observations show that Stalin and Molotov, who alone are
- responsible for Russian foreign policy, are doing everything to
- avoid a conflict with Germany. The entire behavior of the
- Government as well as the attitude of the press, which reports
- all events concerning Germany in a factual, indisputable manner,
- support this view. The loyal fulfillment of the economic treaty
- with Germany proves the same thing.”
-
-Now, that is the German Ambassador talking to you.
-
-The reasons, therefore, which led to the attack on the Soviet Union
-could not have been self-defense or treaty breaches. In truth, no doubt,
-as has been necessarily implied from the materials presented on planning
-and preparation, more than one motive entered into the decision of the
-Nazi conspirators to launch their aggression against the U.S.S.R. All of
-them, however, appear to blend into one grand motive of Nazi policy. The
-pattern into which these various reasons impelling the decision to
-attack may be said to fall is the traditional Nazi ambition for
-expansion to the East at the expense of the U.S.S.R. This Nazi version
-of an earlier imperial imperative—the “Drang nach Osten” (or the drive
-to the East)—had been a cardinal principle of the Nazi Party almost
-since its birth and rested on the twin bases of political strategy and
-economic aggrandizement. Politically such action meant the elimination
-of the powerful country to the east, which might constitute a threat to
-German ambitions, and acquisition of Lebensraum; while on the economic
-side, it offered magnificent opportunities for the plunder of vast
-quantities of food, raw materials, and other supplies, going far beyond
-any legitimate exploitation under the Geneva Convention principles for
-military purpose. Undoubtedly the demands of the German war economy for
-food and raw material served to revive the attractiveness on the
-economic side of this theory while the difficulties Germany was
-experiencing in defeating England reaffirmed for the Nazi conspirators
-the temporarily forgotten Nazi political imperative of eliminating, as a
-political factor, their one formidable opponent on the continent.
-
-As early as 1923 Hitler outlined this theory in some detail in _Mein
-Kampf_ where he stated, and I quote from Page 641 of the Houghton
-Mifflin English edition, as follows:
-
- “There are two reasons which induce me to submit to a special
- examination the relation of Germany to Russia: (1) Here perhaps
- we are dealing with the most decisive concern of all German
- foreign affairs; and (2) this question is also the touchstone
- for the political capacity of the young National Socialist
- movement to think clearly and to act correctly.”
-
-And again at Page 654 of the same edition:
-
- “And so we National Socialists consciously draw a line beneath
- the foreign policy tendency of our pre-war period. We take up
- where we broke off 600 years ago. We stop the endless German
- movement to the south and west, and turn our gaze toward the
- land in the East. At long last we break off the colonial and
- commercial policy of the pre-war period and shift to the soil
- policy of the future.
-
-
-
- “If we speak of soil in Europe today, we can primarily have in
- mind only Russia and her vassal border states.”
-
-The political portion of this economy or purpose is clearly reflected in
-the stated purposes of the organization which the Defendant Rosenberg
-set up to administer the Occupied Eastern Territories. I have already
-discussed this material and need not repeat it now. In a speech,
-however, which he delivered 2 days before the attack to the people most
-interested in the problem of the East, Rosenberg re-stated in his usual
-somewhat mystic fashion the political basis for the campaign and its
-inter-relationship with the economic goal. I should like to read a short
-extract from that speech, which is Document Number 1058-PS and which I
-now offer in evidence as Exhibit USA-147. The part I read is from Page 9
-of the German text:
-
- “The job of feeding the German people stands this year, without
- a doubt, at the top of the list of Germany’s claims in the East;
- and here the southern territories and the northern Caucasus will
- have to serve as a balance for the feeding of the German people.
- We see absolutely no reason for any obligation on our part to
- feed also the Russian people with the products of that surplus
- territory. We know that this is a harsh necessity, bare of any
- feelings. A very extensive evacuation will be necessary, without
- any doubt, and it is sure that the future will hold very hard
- years in store for the Russians. A later decision will have to
- determine to what extent industries can still be maintained
- there (wagon factories, _et cetera_). The consideration and
- execution of this policy in the Russian area proper is for the
- German Reich and its future a tremendous and by no means
- negative task, as might appear, if one takes only the harsh
- necessity of the evacuation into consideration. The conversion
- of Russian dynamics towards the East is a task which requires
- the strongest characters. Perhaps this decision will also be
- approved by a coming Russia later, not in 30 but in a 100
- years.”
-
-As I have indicated, the failure of the Nazi conspirators to defeat
-Great Britain had served to strengthen them further in their belief of
-the political necessity of eliminating the Soviet Union as a European
-factor before Germany could completely achieve her role as the master of
-Europe.
-
-The economic motive for the aggression was brought out clearly in our
-discussion of the organization set up under Göring and General Thomas to
-carry out the economic exploitation of the territories they occupied.
-The purely materialistic basis for the attack was unmistakable; and if
-any doubt existed that at least one of the main purposes of the invasion
-was to steal the food and raw material needed for the Nazi war machine
-regardless of the horrible consequences such robbery would entail, that
-doubt is dispelled by a memorandum, which bears our Number 2718-PS and
-which I introduced earlier during my opening statement as Exhibit
-USA-32, showing clear and conscious recognition that these Nazi plans
-would no doubt result in starving to death millions of people by robbing
-them of their food.
-
-Along the similar line, on June 20, 1941 General Thomas wrote a
-memorandum in which he stated that General Keitel had confirmed to him
-Hitler’s present conception of the German economic policy concerning raw
-material. This policy expressed the almost unbelievably heartless theory
-that less manpower would be used in the conquest of sources of raw
-materials than would be necessary to produce synthetics in lieu of such
-raw materials. This is our Document Number 1456-PS, and I offer it in
-evidence as Exhibit USA-148. I should like to read the first two
-paragraphs.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Perhaps we better do that after the adjournment.
-
- [_A recess was taken until 1400 hours._]
-
-
-
-
- _Afternoon Session_
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I understand that the Defendant Kaltenbrunner is now in
-court. Will you stand up, please?
-
-[_The Defendant Kaltenbrunner rose in the dock._]
-
-THE PRESIDENT: In accordance with Article 24 of the Charter, you must
-now plead either guilty or not guilty.
-
-ERNST KALTENBRUNNER: I plead not guilty. I do not believe that I have
-made myself guilty.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: May it please the Tribunal, I had just put in evidence our
-Document 1456-PS as Exhibit USA-148. I now read from that document on
-Page 17:
-
- “The following is a new conception of the Führer, which Minister
- Todt has explained to me and which has been confirmed later on
- by Field Marshal Keitel:
-
-
-
- “I. The course of the war shows that we went too far in our
- autarkical endeavors. It is impossible to try to manufacture
- everything we lack by synthetic procedures or other measures.
- For instance, it is impossible to develop our motor fuel economy
- to a point where we can entirely depend on it. All these
- autarkical endeavors demand a tremendous amount of manpower, and
- it is simply impossible to provide it. One has to choose another
- way. What one does not have but needs, one must conquer. The
- commitment of men which is necessary for one single action will
- not be as great as the one that is currently needed for the
- running of the synthetic factories in question. The aim must
- therefore be to secure all territories which are of special
- interest to us for the war economy by conquering them.
-
-
-
- “At the time the Four Year Plan was established I issued a
- statement in which I made it clear that a completely autarkical
- economy is impossible for us because the need of men will be too
- great. My solution, however, has always been directed to
- securing the necessary reserves for missing stocks by concluding
- economic agreements which would guarantee delivery even in
- wartime.”
-
-On this macabre note I come to the end of the story of this aggression.
-We have seen these conspirators as they planned, prepared, and finally
-initiated their wanton attack upon the Soviet Union. Others will carry
-on the tale and describe the horrible manner in which they waged this
-war of aggression and the countless crimes they committed in its wake.
-When I consider the solemn pledge of non-aggression, the base and
-sinister motives involved, the months of secret planning and
-preparation, and the unbelievable suffering intentionally and
-deliberately wrought—when I consider all of this, I feel fully
-justified in saying that never before—and, God help us, never again—in
-the history of relations between sovereign nations has a blacker chapter
-been written than the one which tells of this unprovoked invasion of the
-territory of the Soviet Union. For those responsible—and they are here
-before you, the defendants in this case—it might be just to let the
-punishment fit the crime.
-
-I now turn to the final phase of the detailed presentation of the
-aggressive-war part of the case: German collaboration with Italy and
-Japan, and aggressive war against the United States. The relevant
-portions of the Indictment are set forth in Subsection 7 under Section
-IV (F) of Count One, appearing at Pages 9 and 10 of the printed English
-text of the Indictment. The materials relating to this unholy alliance
-of the three fascist powers and to the aggressive war against the United
-States have been gathered together in a document book, marked with the
-letter “Q,” which I now submit to the Tribunal.
-
-Before moving on to the subject matter of this tripartite collaboration,
-I should like to invite the attention of the Tribunal to the
-significance of this phase. In the course of the joint presentation by
-the British and American Prosecution in the past several days, we have
-seen the swastika carried forward by force of arms from a tightly
-controlled and remilitarized Germany to the four corners of Europe. The
-elements of a conspiracy that I am now about to discuss project the Nazi
-plan upon a universal screen, involving the older world of Asia and the
-new world of the United States of America. As a result, the wars of
-aggression that were planned in Berlin and launched across the frontiers
-of Poland ended some six years later, almost to the day, in surrender
-ceremonies upon a United States battleship riding at anchor in the Bay
-of Tokyo.
-
-The first formal alliance between Hitler’s Germany and the Japanese
-Government was the Anti-Comintern Pact signed in Berlin on 25 November
-1936. This agreement, on its face, was directed against the activities
-of the Communist International. It was subsequently adhered to by Italy
-on 6 November 1937.
-
-I ask the Tribunal to take judicial notice of these official state
-documents in accordance with Article 21 of the Charter. The German text
-of these treaties—the original German-Japanese Anti-Comintern Pact and
-the subsequent Protocol of Adherence by Italy—is to be found in Volumes
-4 and 5 of the _Dokumente der Deutschen Politik_, respectively. The
-English translation of the German-Japanese Anti-Comintern Pact of 25
-November 1936 is contained in our Document 2508-PS; the English
-translation of the Protocol of Adherence by Italy of 6 November 1937 is
-contained in our Document 2506-PS. Both of these documents are included
-in the document books which have just been handed up to the Tribunal.
-
-It is an interesting fact, especially in the light of the evidence I
-shall submit regarding the Defendant Ribbentrop’s active participation
-in collaboration with the Japanese, that Ribbentrop signed the
-Anti-Comintern Pact for Germany at Berlin even though at that time,
-November 1936, Ribbentrop was not the German Foreign Minister but simply
-Hitler’s special Ambassador Plenipotentiary.
-
-On 27 September 1940 some four years after the Anti-Comintern Pact was
-signed and one year after the initiation of war in Europe, the German,
-Italian, and Japanese Governments signed another pact at Berlin, a
-10-year military-economic alliance. Again I note that the Defendant
-Ribbentrop signed for Germany, this time in his capacity as Foreign
-Minister. The official German text of this pact, as well as the Japanese
-and Italian texts together with an English translation, is contained in
-our Document 2643-PS, which has been certified by the signature and seal
-of the United States Secretary of State. I now offer in evidence
-Document 2643-PS as Exhibit USA-149.
-
-The Tripartite Pact pledged Germany, Italy, and Japan to support of, and
-collaboration with, one another in the establishment of a New Order in
-Europe and East Asia. I should like to read into the record parts of
-this far-reaching agreement:
-
- “The Governments of Germany, Italy, and Japan consider it as a
- condition precedent of a lasting peace, that each nation of the
- world be given its own proper place. They have, therefore,
- decided to stand together and to co-operate with one another in
- their efforts in Greater East Asia and in the regions of Europe,
- wherein it is their prime purpose to establish and maintain a
- new order of things calculated to promote the prosperity and
- welfare of the peoples there. Furthermore, it is the desire of
- the three Governments to extend this co-operation to such
- nations in other parts of the world as are inclined to give to
- their endeavors a direction similar to their own, in order that
- their aspirations towards world peace as the ultimate goal may
- thus be realized. Accordingly, the Governments of Germany,
- Italy, and Japan have agreed as follows:
-
-
-
- “Article 1. Japan recognizes and respects the leadership of
- Germany and Italy in the establishment of a New Order in Europe.
-
-
-
- “Article 2. Germany and Italy recognize and respect the
- leadership of Japan in the establishment of a New Order in
- Greater East Asia.
-
-
-
- “Article 3. Germany, Italy, and Japan agree to co-operate in
- their efforts on the aforesaid basis. They further undertake to
- assist one another with all political, economic, and military
- means, if one of the three contracting parties is attacked by a
- power at present not involved in the European war or in the
- Chinese-Japanese conflict.”
-
-I now skip to the first sentence of Article 6.
-
- “The present pact shall come into force immediately upon
- signature and remain in force for 10 years from the date of its
- coming into force.”
-
-The Tripartite Pact of 27 September 1940 thus was a bold announcement to
-the world that the fascist leaders of Germany, Japan, and Italy had
-cemented a full military alliance to achieve world domination and to
-establish a New Order presaged by the Japanese invasion of Manchuria in
-1931, the ruthless Italian conquest of Ethiopia in 1935, and the Nazi
-overflow into Austria early in 1938. I might also comment that this fact
-introduces the Führerprinzip into world politics.
-
-I should like to read in this connection a statement by Cordell Hull,
-Secretary of State of the United States, at the time of the signing of
-this Tripartite Pact. This statement appears in the official United
-States publication, _Peace and War, United States Foreign Policy,
-1931-1941_, which has already been put in evidence as Exhibit USA-122.
-Mr. Hull’s statement is Number 184 therein. It is also our Document
-Number 2944-PS, and both the English text and a German translation
-thereof are included in the document books. I now quote a statement by
-the Secretary of State, 27 September 1940:
-
- “The reported agreement of alliance does not, in view of the
- Government of the United States, substantially alter a situation
- which has existed for several years. Announcement of the
- alliance merely makes clear to all a relationship which has long
- existed in effect, and to which this Government have repeatedly
- called attention. That such an agreement has been in process of
- conclusion has been well known for some time, and that fact has
- been fully taken into account by the Government of the United
- States, in the determining of this country’s policies.”
-
-That ends the quotation.
-
-I shall not attempt here to trace the relationships and negotiations
-leading up to the Tripartite Pact of 27 September 1940. I shall note,
-however, one example of the type of German-Japanese relationship
-existing before the formalization of the Tripartite Pact. This is the
-record of the conversation of 31 January 1939 between Himmler and
-General Oshima, Japanese Ambassador at Berlin, which was referred to by
-the United States Chief of Counsel in his opening address. This
-document, which is signed by Himmler in crayon, is our Document Number
-2195-PS. I offer it in evidence as Exhibit USA-150. I now quote the file
-memorandum:
-
- “Today I visited General Oshima. The conversation ranged over
- the following subjects:
-
-
-
- “1) The Führer speech, which pleased him very much, especially
- because it has been spiritually well founded in every respect.
-
-
-
- “2) We discussed the conclusion of a treaty to consolidate the
- triangle Germany-Italy-Japan into an even firmer mold. He also
- told me that, together with German
- counter-espionage”—Abwehr—“he was undertaking long-range
- projects aimed at the disintegration of Russia and emanating
- from the Caucasus and the Ukraine. However, this organization
- was to become effective only in case of war.
-
-
-
- “3) Furthermore, he had succeeded up to now in sending 10
- Russians with bombs across the Caucasian frontier. These
- Russians had the mission to kill Stalin. A number of additional
- Russians whom he had also sent across had been shot at the
- frontier.”
-
-Whatever the beginning and the course of development of the fascist
-triplice, the Nazi conspirators, once their military and economic
-alliance with Japan had been formalized, exhorted the Japanese to
-aggression against those nations with whom they were at war and those
-with whom they contemplated war. In this the conspirators pursued a
-course strikingly parallel to that followed in their relationship with
-the other member of the European Axis. On 10 June 1940 in fulfillment of
-her alliance with Germany, Italy had carried out her “stab in the back”
-by declaring war against France and Great Britain. These Nazi
-conspirators set about to induce similar action by Japan on the other
-side of the world.
-
-As I shall show, the nations against whom the German-Japanese
-collaboration was aimed at various times were the British Commonwealth
-of Nations, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, and the United
-States of America. I shall deal with each of these nations in the order
-named.
-
-At least as early as 23 February 1941—on the basis of documents
-available to us—these conspirators undertook to exploit their alliance
-with Japan by exhortations to commit aggression against the British
-Commonwealth. Again the figure of the Defendant Ribbentrop appears. On
-that date, 23 February 1941, he held a conference with General Oshima,
-the Japanese Ambassador to Berlin, at which he urged that the Japanese
-open hostilities against the British in the Far East as soon as
-possible.
-
-The report of that conference, our Document 1834-PS, has already been
-offered in connection with the presentation of the case on aggression
-against the Soviet Union as Exhibit USA-129. A part of it has already
-been read into the record and I now intend to read other portions. I
-shall again come back to this document when dealing with the
-German-Japanese collaboration as regards the United States.
-
-As can be seen on the cover page of the English translation, Ribbentrop
-on 2 March sent copies of an extract of the record of this conference to
-his various ambassadors and ministers for their strictly confidential
-and purely personal information with the further note that—and I quote:
-
- “These statements are of fundamental significance for
- orientation in the general political situation facing Germany in
- early spring 1941.”
-
-I shall now quote from the top of Page 2 of the English translation of
-1834-PS, to the end of the first paragraph on that page, and then skip
-to the last three sentences of the second paragraph:
-
- “Extract from the report of the conference of the Reich Foreign
- Minister with Ambassador Oshima in Fuschl on 13 February 1941.
-
-
-
- “After particularly cordial mutual greetings the RAM (Reich
- Foreign Minister) declared that Ambassador Oshima had been
- proved right in the policy he had pursued regarding Germany in
- the face of the many doubters in Japan. By Germany’s victory in
- the West these policies had been fully vindicated. He (the
- RAM)”—that is Ribbentrop—“regretted that the alliance between
- Germany and Japan, for which he had been working with the
- ambassador for many years already, had come into being only
- after various detours; but public opinion in Japan had not been
- ripe for it earlier. The main thing was, however, that they are
- together now.”
-
-Then, skipping:
-
- “Now that the German-Japanese alliance has been concluded,
- Ambassador Oshima is the man who gets credit for it from the
- Japanese side. After conclusion of the alliance the question of
- its further development now stands in the foreground. How is the
- situation in this respect?”
-
-Ribbentrop, thereafter in the conference, proceeded to shape the
-argument for Japanese intervention against the British. First outlining
-the intended air and U-boat warfare by Germany against England, he
-said—and I now quote the last two sentences in Paragraph 4, on Page 2,
-of the English translation:
-
- “Thereby England’s situation would take catastrophic shape
- overnight. The landing in England is prepared; its execution,
- however, depends on various factors, above all on weather
- conditions.”
-
-And then skipping and picking up at the first full paragraph on Page 3
-of the English translation, I quote the Defendant Ribbentrop again:
-
- “The Führer will beat England wherever he encounters her.
- Besides, our strength is not only equal but superior to a
- combined English-American air force at any time. The number of
- pilots at our disposal is unlimited. The same is true of our
- airplane production capacity. As far as quality is concerned,
- ours always has been superior to the English—to say nothing
- about the American—and we are on the way to enlarge even this
- lead. Upon order of the Führer the antiaircraft defense, too,
- will be greatly reinforced. Since the Army has been supplied far
- beyond its requirements and enormous reserves have been piled
- up—the ammunitions plants have been slowed down because of the
- immense stock of material—production now will be concentrated
- on submarines, airplanes, and antiaircraft guns.
-
-
-
- “Every eventuality had been provided for; the war has been won
- today, militarily, economically, and politically. We have the
- desire to end the war quickly, and to force England to sue for
- peace soon. The Führer is vigorous and healthy, fully convinced
- of victory, and determined to bring the war as quickly as
- possible to a victorious close. To this end the cooperation with
- Japan is of importance. However, Japan, in her own interest,
- should come in as soon as possible. This would destroy England’s
- key position in the Far East. Japan, on the other hand, would
- thus secure her position in the Far East, a position which she
- could acquire only through war. There were three reasons for
- quick action:
-
-
-
- “1) Intervention by Japan would mean a decisive blow against the
- center of the British Empire (threat to India, cruiser warfare,
- _et cetera_). The effect upon the morale of the British people
- would be very serious and this would contribute toward a quick
- ending of the war.
-
-
-
- “2) A surprise intervention by Japan is bound to keep America
- out of the war. America, which at present is not yet armed and
- would hesitate greatly to expose her Navy to any risks west of
- Hawaii, could then less likely do this. If Japan would otherwise
- respect the American interests, there would not even be the
- possibility for Roosevelt to use the argument of lost prestige
- to make war plausible to the Americans. It is very unlikely that
- America would declare war if she then would have to stand by
- helplessly while Japan takes the Philippines without America
- being able to do anything about it.
-
-
-
- “3) In view of the coming New World Order it seems to be in the
- interest of Japan also to secure for herself, even during the
- war, the position she wants to hold in the Far East at the time
- of a peace treaty. Ambassador Oshima agreed entirely with this
- line of thought and said that he would do everything to carry
- through this policy.”
-
-I should like to note at this point the subtlety of Ribbentrop’s
-argument. First he told the Japanese Ambassador that Germany had already
-practically won the war by herself. Nevertheless he suggested that the
-war could be successfully terminated more quickly with Japan’s aid and
-that the moment was propitious for Japan’s entry. Then referring to the
-spoils of the conquest, he indicated that Japan would be best advised to
-pick up by herself during the war the positions she wanted, implying
-that she would have to earn her share of the booty, which is reminiscent
-of that statement I read to you earlier from the Führer, that “those who
-wished to be in on the meal must take a part in the cooking.”
-
-Continuing Ribbentrop’s argument to show the real nature of the
-German-Japanese alliance, I shall now read the top two paragraphs on
-Page 5 of the English translation of 1834-PS:
-
- “The Reich Foreign Minister continued by saying that it was
- Japan’s friendship which had enabled Germany to arm after the
- Anti-Comintern Pact was concluded. On the other hand, Japan had
- been able to penetrate deeply into the English sphere of
- influence in China. Germany’s victory on the continent has
- brought now, after the conclusion of the Three Power Pact, great
- advantages for Japan. France, as a power, was eliminated in the
- Far East (Indo-China). England, too, was considerably weakened;
- Japan had been able to close unsteadily on Singapore. Thus,
- Germany had already contributed enormously to the shaping of the
- future fate of the two nations. Due to our geographical
- situation, we should have to carry the main burden of the final
- battle in the future, too. If an unwanted conflict with Russia
- should arise, we should have to carry the main burden also in
- this case. If Germany should ever weaken, Japan would find
- herself confronted by a world coalition within a short time. We
- would all be in the same boat. The fate of both nations would be
- determined for centuries to come. The same was true for Italy.
- The interests of the three countries would never intersect. A
- defeat of Germany would also mean the end of the Japanese
- imperialistic idea.
-
-
-
- “Ambassador Oshima definitely agreed with these statements and
- emphasized the fact that Japan was determined to keep her
- imperial position. The Reich Foreign Minister then discussed the
- great problems which would arise after the war for the parties
- of the Three Power Pact from the shaping of a new order in
- Europe and East Asia. The problems arising then would require a
- bold solution. Thereby no over-centralization should take place;
- but a solution should be found on a basis of parity,
- particularly in the economic realm. In regard to this the Reich
- Foreign Minister advanced the principle that a free exchange of
- trade should take place between the two spheres of influence on
- a liberal basis. The European-African hemisphere under the
- leadership of Germany and Italy, and the East Asian sphere of
- interest under the leadership of Japan. As he conceived it, for
- example, Japan would conduct trade and make trade agreements
- directly with the independent states in the European hemisphere
- as heretofore, while Germany and Italy would trade directly and
- make trade agreements with the independent countries within the
- Japanese orbit of power, such as China, Thailand, Indo-China,
- _et cetera_. Furthermore, as between the two economic spheres,
- each should fundamentally grant the other preferences with
- regard to third parties. The Ambassador expressed agreement with
- this thought.”
-
-In the document I have just quoted from we have seen the instigation to
-war by the Defendant Ribbentrop, the German Foreign Minister. I shall
-return to him again in this connection.
-
-I now wish to show, however, the participation of the so-called military
-representatives in the encouragement and provocation of further wars of
-aggression. I therefore offer in evidence our Document Number C-75 as
-Exhibit USA-151.
-
-This document is a top-secret order signed by the Defendant Keitel as
-Chief of the OKW and entitled, “Basic Order Number 24 regarding
-Collaboration with Japan.” It is dated 5 March 1941, about a week and a
-half after Ribbentrop’s conference with Oshima that I have just
-discussed. It was distributed in 14 copies to the highest commands of
-the Army, Navy, and Air Force as well as to the Foreign Office. We have
-turned up two copies of this order, identical except for handwritten
-notations, presumably made by the recipients. C-75, the document I have
-introduced, is copy Number 2 of the order distributed to the naval war
-staff of the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy, the OKM. We also have Copy
-number 4, designed for the Wehrmacht Führungsstab (the Operations Staff
-of the High Command of the Armed Forces). The head of this Operations
-Staff was the Defendant Jodl. Copy Number 4 was found in the OKW files
-at Flensburg. It is our Document Number 384-PS, and was referred to by
-the United States Chief of Counsel in his opening address. I shall not
-burden the Tribunal and the record by introducing two identical copies
-of the same order.
-
-Basic Order Number 24 was the authoritative Nazi policy on collaboration
-with Japan. I shall, therefore, propose to read it in its entirety, some
-two pages of English translation:
-
- “The Führer has issued the following order regarding
- collaboration with Japan:
-
-
-
- “1. It must be the aim of the collaboration based on the Three
- Power Pact to induce Japan, as soon as possible, _to take active
- measures in the Far East_”—The underscoring is in the original
- document—“Strong British forces will thereby be tied down, and
- the center of gravity of the interests of the United States of
- America will be diverted to the Pacific. The sooner she
- intervenes, the greater will be the prospects of success for
- Japan in view of the still undeveloped preparedness for war on
- the part of her adversaries. The Barbarossa operation will
- create particularly favorable political and military
- prerequisites for this.”
-
-Then there is a marginal note, “Slightly exaggerated.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Do you have any idea when that marginal notation was put
-in?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: I assume that was written by the recipient of this copy of
-the order.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: By whom?
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: By the recipient of this particular copy of the order,
-which was the naval war staff.
-
- “2. To prepare the way for the collaboration it is essential to
- strengthen the Japanese military potential with all means
- available. For this purpose the High Commands of the branches of
- the Armed Forces will comply in a comprehensive and generous
- manner with Japanese desires for information regarding German
- war and combat experience, and for assistance in military
- economics and in technical matters. Reciprocity is desirable,
- but this factor should not stand in the way of negotiations.
- Priority should naturally be given to those Japanese requests
- which would have the most immediate application in waging war.
- In special cases the Führer reserves the decisions for himself.
-
-
-
- “3. The harmonizing of the operational plans of the two parties
- is the responsibility of the Naval High Command. This will be
- subject to the following guiding principles:
-
-
-
- “a. The common aim of the conduct of war is to be stressed as
- forcing England to the ground quickly and thereby keeping the
- United States out of the war. Beyond this Germany has no
- political, military, or economic interests in the Far East which
- would give occasion for any reservations with regard to Japanese
- intentions.
-
-
-
- “b. The great successes achieved by Germany in mercantile
- warfare make it appear particularly suitable to employ strong
- Japanese forces for the same purpose. In this connection every
- opportunity to support German mercantile warfare must be
- exploited.
-
-
-
- “c. The raw material situation of the pact powers demands that
- Japan should acquire possession of those territories which it
- needs for the continuation of the war, especially if the United
- States intervenes. Rubber shipments must be carried out even
- after the entry of Japan into the war, since they are of vital
- importance to Germany.
-
-
-
- “d. The seizure of Singapore as the key British position in the
- Far East would mean a decisive success for the entire conduct of
- war of the three powers.
-
-
-
- “In addition, attacks on other systems of bases of British naval
- power—extending to those of American naval power only if the
- entry of the United States into the war cannot be
- prevented—will result in weakening the enemy’s system of power
- in that region and also, just like the attack on sea
- communications, in tying down substantial forces of all kinds
- (Australia). A date for the beginning of operational discussions
- cannot yet be fixed.
-
-
-
- “4. In the military commissions to be formed in accordance with
- the Three Power Pact, only such questions are to be dealt with
- as equally concern the three participating powers. These will
- include primarily the problems of economic warfare. The working
- out of the details is the responsibility of the main commission
- with the co-operation of the Armed Forces High Command.
-
-
-
- “5. The Japanese must not be given any intimation of the
- Barbarossa operations.”
-
-It is signed by Keitel as Chief of the Armed Forces High Command.
-
-If the Tribunal will glance at the distribution list, you will see that
-it went to the heads of all the Armed Forces, Armed Forces High Command:
-Joint Operation Staff, Intelligence divisions, and to the chief of
-foreign affairs, simultaneously for the Foreign Office.
-
-It appears from what I have just read that the Nazis’ cardinal
-operational principle in collaboration with Japan was, as early as March
-1941, the inducement of Japan to aggression against Singapore and other
-British far eastern bases. I shall pass over, for the moment, other
-references to the United States in Basic Order Number 24 and take up
-that point later.
-
-I now wish to refer to our Document Number C-152, which has already been
-introduced by the British prosecution as Exhibit GB-122. This document
-is the top-secret record of a meeting on 18 March 1941, about 2 weeks
-after the issuance of Basic Order Number 24; a meeting attended by
-Hitler, the Defendant Raeder, the Defendant Keitel, and the Defendant
-Jodl. We are concerned only with Paragraph 11 in this phase, where
-Raeder, then Commander-in-Chief of the Navy, is speaking. I quote:
-
- “Japan must take steps to seize Singapore as soon as possible,
- since the opportunity will never again be as favorable (tie-up
- of the whole English Fleet; unpreparedness of U.S.A. for war
- against Japan; inferiority of the United States Fleet in
- comparison with the Japanese). Japan is indeed making
- preparations for this action; but according to all declarations
- made by Japanese officers, she will only carry it out if Germany
- proceeds to land in England. Germany must, therefore,
- concentrate all her efforts on spurring Japan to act
- immediately. If Japan has Singapore, all other East Asiatic
- questions regarding the U.S.A. and England are thereby solved
- (Guam, Philippines, Borneo, Dutch East Indies).
-
-
-
- “Japan wishes, if possible, to avoid war against the U.S.A. She
- can do so if she determinedly takes Singapore as soon as
- possible.”
-
-The fact clearly appears from these minutes that military staff
-conferences had already been held with the Japanese to discuss the
-activation of Japanese military support against the British and to urge
-their immediate attack on Singapore. I quote again the second sentence
-in that paragraph:
-
- “Japan is indeed making preparations for this action; but
- according to all declarations made by Japanese officers, she
- will carry it out only if Germany proceeds to land in England.”
-
-Apparently the Nazis were subsequently able to persuade the Japanese to
-eliminate this condition precedent to their performance under the
-contract.
-
-I now turn to further efforts by the Defendant Ribbentrop to induce the
-Japanese to aggression against the British Commonwealth. On the 29th of
-March 1941 he met with the Japanese Foreign Minister, Matsuoka, who was
-then in Berlin. A report of their conversations found in the German
-Foreign Office archives is contained in our Document 1877-PS, which I
-now offer in evidence as Exhibit USA-152.
-
-Relevant portions of this document have been translated into English. I
-shall now read from the top of Page 1 of the English translation:
-
- “The RAM”—that is Ribbentrop—“resumed, where they had left
- off, the preceding conversation with Matsuoka about the latter’s
- impending talks with the Russians in Moscow. He expressed the
- opinion that it would probably be best, in view of the whole
- situation, not to carry the discussions with the Russians too
- far. He did not know how the situation would develop. One thing
- was certain, however, namely that Germany would strike
- immediately, should Russia ever attack Japan. He was ready to
- give Matsuoka this positive assurance so that Japan could push
- forward to the south on Singapore without fear of possible
- complications with Russia. The largest part of the German Army
- was on the Eastern frontiers of the Reich anyway and fully
- prepared to open the attack at any time. He (the RAM), however,
- believed that Russia would try to avoid developments leading to
- war. Should Germany, however, enter into a conflict with Russia,
- the U.S.S.R. would be finished off within a few months. In this
- case Japan would have, of course, even less reason to be afraid
- than ever, if she wants to advance on Singapore. Consequently,
- she need not refrain from such an undertaking because of
- possible fears of Russia.
-
-
-
- “He could not know, of course, just how things with Russia would
- develop. It was uncertain whether or not Stalin would intensify
- his present unfriendly policy against Germany. He (the RAM)
- wanted to point out to Matsuoka in any case that a conflict with
- Russia was at least within the realm of possibility. In any
- case, Matsuoka could not report to the Japanese Emperor, upon
- his return, that a conflict between Russia and Germany was
- impossible. On the contrary, the situation was such that such a
- conflict, even if it were not probable, would have to be
- considered possible.”
-
-I now skip five pages of the German text and continue directly with the
-English translation:
-
- “Next, the RAM turned again to the Singapore question. In view
- of the fears expressed by the Japanese of possible attacks by
- submarines based on the Philippines, and of the intervention of
- the British Mediterranean and home fleets, he had again
- discussed the situation with Grossadmiral Raeder. The latter had
- stated that the British Navy during this year would have its
- hands so full in the English home waters and in the
- Mediterranean that it would not be able to send even a single
- ship to the Far East. Grossadmiral Raeder had described the
- United States submarines as so poor that Japan need not bother
- about them at all.
-
-
-
- “Matsuoka replied immediately that the Japanese Navy had a very
- low estimate of the threat from the British Navy. It also held
- the view that, in case of a clash with the American Navy, it
- would be able to smash the latter without trouble. However, it
- was afraid that the Americans would not take up the battle with
- their fleet; thus the conflict with the United States might
- perhaps be dragged out to 5 years. This possibility caused
- considerable worry in Japan.
-
-
-
- “The RAM replied that America could not do anything against
- Japan in the case of the capture of Singapore. Perhaps for this
- reason alone, Roosevelt would think twice before deciding on
- active measures against Japan. For while on the one hand he
- could not achieve anything against Japan, on the other hand
- there was the probability of losing the Philippines to Japan;
- for the American President, of course, this would mean a
- considerable loss of prestige, and because of the inadequate
- rearmament, he would have nothing to offset such a loss.
-
-
-
- “In this connection Matsuoka pointed out that he was doing
- everything to reassure the English about Singapore. He acted as
- if Japan had no intention at all regarding this key position of
- England in the East. Therefore it might be possible that his
- attitude toward the British would appear to be friendly in words
- and in acts. However, Germany should not be deceived by that. He
- assumed this attitude not only in order to reassure the British,
- but also in order to fool the pro-British and pro-American
- elements in Japan just so long, until one day he would suddenly
- open the attack on Singapore.
-
-
-
- “In this connection Matsuoka stated that his tactics were based
- on the certain assumption that the sudden attack against
- Singapore would unite the entire Japanese nation with one blow.
- (‘Nothing succeeds like success,’ the RAM remarked.) He followed
- here the example expressed in the words of a famous Japanese
- statesman addressed to the Japanese Navy at the outbreak of the
- Russo-Japanese war: ‘You open fire, then the nation will be
- united.’ The Japanese need to be shaken up to awaken. After all,
- as an Oriental, he believed in the fate which would come,
- whether you wanted it or not.”
-
-I then skip again in the German text, and continue with what appears in
-the English translation:
-
- “Matsuoka then introduced the subject of German assistance in
- the blow against Singapore, a subject which had been broached to
- him frequently, and mentioned the proposal of a German written
- promise of assistance.
-
-
-
- “The RAM replied that he had already discussed these questions
- with Ambassador Oshima. He had asked him to procure maps of
- Singapore in order that the Führer—who probably must be
- considered the greatest expert on military questions at the
- present time—could advise Japan on the best method of attack
- against Singapore. German experts on aerial warfare, too, would
- be at her disposal; they could draw up a report, based on their
- European experiences, for the Japanese on the use of
- dive-bombers from airfields in the vicinity against the British
- Fleet in Singapore. Thus, the British Fleet would be forced to
- disappear from Singapore immediately.
-
-
-
- “Matsuoka remarked that Japan was less concerned with the
- British Fleet than with the capture of the fortifications.
-
- “The RAM replied that here, too, the Führer had developed new
- methods for the German attacks on strongly fortified positions,
- such as the Maginot Line and Fort Eben-Emael, which he could
- make available to the Japanese.
-
-
-
- “Matsuoka replied in this connection that some of the younger
- expert Japanese Naval officers, who were close friends of his,
- were of the opinion that the Japanese Naval forces would need 3
- months until they could capture Singapore. As a cautious Foreign
- Minister, he had doubled this estimate. He believed he could
- stave off any danger which threatened from America for 6 months.
- If, however, the capture of Singapore required still more time
- and if the operations would perhaps even drag out for a year,
- the situation with America would become extremely critical; and
- he did not know as yet how to meet it.
-
-
-
- “If at all avoidable, he would not touch the Netherlands East
- Indies, since he was afraid that in case of a Japanese attack on
- this area, the oil fields would be set afire. They could be
- brought into operation again only after 1 or 2 years.
-
-
-
- “The RAM added that Japan would gain decisive influence over the
- Netherlands East Indies simultaneously with the capture of
- Singapore.”
-
-On the 5th of April, about a week after the conference from whose
-minutes I have just quoted, Ribbentrop again met with Matsuoka and again
-pushed the Japanese another step along the road to aggressive war. The
-notes of this conference, which were also found in the German Foreign
-Office archives, are contained in our Document 1882-PS, which I now
-offer as Exhibit USA-153. I shall read a few brief extracts from these
-notes, starting with the third paragraph on Page 1 of the English
-translation:
-
- “In answer to a remark by Matsuoka that Japan was now awakened
- and, according to the Japanese temperament, would take action
- quickly after the previous lengthy deliberation, the Reich
- Foreign Minister replied that it was necessary, of course, to
- accept a risk in this connection just as the Führer had done
- successfully with the occupation of the Rhineland, with the
- proclamation of sovereignty of armament and with the resignation
- from the League of Nations.”
-
-I now skip several pages of the German text and continue on with the
-English translation.
-
- “The Reich Foreign Minister replied that the new German Reich
- would actually be built up on the basis of the ancient
- traditions of the Holy Roman Empire of the German nation, which
- in its time was the only dominant power on the European
- continent.
-
-
-
- “In conclusion, the Reich Foreign Minister once again summarized
- the points he wanted Matsuoka to take back to Japan with him
- from his trips:
-
-
-
- “1) Germany had already won the war. With the end of this year,
- the world would realize this. Even England would have to concede
- it, if she had not collapsed before then, and America would also
- have to resign herself to this fact.
-
-
-
- “2) There were no conflicting interests between Japan and
- Germany. The future of both countries could be regulated for the
- long run on the basis that Japan should predominate in the Far
- East, Italy and Germany in Europe and Africa.
-
-
-
- “3) Whatever might happen, Germany would win the war. But it
- would hasten victory if Japan would enter the war. Such an entry
- into the war was undoubtedly more in the interest of Japan than
- in that of Germany, for it offered a unique opportunity, which
- would hardly ever return, for the fulfillment of the national
- objectives of Japan—a chance which would make it possible for
- her to play a really leading role in East Asia.”
-
-Here again, in the portion just quoted, we see Ribbentrop pursuing the
-same track I have previously noted. Germany has already won the war for
-all practical purposes. Japan’s entry will hasten the inevitable end.
-But Japan had better get the positions she wants during the war.
-
-I also invite the Tribunal’s attention to Ribbentrop’s assurances,
-expressed in the quotation I read from 1877-PS previously, that Japan
-likewise had nothing to fear from the Soviet Union if Japan entered the
-conflict. The references to the weaknesses of the United States,
-scattered throughout the quotations I have read, were also an ingredient
-in this brew which was being so carefully prepared and brought to a
-boil.
-
-I should like to introduce one more document on the part of the case
-dealing particularly with exhortation of the Japanese to aggression
-against the British Commonwealth. This is our Document 1538-PS, which I
-now offer as Exhibit USA-154. This document is a top-secret report,
-dated 24 May 1941, from the German Military Attaché in Tokyo to the
-Intelligence Division of the OKW. I wish merely to call attention, at
-this point, to the last sentence in the paragraph numbered 1, wherein it
-is stated—I quote: “The preparations for attack on Singapore and Manila
-stand.”
-
-I shall return to this document later. I point out here, however, the
-fact which appears from the sentence I have just read, that the German
-military were keeping in close touch with the Japanese operational plans
-against Singapore, which the Nazi conspirators had fostered.
-
-Next, exhortations by the Nazis to Japanese aggression against the
-U.S.S.R.
-
-I invite the Tribunal’s attention, at this point, to the language of the
-Indictment on Page 10 of the English edition. I quote, beginning with
-the eighth line from the top of the page:
-
- “The Nazi conspirators conceived that Japanese aggression would
- weaken and handicap those nations with whom they were at war and
- those with whom they contemplated war. Accordingly, the Nazi
- conspirators exhorted Japan to seek a ‘new order of things’.”
-
-The evidence I have just adduced showed the Nazi exhortations with
-particular reference to the British Commonwealth of Nations. We now turn
-to their efforts to induce the Japanese to commit a “stab in the back”
-on the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Here again the Defendant
-Ribbentrop appears as the central figure.
-
-For some months prior to the issuance of Basic Order Number 24 regarding
-collaboration with Japan, the conspirators had been preparing Fall
-Barbarossa, the plan for the attack on the U.S.S.R. Basic Order Number
-24 decreed, however, that the Japanese “must not be given any intimation
-of the Barbarossa operation.”
-
-In his conference with the Japanese Foreign Minister Matsuoka, on 29
-March 1941, almost 3 weeks after the issuance of Basic Order Number 24,
-Ribbentrop nevertheless hinted at things to come. The report of this
-conference, contained in 1877-PS, has already been introduced as Exhibit
-USA-152 and read into the record. I wish to invite the Tribunal’s
-attention again to the first two paragraphs of the English translation
-of 1877-PS, where Ribbentrop assured Matsuoka that the largest part of
-the German Army was on the eastern frontiers of the Reich fully prepared
-to open the attack at any time. Ribbentrop then added that although he
-believed that the U.S.S.R. would try to avoid developments leading to
-war, nevertheless a conflict with the Soviet Union, even if not
-probable, would have to be considered possible.
-
-Whatever conclusion the Japanese Ambassador drew from these remarks in
-April of 1941 can only be conjectured. Once the Nazis had unleashed
-their aggression against the U.S.S.R. in June of 1941, the tenor of
-Ribbentrop’s remarks left no room for doubt. On 10 July 1941 Ribbentrop
-dispatched a coded telegram to Ott, the German Ambassador in Tokyo. The
-telegram is our Document 2896-PS, which I now introduce as Exhibit
-USA-155. I quote from numbered Paragraph 4 of that telegram, which is
-the first paragraph of the English translation:
-
- “Please take this opportunity to thank the Japanese Foreign
- Minister for conveying the cable report of the Japanese
- Ambassador in Moscow. It would be convenient if we could keep on
- receiving news from Russia this way. In summing up, I should
- like to say I have now, as in the past, full confidence in the
- Japanese policy and in the Japanese Foreign Minister; first of
- all because the present Japanese Government would really act
- inexcusably toward the future of their nation if they would not
- take this unique opportunity to solve the Russian problem, as
- well as to secure for all time its expansion to the south and
- settle the Chinese matter. Since Russia, as reported by the
- Japanese Ambassador in Moscow, is in effect close to collapse—a
- report which coincides with our own observations as far as we
- are able to judge the present war situation—it is simply
- impossible that Japan should not settle the matter of
- Vladivostok and the Siberian area as soon as her military
- preparations are completed.”
-
-Skipping now to the middle of the second paragraph on Page 1 of the
-English translation—the sentence beginning “However . . .”:
-
- “However, I ask you to employ all available means in further
- insisting upon Japan’s entry into the war against Russia at the
- earliest possible date, as I have mentioned already in my note
- to Matsuoka. The sooner this entry is effected, the better. The
- natural objective still remains that we and Japan join hands on
- the trans-Siberian railroad before winter starts. After the
- collapse of Russia, however, the position of the
- Three-Power-Pact States in the world will be so gigantic that
- the question of England’s collapse or the total destruction of
- the British Isles will be only a matter of time. An America
- totally isolated from the rest of the world would then be faced
- with our taking possession of the remaining positions of the
- British Empire which are important for the Three-Power-Pact
- countries. I have the unshakeable conviction that a carrying
- through of the New Order as desired by us will be a matter of
- course, and there would be no insurmountable difficulties if the
- countries of the Three Power Pact stand close together and
- encounter every action of the Americans with the same weapons. I
- ask you to report in the near future, as often as possible and
- in detail, on the political situation there.”
-
-We have Ott’s reply to this telegram, dated 13 July 1941. This is our
-Document Number 2897-PS, which I offer in evidence as Exhibit USA-156.
-After reading the heading, I shall skip to the last paragraph on Page 3
-of the German text, which is the paragraph appearing in the English
-translation:
-
- “Telegram; secret cipher system”—Sent 14 July from Tokyo;
- arrived 14 July 1941—“As fast as possible.
-
-
-
- “I am trying with all means to work toward Japan’s entry into
- the war against Russia as soon as possible, especially using
- arguments of personal message of Foreign Minister and telegram
- cited above to convince Matsuoka personally, as well as the
- Foreign Office, military elements, nationalists, and friendly
- businessmen. I believe that according to military preparations,
- Japanese participation will soon take place. The greatest
- obstacle to this against which one has to fight is the disunity
- within the activist group which, without unified command,
- follows various aims and only slowly adjusts itself to the
- changed situation.”
-
-On subsequent occasions Ribbentrop repeated his exhortations to induce
-the Japanese to aggression against the U.S.S.R. I shall present three
-documents covering July of 1942 and March and April of 1943. The first
-is our Document 2911-PS which contains notes of a discussion between
-Ribbentrop and Oshima, Japanese Ambassador to Berlin, on 9 July 1942. As
-a matter of background I note that at this time German armies were
-sweeping forward in the U.S.S.R. and the fall of Sevastopol had just
-been announced.
-
-I now offer our Document 2911-PS as Exhibit USA-157, and I quote the
-relevant extracts appearing in the English translation thereof:
-
- “He, the German Minister, had asked to see the Ambassador at
- this time, when the situation was as described, because now a
- question of fateful importance had arisen concerning the joint
- conduct of the war. If Japan felt herself sufficiently strong
- militarily, the moment for Japan to attack Russia was probably
- now. He thought it possible that if Japan attacked Russia at
- this time, it would lead to her (Russia) final moral collapse;
- at least it would hasten the collapse of her present system. In
- any case, never again would Japan have such an opportunity as
- existed at present to eliminate once and for all the Russian
- colossus in eastern Asia.
-
-
-
- “He had discussed this question with the Führer, and the Führer
- was of the same opinion; but he wanted to emphasize one point
- right away: Japan should attack Russia only if she felt
- sufficiently strong for such an undertaking. Under no
- circumstances should Japanese operations against Russia be
- allowed to bog down at the half-way mark, and we do not want to
- urge Japan into an action that is not mutually profitable.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn now, for 10 minutes.
-
- [_A recess was taken._]
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: May it please the Tribunal, I now offer in evidence our
-Document Number 2954-PS as Exhibit USA-158. This is a record of a
-conference between Ribbentrop and Ambassador Oshima on 6 March 1943.
-
-I note again for background that the strategic military situation in the
-broad expanses of the U.S.S.R. had changed somewhat.
-
-In the previous month, February 1943, the Soviet armies had completely
-defeated the German forces at Stalingrad and inflicted very severe
-losses. Further north and west their winter offensive had removed large
-areas from the hands of the invader. Combined United States and British
-forces had already landed in North Africa.
-
-You will remark as I read that the tone of Ribbentrop’s argument at this
-time reflects the changed military situation. The familiar Japanese
-refrain of “So sorry, please,” likewise appears to have crept in.
-
-I note in this record that the month of February 1943 had also seen the
-end of the organized Japanese resistance on the Island of Guadalcanal.
-
-I now quote the relevant extracts from the minutes of the discussion
-between Ribbentrop and Oshima on 6 March 1943, which appear in the
-English translation in the document book:
-
- “Ambassador Oshima declared that he received a telegram from
- Tokyo, and he is to report by order of his Government to the
- Reich Minister for Foreign Affairs the following: The suggestion
- of the German Government to attack Russia was the subject of a
- common conference between the Japanese Government and the
- Imperial headquarters during which the question was discussed in
- detail and investigated exactly. The result is the following:
- The Japanese Government absolutely recognize the danger which
- threatens from Russia and completely understand the desire of
- their German ally that Japan on her part will also enter the war
- against Russia. However, it is not possible for the Japanese
- Government, considering the present war situation, to enter into
- the war. They are rather of the conviction that it would be in
- the common interest not to start the war against Russia now. On
- the other hand, the Japanese Government would never disregard
- the Russian question.
-
-
-
- “The Japanese Government have the intention to become aggressive
- again in the future on other fronts.
-
-
-
- “The RAM brought up the question, after the explanation by the
- Ambassador, how the continued waging of the war is envisaged in
- Tokyo. At present Germany wages the war against the common
- enemies, England and America, mostly alone, while Japan mostly
- behaves more defensively. However, it would be more correct that
- all powers allied in the Three Power Pact would combine their
- forces not only to defeat England and America, but also Russia.
- It is not good when one part must fight alone. One cannot
- overstrain the German national strength. He was inwardly
- concerned about certain forces at work in Tokyo, who were of the
- opinion, and propagated the same, that doubtless, Germany could
- emerge from the battle victoriously and that Japan should
- proceed to consolidate her forces before she should further
- exert herself to the fullest extent.”
-
-I now skip several pages in the German text and resume the quotation:
-
- “Then the RAM again brought up the question of the attack on
- Russia by Japan and he declared that, after all, the fight on
- the Burma front as well as in the south is actually more of a
- maritime problem; and on all fronts except those in China at
- best very few ground forces are stationed. Therefore the attack
- on Russia is primarily an Army affair, and he asked himself if
- the necessary forces for that would be available.”
-
-Ribbentrop kept on trying. He held another conference with Oshima about
-3 weeks later on 18 April 1943. The top-secret notes of this conference
-are contained in our Document 2929-PS, which I now offer as Exhibit
-USA-159. I shall quote only one sentence:
-
- “The Reich Minister for Foreign Affairs then stressed again
- that, without any doubt, this year presented the most favorable
- opportunity for Japan, if she felt strong enough and had
- sufficient anti-tank weapons at her disposal, to attack Russia,
- which certainly would never again be as weak as she was at the
- moment.”
-
-I now wish to come to that aspect of this conspiracy which is in a large
-measure responsible for the appearance of millions of Americans in
-uniform all over the world.
-
-The Nazi preparations and collaboration with the Japanese against the
-United States, as noted by the United States Chief of Counsel in his
-opening statement, present a two-fold aspect; one of preparations by the
-Nazis themselves for an attack from across the Atlantic, and the other
-of fomenting war in the Pacific.
-
-In the course of my presentation of the Nazi exhortations to the
-Japanese to war against the British Commonwealth and the U.S.S.R., I
-have referred to some documents and quoted some sentences relating to
-the United States. I shall take those documents up again in their
-relevant passages to show their particular application. I have also, in
-the treatment of Ribbentrop’s urging the Japanese to war against the
-U.S.S.R., gone beyond the dates of 7 December and 11 December 1941, when
-the Japanese and German Governments respectively initiated and declared
-aggressive war against the United States.
-
-Apart from the advantage and convenience of presentation, these
-documents have indicated the Nazi awareness and acceptance of the
-direction in which their actions were leading, as well as the universal
-aspects of their conspiracy and of their alliance with the Japanese.
-Their intentions against the United States must be viewed in the focus
-of both their over-all plan and their immediate commitments elsewhere.
-That their over-all plan involved ultimate aggressive war against the
-United States was intimated by the Defendant Göring in a speech on 8
-July 1938, when these conspirators had already forcibly annexed Austria
-and were perfecting their plans against Czechoslovakia.
-
-This speech was delivered to representatives of the aircraft industry,
-and the copy that we have was transmitted as the enclosure to a secret
-memorandum from Göring’s adjutant to General Udet, who was then in
-charge of experimental research for the Luftwaffe. It is contained in
-our Document R-140, which I now offer as Exhibit USA-160.
-
-I invite the Tribunal’s attention to the statement in the covering
-memorandum that the enclosure is a copy of the shorthand minutes of the
-conference. I shall not go through the long speech in which Göring
-called for increased aircraft production and pointed to the necessity
-for full mobilization of German industrial capacity. I wish to quote
-just two sentences, which appear on Page 33 of the German text and Page
-11 of the English translation. Quoting from the second full paragraph on
-Page 11 of the English translation, starting with the third sentence
-from the end of the paragraph:
-
- “I still lack these rocket-motors which could make such flights
- possible. I completely lack the bombers capable of round-trip
- flights to New York with a 5-ton bomb load. I would be extremely
- happy to possess such a bomber which would at last stuff the
- mouth of arrogance across the sea.”
-
-Göring’s fervent hope, of course, was not capable of realization at that
-time, either technically or in the fact of the Nazi conspirators’
-schedule of aggression that has been outlined here in the past several
-days.
-
-During the period of their preparation for and the waging of aggressive
-war in Europe, up to the launching of the campaign against the U.S.S.R.,
-it is only reasonable to believe that these conspirators were not
-disposed to involve the United States in war at that time. Nevertheless,
-even in the fall of 1940 the prosecution of war against the United
-States of America at a later date was on the military agenda. This is
-clearly shown in a document which we have found in the files of the OKL,
-the German Air Force files. It is Document 376-PS, which I now offer as
-Exhibit Number USA-161. This document is a memorandum marked
-“Chefsache,” the German designation for top secret, from a Major Von
-Falkenstein to an unspecified general, presumably a Luftwaffe general.
-
-Falkenstein, who was a major of the General Staff, was at that time the
-Luftwaffe liaison officer with the Operations Staff of the OKW, which
-was the staff headed by the Defendant Jodl. His memorandum, which he
-characterizes as a “brief résumé on the military questions current
-here,” is dated the 29th of October 1940. It covers several questions. I
-shall quote to you numbered Paragraph 5, which appears at the bottom of
-the first page of the English translation and carries over to the
-reverse side of the one-sheet document:
-
- “5) The Führer is at present occupied with the question of the
- occupation of the Atlantic islands with a view to the
- prosecution of a war against America at a later date.
- Deliberations on this subject are being embarked upon here.
- Essential conditions are at the present:
-
-
-
- “(a) No other operational commitment; (b) Portuguese neutrality;
- (c) support of France and Spain.
-
-
-
- “A brief assessment of the possibility of seizing and holding
- air bases and of the question of supply is needed from the
- GAF.”—or the German Air Force.
-
-The Nazis’ military interest in the United States is further indicated
-by Paragraph 7 which I read:
-
- “General Bötticher has made repeated reference, especially in
- his telegram 2314, dated 26th of October, to the fact that in
- his opinion too many details of our knowledge of American
- aircraft industry are being published in the German press. The
- matter has been discussed at Armed Forces Supreme Command. I
- pointed out that the matter was specifically a GAF one but have
- taken the liberty of referring the matter to you on its own
- merits.”
-
-Again, in July 1941, in his first flush of confidence resulting from
-early gains in the aggression against the U.S.S.R., the Führer signed an
-order for further preliminary preparations for the attack on the United
-States. This top-secret order, found in the files of the German Navy, is
-our Document C-74, which I now offer as Exhibit USA-162. I read from the
-first paragraph of that text just preceding the paragraph numbered (1):
-
- “By virtue of the intentions announced in Directive Number 32,
- for the further conduct of the war, I lay down the following
- principles to govern the strength of personnel and of material
- supplies:
-
-
-
- “(1) In general:
-
-
-
- “The military domination of Europe after the defeat of Russia
- will enable the strength of the Army to be considerably reduced
- in the near future. As far as the reduced strength of the Army
- will allow, the armored units will be greatly increased.
-
-
-
- “Naval armament must be restricted to those measures which have
- a direct connection with the conduct of the war against England
- and, should the case arise, against America.
-
-
-
- “The main effort in armament will be shifted to the Air Force,
- which must be greatly increased in strength.”
-
-From these documents it appears that the Nazi conspirators were making
-at least preliminary plans of their own against the United States. The
-Nazis’ over-all plan with regard to the United States was, however, a
-complex one involving, in addition, collaboration with the Japanese. In
-the course of their repeated representations to the Japanese to
-undertake an assault against British possessions in the Pacific Far
-East, they again considered war against the United States.
-
-I now refer again to Basic Order Number 24, regarding collaboration with
-Japan. This is our Document C-75, which I have put in as Exhibit
-USA-151. I have read it in its entirety into the record. The Tribunal
-will recall that in that basic order, which was issued on 5 March 1941,
-the Nazi policy was stated in Subparagraph (3) (a) as “forcing England
-to the ground quickly and thereby keeping the United States out of the
-war.”
-
-Nevertheless, the Nazi conspirators clearly contemplated, within the
-framework of that policy, the possibility of the United States’ entry
-into the Far Eastern conflict which the Nazis were then instigating.
-This could result from an attack by Japan on possessions of the United
-States practically simultaneously with the assault on the British
-Empire, as actually happened. Other possibilities of involvement of the
-United States were also discussed. This Basic Order Number 24
-stated—and I am referring to Subparagraph (3) (c), on the top of Page 2
-of the Document C-75:
-
- “(c) The raw material situation of the pact powers demands that
- Japan should acquire possession of those territories which it
- needs for the continuation of the war, especially if the United
- States intervenes. Rubber shipments must be carried out even
- after the entry of Japan into the war, since they are of vital
- importance to Germany.”
-
-The order continues in an unnumbered paragraph, immediately below
-Subparagraph (3) (d):
-
- “In addition, attacks on other systems of bases of British naval
- power—extending to those of American naval power only if the
- entry of the United States into the war cannot be
- prevented—will result in weakening the enemy’s system of power
- in that region and also, just like the attack on sea
- communications, in tying down substantial forces of all kinds
- (Australia).”
-
-In these passages there is a clear envisagement of United States
-involvement, as well as a clear intent to attack. The vital threat to
-United States interests, if Japan were to capture Singapore, was also
-envisaged by the Defendant Raeder in his meeting of 18 March 1941 with
-Hitler and the Defendants Keitel and Jodl. These minutes are contained
-in our Document C-152, which has already been put in as Exhibit GB-122.
-I wish now to repeat the four sentences of Item 11 of the minutes of
-that conference, contained on Page 1 of the English translation. I am
-quoting the Defendant Raeder:
-
- “Japan must take steps to seize Singapore as soon as possible,
- since the opportunity will never again be so favorable (tie-up
- of the whole English Fleet; unpreparedness of the U.S.A. for war
- against Japan, inferiority of the United States Fleet in
- comparison with the Japanese). Japan is indeed making
- preparations for this action, but according to all declarations
- made by Japanese officers, she will carry it out only if Germany
- proceeds to land in England. Germany must, therefore,
- concentrate all her efforts on spurring Japan to act
- immediately. If Japan has Singapore, all other East Asiatic
- questions regarding the U.S.A. and England are thereby solved
- (Guam, the Philippines, Borneo, and the Dutch East Indies).
-
-
-
- “Japan wishes, if possible, to avoid war against the U.S.A. She
- can do so if she determinedly takes Singapore as soon as
- possible.”
-
-The Defendant Ribbentrop also recognized the possibility of United
-States involvement as a result of the course of aggression that he was
-urging on the Japanese. I refer again to his meeting of 23 February 1941
-with the Japanese Ambassador Oshima, the notes of which are contained in
-our Document 1834-PS, which is in evidence as Exhibit USA-129.
-
-The Tribunal will recall that in a passage I have already read,
-Subparagraph (2) near the bottom of Page 3 of the English translation,
-Ribbentrop assured Matsuoka that a surprise by Japan was bound to keep
-the United States out of the war since she was unarmed and could not
-risk either her fleet or the possibility of losing the Philippines as
-the result of a declaration of war. Two paragraphs later Ribbentrop
-practically dropped the pretense that the United States would not be
-involved. I quote here from the last paragraph at the bottom of Page 3
-of the English translation:
-
- “The Reich Foreign Minister mentioned further that if America
- should declare war because of Japan’s entry into the war, this
- would mean that America had the intention to enter the war
- sooner or later anyway. Even though it would be preferable to
- avoid this, the entry into the war would, as explained above, be
- by no means decisive and would not endanger the final victory of
- the countries of the Three Power Pact. The Foreign Minister
- further expressed his belief that a temporary lift of the
- British morale caused by America’s entry into the war would be
- canceled by Japan’s entry into the war. If, however, contrary to
- all expectations, the Americans should be careless enough to
- send their navy, in spite of all, beyond Hawaii and to the Far
- East, this would represent the biggest chance for the countries
- of the Three Power Pact to bring the war to an end with the
- greatest rapidity. He—the Foreign Minister—is convinced that
- the Japanese Fleet would then do a complete job. Ambassador
- Oshima replied to this that unfortunately he does not think the
- Americans would do it, but he is convinced of a victory of his
- fleet in Japanese waters.”
-
-In the paragraphs that follow, some of which have already been read into
-the record, Ribbentrop again stressed the mutual inter-dependence of the
-Tripartite Pact powers and suggested co-ordinated action.
-
-I want to quote now only the last paragraph on Page 5, a difficult bit
-of Nazi cynicism which by now is quite familiar.
-
- “The Reich Foreign Minister then touched upon the question,
- explicitly designated as theoretical, that the contracting
- powers might be required, on the basis of new affronts by the
- U.S.A., to break off diplomatic relations. Germany and Italy
- were fundamentally determined on this. After signing of the
- Three Power Pact, we should proceed, if the occasion arises,
- also jointly in this matter. Such a lesson should open the eyes
- of the people in the United States, and under certain conditions
- swing public opinion towards isolation. Naturally a situation
- had to be chosen in which America found herself entirely in the
- wrong. The common step of the signatory powers should be
- exploited correspondingly in propaganda. The question, however,
- was in no way acute at the time.”
-
-Again, on 29 March 1941, Ribbentrop, this time in a conference with the
-Japanese Foreign Minister Matsuoka, discussed the possible involvement
-of the United States. Notes of this conference are contained in our
-Document 1877-PS, which I have already introduced as Exhibit USA-152;
-and I have read it into the record. The relevant statements appear in
-the bottom two paragraphs of Page 1 and the first full paragraph on Page
-2 of the English translation. I shall not take the Tribunal’s time to
-read them again.
-
-I should like to refer to one more document to show that the Nazi
-conspirators knew that the aggressive war they were urging the Japanese
-to undertake both threatened the vital interests of the United States
-and could lead to the United States’ involvement in the contemplated Far
-Eastern conflict. This document is our 1881-PS, report of the conference
-between Hitler and the Japanese Foreign Minister Matsuoka in Berlin on 4
-April 1941. I have already offered, in my opening statement to the
-Tribunal 2 weeks ago, Document 1881-PS as Exhibit USA-33; and I read at
-that time a considerable portion of it into the record. Unless the Court
-prefers that I do not do so, it seems to me desirable at this point to
-re-read a few brief passages.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I think we might treat it as being in evidence.
-
-MR. ALDERMAN: I wish to emphasize, however, that the passages which I
-read 2 weeks ago and which I had expected to re-read at this point show
-not only a realization of the probable involvement of the United States
-in the Far Eastern conflict that the Nazis were urging, but also a
-knowledge on their part that the Japanese Army and Navy were actually
-preparing war plans against the United States. Furthermore, we have a
-document that shows the Nazis knew at least a part of what those war
-plans were.
-
-I now refer again to Document Number 1538-PS, which has been offered in
-evidence as Exhibit USA-154, the secret telegram from the German
-Military Attaché in Tokyo, dated 24 May 1941. He talks about the
-conferences he has had regarding Japan’s entry in the war in the event
-Germany should become involved in war with the United States.
-
-In the paragraph numbered 1 this sentence also appears—I quote the last
-sentence in numbered Paragraph Number 1, “Preparations for attack on
-Singapore and Manila stand.”
-
-May I at this point review the Nazi position with regard to the United
-States at this time, the spring of 1941. In view of their pressing
-commitments elsewhere and their aggressive plans against the U.S.S.R.
-set for execution in June of 1941, their temporary strategy was
-naturally a preference that the United States not be involved in the war
-at that time. Nevertheless, they had been considering their own
-preliminary plan against the United States, as seen in the Atlantic
-island document which I offered.
-
-They were repeatedly urging the Japanese to aggression against the
-British Commonwealth just as they would urge them to attack the U.S.S.R.
-soon after the launching of the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union. They
-were aware that the course along which they were pushing the Japanese in
-the Far East would probably lead to involvement of the United States.
-Indeed, the Japanese Foreign Minister had told Hitler this in so many
-words, and their own military men had fully realized the implications of
-the move against Singapore. They also knew that the Japanese Army and
-Navy were preparing operation plans against the U.S. They knew at least
-part of those plans.
-
-The Nazi conspirators not only knew all these things; they accepted the
-risk of the aggressive course they were urging on the Japanese and
-pushed their eastern allies still further along that course.
-
-In April 1941 Hitler told the Japanese Foreign Minister that in the
-event Japan would have become involved in the war with the United
-States, Germany would immediately take the consequences and strike
-without delay.
-
-I refer to our Document 1881-PS, the notes of the Hitler-Matsuoka
-conference in Berlin on 4 April 1941, which has already been introduced
-as Exhibit Number USA-33. I refer particularly to the first four
-paragraphs on Page 2 of the English translation. I think that has been
-read to you at least twice, and I perhaps need not repeat it.
-
-Then, skipping two paragraphs, we see Hitler then encouraging Matsuoka
-in his decision to strike against the United States; and I invite your
-attention to the fourth paragraph on Page 2, which you have heard
-several times and which I shall not re-read.
-
-Here in those passages were assurance, encouragement, and abetment by
-the head of the German State, the leading Nazi co-conspirator, in April
-1941. But the Nazi encouragement and promise of support did not end
-there.
-
-I now offer our Document 2898-PS as Exhibit Number USA-163. This is
-another telegram from the German Ambassador in Tokyo regarding his
-conversation with the Japanese Foreign Minister. It is dated the 30th of
-November 1941, exactly 1 week before Pearl Harbor. I will read from the
-first four paragraphs on Page 2 of the German text, which is the first
-paragraph of the English translation; and this passage, I am sure, has
-not been read to the Tribunal. No part of this document has been read.
-
- “The progress of the negotiations so far confirms his viewpoint
- that the difference of opinion between Japan and the U.S. is
- very great. The Japanese Government, since they sent Ambassador
- Kurusu, have taken a firm stand as he told me. He is convinced
- that this position is in our favor, and makes the United States
- think that her entry into the European war would be risky
- business. The new American proposal of 25 November showed great
- divergencies in the viewpoints of the two nations. These
- differences of opinion concern, for example, the further
- treatment of the Chinese question. The biggest”—and then the
- German text has the legend “one group missing,” indicating that
- one group of the secret code was garbled on transmission. It
- would appear from the text that the missing words are
- “difference of opinion”—“The biggest (one group missing),
- however, resulted from the United States attempt to make the
- three-power agreement ineffective. The United States suggested
- to Japan that she conclude treaties of non-aggression with the
- United States, the British Empire, the Soviet Union, and other
- countries in order to prevent Japan’s entry into the war on the
- side of the Axis Powers. Japan, however, insisted upon
- maintaining her treaty obligations, and for this reason American
- demands are the greatest obstacles for adjusting
- Japanese-American relations. He avoided discussing concessions
- promised by the United States and merely mentioned that grave
- decisions were at stake.
-
-
-
- “The United States is seriously preparing for war and is about
- to operate a considerable part of its navy from southern Pacific
- bases. The Japanese Government are busy working out an answer in
- order to clarify their viewpoint. But he has no particulars at
- that moment. He thinks the American proposals as a whole
- unacceptable.
-
-
-
- “Japan is not afraid of a breakdown of negotiations, and she
- hopes that if occasion arises Germany and Italy, according to
- the Three Power Pact, would stand at her side. I answered that
- there could be no doubt about Germany’s future position. The
- Japanese Foreign Minister thereupon stated that he understood
- from my words that Germany, in such a case, would consider her
- relationship to Japan as that of a union by fate. I answered,
- according to my opinion, Germany was certainly ready to have
- mutual agreement between the two countries over this situation.
-
-
-
- “The Minister of Foreign Affairs answered that it was possible
- that he would come back to this point soon. The conversation
- with the Minister of Foreign Affairs confirmed the impression
- that the United States note, in fact, is very unsatisfactory
- even for the compromise-seeking politicians here. For these
- circles America’s position, especially in the China question, is
- very disappointing. The emphasis upon the Three Power Pact as
- being the main obstacle between successful Japanese-United
- States negotiations seems to point to the fact that the Japanese
- Government are becoming aware of the necessity of close
- co-operation with the Axis Powers.”
-
-The time is now fast approaching for that day of infamy. I offer our
-Document 2987-PS as Exhibit USA-166. This document consists of extracts
-from the handwritten diary of Count Galeazzo Ciano during the period 3
-December to 8 December 1941. It consists of notes he jotted down in the
-course of his daily business as Foreign Minister of Italy. The Italian
-has been translated into both English and German, and copies of both the
-English and the German are in the document books.
-
-I now quote from the beginning of the entry of 3 December, Wednesday:
-
- “Sensational move by Japan. The Ambassador asks for an audience
- with the Duce and reads him a long statement on the progress of
- the negotiations with America, concluding with the assertion
- that they have reached a dead end. Then invoking the appropriate
- clause in the Tripartite Pact, he asks that Italy declare war on
- America immediately after the outbreak of hostilities and
- proposes the signing of an agreement not to conclude a separate
- peace. The interpreter translating this request was trembling
- like a leaf. The Duce gave fullest assurances, reserving the
- right to confer with Berlin before giving a reply. The Duce was
- pleased with the communication and said, ‘We are now on the
- brink of the inter-continental war which I predicted as early as
- September 1939.’ What does this new event mean? In any case it
- means that Roosevelt has succeeded in his maneuver. Since he
- could not enter the war immediately and directly, he entered it
- indirectly by letting himself be attacked by Japan. Furthermore,
- this event also means that every prospect of peace is becoming
- further and further removed and that it is now easy—much too
- easy—to predict a long war. Who will be able to hold out
- longest? It is on this basis that the problem must be
- considered. Berlin’s answer will be somewhat delayed because
- Hitler has gone to the southern Front to see General Kleist,
- whose armies continue to give way under the pressure of an
- unexpected Soviet offensive.”
-
-And then December 4, Thursday—that is 3 days before Pearl Harbor:
-
- “Berlin’s reaction to the Japanese move is extremely cautious.
- Perhaps they will accept because they cannot get out of it, but
- the idea of provoking America’s intervention pleases the Germans
- less and less. Mussolini, on the other hand, is pleased about
- it.”
-
-And December 5, Friday:
-
- “A night interrupted by Ribbentrop’s restlessness. After
- delaying 2 days, now he cannot wait a minute to answer the
- Japanese; and at three in the morning he sent Mackensen to my
- house to submit a plan for a triple agreement relative to
- Japanese intervention and the pledge not to make a separate
- peace. He wanted me to awaken the Duce, but I did not do so, and
- the latter was very glad I had not.”
-
-It appears from the last entry I have read, that of December 5, that
-some sort of an agreement was reached.
-
-On Sunday, 7 December 1941, Japan, without previous warning or
-declaration of war, commenced an attack against the United States at
-Pearl Harbor and against the British Commonwealth of Nations in the
-Southwest Pacific. On the morning of 11 December, 4 days after the
-Japanese assault in the Pacific, the German Government declared war on
-the United States, committing the last act of aggression which was to
-seal their doom. This declaration of war is contained in Volume IX of
-the _Dokumente der Deutschen Politik_, of which I now ask the Tribunal
-to take judicial notice as Exhibit USA-164. An English translation is
-contained in our document book, and for the convenience of the Tribunal
-is Number 2507-PS.
-
-The same day, 11 December, the fourth anniversary of which is tomorrow,
-the Congress of the United States resolved:
-
- “That the state of war between the United States and the
- Government of Germany which has thus been thrust upon the United
- States, is hereby formally declared.”
-
-This declaration is contained as Document 272 in the official
-publication _Peace and War_, of which the Tribunal has already taken
-judicial notice as Exhibit USA-122. The declaration itself has been
-reproduced for the document books as our Document 2945-PS.
-
-It thus appears that, apart from their own aggressive intentions and
-declaration of war against the United States, the Nazi conspirators in
-their collaboration with Japan incited and kept in motion a force
-reasonably calculated to result in an attack on the United States. While
-maintaining their preference that the United States not be involved in
-war at the time, they nevertheless foresaw the distinct possibility,
-even probability, of such involvement as a result of the action they
-were encouraging. They were aware that the Japanese had prepared plans
-for attack against the United States, and they accepted the consequences
-by assuring the Japanese that they would declare war on the United
-States should a United States-Japanese conflict result.
-
-In dealing with captured documents of the enemy the completeness of the
-plan is necessarily obscured, but those documents which have been
-discovered and offered in evidence before this Tribunal show that the
-Japanese attack was the proximate and foreseeable consequence of their
-collaboration policy and that their exhortations and encouragement of
-the Japanese as surely led to Pearl Harbor as though Pearl Harbor itself
-had been mentioned.
-
-I should like to read the Ciano diary entry for 8 December, the day
-after Pearl Harbor:
-
- “A night telephone call from Ribbentrop. He is overjoyed about
- the Japanese attack on America. He is so happy about it that I
- am happy with him, though I am not too sure about the final
- advantages of what has happened. One thing is now certain, that
- America will enter the conflict and that the conflict will be so
- long that she will be able to realize all her potential forces.
- This morning I told this to the King who had been pleased about
- the event. He ended by admitting that, in the long run, I may be
- right. Mussolini was happy, too. For a long time he has favored
- a definite clarification of relations between America and the
- Axis.”
-
-The final document consists of the top-secret notes of a conference
-between Hitler and Japanese Ambassador Oshima on 14 December 1941, from
-1300 to 1400 hours, in the presence of the Reich Foreign Minister
-Ribbentrop. It is our Document 2932-PS, which I now offer as Exhibit
-USA-165. The immediate subject matter is the Pearl Harbor attack, but
-the expressions therein typify Nazi technique. I quote from the second
-paragraph of the English translation which has not been previously read:
-
- “First the Führer presents Ambassador Oshima with the Grand
- Cross of the Order of Merit of the German Eagle in gold. With
- cordial words he acknowledges his services in the achievement of
- German-Japanese co-operation, which has now obtained its
- culmination in a close brotherhood of arms.
-
-
-
- “General Oshima expresses his thanks for the great honor and
- emphasizes how glad he is that this brotherhood of arms has now
- come about between Germany and Japan.
-
-
-
- “The Führer continues: ‘You gave the right declaration of war.’
- This method is the only proper one. Japan pursued it formerly
- and it corresponds with his own system, that is, to negotiate as
- long as possible. But if one sees the other is interested only
- in putting one off, in shamming and humiliating one, and is not
- willing to come to an agreement, then one should strike as hard
- as possible, indeed, and not waste time declaring war. It was
- heart-warming to him to hear of the first operations of the
- Japanese. He himself negotiated with infinite patience at times,
- for example, with Poland and also with Russia. When he then
- realized that the other did not want to come to an agreement, he
- struck suddenly and without formality. He would continue to go
- on this way in the future.”
-
-If the Tribunal please, that ends my presentation of the various phases
-of aggressive warfare charged as Crimes against Peace in Count One of
-the Indictment. As I conclude this phase I hope the Tribunal will allow
-me to express my deep sense of obligation to Commander Sidney J. Kaplan,
-section chief, and to the members of his staff, who did the yeoman work
-necessary to assemble and prepare these materials that I have presented.
-These members of that staff, in the order in which the materials were
-presented, are: Major Joseph Dainow, Lieutenant Commander Harold
-Leventhal, Lieutenant John M. Woolsey, Lieutenant James A. Gorrell,
-Lieutenant Roy H. Steyer.
-
-Commander Kaplan and his staff have fully measured up to the famous
-motto of his branch of the armed services, the United States Coast
-Guard, “Semper Paratus” (Always Prepared).
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will now adjourn.
-
- [_The Tribunal adjourned until 11 December 1945 at 1000 hours._]
-
-
-
-
- SEVENTEENTH DAY
- Tuesday, 11 December 1945
-
-
- _Morning Session_
-
-COL. STOREY: If the Tribunal please, the United States next offers in
-evidence some captured moving pictures through Commander Donovan, who
-had charge of taking them.
-
-COMMANDER JAMES BRITT DONOVAN (Assistant Trial Counsel for the United
-States): May it please the Tribunal, the United States now offers in
-evidence Document Number 3054-PS, United States Exhibit Number 167, the
-motion picture entitled _The Nazi Plan_. This document contains several
-affidavits with exhibits, copies of which have been furnished to Defense
-Counsel. I ask the Tribunal whether it believes it to be necessary that
-I formally read the affidavits at this time. Since the motion pictures
-themselves will be presented to the Tribunal and thereafter be in its
-permanent record, I respectfully submit that the reading be waived.
-
-In the past 3 weeks the Prosecution has presented to this Tribunal a
-vast amount of evidence concerning the nature of the Nazi conspiracy and
-what we contend to be its deliberate planning, launching, and waging of
-wars of aggression. That evidence has consisted of documentary and some
-oral proof, but the Nazi conspirators did more than leave behind such
-normal types of evidence. German proficiency in photography has been
-traditional. Its use as a propaganda instrument was especially well
-known to these defendants, and as a result the United States in 1945
-captured an almost complete chronicle of the rise and fall of National
-Socialism as documented in films made by the Nazis themselves. It is
-from excerpts of this chronicle that we have compiled the motion picture
-now presented, entitled _The Nazi Plan_, which in broad outline sums up
-the case thus far presented under Counts One and Two of the Indictment.
-
-The motion picture has been divided into four parts. This morning we
-first offer to the Tribunal Parts 1 and 2, respectively entitled “The
-Rise of the NSDAP, 1921 to 1933,” and “Acquiring Totalitarian Control of
-Germany, 1933 to 1935.” These will be concluded by 11:20, at which time
-we assume the Tribunal will order its customary morning adjournment. At
-11:30 we shall present Part 3, entitled “Preparation for Wars of
-Aggression, 1935 to 1939.” This will be concluded shortly before 1
-o’clock. At 2 p.m. we will offer Part 4, “Wars of Aggression, 1939 to
-1944,” and this will be concluded by 3 p.m.
-
-Parts 1 and 2 now to be presented, enable us to re-live those years in
-which the Nazis fought for and obtained the power to rule all life in
-Germany. We see the early days of terrorism and propaganda bearing final
-fruit in Hitler’s accession to the Chancellery in 1933, then the
-consolidation of power within Germany, climaxed by the Parteitag of
-1934, in which the Nazis proclaimed to the nation their plans for
-totalitarian control. It is in simple and dramatic form the story of how
-a nation forsook its liberty.
-
-I wish again to emphasize that all film now presented to the Tribunal,
-including, for example, pictures of early Nazi newspapers, is the
-original German film, to which we have added only the title in English.
-And now, if it please the Tribunal, we shall present Parts 1 and 2 of
-_The Nazi Plan_.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: It may be convenient for the United States Prosecutor to
-know that the Tribunal propose to rise this afternoon at 4 o’clock
-instead of 5.
-
- [_The film, The Nazi Plan, was then shown in the court room until 1125
- hours, at which time a recess was taken._]
-
-COMMANDER DONOVAN: May it please the Tribunal, in the films which have
-just been shown to the Tribunal we have watched the Nazi rise to power.
-In Part 3 of our documentary motion picture now to be presented, we see
-the use they made of that power and how the German nation was led by
-militaristic regimentation to preparation for aggressive war as an
-instrument of national policy. Part 3, “Preparation for Wars of
-Aggression, 1935-1939; 1935—Von Schirach urges Hitler Youth to follow
-principles of _Mein Kampf_.”
-
- [_The showing of the film then continued and at the end a recess was
- taken until 1400 hours._]
-
-
-
-
- _Afternoon Session_
-
-COMMANDER DONOVAN: This morning we presented photographic evidence of
-the history of National Socialism from 1921 to September 1939. We saw
-the dignity of the individual in Germany destroyed by men dedicated to
-perverted nationalism, men who set forth certain objectives and then
-preached to a regimented people the accomplishment of those objectives
-by any necessary means, including aggressive war.
-
-In September 1939 the Nazis launched the first of a series of
-catastrophic wars, terminated only by the military collapse of Germany.
-It is this final chapter in the history of National Socialism that the
-Prosecution now presents.
-
-May I again remind the Tribunal that all film presented and all German
-narration heard is in the original form as filmed by the Nazis.
-
- [_The showing of the film, part 4, then continued._]
-
-COMMANDER DONOVAN: The Prosecution has concluded its presentation of the
-photographic summation entitled _The Nazi Plan_. We shall deliver for
-the permanent records of the Tribunal, as soon as possible, the original
-films projected today.
-
-COL. STOREY: If the Tribunal please, just a brief announcement about the
-presentation that shall follow. The rest of the week will be consumed in
-the presentation of War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity, starting
-with exploitation of forced labor, concentration camps, persecution of
-the Jews, and Germanization and spoliation in occupied countries. We
-should like to call the Tribunal’s attention to the fact that many of
-these crimes will be crimes attributed to the criminal organizations
-which will follow. The program following will be the criminal
-organizations, beginning with the Leadership Corps of the Nazi Party,
-the Reich Cabinet, the SA, the SS, and finally, the SD and Gestapo.
-
-Mr. Dodd will now present “Exploitation of Forced Labor.”
-
-MR. THOMAS J. DODD (Executive Trial Counsel for the United States): May
-it please the Tribunal, we propose to submit during the next several
-days, as Colonel Storey has said a moment ago, evidence concerning the
-conspirators’ criminal deportation and enslavement of foreign labor,
-their illegal use of prisoners of war, their infamous concentration
-camps, and their relentless persecution of the Jews. We shall present
-evidence regarding the general aspects of these programs, and our French
-and Soviet colleagues will present evidence of the specific application
-of these programs in the West and the East respectively.
-
-These crimes were committed both before and after Nazi Germany had
-launched her series of aggressions. They were committed within Germany
-and in foreign countries as well. Although separated in time and space,
-these crimes had, of course, an inter-relationship which resulted from
-their having a common source in Nazi ideology; for we shall show that
-within Germany the conspirators had made hatred and destruction of the
-Jews an official philosophy and a public duty, that they had preached
-the concept of the master race with its corollary of slavery for others,
-that they had denied and destroyed the dignity and the rights of the
-individual human being. They had organized force, brutality, and terror
-into instruments of political power and had made them commonplaces of
-daily existence. We propose to prove that they had placed the
-concentration camp and a vast apparatus of force behind their racial and
-political myths, their laws, and their policies. As every German Cabinet
-minister or high official knew, behind the laws and decrees in the
-_Reichsgesetzblatt_ was not the agreement of the people or their
-representatives but the terror of the concentration camps and the police
-state. The conspirators had preached that war was a noble activity and
-that force was the appropriate means of resolving international
-differences; and having mobilized all aspects of German life for war,
-they plunged Germany and the world into war.
-
-We say this system of hatred, savagery, and denial of individual rights,
-which the conspirators erected into a philosophy of government within
-Germany or into what we may call the Nazi constitution, followed the
-Nazi armies as they swept over Europe. For the Jews of the occupied
-countries suffered the same fate as the Jews of Germany, and foreign
-laborers became the serfs of the “master race,” and they were deported
-and enslaved by the million. Many of the deported and enslaved laborers
-joined the victims of the concentration camps, where they were literally
-worked to death in the course of the Nazi program of extermination
-through work. We propose to show that this Nazi combination of the
-assembly line, the torture chamber, and the executioner’s rack in a
-single institution has a horrible repugnance to the twentieth century
-mind.
-
-We say that it is plain that the program of the concentration camp, the
-anti-Jewish program, and the forced labor program are all parts of a
-larger pattern, and this will become even more plain as we examine the
-evidence regarding these programs, and then test their legality by
-applying the relevant principles of international law.
-
-The evidence relating to the Nazi slave labor program has been assembled
-in a document book bearing the letter “R”; and in addition, there is an
-appendix to the document book consisting of certain photographs
-contained in a manila folder. Your Honors will observe that on some of
-the books we have placed some tabs, so that it would be easier for the
-Tribunal to locate the documents. Unfortunately, we did not have a
-sufficient number of tabs to do the work completely, and that would
-account for tabs which are missing on some of the document books.
-
-It may illuminate the specific items of evidence which will be offered
-later if we first describe in rather general terms the elements of the
-Nazi foreign labor policy. It was a policy of mass deportation and mass
-enslavement, as I said a minute ago, and it was also carried out by
-force, by fraud, by terror, by arson, by means unrestrained by the laws
-of war and laws of humanity, or the considerations of mercy. This labor
-policy was a policy as well of underfeeding and overworking foreign
-laborers, of subjecting them to every form of degradation, brutality,
-and inhumanity. It was a policy which compelled foreign workers and
-prisoners of war to manufacture armaments and to engage in other
-operations of war directed against their own countries. It was a policy,
-as we propose to establish, which constituted a flagrant violation of
-the laws of war and of the laws of humanity.
-
-We shall show that the Defendants Sauckel and Speer are principally
-responsible for the formulation of the policy and for its execution:
-that the Defendant Sauckel, the Nazis’ Plenipotentiary General for
-Manpower, directed the recruitment, deportation, and the allocation of
-foreign civilian labor, that he sanctioned and directed the use of force
-as the instrument of recruitment, and that he was responsible for the
-care and the treatment of the enslaved millions; that the Defendant
-Speer, as Reich Minister for Armament and Munitions, Director of the
-Organization Todt, and member of the Central Planning Board, bears
-responsibility for the determination of the numbers of foreign slaves
-required by the German war machine, was responsible for the decision to
-recruit by force and for the use under brutal, inhumane, and degrading
-conditions of foreign civilians and prisoners of war in the manufacture
-of armaments and munitions, the construction of fortifications, and in
-active military operations.
-
-We shall also show in this presentation that the Defendant Göring, as
-Plenipotentiary General for the Four Year Plan, is responsible for all
-of the crimes involved in the Nazi slave labor program. Finally, we
-propose to show that the Defendant Rosenberg, as Reich Minister for the
-Occupied Eastern Territories, and the Defendant Frank, as Governor of
-the Government General of Poland, and the Defendant Seyss-Inquart, as
-Reich Commissar for the occupied Netherlands, and the Defendant Keitel,
-as Chief of the OKW, share responsibility for the recruitment by force
-and terror and for the deportation to Germany of the citizens of the
-areas overrun or subjugated by the Wehrmacht.
-
-The use of vast numbers of foreign workers was planned before Germany
-went to war and was an integral part of the conspiracy for waging
-aggressive war. On May 23, 1939 a meeting was held in Hitler’s study at
-the Reich Chancellery. Present were the Defendants Göring, Raeder, and
-Keitel.
-
-I now refer to Document L-79, which has already been entered in evidence
-as Exhibit USA-27. The document presents the minutes of this meeting at
-which Hitler stated, as Your Honors will recall, that he intended to
-attack Poland at the first suitable opportunity; but I wish to quote
-from Page 2 of the English text starting with the 13th paragraph as
-follows. In the German text, by the way, the passage appears at Page 4,
-Paragraphs 6 and 7. Quoting directly from the English text:
-
- “If fate brings us into conflict with the West, the possession
- of extensive areas in the East will be advantageous. We shall be
- able to rely upon record harvests even less in time of war than
- in peace.
-
-
-
- “The population of non-German areas will perform no military
- service and will be available as a source of labor.”
-
-We say the slave labor program of the Nazi conspirators was designed to
-achieve two purposes, both of which were criminal. The primary purpose,
-of course, was to satisfy the labor requirements of the Nazi war machine
-by compelling these foreign workers, in effect, to make war against
-their own countries and their allies. The secondary purpose was to
-destroy or weaken peoples deemed inferior by the Nazi racialists or
-deemed potentially hostile by the Nazi planners of world supremacy.
-
-These purposes were expressed by the conspirators themselves.
-
-I wish to refer at this point and to offer in evidence Document 016-PS,
-which is Exhibit USA-168. This document was sent by the Defendant
-Sauckel to the Defendant Rosenberg on the 20th of April 1942, and it
-describes Sauckel’s labor mobilization program. I wish to quote now from
-Page 2 of the English text, starting with the sixth paragraph; and in
-the German text, again, it appears at Page 2 of the second paragraph.
-Quoting from the text directly:
-
- “The aim of this new, gigantic labor mobilization is to use all
- the rich and tremendous sources, conquered and secured for us by
- our fighting Armed Forces under the leadership of Adolf Hitler,
- for the armament of the Armed Forces and also for the nutrition
- of the homeland. The raw materials as well as the fertility of
- the conquered territories and their human labor power are to be
- used completely and conscientiously to the profit of Germany and
- her allies.”
-
-The theory of the master race underlay the conspirators’ labor policy in
-the East as well.
-
-I now refer to Document Number 1130-PS, which is marked Exhibit USA-169.
-This document consists of a statement made by one Erich Koch, Reich
-Commissar for the Ukraine, on the 5th day of March 1943 at a meeting of
-the National Socialist Party in Kiev. I quote from the first page of the
-English text, starting with the first paragraph—and in the German text
-it appears at Page 2, Paragraph 1. Quoting directly again from the
-English text Koch said:
-
- “1. We are the master race and must govern hard but just . . . .
-
-
-
- “2. I will draw the very last out of this country. I did not
- come to spread bliss. I have come to help the Führer. The
- population must work, work, and work again . . . for some people
- are getting excited that the population may not get enough to
- eat. The population cannot demand that. One has only to remember
- what our heroes were deprived of in Stalingrad . . . . We
- definitely did not come here to give out manna. We have come
- here to create the basis for victory.
-
-
-
- “3. We are a master race, which must remember that the lowliest
- German worker is racially and biologically a thousand times more
- valuable than the population here.”
-
-At this point I should like to offer in evidence Document Number
-1919-PS, which is Exhibit USA-170. This is a document which contains a
-speech delivered by Himmler, the Reichsführer SS, to a group of SS
-Generals on the 4th day of October 1943 at Posen; and I am referring to
-the first page of the English text, starting with the third paragraph.
-For the benefit of the interpreters, in the German text it appears at
-Page 23 in the first paragraph. Quoting directly again from this
-document on the first page, starting with the third paragraph:
-
- “What happens to the Russians, to the Czechs, does not interest
- me in the slightest. What the nations can offer in the way of
- good blood of our type we will take, if necessary, by kidnapping
- their children and raising them here with us. Whether the other
- nations live in prosperity or starve to death interests me only
- insofar as we need them as slaves for our culture; otherwise, it
- is of no interest to me. Whether 10,000 Russian females fall
- down from exhaustion while digging an anti-tank ditch or not
- interests me only insofar as the anti-tank ditch for Germany is
- finished.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Who is the author of that document?
-
-MR. DODD: The author of that quotation is the Reichsführer SS, Heinrich
-Himmler.
-
-The next document to which I make reference is Number 031-PS, which is
-Exhibit USA-71. This document is a top-secret memorandum prepared for
-the Ministry of the Occupied Eastern Territories on the 12th of June
-1944 and approved by the Defendant Rosenberg; and from it I wish to
-quote, from the English text starting with the first paragraph, and in
-the German text it appears at the first paragraph of Page 2. Quoting
-directly:
-
- “The Army group center has the intention to apprehend
- 40,000-50,000 youths at the ages of 10 to 14 who are in the Army
- territory and to transport them to the Reich.”
-
-I wish to pass now to line 21 of Paragraph 1. Quoting directly I read as
-follows:
-
- “It is intended to allot these juveniles primarily to the German
- trades as apprentices to be used as skilled workers after 2
- years’ training. This is to be arranged through the Organization
- Todt which is especially equipped for such a task by means of
- its technical and other set-ups. This action is being greatly
- welcomed by the German trade since it represents a decisive
- measure for the alleviation of the shortage of apprentices.”
-
-Passing a little further on in that document, I wish to call to the
-attention of the Tribunal Paragraph 1 on Page 2, and to quote it
-directly:
-
- “This action is aimed not only at preventing a direct
- reinforcement of the enemy’s military strength but also at a
- reduction of his biological potentialities as viewed from the
- perspective of the future. These ideas have been voiced not only
- by the Reichsführer SS but also by the Führer. Corresponding
- orders were given during last year’s withdrawals in the southern
- sector . . . .”
-
-I call to Your Honor’s attention particularly that the approval of the
-Defendant Rosenberg is noted on Page 3 of the document. It is a note in
-ink on the original. I quote it:
-
- “Obergruppenführer Berger has received another memorandum on
- June 14, according to which the Reich Minister now has approved
- the action.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, did you mean to leave out the sentence at the
-bottom of Page 1?
-
-MR. DODD: No, Your Honor, I did not, but I did not want to refer to it
-at this time. I will refer to it a little later on.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Isn’t it really a part of what follows at the top of Page
-2, which you did read, “Following are the arguments . . .”
-
-MR. DODD: Yes, I did omit that. I thought you were referring to the
-sentence above. I’m sorry.
-
- “Following are the arguments against this decision of the
- minister.”—and then quoting—“This action is not only aimed at
- preventing direct reinforcement of any military . . .”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Yes and you were telling us how you showed that the
-Defendant Rosenberg was implicated.
-
-MR. DODD: Yes. On the last page of that document, the original bears a
-note in ink, and in the mimeographed copy it is typewritten:
-
- “Obergruppenführer Berger has received another memorandum on
- June 14, according to which the Reich Minister now has approved
- the action.”
-
-One page back on that same document, from the first paragraph, four
-sentences down, the sentence begins:
-
- “The Minister has approved the execution of the ‘Hay Action’ in
- the Army territories under the conditions and provisions arrived
- at in talks with Army group center.”
-
-The purposes of the slave labor program which we have just been
-describing, namely the strengthening of the Nazi war machine and the
-destruction or the weakening of peoples deemed inferior by the Nazi
-conspirators, were achieved, we repeat, by the impressment and the
-deportation of millions of persons into Germany for forced labor. It
-involved the separation of husbands from their wives, and children from
-their parents, and the imposition of conditions unfit for human
-existence, with the result that countless numbers were killed.
-
-Poland was the first victim. The Defendant Frank, as Governor of the
-Government General of Poland, announced that under his program 1 million
-workers were to be sent to Germany; and he recommended that police
-surround Polish villages and seize the inhabitants for deportation.
-
-I wish to refer to Document Number 1375-PS, which is Exhibit USA-172.
-This document is a letter from the Defendant Frank to the Defendant
-Göring and it is dated the 25th day of January 1940; and I wish to quote
-from the first page of the English text, starting with the first
-paragraph, and in the German text, again, it appears at Page 1 of the
-first paragraph. Quoting directly:
-
- “1. In view of the present requirements of the Reich for the
- defense industry, it is at present fundamentally impossible to
- carry on a long-term economic policy in the Government General.
- Rather, it is necessary so to steer the economy of the
- Government General that it will, in the shortest possible time,
- accomplish results representing the maximum that can be secured
- out of the economic strength of the Government General for the
- immediate strengthening of our capacity for defense.
-
-
-
- “2. In particular the following performances are expected of the
- total economy of the Government General . . . .”
-
-I wish to pass on a little bit in this text to the second page and
-particularly to Paragraph g in the English text. In the German text, the
-same passage appears on Page 3 in Paragraph g. I am quoting directly
-again:
-
- “Supply and transportation of at least 1 million male and female
- agricultural and industrial workers to the Reich—among them at
- least 750,000 agricultural workers of which at least 50 percent
- must be women—in order to guarantee agricultural production in
- the Reich and as a replacement for industrial workers lacking in
- the Reich.”
-
-The methods by which these workers were to be supplied were considered
-by the Defendant Frank, as revealed in another document to which we now
-refer.
-
-It is an entry in the Defendant Frank’s own diary, to which we have
-assigned our Document Number 2233(a)-PS and which we offer as Exhibit
-USA-173. The portion which I shall read is the entry for Friday, the
-10th of May 1940. It appears in the document book as 2233(a)-PS, on the
-third page in the center of the page. Just above it are the words “Page
-23, Paragraph 1” to the left:
-
- “Then the Governor General deals with the problem of the
- compulsory labor service of the Poles. Upon the pressure from
- the Reich it has now been decreed that compulsion may be
- exercised in view of the fact that sufficient manpower was not
- voluntarily available for service inside the German Reich. This
- compulsion means the possibility of arrest of male and female
- Poles. Because of these measures a certain disquietude had
- developed which, according to individual reports, was spreading
- very much and might produce difficulties everywhere. General
- Field Marshal Göring some time ago pointed out, in his long
- speech, the necessity to deport into the Reich a million
- workers. The supply so far was 160,000. However, great
- difficulties had to be overcome here. Therefore it would be
- advisable to co-operate with the district and town chiefs in the
- execution of the compulsion, so that one could be sure from the
- start that this action would be reasonably expedient. The arrest
- of young Poles when leaving church service or the cinema would
- bring about an ever increasing nervousness of the Poles.
- Generally speaking, he had no objections at all to the rubbish,
- capable of work yet often loitering about, being snatched from
- the streets. The best method for this, however, would be the
- organization of a raid; and it would be absolutely justifiable
- to stop a Pole in the street and to question him as to what he
- was doing, where he was working, _et cetera_.”
-
-I should like to refer to another entry in the diary of the Defendant
-Frank, and I offer in evidence an extract from the entry made on the
-16th day of March 1940, which appears in the document book as
-2233(b)-PS, and it is Exhibit USA-174. I wish particularly to quote from
-the third page of the English text:
-
- “The Governor General remarks that he had long negotiations in
- Berlin with the representatives of the Reich Ministry for
- Finance and the Reich Ministry for Food. Urgent demands have
- been made there that Polish farm workers should be sent to the
- Reich in greater numbers. He has made the statement in Berlin
- that he, if it is demanded from him, could of course exercise
- force in some such manner: he could have the police surround a
- village and get the men and women in question out by force, and
- then send them to Germany. But one can also work differently,
- besides these police measures, by retaining the unemployment
- compensation of these workers in question.”
-
-The instruments of force and terror used to carry out this program
-reached into many phases of Polish life. German labor authorities raided
-churches and theaters, seized those present, and shipped them back to
-Germany. And this appears in a memorandum to Himmler, which we offer in
-evidence as Document Number 2220-PS, and it bears Exhibit Number
-USA-175. This memorandum is dated the 17th day of April 1943; and it was
-written by Dr. Lammers, the Chief of the Reich Chancellery, and deals
-with the situation in the Government General of Poland.
-
-DR. SERVATIUS: I should like to call the attention of the Tribunal to
-the fact that the last three documents, which have just been read, were
-not made available to me beforehand. They do not appear on the original
-list of documents, nor have I been able to find them on the later list.
-
-I therefore request that the reading of these documents be held in
-abeyance until I have had an opportunity to read them and to discuss
-them with my client.
-
-Perhaps I may, at the same time, lodge an additional complaint. I
-received some interrogation records in English the day before yesterday.
-I consulted my client about them and he told me that they are not the
-actual transcripts of his words in the interrogation, because he was
-interrogated in German; an interpreter translated his statements into
-English, and then they were taken down.
-
-These documents cannot have any evidential value since they were not
-presented to the defendant for certification; he did not sign them, nor
-were they read to him. They are transcripts in English, a language of
-which the defendant understands little or nothing.
-
-I also discovered that another interrogation record on the Defendant
-Speer contains statements which incriminate my client but which are
-apparently also incorrect, as I established in consultation with the
-Defendant Speer.
-
-I should like to have an opportunity of discussing the matter with the
-representative of the Prosecution and of clearing up these
-differences—to decide to what extent I can agree to the use of these
-documents. They were to be presented by the Prosecution today or
-tomorrow at the latest, but for the time being I must object to their
-use.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: As I understand it, you said to us that the last three
-documents were not available to you and that they were not in the
-original list. Is that right?
-
-DR. SERVATIUS: Not up to now. I want to have an opportunity of reading
-these documents in advance. They are being read here without my having
-seen them.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: And then you went on to deal with the interrogations
-which have not been put into evidence.
-
-DR. SERVATIUS: Yes, I wanted to take the opportunity of saying that I
-wished to discuss these documents with the Prosecution before they are
-submitted to the Tribunal tomorrow, or probably even today. Meanwhile I
-must object to their being used as evidence.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, do you know what the circumstances are about
-these three documents which have not been supplied?
-
-MR. DODD: I do not, Your Honor. They have been placed in the defendants’
-Information Center and they partly have been in the information list. It
-may be that through some oversight these entries of this diary were
-neglected.
-
-DR. SERVATIUS: I have these documents before me now; they are not
-numbered; the document concerning Sauckel begins on Page 10—question
-and answer on Pages 11 and 12. The record is not continuous; it consists
-of fragments of a transcript, which I want to trace to its origin.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Counsel for the Prosecution will supply you with these
-documents at the adjournment this afternoon. With reference to the
-interrogation, if they propose to use any interrogation in the Trial
-tomorrow, they can also supply you with any documents which are material
-to that interrogation.
-
-DR. SERVATIUS: Thank you.
-
-MR. DODD: I believe I was referring to Document Number 2220-PS.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: That is right. You have not begun to read it yet.
-
-MR. DODD: I propose to read from the fourth page of the English text,
-Paragraph 2 at the top of the page, particularly the last two sentences
-of the paragraph; and in the German text the passage is found in Page
-10, Paragraph 1. Quoting directly, it is as follows:
-
- “As things were, the recruiting of manpower had to be
- accomplished by means of more or less forceful methods, such as
- the instances when certain groups appointed by the labor offices
- caught church and movie-goers indiscriminately and transported
- them into the Reich. That such methods only undermine the
- people’s willingness to work and the people’s confidence to such
- a degree that it cannot be checked even with terror, is just as
- clear as the consequences brought about by a strengthening of
- the political resistance movement.”
-
-That is the end of the quotation. We say that Polish farmland was
-confiscated with the aid of the SS and was distributed to German
-inhabitants or held in trust for the German community, and the farm
-owners were employed as laborers or transported to Germany against their
-will. We refer to Document Number 1352-PS, which bears Exhibit Number
-USA-176. This document is a report of the SS, and it bears the title
-“Achievement of Confiscations of Polish Agricultural Enterprises with
-the Purpose of Transferring the Poles to the Old Reich and Employing
-them as Agricultural Workers.”
-
-I wish to read from the first page of the English text beginning with
-the fifth paragraph; and in the German text it appears on Page 9,
-Paragraph 1 on that page. Quoting:
-
- “It is possible without difficulty to accomplish the
- confiscation of small agricultural enterprises in the villages
- in which larger agricultural enterprises have been already
- confiscated and are under the management of the East German
- Corporation for Agricultural Development.”
-
-And then passing down three sentences, there is this statement which I
-quote:
-
- “The former owners of Polish farms together with their families
- will be transferred to the Old Reich by the employment offices
- for employment as farm workers. In this way many hundreds of
- Polish agricultural workers can be placed at the disposal of
- agriculture in the Old Reich in the shortest and simplest
- manner. In this way, to begin with, the most pressing shortage
- now felt in a very disagreeable manner, especially in the
- root-crop districts, will be quickly removed.”
-
-Pursuant to the directions of the Defendant Sauckel, his agents and the
-SS men deported Polish men to Germany without their families, thereby
-accomplishing one of the basic purposes of the program, the supplying of
-labor for the German war effort, and at the same time, weakening the
-reproductive potential of the Polish people.
-
-I wish to refer directly to Document L-61, which bears Exhibit Number
-USA-177. This document is a letter from the Defendant Sauckel to the
-presidents of the land labor offices. It is dated the 26th day of
-November 1942, and I want to read from the first paragraph of that
-letter which states as follows:
-
- “In agreement with the Chief of the Security Police and the SD,
- these Jews who are still in employment are also, from now on, to
- be evacuated from the territory of the Reich and are to be
- replaced by Poles, who are being evacuated from the Government
- General.”
-
-And passing to the third paragraph of that same letter, we find this
-statement. Quoting:
-
- “The Poles who are to be evacuated as a result of this measure
- will be put into concentration camps and put to work, insofar as
- they are criminal or asocial elements. The remaining Poles, so
- far as they are suitable for labor, will be transported—without
- family—into the Reich, particularly to Berlin, where they will
- be put at the disposal of the labor allocation offices to work
- in armament factories instead of the Jews who are to be
- replaced.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Who is the Chief of the Security Police, mentioned in the
-second paragraph?
-
-MR. DODD: The Chief of the Security Police was Heinrich Himmler. He was
-also the Reichsführer of the SS.
-
-DR. SERVATIUS: May I say something with regard to this document. The
-Defendant Sauckel denies knowledge of it and says that the place of
-dispatch, not mentioned during the reading of this document, is of
-importance. The document, according to its letterhead, was written at 96
-Saarland Strasse, which was not the office of the Defendant Sauckel. The
-second point is that this document, contrary to the statement in the
-document list classifying it as an original letter of Sauckel, was not
-signed by him. Moreover the certification of the signature, customary on
-all documents, is missing. May I ask the prosecutor to read this into
-the record, so that I can come back to it later.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: If the procedure which the Tribunal has laid down has
-been carried out, either the original document or a photostat copy will
-be in your Information Center; and you can then compare or show to your
-client either the photostat or the original.
-
-DR. SERVATIUS: I have done that and only object now to the fact that
-from the reading of this document parts which I consider important are
-being omitted. If this letter is being read here it must be read in its
-entirety, including the parts which I consider important, namely, the
-letterhead and the type of signature.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Will you repeat that.
-
-DR. SERVATIUS: I am asking that if it is to be used as evidence, the
-letter should be read in its entirety, including its complete heading
-and the signature as it appears, namely, “signed Sauckel.” The
-certification of the signature is missing, a fact from which my client
-draws certain conclusions in his favor.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: You will have an opportunity after adjournment of seeing
-this document; and you have been told already that you can refer, when
-your turn comes to present your defense, to the whole of any document.
-It is inconvenient to the Tribunal to have many interruptions of this
-sort; and if you wish to refer to the whole document, you will be able
-to do so at a later stage.
-
-DR. SERVATIUS: I must assume then, Mr. President, that it is admissible
-to read parts of a document instead of the whole. Did I understand
-correctly?
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Yes, certainly. You can put in a part or the whole of the
-document when your turn comes. We will adjourn now; but, Mr. Dodd, you
-will satisfy this counsel for the Defense as to the reason why he had
-not got these documents.
-
-DR. SERVATIUS: Yes, I understand, Mr. President.
-
-MR. DODD: Yes, I will.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: And you will make them available to him and insure that
-he has an opportunity of seeing the original of this document so that he
-can check the signature.
-
-MR. DODD: We will, and I will see that the original is available to him.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: All right, we will adjourn now.
-
- [_The Tribunal adjourned until 12 December 1945 at 1000 hours._]
-
-
-
-
- EIGHTEENTH DAY
- Wednesday, 12 December 1945
-
-
- _Morning Session_
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will adjourn this morning at 12:30 for a
-closed session and sit again at 2:00 o’clock.
-
-MR. DODD: May it please the Tribunal, I should like to report to the
-Tribunal this morning with reference to the questions which arose
-yesterday afternoon concerning three documents.
-
-After adjournment we found that Document 2220-PS was in the defendants’
-Information Center in photostatic form, and that the two other
-documents, being respectively two entries from the Frank diary, were
-also there but in a different form. The Frank diary consists of some
-40-odd volumes which we, of course, were not able to photostat, so we
-had placed instead in the defendants’ room the excerpts. As a matter of
-fact, we had placed the entire document book there.
-
-DR. ALFRED SEIDL (Counsel for the Defendant Frank): Yesterday the
-Prosecution submitted documents concerning the Defendant Frank; the
-numbers are 2233(a)-PS and 2233(b)-PS, which were presented as Exhibits
-USA-173 and USA-174. These are not ordinary documents, but excerpts from
-the diary of Frank. Six weeks ago I applied in writing to have this
-diary, which consists of 42 heavy, thick volumes, submitted to me. I
-made this request for the first time on the 2d of September, the second
-time on the 16th of November, the third time on the 18th of November,
-and the fourth time on the 3rd of December.
-
-Unfortunately, I have not so far received this diary, and I should like
-to ask the Tribunal that it be submitted to me as soon as possible, not
-least because this material was surrendered by the Defendant Frank
-himself to the officers who arrested him and was to be used as evidence
-for his defense.
-
-I am of course not in a position to work through all this material in a
-few days, and I should like to ask the Tribunal that this diary be put
-at my disposal without delay.
-
-In this connection I should like to call the attention of the Tribunal
-to another matter. The Tribunal has already approved that the four long
-speeches which the Defendant Frank delivered in Germany in 1942 and
-which led to his dismissal by Hitler from all his offices should be put
-at my disposal as evidence. The General Secretary of the Tribunal
-informed me of this on the 4th of December, but unfortunately I have not
-so far received copies of these speeches. I should be very grateful,
-therefore, if the Tribunal will ensure that its decisions are carried
-out and that the documents are submitted to me without delay.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will look into these matters with the
-General Secretary of the Tribunal, and doubtless it will be able to
-arrange that you should have these documents submitted to you in the
-defendants’ counsel Information Center.
-
-DR. SEIDL: Thank you.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Yes, Mr. Dodd.
-
-MR. DODD: May I refer briefly to the discussion that we were engaged in
-yesterday in order to take up the train of thought.
-
-I wish to remind the Tribunal that we were discussing or had just
-completed a discussion of Document L-61, which had to do with a letter
-written by the Defendant Sauckel to the presidents of the “Länder” labor
-offices. I had read two excerpts from that letter.
-
-Referring to the letter, we say that the Nazi campaign of force and
-terror and abduction was described in another letter to the Defendant
-Frank, which we wish to refer to as Document Number 1526-PS.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Before you pass from that, Mr. Dodd, has either the
-original or the photostatic copy been shown to Sauckel’s counsel?
-
-MR. DODD: Oh, yes, Sir. A photostatic copy was in the defendants’
-Information Center, and after adjournment yesterday we got the original
-and handed it to him here in this room.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: And he saw it?
-
-MR. DODD: Yes, Sir.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Very well.
-
-MR. DODD: This document, Number 1526-PS, USA-178, is a letter written by
-the chairman of the Ukrainian Main Committee at Kraków in February 1943.
-I wish to read from the third page of the English text, beginning with
-the second paragraph; the same passage in the German text at Page 2,
-Paragraph 5. I quote:
-
- “The general nervousness is still further increased by the wrong
- methods of labor mobilization which have been used more and more
- frequently in recent months.
-
-
-
- “The wild and ruthless manhunt as practiced everywhere in towns
- and country, in streets, squares, stations, even in churches, as
- well as at night in homes, has shaken the feeling of security of
- the inhabitants. Every man is exposed to the danger of being
- seized suddenly and unexpectedly, anywhere and at any time, by
- the police, and brought into an assembly camp. None of his
- relatives knows what has happened to him, and only weeks or
- months later one or another gives news of his fate by a
- postcard.”
-
-I wish to turn to Enclosure 5 on Page 8 of this document, which I quote:
-
- “In November of last year an inspection of all males of the
- age-classes born 1910 to 1920 was ordered in the area of
- Zaleszczyti (district of Czortkow). After the men had appeared
- for inspection, all those who were selected were arrested at
- once, loaded into trains, and sent to the Reich. Similar
- recruitment of laborers for the Reich also took place in other
- areas of this district. Following some interventions, the action
- was then stopped.”
-
-The resistance of the Polish people to this enslavement program and the
-necessity for increased force were described by the Defendant Sauckel’s
-deputy, one Timm, at a meeting of the Central Planning Board, which was,
-by the way, Hitler’s wartime planning agency. It was made up of the
-Defendant Speer, Field Marshal Milch, and State Secretary Körner. The
-Central Planning Board was the highest level economic planning agency,
-exercising production controls by allocating raw materials and labor to
-industrial users.
-
-Now, Document R-124, Exhibit USA-179. This document consists of excerpts
-from minutes of the meetings of this Central Planning Board and minutes
-of conferences between the Defendant Speer and Hitler. Only the
-excerpts, of course, from these minutes upon which we rely are being
-offered in evidence. I would say to the Tribunal, however, that the
-balance of the minutes are available—can be made available—if the
-Tribunal so desires.
-
-This deputy of Sauckel, his name being Timm, made a statement at the
-36th conference of the Central Planning Board; and it appears on Page
-14, Paragraph 2 of the English text of Document R-124, and on Page 10,
-Paragraph 2 of the German text:
-
- “Especially in Poland the situation at the moment is
- extraordinarily serious. It is known that violent battles have
- occurred just because of these actions. The resistance against
- the administration established by us is very strong. Quite a
- number of our men have been exposed to increased dangers; and
- just in the last 2 or 3 weeks some of them have been shot dead,
- for example, the head of the Labor Office of Warsaw, who was
- shot in his office 14 days ago, and yesterday another man again.
- This is how matters stand at present; and the recruiting itself
- even if done with the best will, remains extremely difficult
- unless police reinforcements are at hand.”
-
-Deportation and enslavement of civilians reached unprecedented levels in
-the so-called Eastern Occupied Territories. These wholesale deportations
-resulted directly from labor demands made by the Defendant Sauckel on
-the Defendant Rosenberg, who was the Reich Minister for the Eastern
-Occupied Territories, and his subordinates, and also on the Armed
-Forces—a demand made directly on the Armed Forces by the Defendant
-Sauckel.
-
-On the 5th of October 1942, for example, the Defendant Sauckel wrote to
-the Defendant Rosenberg, stating that 2 million foreign laborers were
-required and that the majority of these would have to be drafted from
-the recently occupied Eastern territories and especially from the
-Ukraine.
-
-I wish to refer at this point to Document 017-PS, which bears Exhibit
-Number USA-180. This letter from the Defendant Sauckel to the Defendant
-Rosenberg I wish to quote in full. It begins by saying:
-
- “The Führer has worked out new and most urgent plans for
- armament which require the quick mobilization of two million
- more foreign workers. The Führer therefore has granted me, for
- the execution of his decree of 21 March 1942, new powers for my
- new duties, and has especially authorized me to take whatever
- measures I think are necessary in the Reich, the Protectorate,
- the Government General, as well as in the occupied territories,
- in order to assure, at all costs, an orderly mobilization of
- labor for the German armament industry.
-
-
-
- “The additional required labor forces will have to be drafted,
- for the most part, from the recently occupied Eastern
- Territories, especially from the Reichskommissariat Ukraine.
- Therefore, the Reichskommissariat Ukraine must furnish 225,000
- workers by 31 December 1942 and 225,000 more by 1 May 1942.
-
-
-
- “I ask you to inform Reich Commissioner, Gauleiter, Party Member
- Koch at once about the new situation and requirements and
- especially to see that he supports personally in every possible
- way the execution of this new order.
-
-
-
- “I intend to visit Party Member Koch shortly and I would be
- grateful if he could inform me as to where and when I could meet
- him for a personal discussion. Just now though, I ask that the
- recruiting be taken up at once with all energy and the use of
- every factor, especially the experts of the labor offices. All
- directives which temporarily limited the procurement of Eastern
- Workers are annulled. The Reich procurement for the next months
- must be given priority over all other measures . . . .
-
-
-
- “I do not ignore the difficulties which exist for the execution
- of this new order, but I am convinced that with the ruthless use
- of all resources and with the full co-operation of all concerned
- the execution of the new demands can be accomplished by the date
- fixed. I have already communicated the new demands directly to
- the Reich Commissioner for the Ukraine by teletype. In reference
- to our phone-call of today, I will send you the text of the
- Führer’s decree at the beginning of next week.”
-
-I should like to remind the Tribunal that we have referred previously,
-yesterday afternoon, to this Reichskommissar, Gauleiter, Party Member
-Koch; and we quoted him as stating, the Tribunal will recall, “We are
-the master race. We must be hard,” and so forth.
-
-On the 17th day of March 1943, the Defendant Sauckel wrote again to the
-Defendant Rosenberg; and on this occasion he demanded the importation of
-another 1 million men and women from the Eastern Territories within the
-following 4 months. I wish to refer at this point to Document Number
-019-PS, which bears Exhibit Number USA-181. Quoting that letter in full:
-
- “After a protracted illness, my deputy for labor allocation in
- the Occupied Eastern Territories, State Councillor Peuckert, is
- going there to regulate the allocation of labor both for Germany
- and the territories themselves.
-
-
-
- “I ask you sincerely, dear Party Member Rosenberg, to assist him
- to your utmost on account of the pressing urgency of Peuckert’s
- mission. I may thank you already at this moment for the good
- reception accorded to Peuckert up to this time. He himself has
- been charged by me to co-operate fully and unreservedly with all
- bureaus of the Eastern Territories.
-
-
-
- “Especially the labor allocation for German agriculture and
- likewise the most urgent armament production programs ordered by
- the Führer, make the fastest importation of approximately 1
- million men and women from the Eastern Territories within the
- next 4 months, a necessity. Starting 15 March the daily shipment
- must reach 5,000 female or male workers, while from the
- beginning of April this number has to be stepped up to 10,000,
- if the most urgent programs and the spring tillage and other
- agricultural tasks are not to suffer to the detriment of food
- and of the Armed Forces.
-
-
-
- “I have provided for the allotment of the draft quotas for the
- individual territories, in agreement with your experts for labor
- supply, as follows:
-
-
-
- “Daily quota starting 15 March 1943: From General kommissariat,
- White Ruthenia—500 people; Economic Inspection, Center—500
- people; Reichskommissariat, Ukraine—3,000 people; Economic
- Inspection, South—1,000 people; total—5,000 people.
-
-
-
- “Starting 1 April 1943, the daily quota is to be doubled
- corresponding to the doubling of the entire quota. I hope to
- visit personally the Eastern Territories towards the end of the
- month, and ask you once more for your kind support.”
-
-The Defendant Sauckel did travel to the East. He travelled to Kovno in
-Lithuania to press his demands. We offer in evidence Document Number
-204-PS, which bears Exhibit Number USA-182. This document is a synopsis
-of a report of the City Commissioner of Kovno and minutes of a meeting
-in which the Defendant Sauckel participated. I wish to read from the
-second page of the English text, beginning with the first paragraph. The
-same passage appears in the German text at Page 5, Paragraph 2. Quoting
-directly as follows:
-
- “In a lecture which the Plenipotentiary General for the
- Allocation of Labor, Gauleiter Sauckel, gave on 18 July 1943 in
- Kovno, and in an official conference following it between
- Gauleiter Sauckel and the General Commissioner, the precarious
- labor situation in the Reich was again urgently presented for
- discussion. Gauleiter Sauckel again demanded that Lithuanian
- labor be furnished in greater volume for the purposes of the
- Reich.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Who was the General Commissar? Rosenberg?
-
-MR. DODD: The Plenipotentiary for the Arbeitseinsatz?
-
-THE PRESIDENT: No, the General Commissar.
-
-MR. DODD: His name is not known to us. He was apparently a local
-functionary in the Party.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Very well.
-
-MR. DODD: The Defendant Sauckel also visited Riga, in Latvia, to assert
-his demands; and the purpose of this visit is described in Document
-Number 2280-PS, bearing Exhibit Number USA-183. This document is a
-letter from the Reich Commissar for the Ostland to the Commissioner
-General in Riga, and it is dated the 3rd of May 1943. I wish to read
-from Page 1 of the English text, beginning with the first paragraph:
-
- “Following the basic statements of the Plenipotentiary General
- for Allocation of Labor, Gauleiter Sauckel, on the occasion of
- his visit to Riga on the 21st of April 1943, it was decided, in
- view of the critical situation and in disregard of all adverse
- considerations, that a total of 183,000 workers would have to be
- supplied from the Ostland to the Reich territory. This task
- absolutely must be accomplished within the next 4 months and at
- the latest must be completed by the end of August.”
-
-Here again we are not informed as to the name and identity of the Reich
-Commissar for the Ostland.
-
-Sauckel asked the German Army for assistance in the recruitment and
-deportation of civilian labor from the Eastern Territories. We refer now
-to Document Number 3010-PS, which bears Exhibit Number USA-184.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, were you saying that it was not known from whom
-that document emanated?
-
-MR. DODD: No, Sir. We say it is a letter from the Reichskommissar for
-the Ostland to the Commissioner General in Riga, but we don’t know their
-names specifically at the time of the writing of the letter.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: You don’t know who the Reichskommissar of the Eastern
-Territories was?
-
-MR. DODD: We don’t know him by that title, “The Reichskommissar for the
-Ostland.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Very well.
-
-MR. DODD: Lohse, I am now informed, was his name. I understood that we
-did not know it.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: All right.
-
-MR. DODD: Referring to this Document 3010-PS, this document is a secret
-operational order of the Army Group South dated the 17th day of August
-1943. I wish to read from the first page of the English text, the first
-two paragraphs, as follows:
-
- “The Plenipotentiary General for Allocation of Labor, in Decree
- Az. VI A 5780.28, a copy of which is enclosed (Enclosure 1), has
- ordered the mustering and calling-up of two complete age classes
- for the whole newly occupied Eastern Territory. The Reich
- Minister for Armament and Munitions has approved this order.
-
-
-
- “According to this order by the Plenipotentiary General for
- Allocation of Labor”—GBA—“you have to recruit and to transport
- to the Reich immediately all labor forces in your territory born
- during 1926 and 1927. The decree of 6 February 1943 relative to
- labor duty and labor employment in the theater of operations of
- the newly occupied Eastern Territory and the executive orders
- issued on this subject are the authority for the execution of
- this measure. Enlistment must be completed by 30 September 43 at
- the latest.”
-
-We say it is clear that the demands made by the Defendant Sauckel
-resulted in the deportation of civilians from the Occupied Eastern
-Territories. The Defendant Speer has recorded conferences with Hitler on
-10, 11, and 12 August 1942; and this record is contained in Document
-R-124, which is already in as Exhibit USA-179. I now wish to quote from
-Page 34 of that same document in Paragraph 1 of the English text. In the
-German text it appears at Page 23, Paragraph 2. Quoting directly:
-
- “Gauleiter Sauckel promises to make Russian labor available for
- the fulfillment of the iron and coal program and reports that,
- if required, he will supply a further million Russian laborers
- for the German armament industry up to and including October
- 1942. So far he has already supplied 1,000,000 for industry and
- 700,000 for agriculture. In this connection the Führer states
- that the problem of providing labor can be solved in all cases
- and to any extent. He authorizes Gauleiter Sauckel to take all
- necessary measures. He would agree to any compulsory measures in
- the East as well as in the Occupied Western Territories if this
- question could not be solved on a voluntary basis.”
-
-In order to meet these demands of 1,700,000—100,000 here and there—the
-Nazi conspirators made terror and violence and arson, as we said
-yesterday, fundamental instruments of their labor enslavement policy.
-Twenty days after the Defendant Sauckel’s demands of the 5th of October
-1942, a top official in the Defendant Rosenberg’s Ministry described the
-measures taken to meet these demands. I wish to refer now to Document
-Number 294-PS, which is Exhibit Number USA-185. This document is a
-top-secret memorandum, dated the 25th of October 1942, signed by one
-Bräutigam. I wish to quote from Page 4 of the English text starting with
-the last paragraph, as follows—in the German text it appears at Page 8,
-Paragraph 2—quoting directly:
-
- “We now experienced the grotesque picture of having to recruit,
- precipitately, millions of laborers from the Occupied Eastern
- Territories, after prisoners of war had died of hunger like
- flies, in order to fill the gaps that have formed within
- Germany. Now suddenly the food question no longer existed. In
- the customary limitless disregard for the Slavic people,
- ‘recruiting’ methods were used which probably have their
- precedent only in the blackest periods of the slave trade. A
- regular manhunt was inaugurated. Without consideration of health
- or age, the people were shipped to Germany where it turned out
- immediately that more than 100,000 had to be sent back because
- of serious illness and other incapability for work.”
-
-The Defendant Rosenberg wrote, himself, concerning these brutalities, to
-the instigator of them, the Defendant Sauckel; and we refer now to
-Document Number 018-PS, which bears Exhibit Number USA-186.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, from where did that top-secret document come?
-
-MR. DODD: It came from the files of the Defendant Rosenberg.
-
-This document, 018-PS, is a letter from the Defendant Rosenberg to the
-Defendant Sauckel; and it is dated the 21st day of December 1942, with
-attachments. I wish to quote from Page 1 of the English text, starting
-at the middle of the second paragraph which reads as follows:
-
- “The reports I have received show that the increase of the
- guerilla bands in the Occupied Eastern Territories is largely
- due to the fact that the methods used for procuring laborers in
- these regions are felt to be forced measures of mass
- deportations, so that the endangered persons prefer to escape
- their fate by withdrawing into the woods or going to the
- guerilla bands.”
-
-Passing now to Page 4 of the same English text, there is an attachment
-to Rosenberg’s letter consisting of parts excerpted from letters of
-residents of the Occupied Eastern Territories—excerpted by Nazi censors
-apparently. In the German text it appears at Page 6, Paragraphs 1 and 2.
-Starting the quotation:
-
- “At our place, new things have happened. People are being taken
- to Germany. On October 5 some people from the Kowkuski district
- were scheduled to go, but they did not want to and the village
- was set on fire. They threatened to do the same thing in
- Borowytschi, as not all who were scheduled to depart wanted to
- go. Thereupon three truckloads of Germans arrived and set fire
- to their houses. In Wrasnytschi 12 houses and in Borowytschi 3
- houses were burned.
-
-
-
- “On October 1 a new conscription of labor forces took place. Of
- what happened, I will describe the most important to you. You
- cannot imagine the bestiality. You probably remember what we
- were told about the Soviets during the rule of the Poles. At
- that time we did not believe it and now it seems just as
- incredible. The order came to supply 25 workers, but no one
- reported. All had fled. Then the German police came and began to
- ignite the houses of those who had fled. The fire burned
- furiously, since it had not rained for 2 months. In addition the
- grain stacks were in the farm yards. You can imagine what took
- place. The people who had hurried to the scene were forbidden to
- extinguish the flames, were beaten and arrested, so that six
- homesteads were burned down. The policemen meanwhile ignited
- other houses. The people fall on their knees and kiss their
- hands, but the policemen beat them with rubber truncheons and
- threaten to burn down the whole village. I do not know how this
- would have ended if Sapurkany had not intervened. He promised
- that there would be laborers by the next morning. During the
- fire the police went through the adjoining villages, seized the
- laborers, and brought them under arrest. Wherever they did not
- find any laborers, they detained the parents until the children
- appeared. That is how they raged throughout the night in
- Bielosersk . . . .
-
-
-
- “The workers who had not yet appeared by then were to be shot.
- All schools were closed and the married teachers were sent to
- work here, while the unmarried ones go to work in Germany. They
- are now catching humans as the dogcatchers used to catch dogs.
- They are already hunting for 1 week and have not yet enough. The
- imprisoned workers are locked in the schoolhouse. They cannot
- even go to perform their natural functions, but have to do it
- like pigs in the same room. People from many villages went on a
- certain day to a pilgrimage to the Poczajów Monastery. They were
- all arrested, locked in, and will be sent to work. Among them
- there are lame, blind, and aged people.”
-
-Despite the fact that the Defendant Rosenberg wrote this letter with
-this attachment, we say he nevertheless countenanced the use of force in
-order to furnish slave labor to Germany and admitted his responsibility
-for the “unusual and hard measures” that were employed. I refer to
-excerpts from the transcript of an interrogation under oath of the
-Defendant Rosenberg on the 6th of October 1945, which is Exhibit
-USA-187, and I wish to quote from Page 1 of the English text starting
-with the ninth paragraph.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: You haven’t given us the PS number.
-
-MR. DODD: It has no PS number.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I beg your pardon. Has a copy of it been given to
-Rosenberg’s counsel?
-
-MR. DODD: Yes, it has been. It is at the end of the document book, if
-Your Honors please, the document book the Tribunal has.
-
-DR. ALFRED THOMA (Counsel for the Defendant Rosenberg): In the name of
-my client, I object to the reading of this document for the following
-reasons:
-
-In the preliminary hearings my client was questioned several times on
-the subject of employment of labor from the eastern European nations. He
-stated: that the Defendant Sauckel, by virtue of the authority he
-received from the Führer and by order of the Delegate for the Four Year
-Plan, had the right to give him instructions; that he (the Defendant
-Rosenberg) nevertheless demanded that recruiting of labor be conducted
-on a voluntary basis; that this was in fact carried out; and that
-Sauckel agreed, provided that the quota could be met. Rosenberg further
-stated that on several occasions in the course of joint discussions his
-Ministry demanded that the quota be reduced and that in part it was, in
-fact, reduced.
-
-This document which is now going to be presented does not mention all
-these statements, it only contains fragments of them. In order to make
-it possible both for the Tribunal and the Defense to obtain a complete
-picture, I ask the Tribunal that the Prosecution be requested to present
-the entire records of the statements and, before submitting the document
-officially, to discuss the retranslation with the Defense so as to avoid
-misunderstandings.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I am not sure that I understand your objection. You say,
-as I understood it, that Sauckel had authority from Hitler. Is that
-right?
-
-DR. THOMA: Yes.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: And that Rosenberg was carrying out that authority.
-
-DR. THOMA: Yes.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: But all that counsel for the Prosecution is attempting to
-do at the moment is to put in evidence an interrogation of Rosenberg.
-With reference to that, you ask that he should put in the whole
-interrogation?
-
-DR. THOMA: Yes.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Well, we don’t know yet whether he intends to put in the
-whole interrogation or a part of it.
-
-DR. THOMA: I know only one thing: I already have in my hand the document
-which the Prosecution wishes to submit and I can see from it that it
-contains only fragments of the whole interrogation. What in particular
-it does not contain is the fact that Rosenberg always insisted on
-voluntary recruiting only and that he continually demanded a reduction
-of the quota. That is not contained in the document to be submitted.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: If counsel for the Prosecution reads a part of the
-interrogation, and you wish to refer to another part of the
-interrogation in order that the part he has read should not be
-misleading, you will be at liberty to do so when he has read his part of
-the interrogation. Is that clear?
-
-DR. THOMA: Yes. But then I request the Tribunal to ask counsel for the
-Prosecution if the document which he intends to submit contains the
-whole of Rosenberg’s statement.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, were you going to put in the whole of
-Rosenberg’s interrogation?
-
-MR. DODD: No, Your Honor, I was not prepared to put in the whole of
-Rosenberg’s interrogation, but only certain parts of it. These parts are
-available, and have been for some time, to counsel. The whole of the
-Rosenberg interrogation in English was given to Sauckel’s counsel,
-however, and he has the entire text of it, the only available copy that
-we have.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Has counsel for Rosenberg not got the entire document?
-
-MR. DODD: He has only the excerpt that we propose to read into the
-record here at this time.
-
-DR. THOMA: May I say something?
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, the Tribunal considers that if you propose to
-put in a part of the interrogation, the whole interrogation ought to be
-submitted to the defendant’s counsel, that then you may read what part
-you like of the interrogation, and then defendant’s counsel may refer to
-any other part of the interrogation directly if it is necessary for the
-purpose of explaining the part which has been read by counsel for the
-Prosecution. So before you use this interrogation, Rosenberg’s counsel
-must have a copy of the whole interrogation.
-
-MR. DODD: I might say, Your Honor, that we turned over the whole
-interrogation to counsel for the Defendant Sauckel; and we understood
-that he would make it available to all other counsel for the Defense.
-Apparently, that did not happen.
-
-DR. THOMA: Thank you, Mr. President.
-
-DR. SERVATIUS: I received these documents from the Prosecution last
-night. They were in English; that is sufficient for me, but counsel for
-the other defendants are not all in a position to follow the English
-text, so that certain difficulties arise, and I must find time to
-interpret the document to my colleagues. But it would be desirable if
-the Prosecution could give us the German text, for the interrogation
-took place in German and was translated into English, so that the
-original German text should be available.
-
-Those are the difficulties, and I would like to suggest that the German
-text be also handed to us as soon as possible.
-
-MR. DODD: With reference to the so-called German text, the original is
-an English text. These interrogations were made through an interpreter
-and they were transcribed in English so that the original text is an
-English text, and that is what was turned over to the attorney for the
-Defendant Sauckel with the understanding that it would be made available
-to all other counsel.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: But of course that doesn’t quite meet their difficulties
-because they don’t all of them speak English, or are not all able to
-read English, so I am afraid you must wait until Rosenberg’s counsel has
-got a copy of the entire interrogation in his own language.
-
-MR. DODD: Very well.
-
-Passing on beyond the document to which we have just referred—which we
-now withdraw in view of the ruling—and which we will offer at a later
-date after we have complied with the ruling of the Court, we have a
-letter dated the 21st of December 1942, which is Document 018-PS, and
-which bears Exhibit Number USA-186—which, by the way, is a letter from
-the Defendant Rosenberg to the Defendant Sauckel—and I wish to quote
-from Page 1, Paragraph 3 of the English text. In the German text it
-appears at Page 3, Paragraph 1. Quoting directly:
-
- “Even if I in no way deny that the numbers demanded by the Reich
- Minister for Armament and Munitions as well as by the
- agricultural economy justify unusual and severe measures, I
- must, because I am answerable for the Occupied Eastern
- Territories, emphatically request that, in filling the quota
- demanded, measures be excluded the consequences and our
- toleration of which will some day be held against me and my
- collaborators.”
-
-In the Ukraine area, arson was indeed used as a terror instrument to
-enforce these conscription measures; and we refer now to Document Number
-254-PS, which is Exhibit USA-188. This document is from an official of
-the Rosenberg Ministry and was also found in the Rosenberg file. It is
-dated June 29, 1944 and encloses a copy of a letter from one Paul Raab,
-a district commissioner in the territory of Wassilkov, to the Defendant
-Rosenberg. I wish to quote from Raab’s letter, Page 1, starting with
-Paragraph 1 of the English text which reads as follows:
-
- “According to a charge by the Supreme Command of the Army, I
- burned down several houses . . . in the territory of Wassilkov,
- Ukraine, belonging to insubordinate people ordered to labor
- service—this accusation is true.”
-
-Passing now to the third paragraph:
-
- “During the year of 1942 the conscription of workers was
- accomplished nearly exclusively by way of propaganda. Only
- rarely was force necessary. But in August 1942, measures had to
- be taken against two families in the villages of Glevenka and
- Soliony-Shatior, each of which were to supply one person for
- labor. Both had been requested in June for the first time but
- had not obeyed, although requested repeatedly. They had to be
- brought in by force, but succeeded twice in escaping from the
- collecting camp in Kiev or while in transit. Before the second
- arrest, the fathers of both of the workers were taken into
- custody as hostages to be released only when their sons
- appeared. When, after the second escape, the re-arrest of both
- the young men and the fathers was ordered, the police patrols
- detailed to do this, found the houses empty.”
-
-Passing to Paragraph 4, it is stated, and I quote directly:
-
- “At that time I decided at last to take measures to show the
- increasingly rebellious Ukrainian youth that our orders have to
- be followed. I ordered the burning of the houses of the two
- fugitives.”
-
-Would Your Honor like to have the rest of that paragraph?
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I think you should read the next few lines.
-
- MR. DODD: “The result was that in the future people obeyed,
- willingly, orders concerning labor obligations. However, the
- practice of burning houses has not become known for the first
- time by my actions, but was suggested in a secret letter from
- the Reich Commissioner for Allocation of Labor specifically as a
- coercive measure in case other measures should fail. This harsh
- punishment was acceptable to the local population . . .”
-
-THE TRIBUNAL (Mr. Biddle): The Commissioner for Labor, Mr. Dodd—you
-just said, “an order from the Commissioner of Labor.” Who was that?
-
-MR. DODD: Well, we have discussed this matter previously to our
-appearance here today. The document does not identify him by name. We
-are not sure. The Defendant Sauckel was called Plenipotentiary General
-for Labor, and we think we can’t go much further, and say we don’t know.
-It just does not appear.
-
-THE TRIBUNAL (Mr. Biddle): Thank you.
-
-MR. DODD: Reading that last sentence again:
-
- “This harsh punishment was acceptable to the local population
- because previous to this step both families had ridiculed on
- every hand the duty-conscious people who sent their children
- partly voluntarily to the labor allocation.”
-
-Turning to Paragraph 2 on Page 2, beginning about two-thirds of the way
-through the paragraph, I wish to read as follows—in the German text it
-appears at Page 3, Paragraph 1:
-
- “After initial successes, a passive resistance of the population
- started, which finally forced me to turn again to arrests,
- confiscations, and transfers to labor camps. After a whole
- transport of conscripted laborers overcame the police at the
- railroad station in Wassilkov and escaped, I saw again the
- necessity for strict measures. A few ring-leaders, who of course
- had long since escaped, were located in Plissezkoje and in
- Mitnitza. After repeated attempts to get hold of them, their
- houses were burned down.”
-
-And finally, I wish to pass to the last paragraph on Page 3 of that same
-document. In the German text it appears at Page 5, Paragraph 7. Quoting
-from that last paragraph on the third page:
-
- “My actions toward fugitive labor draftees were always reported
- to District Commissioner Döhrer, of the Wassilkov office, and to
- the Commissioner General in Kiev. Both of them knew the
- circumstances and agreed with my measures because of their
- success.”
-
-That is the end of that part of the quotation.
-
-That Generalkommissar in Kiev, as we indicated yesterday and again this
-morning, was the man Koch—we quoted his statement about the master
-race.
-
-Another document confirms arson as an instrument of enforcing this labor
-program in the village of Bielosersk in the Ukraine in cases of
-resistance to forced labor recruitment. Atrocities committed in this
-village are related in Document Number 018-PS, which is already in
-evidence as Exhibit USA-186. But in addition there is Document Number
-290-PS, which bears Exhibit Number USA-189. This document consists of
-correspondence originating within the Rosenberg ministry, which was, of
-course, the office headquarters of the Defendant Rosenberg; and it is
-dated the 12th day of November 1943. I wish to quote from Page 1 of the
-English text, starting with the last line, as follows:
-
- “But even if Müller had been present at the burning of houses in
- connection with the Reich conscription in Bielosersk, this
- should by no means lead to the removal of Müller from office. It
- is mentioned specifically in a directive of the Commissioner
- General in Luck, of 21 September 1942, referring to the extreme
- urgency of national conscription, that farms of those who refuse
- to work are to be burned and their relatives are to be arrested
- as hostages and brought to forced labor camps.”
-
-The SS troops were directed to participate in the abduction of these
-forced laborers and also in the raids on villages, burning of villages,
-and were directed to turn the entire population over for slave labor in
-Germany.
-
-We refer to Document Number 3012-PS, which bears Exhibit Number USA-190.
-This document is a secret SS order and it is dated the 19th day of March
-1943. I wish to quote from Page 3 of the English text starting with the
-third paragraph. In the German text it appears at Page 2, Paragraph 3.
-It says, and I quote it:
-
- “The activity of the labor offices, that is, of recruiting
- commissions, is to be supported to the greatest extent possible.
- It will not be possible always to refrain from using force.
- During a conference with the chief of the labor allocation
- staffs, it was agreed that whatever prisoners could be released
- should be put at the disposal of the commissioner of the labor
- office. When searching villages or when it becomes necessary to
- burn down villages, the whole population will be put at the
- disposal of the commissioner by force.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Shouldn’t you read Number 4 which follows it?
-
-MR. DODD: Number 4 says:
-
- “As a rule, no more children will be shot.”
-
-I might say to Your Honor that parts of these documents are going to be
-relied on for other purposes later and it sometimes may appear to the
-Tribunal that we are overlooking some of these excerpts, but
-nevertheless I am grateful to have them called to our attention because
-they are most pertinent to these allegations as well.
-
-From the community of Zhitomir where the Defendant Sauckel appealed for
-more workers for the Reich, the Commissioner General reported on the
-brutality of the conspirator’s program, which he described as a program
-of coercion and slavery. And I now refer to Document Number 265-PS,
-which is Exhibit USA-191. This document is a secret report of a
-conference between the Commissioner General of Zhitomir and the
-Defendant Rosenberg in the community of Vinnitza on the 17th of June
-1943. The report itself is dated the 30th of June 1943 and is signed by
-Leyser. I wish to quote from Page 1 of the English text, beginning with
-the last paragraph; and in the German text it appears at Page 2,
-Paragraph 3. Quoting it directly:
-
- “The symptoms created by the recruiting of workers are, no
- doubt, well known to the Reich Minister through reports and his
- own observations. Therefore I shall not repeat them. It is
- certain that a recruitment of labor in the true sense of the
- word can hardly be spoken of. In most cases it is nowadays a
- matter of actual conscription by force.”
-
-Passing now to Page 2 of that same document, and to Paragraph 1, line
-11—in the German text it appears at Page 3, Paragraph 2—it says; and I
-quote it directly:
-
- “But as the Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor
- explained to us the gravity of the situation, we had no
- alternative. I consequently have authorized the commissioners of
- the areas to apply the severest measures in order to achieve the
- imposed quota. That a lowering of morale is coupled with this
- needs no further proof. It is nevertheless essential to win the
- war on this front too. The problem of labor mobilization cannot
- be handled with gloves.”
-
-The recruitment measures which we have been discussing enslaved so many
-citizens of occupied countries that whole areas were depopulated.
-
-I now wish to refer to our Document Number 3000-PS, which is Exhibit
-USA-192. This document is a partial translation of a report from the
-chief of Main Office III with the High Command in Minsk, and it is dated
-the 28th day of June 1943. It was sent to Ministerialdirektor Riecke,
-who was a top official in the Rosenberg Ministry. I wish to read from
-Page 1 of the English text, starting with the second paragraph, as
-follows:
-
- “Thus recruitment of labor for the Reich, however necessary, had
- disastrous effects, for the recruitment measures in the last
- months and weeks were absolute manhunts, which have an
- irreparable political and economic effect . . . . From . . .
- White Ruthenia approximately 50,000 people have been obtained
- for the Reich so far. Another 130,000 are to be taken.
- Considering the 2,400,000 total population . . . the fulfillment
- of these quotas is impossible. . . . Owing to the sweeping
- drives of the SS and police in November 1942, about 115,000
- hectares of farmland . . . are not used, as the population is
- not there and the villages have been razed. . . .”
-
-We have already referred to the conspirators’ objective of permanently
-weakening the enemy through the enslavement of labor and the breaking up
-of families; and we invite the Tribunal’s attention to Document 031-PS,
-which is in evidence as Exhibit USA-171, for we desire to emphasize that
-the policy was applied in the Eastern Occupied Territories with the
-Defendant Rosenberg’s approval of a plan for the apprehension and
-deportation of 40,000 to 50,000 youths of the ages of 10 to 14. Now the
-stated purpose of this plan was to prevent a reinforcement of the
-enemy’s military strength and to reduce the enemy’s biological
-potentialities. We have already quoted from Page 3 of the English text
-of that document to establish that the Defendant Rosenberg approved that
-plan, the so-called Hay Action plan. We referred to it yesterday
-afternoon.
-
-Further evidence of the conspirators’ plan to weaken their enemies, in
-utter disregard of the rules of international law, is contained in
-Document Number 1702-PS, which bears Exhibit Number USA-193. This
-document is a secret order, issued by a rear area military commandant to
-the district commissar at Kasatin, dated the 25th of December 1943. I
-quote from Page 3 of the English text at Paragraph 1. In the German text
-it appears at Page 12, Paragraph 1.
-
- “The able-bodied male population between 15 and 65 years of age
- and the live stock are to be shipped back from the district east
- of the line Belilovka-Berditchev-Zhitomir (exclusive of these
- places).”
-
-This program, which we have been describing, and the brutal measures
-that it employed were not limited to Poland and the Occupied Eastern
-Territories but covered and cursed Western Europe as well. Frenchmen,
-Dutchmen, Belgians, Italians, all came to know the yoke of slavery and
-the brutality of their slavemasters.
-
-In France these slavemasters intensified their program in the early part
-of 1943, pursuant to instructions which the Defendant Speer telephoned
-to the Defendant Sauckel at 8 o’clock in the evening on the 4th day of
-January 1943 from Hitler’s headquarters. I now refer to Document Number
-556(13)-PS, which is Exhibit USA-194. This document, incidentally, is a
-note for his own files, signed by the Defendant Sauckel, dated the 5th
-of January 1943. I wish to quote from Page 1 of the English text,
-Paragraph 1 as follows:
-
- “On 4 January 1943 at 8 p.m. Minister Speer telephones from the
- Führer’s headquarters and communicates that on the basis of the
- Führer’s decision, it is no longer necessary to give special
- consideration to Frenchmen in the further recruiting of
- specialists and helpers in France. The recruiting can proceed
- with vigor and with sharpened measures.”
-
-To overcome resistance to his slave labor program, the Defendant Sauckel
-improvised new impressment measures which were applied to both France
-and Italy by his own agents and which he himself labelled as grotesque.
-I now refer to Document Number R-124, which is Exhibit USA-179, and
-particularly Page 2 and Paragraph 2 of the English text; in the German
-text it appears at Page 8, Paragraph 1. Quoting directly from that page
-and that paragraph a statement made by Sauckel on 1 March 1944 at a
-meeting of the Central Planning Board:
-
- “The most abominable point against which I have to fight is the
- claim that there is no organization in these districts properly
- to recruit Frenchmen, Belgians, and Italians and to dispatch
- them to work. So I have even proceeded to employ and train a
- whole staff of French and Italian agents of both sexes who for
- good pay, just as was done in olden times for ‘shanghaiing,’ go
- hunting for men and dupe them, using liquor as well as
- persuasion in order to dispatch them to Germany.
-
-
-
- “Moreover, I have charged several capable men with founding a
- special labor allocation organization of our own, and this by
- training and arming, under the aegis of the Higher SS and Police
- Führer, a number of indigenous units; but I still have to ask
- the munitions ministry for arms for these men. For during the
- last year alone several dozens of high-ranking labor allocation
- officials of great ability have been shot. All these means must
- be used, grotesque as it may sound, to refute the allegation
- that there is no organization to bring labor to Germany from
- these countries.”
-
-This same slave labor hunt proceeded in Holland, as it did in France,
-with terror and abduction. I now refer to Document Number 1726-PS, which
-is Exhibit USA-195. This document is entitled, “Statement of the
-Netherlands Government in View of the Prosecution and Punishment of the
-German Major War Criminals.” I wish to quote from enclosure “h,”
-entitled “Central Bureau for Statistics—The Deportation of Netherlands’
-Workmen to Germany.” It is Page 1 of the English text, starting with the
-first paragraph; and in the German text it appears at Page 1, also
-Paragraph 1. Quoting it directly, it reads as follows:
-
- “Many big and medium-size large business concerns, especially in
- the metal industry, were visited by German commissions who
- selected workmen for deportation. This combing-out was called
- the ‘Sauckel action,’ so named after its leader, who was charged
- with the procurement, of foreign workmen for Germany.
-
-
-
- “The employers had to cancel the contracts with the selected
- workmen; and the latter were forced to register at the labor
- offices, which then took charge of the deportation under
- supervision of German ‘Fachberater.’
-
-
-
- “Workmen who refused—relatively few—were prosecuted by the
- Sicherheitsdienst—the SD. If captured by this service, they
- were mostly lodged for some time in one of the infamous
- prisoners’ camps in the Netherlands and eventually put to work
- in Germany.
-
-
-
- “In these prosecutions the Sicherheitsdienst was supported by
- the German police service, which was connected with the labor
- offices and was composed of members of the NSB and the like.
-
-
-
- “At the end of April 1942 the deportation of workers started on
- a grand scale. Consequently, in the months of May and June, the
- number of deportees amounted to not less than 22,000 and 24,000
- respectively, of which many were metal workers.
-
-
-
- “After that the action slackened somewhat, but in October 1942
- another peak was reached (2,600). After the big concerns, the
- smaller ones had, in their turn, to give up their
- personnel. . . .
-
-
-
- “This changed in November 1944. The Germans then started a
- ruthless campaign for manpower, passing by the labor offices.
- Without warning they lined off whole quarters of the towns,
- seized people in the streets or in the houses and deported them.
-
-
-
- “In Rotterdam and Schiedam where these raids took place on 10
- and 11 November, the number of people thus deported was
- estimated at 50,000 and 5,000, respectively.
-
-
-
- “In other places where the raids were held later, the numbers
- were much lower, because one was forewarned by the events. The
- exact figures are not known as they have never been published by
- the occupants.
-
-
-
- “The people thus seized were put to work partly in the
- Netherlands, partly in Germany.”
-
-A document found in the OKH files furnishes further evidence of the
-seizure of workers in Holland; and I refer to Document Number 3003-PS,
-which is Exhibit USA-196. This document is a partial translation of the
-text of a lecture, delivered by one Lieutenant Haupt of the German
-Wehrmacht, concerning the situation of the war economy in the
-Netherlands. I wish to quote from Page 1 of the English text, starting
-with the fourth line of Paragraph 1—quoting that directly, which reads
-as follows:
-
- “There had been some difficulties with the Arbeitseinsatz, that
- is, during the man-catching action, which became very noticeable
- because it was unorganized and unprepared. People were arrested
- in the streets and taken out of their homes. It has been
- impossible to carry out a uniform exemption procedure in
- advance, because for security reasons the time for the action
- had not been previously announced. Certificates of exemption,
- furthermore, were to some extent not recognized by the officials
- who carried out the action. Not only workers who had become
- available through the stoppage of industry, but also those who
- were employed in our installations producing things for our
- immediate need were apprehended or did not dare to go into the
- streets. In any case it proved to be a great loss to us.”
-
-I might say to the Tribunal, that the hordes of people displaced in
-Germany today indicate, to a very considerable extent, the length to
-which the conspirators’ labor program succeeded. The best available
-Allied and German data reveal that, as of January 1945, approximately
-4,795,000 foreign civilian workers had been put to work for the German
-war effort in the Old Reich; and among them were forced laborers of more
-than 14 different nationalities. I now refer to Document Number 2520-PS,
-Exhibit USA-197, which is an affidavit executed by Edward L. Deuss, an
-economic analyst.
-
-At the top of the first page there are tables setting forth the
-nationality and then the numbers of the various nationals and other
-groupings or prisoners of war and politicals, so-called. The workers
-alone total, according to Mr. Deuss who is an expert in the field, the
-4,795,000 figure to which I have just referred. In the second paragraph
-of this statement of Deuss, I should like to read for the record and
-quote directly:
-
- “I, Edward L. Deuss, for 3 years employed by the Foreign
- Economic Administration, Washington, as an economic analyst in
- London, Paris, and Germany, specializing in labor and population
- problems of Germany during the war, do hereby certify that the
- figures of foreign labor employed in the Old Reich have been
- compiled on the basis of the best available German and Allied
- sources of material. The accompanying table represents a
- combination of German official estimates of foreigners working
- in Germany in January 1945, and of American, British, and French
- figures of the number of foreigners actually discovered in the
- Old Reich since 10 May 1945.”
-
-Only a very small proportion of these imported laborers came to Germany
-on a voluntary basis. At the March 1, 1944 meeting of this same Central
-Planning Board, to which we have made reference before, the Defendant
-Sauckel himself made clear the vast scale on which free men had been
-forced into this labor slavery. He made the statement, and I quote from
-Document Number R-124, which is in evidence as Exhibit USA-179 and from
-which I have quoted earlier this morning. I wish to refer to Page 11 of
-that document, the middle paragraph, Paragraph 3. In the German text it
-appears at Page 4, Paragraph 2—the Defendant Sauckel speaking—and I
-quote directly from that document:
-
- “Out of 5 million foreign workers who arrived in Germany, not
- even 200,000 came voluntarily.”
-
-The Nazi conspirators were not satisfied just to tear 5 million odd
-persons from their children, from their homes, from their native land.
-But in addition, these defendants, who sit today in this courtroom,
-insisted that this vast number of wretched human beings who were in the
-so-called Old Reich as forced laborers must be starved, given less than
-sufficient to eat, often beaten and maltreated, and permitted to die
-wholesale for want of food, for want of even the fundamental
-requirements of decent clothing, for the want of adequate shelter or
-indeed sometimes just because they produced too little.
-
-Now these conditions of deportation are vividly described in Document
-Number 054-PS, which is a report made to the Defendant Rosenberg
-concerning the treatment of Ukrainian labor. I wish to refer to Document
-Number 054-PS, which bears the Exhibit Number USA-198. Before quoting
-from it directly—according to this report the plight of these hapless
-victims was aggravated because many were dragged off without opportunity
-to collect their possessions. Indeed, men and women were snatched from
-bed and lodged in cellars pending deportation. Some arrived in night
-clothing. Brutal guards beat them. They were locked in railroad cars for
-long periods without any toilet facilities at all, without food, without
-water, without heat. The women were subjected to physical and moral
-indignities and indecencies during medical examinations.
-
-I refer how specifically to this Document Number 054-PS, which consists
-of a covering letter to the Defendant Rosenberg, first of all, and is
-signed by one Theurer, a 1st lieutenant in the Wehrmacht, to which is
-attached a copy of a report by the commandant of the collecting center
-for Ukrainian specialists at Kharkov; and it also consists of a letter
-written by one of the specialists in the Rosenberg office—no, by one of
-the workers, not in the Rosenberg office, but one of the specialists
-they were recruiting, by the name of Grigori. I wish to quote from the
-report at Page 2, starting at Paragraph 4 of the English text—and in
-the German text it appears at Page 3, Paragraph 4. Quoting directly from
-that page of the English text:
-
- “The _starosts_, that is village elders, are frequently
- corruptible; they continue to have the skilled workers, whom
- they drafted, dragged from their beds at night to be locked up
- in cellars until they are shipped. Since the male and female
- workers often are not given any time to pick up their luggage
- and so forth, many skilled workers arrive at the collecting
- center for skilled workers with equipment entirely insufficient
- (without shoes or change of clothing, no eating and drinking
- utensils, no blankets, _et cetera_). In particularly extreme
- cases, therefore, new arrivals have to be sent back again
- immediately to get the things most necessary for them. If people
- do not come along at once, threatening and beating of skilled
- workers by the above-mentioned local militia become a daily
- occurrence and are reported from most of the communities. In
- some cases women were beaten until they could no longer march.
- One bad case in particular was reported by me to the commander
- of the civil police here (Colonel Samek) for severe punishment
- (village of Sozolinkov, district of Dergatchi). The
- encroachments of the _starosts_ and the militia are of a
- particularly grave nature because they usually justify
- themselves by claiming that all that is done in the name of the
- German Armed Forces. In reality, the latter have conducted
- themselves throughout in a highly understanding manner toward
- the skilled workers and the Ukrainian population. The same,
- however, cannot be said of some of the administrative agencies.
- To illustrate this, be it mentioned that a woman once arrived
- dressed with barely more than a shirt.”
-
-Passing now to Page 4 of this same document, starting with the 10th line
-of the third paragraph, and in the German text it appears at Page 5,
-Paragraph 2. Quoting directly again:
-
- “On the basis of reported incidents, attention must be called to
- the fact that it is inexcusable to keep workers locked in the
- cars for many hours, so that they cannot even take care of the
- calls of nature. It is evident that the people of a transport
- must be given an opportunity from time to time, to get drinking
- water, to wash, and to relieve themselves. Cars have been shown
- in which people had made holes so that they could attend to the
- calls of nature. When nearing bigger stations, persons should,
- if possible, relieve themselves far from these stations.”
-
-Turning to Page 5 of the same document, Paragraph 12—in the German text
-it appears at Page 6, Paragraph 1:
-
- “The following abuses were reported from the delousing stations:
-
-
-
- “In the women’s and girls’ shower rooms, services were partly
- performed by men, or men would mingle around or even help with
- the soaping, and vice versa there were female personnel in the
- men’s shower rooms. Men also for some time were taking
- photographs in the women’s shower rooms. Since mainly Ukrainian
- peasants were transported in the last months, as far as the
- female portion of these are concerned, they were mostly of a
- high moral standard and used to strict modesty; they must have
- considered such a treatment as a national degradation. The
- above-mentioned abuses have been, according to our knowledge,
- settled by the intervention of the transport commanders. The
- reports of the photographing were made from Halle; the reports
- about the former were made from Kiwerce. Such incidents,
- altogether unworthy of the dignity and prestige of the Greater
- German Reich may still occur here or there.”
-
-Sick and infirm people of the occupied countries were taken
-indiscriminately with the rest. Those who managed to survive the trip
-into Germany but who arrived too sick to work were returned like cattle
-together with those who fell ill at work, because they were of no
-further use to the Germans. The return trip took place under the same
-terrible conditions as the initial journey, and without any kind of
-medical supervision. Death came to many and their corpses were
-unceremoniously dumped out of the cars, with no provision for burial.
-
-I quote from Page 3, Paragraph 3 of Document Number 054-PS. In the
-German text it appears at Page 2, Paragraph 3. Quoting directly:
-
- “Very depressing for the morale of the skilled workers and the
- population is the effect of those persons shipped back from
- Germany who had become disabled or had been unfit for employment
- from the very beginning.
-
-
-
- “Several times already transports of skilled workers on their
- way to Germany have crossed returning transports of such
- disabled persons and have stood on the tracks alongside of each
- other for a long period of time. These returning transports are
- insufficiently cared for. Nothing but sick, injured, or weak
- people, mostly 50 to 60 in a car usually escorted by 3 to 4 men.
- There is neither sufficient care nor food. The returnees made
- frequently unfavorable—if also surely exaggerated—statements
- relative to their treatment in Germany and on the way. As a
- result of all this and of what the people could see with their
- own eyes, a psychosis of fear was evoked among the skilled
- workers, that is, the whole transport to Germany. Several
- transport leaders, of the 62d and 63d transports, in particular,
- reported on it in detail. In one case the leader of the
- transport of skilled workers observed with his own eyes how a
- person who had died of hunger was unloaded from a returning
- transport on the side track (1st Lieutenant Hofmann of the 63rd
- Transport Station, Darniza). Another time it was reported that
- three dead had to be deposited by the side of the tracks on the
- way and had to be left behind unburied by the escort. It is also
- regrettable that these disabled persons arrive here without any
- identification. From the reports of the transport commanders,
- one gets the impression that these unemployable persons are
- assembled, penned into the wagons, and sent off provided only by
- a few men escorts and without special care for food and medical
- or other attendance. The labor office at the place of arrival as
- well as the transport commanders confirm this impression.”
-
-Incredible as it may seem, mothers in the throes of childbirth shared
-cars with those infected with tuberculosis or venereal diseases. Babies,
-when born, were hurled out of these car windows; and dying persons lay
-on the bare floors of freight cars without even the small comfort of
-straw.
-
-I refer to Document Number 084-PS, which is Exhibit USA-199. This
-document is an interdepartmental report, prepared by Dr. Gutkelch, in
-the Defendant Rosenberg’s Ministry, and it is dated the 30th of
-September 1942. I wish to quote from Page 10 of the English text,
-starting with the fourth line from the top of the page. In the German
-text it appears at Page 22, Paragraph 1. Quoting directly from that
-paragraph:
-
- “How necessary this interference was is shown by the fact that
- this train with returning laborers had stopped at the same place
- where a train with newly recruited Eastern Workers had stopped.
- Because of the corpses in the trainload of returning laborers, a
- catastrophe might have been precipitated had it not been for the
- mediation of Mrs. Miller. In this train women gave birth to
- babies who were thrown out of the windows during the journey,
- people having tuberculosis and venereal diseases rode in the
- same car, dying people lay in freight cars without straw, and
- one of the dead was thrown on the railway embankment. The same
- must have occurred in other returning transports.”
-
-Some aspects of the Nazi transport were described by the Defendant
-Sauckel himself in a decree which he issued on the 20th of July 1942;
-and I refer specifically to Document Number 2241(2)-PS, which is Exhibit
-USA-200. I ask that the Tribunal take judicial notice of the original
-decree, which is published in Section BIa, at Page 48e of a book
-entitled _Die Beschäftigung von ausländischen Arbeitskräften in
-Deutschland_. I quote from Page 1, Paragraph 2, of the English text; and
-I am quoting directly:
-
- “According to reports of transportation
- commanders”—Transportleiter—“presented to me, the special
- trains provided by the German railway have frequently been in a
- really broken-down condition. Numerous window panes have been
- missing in the coaches. Old French coaches without lavatories
- have been partly employed so that the workers had to fit up an
- emptied compartment as a lavatory. In other cases, the coaches
- were not heated in winter so that the lavatories quickly became
- unusable because the water system was frozen and the flushing
- apparatus was therefore without water.”
-
-The Tribunal will unquestionably have noticed or observed that a number
-of the documents which we have referred to—and which we have
-offered—consist of complaints by functionaries of the Defendant
-Rosenberg’s Ministry, or by others, concerning the conditions under
-which foreign workers were recruited and lived. I think it is
-appropriate to say that these documents have been presented by the
-Prosecution really for two purposes, or for a dual purpose; to
-establish, first, the facts recited therein, of course, but also to show
-that these conspirators had knowledge of these conditions and that
-notwithstanding their knowledge of these conditions, these conspirators
-continued to countenance and assist in this enslavement program of a
-vast number of citizens of occupied countries.
-
-Once within Germany, slave laborers were subjected to almost
-unbelievable brutality and degradation by their captors; and the
-character of this treatment was in part made plain by the conspirators’
-own statements, as in Document Number 016-PS, which is in evidence as
-Exhibit USA-168; and I refer to Page 12, Paragraph 2 of the English
-text. In the German text it appears at Page 17, Paragraph 4. Quoting
-directly:
-
- “All the men must be fed, sheltered, and treated in such a way
- that they produce to the highest possible extent at the lowest
- conceivable degree of expenditure.”
-
-Force and brutality as instruments of production found a ready adherent
-in the Defendant Speer who, in the presence of the Defendant Sauckel,
-said at a meeting of the Central Planning Board—and I refer to Document
-Number R-124, which is already in evidence and which has been referred
-to previously. It bears the Exhibit Number USA-179. I refer particularly
-to Page 42 of that Document R-124, and Paragraph 2 of that Page 42. The
-Defendant Speer, speaking at that meeting, stated:
-
- “We must also discuss the slackers. Ley has ascertained that the
- side list decreased at once to one-fourth or one-fifth in
- factories where doctors are on the staff who examine the sick
- men. There is nothing to be said against SS and police taking
- drastic steps and putting those known as slackers into
- concentration camps. There is no alternative. Let it happen
- several times and the news will soon go around.”
-
-At a later meeting of the Central Planning Board, Field Marshal Milch
-agreed that so far as workers were concerned—and again I refer to
-Document Number R-124 and to Page 26, Paragraph 2, in the English text,
-and in the German text at Page 17, Paragraph 1. Field Marshal Milch,
-speaking at a meeting of the Central Planning Board when the Defendant
-Speer was present, stated; and I am quoting directly:
-
- “The list of the shirkers should be entrusted to Himmler
- . . . .”
-
-Milch made particular reference to foreign workers again in this
-Document Number R-124 at Page 26, Paragraph 3—in the German text it
-appears at Page 18, Paragraph 3—when he said; and I am quoting him
-directly:
-
- “It is therefore not possible to exploit fully all the
- foreigners unless we compel them by piece-work wages and have
- the possibility of taking measures against foreigners who are
- not doing their bit.”
-
-The policy as actually executed was even more fearful than the policy as
-expressed by the conspirators. Indeed, these impressed workers were
-underfed and overworked; and they were forced to live in grossly
-overcrowded camps where they were held as virtual prisoners, and were
-otherwise denied adequate shelter, adequate clothing, adequate medical
-care and treatment. As a consequence, they suffered from many diseases
-and ailments. They were generally forced to work long hours, up to and
-beyond the point of exhaustion. They were beaten and subjected to all
-manner of inhuman indignities.
-
-An example of this maltreatment is found in the conditions which
-prevailed in the Krupp factories. Foreign laborers at the Krupp works
-were given insufficient food to enable them to perform the work required
-of them.
-
-I refer to Document Number D-316, which is Exhibit USA-201. This
-document was found in the Krupp files. It is a memorandum upon the Krupp
-stationery to a Herr Hupe, a director of the Krupp locomotive factory in
-Essen, Germany, dated the 14th of March 1942. I wish to refer to Page 1
-of the English text, starting with Paragraph 1, as follows; and I am
-quoting directly:
-
- “During the last few days we established that the food for the
- Russians employed here is so miserable that the people are
- getting weaker from day to day.
-
-
-
- “Investigations showed that single Russians are not able to
- place a piece of metal for turning into position, for instance,
- because of lack of physical strength. The same conditions exist
- in all other places of work where Russians are employed.”
-
-The condition of foreign workers in Krupp workers’ camps is described in
-detail in an affidavit executed in Essen, Germany, by Dr. Wilhelm Jäger,
-who was the senior camp doctor. It is Document Number D-288, which is
-Exhibit USA-202.
-
- “I, Dr. Wilhelm Jäger, am a general practitioner in Essen,
- Germany, and its surroundings. I was born in Germany on 2
- December 1888 and now live at Kettwig, Sengenholz 6, Germany.
-
-
-
- “I make the following statement of my own free will. I have not
- been threatened in any way and I have not been promised any sort
- of reward.
-
-
-
- “On the 1st of October 1942, I became senior camp doctor in the
- Krupp’s workers’ camps for foreigners and was generally charged
- with the medical supervision of all Krupp’s workers’ camps in
- Essen. In the course of my duties it was my responsibility to
- report upon the sanitary and health conditions of the workers’
- camps to my superiors in the Krupp works.
-
-
-
- “It was a part of my task to visit every Krupp camp which housed
- foreign civilian workers, and I am therefore able to make this
- statement on the basis of my personal knowledge.
-
-
-
- “My first official act as senior camp doctor was to make a
- thorough inspection of the various camps. At that time, in
- October 1942, I found the following conditions:
-
-
-
- “The Eastern Workers and Poles who worked in the Krupp works at
- Essen were kept at camps at Seumannstrasse, Grieperstrasse,
- Spenlestrasse, Heegstrasse, Germaniastrasse,
- Kapitän-Lehmannstrasse, Dechenschule, and Krämerplatz.”—When
- the term “Eastern Workers” is hereinafter used, it is to be
- taken as including Poles.—“All of the camps were surrounded by
- barbed wire and were closely guarded.
-
-
-
- “Conditions in all of these camps were extremely bad. The camps
- were greatly overcrowded. In some camps there were twice as many
- people in a barrack as health conditions permitted.
-
-
-
- “At Krämerplatz the inhabitants slept in treble-tiered bunks,
- and in the other camps they slept in double-tiered bunks. The
- health authorities prescribed a minimum space between beds of 50
- centimeters, but the bunks in these camps were separated by a
- maximum of 20 to 30 centimeters.
-
-
-
- “The diet prescribed for the Eastern Workers was altogether
- insufficient. They were given 1,000 calories a day less than the
- minimum prescribed for any German. Moreover, while German
- workers engaged in the heaviest work received 5,000 calories a
- day, the Eastern Workers with comparable jobs received only
- 2,000 calories. The Eastern Workers were given only two meals a
- day and their bread ration. One of these two meals consisted of
- a thin, watery soup. I had no assurance that the Eastern
- Workers, in fact, received the minimum which was prescribed.
- Subsequently, in 1943, I undertook to inspect the food prepared
- by the cooks; I discovered a number of instances in which food
- was withheld from the workers.
-
-
-
- “The plan for food distribution called for a small quantity of
- meat per week. Only inferior meats rejected by the veterinary,
- such as horse meat or tuberculin-infested, was permitted for
- this purpose. This meat was usually cooked into a soup . . . .
-
-
-
- “The percentage of Eastern Workers who were ill was twice as
- great as among the Germans. Tuberculosis was particularly
- widespread among the Eastern Workers. The tuberculosis rate
- among them was four times the normal rate (Eastern Workers, 2
- percent; German, 0.5 percent). At Dechenschule approximately 2.5
- percent of the workers suffered from open tuberculosis. The
- Tartars and Kirghises suffered most; as soon as they were
- overcome by this disease they collapsed like flies. The cause
- was bad housing, the poor quality and insufficient quantity of
- food, overwork, and insufficient rest.
-
-
-
- “These workers were likewise afflicted with spotted fever. Lice,
- the carrier of this disease, together with countless fleas,
- bugs, and other vermin, tortured the inhabitants of these camps.
- As a result of the filthy conditions of the camps nearly all
- Eastern Workers were afflicted with skin disease. The shortage
- of food also caused many cases of Hunger-Oedema, Nephritis and
- Shiga-Kruse.
-
-
-
- “It was the general rule that workers were compelled to go to
- work unless a camp doctor had certified that they were unfit for
- work. At Seumannstrasse, Grieperstrasse, Germaniastrasse,
- Kapitän-Lehmannstrasse, and Dechenschule there was no daily sick
- call. At these camps the doctors did not appear for 2 or 3 days.
- As a consequence workers were forced to go to work despite
- illness.
-
-
-
- “I undertook to improve conditions as much as I could. I
- insisted upon the erection of some new barracks in order to
- relieve the overcrowded conditions of the camps. Despite this,
- the camps were still greatly overcrowded but not as much as
- before. I tried to alleviate the poor sanitary conditions in
- Krämerplatz and Dechenschule by having some emergency toilets
- installed; but the number was insufficient, and the situation
- was not materially altered . . . .
-
-
-
- “With the onset of heavy air raids in March 1943, conditions in
- the camps greatly deteriorated. The problem of housing, feeding,
- and medical attention became more acute than ever. The workers
- lived in the ruins of their former barracks. Medical supplies
- which were used up, lost, or destroyed were difficult to
- replace. At times the water supply at the camps was completely
- shut off for periods of 8 to 14 days. We installed a few
- emergency toilets in the camps, but there were far too few of
- them to cope with the situation.
-
-
-
- “During the period immediately following the March 1943 raids
- many foreign workers were made to sleep at the Krupp factories
- in the same rooms in which they worked. The day workers slept
- there at night, and the night workers slept there during the
- day, despite the noise which constantly prevailed. I believe
- that this condition continued until the entrance of American
- troops into Essen.
-
-
-
- “As the pace of air raids was stepped up, conditions became
- progressively worse. On 28 July 1944 I reported to my superiors
- that:
-
-
-
- “‘The sick barracks in camp Rabenhorst are in such a bad
- condition one cannot speak of a sick barracks any more. The rain
- leaks through in every corner. The housing of the sick is
- therefore impossible. The necessary labor for production is in
- danger because those persons who are ill cannot recover.’
-
-
-
- “At the end of 1943 or the beginning of 1944—I am not
- completely sure of the exact date—I obtained permission for the
- first time to visit the prisoner-of-war camps. My inspection
- revealed that conditions at these camps were worse than those I
- had found at the camps of the Eastern Workers in 1942. Medical
- supplies at such camps were virtually non-existent. In an effort
- to cure this intolerable situation, I contacted the Wehrmacht
- authorities whose duty it was to provide medical care for the
- prisoners of war. My persistent efforts came to nothing. After
- remonstrating with them over a period of 2 weeks, I was given a
- total of 100 aspirin tablets for over 3,000 prisoners of war.
-
-
-
- “The French prisoner-of-war camp in Nöggerathstrasse had been
- destroyed in an air raid attack and its inhabitants were kept
- for nearly half a year in dog kennels, urinals, and in old
- bakehouses. The dog kennels were 3 feet high, 9 feet long, and 6
- feet wide. Five men slept in each of them. The prisoners had to
- crawl into these kennels on all fours. The camp contained no
- tables, chairs, or cupboards. The supply of blankets was
- inadequate. There was no water in the camp. Such medical
- treatment as there was, was given in the open. Many of these
- conditions were reported to me in a report by Dr. Stinnesbeck,
- dated 12 June 1944, in which he said:
-
-
-
- “‘. . . There are still 315 prisoners in the camp. One hundred
- seventy of these are no longer in barracks but in the tunnel in
- Grunertstrasse under the Essen-Mülheim railway line. This tunnel
- is damp and is not suitable for continued accommodation of human
- beings. The rest of the prisoners are accommodated in 10
- different factories in the Krupp works. The medical attention is
- given by a French military doctor who takes great pains with his
- fellow countrymen. Sick people from Krupp factories must be
- brought to sick call. This inspection is held in the lavatory of
- a burned-out public house outside the camp. The sleeping
- accommodation of the four French orderlies is in what was the
- men’s room. In the sick bay there is a double-tier wooden bed.
- In general the treatment takes place in the open. In rainy
- weather it is held in the above-mentioned small room. These are
- insufferable conditions. There are no chairs, tables, cupboards,
- or water. The keeping of a register of sick people is
- impossible. Bandages and medical supplies are very scarce,
- although the badly wounded from the factory are very often
- brought here for first aid and have to be bandaged here before
- being transported to the hospital. There are many loud and
- lively complaints about food which the guard personnel confirms
- as being justified. Illness and loss of manpower must be
- reckoned with under these conditions . . . .’
-
-
-
- “In my report to my superiors at Krupps, dated 2 September 1944,
- I stated . . . .
-
-
-
- “Camp Humboldtstrasse has been inhabited by Italian military
- internees. After it had been destroyed by an air raid, the
- Italians were removed and 600 Jewish females from Buchenwald
- concentration camp were brought to work at the Krupp factories.
- Upon my first visit at Camp Humboldtstrasse, I found these
- persons suffering from open festering wounds and other ailments.
-
-
-
- “I was the first doctor they had seen for at least a fortnight.
- There was no doctor in attendance at the camp. There were no
- medical supplies in the camp. They had no shoes and went about
- in their bare feet. The sole clothing of each consisted of a
- sack with holes for their arms and head. Their hair was shorn.
- The camp was surrounded by barbed wire and closely guarded by SS
- guards.
-
-
-
- “The amount of food in the camp was extremely meager and of very
- poor quality. The houses in which they lived consisted of the
- ruins of former barracks and they afforded no shelter against
- rain and other weather conditions. I reported to my superiors
- that the guards lived and slept outside their barracks as one
- could not enter them without being attacked by 10, 20, and up to
- 50 fleas. One camp doctor employed by me refused to enter the
- camp again after he had been bitten very badly. I visited this
- camp with Mr. Gröne on two occasions and both times we left the
- camp badly bitten. We had great difficulty in getting rid of the
- fleas and insects which had attacked us. As a result of this
- attack by insects of this camp I got large boils on my arms and
- the rest of my body. I asked my superiors at the Krupp works to
- undertake the necessary steps to delouse the camp so as to put
- an end to this unbearable vermin-infested condition. Despite
- this report, I did not find any improvement in sanitary
- conditions at the camp on my second visit a fortnight later.
-
-
-
- “When foreign workers finally became too sick to work or were
- completely disabled, they were returned to the labor exchange in
- Essen and from there they were sent to a camp at Friedrichsfeld.
- Among persons who were returned to the labor exchange were
- aggravated cases of tuberculosis, malaria, neurosis, cancer
- which could not be treated by operation, old age, and general
- feebleness. I know nothing about conditions at this camp because
- I have never visited it. I only know that it was a place to
- which workers were sent who were no longer of any use to Krupp.
-
-
-
- “My colleagues and I reported all of the foregoing matters to
- Mr. Ihn, director of Friedrich Krupp AG.; Dr. Wiele, personal
- physician of Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach; senior camp
- leader Kupke; and sometimes to the Essen health department.
- Moreover, I know that these gentlemen personally visited the
- camps.”—signed—“Dr. Wilhelm Jäger.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn now until 2 o’clock.
-
- [_A recess was taken until 1400 hours._]
-
-
-
-
- _Afternoon Session_
-
-MR. DODD: May it please the Tribunal, we had just completed the reading
-of the affidavit executed by Dr. Wilhelm Jäger at the noon recess. The
-conditions which were described in this affidavit were not confined to
-the Krupp factories alone but existed throughout Germany; and we turn to
-a report of the Polish Main Committee made to the Administration of the
-General Government of Poland, Document Number R-103, Exhibit Number
-USA-204. This document is dated the 17th of May 1944 and describes the
-situation of the Polish workers in Germany, and I wish to refer
-particularly to Page 2 of the English translation, starting with
-Paragraph 2; in the German text it appears at Page 2, Paragraph 2 also.
-In quoting from the document, it reads:
-
- “The state of cleanliness of many overcrowded camp rooms is
- contrary to the most elementary requirements. Often there is no
- opportunity to obtain warm water for washing; therefore, the
- cleanest parents are unable to maintain even the most primitive
- standard of hygiene for their children or often even to wash
- their only set of underclothing. A consequence of this is the
- spreading of scabies which cannot be eradicated . . . .
-
-
-
- “We receive imploring letters from the camps of Eastern Workers
- and their prolific families beseeching us for food. The quantity
- and quality of camp rations mentioned therein—the so-called
- class 4—is absolutely insufficient to compensate the energy
- spent in heavy work. Three and one half kilograms of bread
- weekly and a thin soup at lunch time, cooked with kohlrabi or
- other vegetables without any meat or fat, with a meager addition
- of potatoes now and then, is a starvation ration for a heavy
- worker.
-
-
-
- “When, on top of that, starvation is sometimes inflicted as
- punishment—for refusal to wear the badge ‘East’, for
- example—the result is that workers faint at their work
- (Klosterteich Camp, Grünheim, Saxony). The consequence is
- complete exhaustion, an ailing state of health, and
- tuberculosis. The spreading of tuberculosis among the Polish
- factory workers is due to the deficient food rations meted out
- in the community camps which are insufficient to restore the
- energy spent in heavy work . . . .
-
-
-
- “The call for help which reaches us brings to light privation
- and hunger, severe stomach and intestinal trouble, especially in
- the case of children, resulting from the insufficiency of food
- which does not take into consideration the needs of children.
- Proper medical treatment or care for the sick is not available
- in the mass camps.”
-
-We now refer to Page 3 of this same document and particularly to the
-first paragraph. In the German text it appears at Page 5, Paragraph 1:
-
- “In addition to these bad conditions, there is lack of
- systematic occupation for and supervision of these hosts of
- children which affects the life of prolific families in the
- camps. The children, left to themselves without schooling or
- religious care, must run wild and grow up illiterate. Idleness
- in rough surroundings may and will create undesirable results in
- these children . . . . An indication of what these awful
- conditions may lead to is given by the fact that in the camps
- for Eastern Workers (‘Waldlust,’ Lauf, post office, Pegnitz)
- there are cases of 8-year-old, delicate, and undernourished
- children put to forced labor and perishing from such treatment
- . . . .
-
-
-
- “The fact that these bad conditions dangerously affect the state
- of health and the vitality of the workers is proved by the many
- cases of tuberculosis found in very young people returning from
- the Reich to the General Government as unfit for work. Their
- state of health is usually so bad that recovery is out of the
- question. The reason is that a state of exhaustion resulting
- from overwork and a starvation diet is not recognized as an
- ailment until the illness betrays itself by high fever and
- fainting spells.
-
-
-
- “Although some hostels for unfit workers have been provided as a
- precautionary measure, one can only go there when recovery may
- no longer be expected (Neumarkt in Bavaria). Even there the
- incurables waste away slowly, and nothing is done even to
- alleviate the state of the sick by suitable food and medicines.
- There are children there with tuberculosis whose cure would not
- be hopeless and men in their prime who, if sent home in time to
- their families in rural districts, might still be able to
- recover . . . . No less suffering is caused by the separation of
- families when wives and mothers of small children are away from
- their families and sent to the Reich for forced labor.”
-
-And finally, from Page 4 of the same document, starting with the first
-paragraph—in the German text it appears at Page 7, Paragraph 4:
-
- “If, under these conditions, there is no moral support such as
- is normally based on regular family life, then at least such
- moral support which the religious feelings of the Polish
- population require should be maintained and increased. The
- elimination of religious services, religious practices, and
- religious care from the life of the Polish workers, the
- prohibition of church attendance when there is a religious
- service for other people, and other measures show a certain
- contempt for the influence of religion on the feelings and
- opinions of the workers.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Can you tell us who the Polish Central Committee
-were—or, I mean, how they were founded?
-
-MR. DODD: Well, insofar as we are aware, it was a committee apparently
-set up by the Nazi State when it occupied Poland to work in some sort of
-co-operation with it during the days of the occupation. We don’t know
-the names of the members, and we haven’t any more specific information.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Is it a captured document?
-
-MR. DODD: It is a captured document, yes, Sir. All of the documents that
-I am presenting in connection with this case are, excepting the
-Netherlands Government’s report and one or two other official reports,
-the Deuss affidavit and such other matters, are captured documents. That
-particular document, it has just been called to my attention, was
-captured by the United States 3rd Army.
-
-Particularly harsh and brutal treatment was reserved for workers
-imported from the conquered Eastern territories. As we have illustrated,
-they did indeed live in bondage, and they were subjected to almost every
-form of degradation, quartered in stables with animals, denied the right
-of free worship and the ordinary pleasures of human society.
-
-Illustrative of this treatment is Document EC-68, bearing Exhibit Number
-USA-205. This document, EC-68, bears the title, “Directives on the
-Treatment of Foreign Farm Workers of Polish Nationality,” issued by the
-Minister for Finance and Economy of Baden, Germany, on the 6th of March
-1941. And we don’t know his name, nor have we been able to ascertain it.
-
-Quoting from the English text of this document from the beginning:
-
- “The agencies of the Baden State Peasant Association of the
- Reich Food Administration, have received the result of the
- negotiations with the Higher SS and Police Führer in Stuttgart
- on 14 February 1941 with great satisfaction. Appropriate
- memoranda have already been turned over to the District Peasants
- Associations. Below I promulgate the individual regulations as
- they have been laid down during the conference and the manner in
- which they are now to be applied:
-
-
-
- “1. On principle, farm workers of Polish nationality are no
- longer granted the right to complain, and thus no complaints may
- be accepted by any official agency.
-
-
-
- “2. The farm workers of Polish nationality may no longer leave
- the localities in which they are employed, and have a curfew
- from 1 October to 31 March from 2000 hours to 0600 hours and
- from 1 April to 30 September from 2100 hours to 0500 hours.
-
-
-
- “3. The use of bicycles is strictly prohibited. Exceptions are
- possible for riding to the place of work in the field if a
- relative of the employer or the employer himself is present.
-
-
-
- “4. The visit to churches, regardless of faith, is strictly
- prohibited, even when there is no service in progress.
- Individual spiritual care by clergymen outside of the church is
- permitted.
-
-
-
- “5. Visits to theaters, motion pictures, or other cultural
- entertainment are strictly prohibited for farm workers of Polish
- nationality.
-
-
-
- “6. The visit to restaurants is strictly prohibited to farm
- workers of Polish nationality, except for one restaurant in the
- village, which will be selected by the Regional Commissioner’s
- Office”—Landratsamt—“and then only 1 day per week. The day
- which is allowed for visiting the restaurant will also be
- determined by the Landratsamt. This regulation does not change
- the curfew regulation mentioned above under ‘2’.
-
-
-
- “7. Sexual intercourse with women and girls is strictly
- prohibited; and wherever it is discovered, it must be reported.
-
- “8. Gatherings of farm workers of Polish nationality after work
- is prohibited, whether it is on other farms, in the stables, or
- in the living quarters of the Poles.
-
-
-
- “9. The use of railroads, buses, or other public conveyances by
- farm workers of Polish nationality is prohibited.
-
-
-
- “10. Permits to leave the village may be granted only in very
- exceptional cases by the local police authority (mayor’s
- office). However, in no case may it be granted if a Pole wishes
- to visit a public agency on his own authority, whether it is a
- labor office or the District Peasants Association, or if he
- wants to change his place of employment.
-
-
-
- “11. Unauthorized change of employment is strictly prohibited.
- The farm workers of Polish nationality have to work daily as
- long as it is to the interests of the enterprise and is demanded
- by the employer. There are no limits to the working hours.
-
-
-
- “12. Every employer has the right to give corporal punishment to
- farm workers of Polish nationality if persuasion and reprimand
- fail. The employer may not be held accountable in any such case
- by an official agency.
-
-
-
- “13. Farm workers of Polish nationality should, if possible, be
- removed from the household; and they can be quartered in stables
- _et cetera_. No consideration whatever should restrict such
- action.
-
-
-
- “14. Report to the authorities of all crimes committed by farm
- workers of Polish nationality which sabotage industry or slow
- down work—for instance, unwillingness to work, impertinent
- behavior—is compulsory even in minor cases. An employer who
- loses a Pole sentenced to a long prison sentence because of such
- a compulsory report will upon request, have preference for the
- assignment of another Pole from the competent labor office.
-
-
-
- “15. In all other cases, only the State Police is still
- competent. For the employer himself, severe punishment is
- provided if it is established that the necessary distance has
- not been kept from farm workers of Polish nationality. The same
- applies to women and girls. Extra rations are strictly
- prohibited. Noncompliance with the Reich tariffs for farm
- workers of Polish nationality will be punished by the competent
- labor office by the taking away of the workers.”
-
-The women of the conquered territories were led away against their will
-to serve as domestics, and the Defendant Sauckel described this program
-in his own words, which appear in Document Number 016-PS, already
-offered in evidence as Exhibit USA-168, 016-PS, and particularly Page 7,
-fourth paragraph of the English text. In the German text it appears on
-Page 10, Paragraph 1, and I quote directly:
-
- “In order to relieve considerably the German housewife,
- especially the mother with many children and the extremely busy
- farmwoman, and in order to avoid any further danger to their
- health, the Führer also has charged me with the procurement of
- 400,000 to 500,000 selected, healthy, and strong girls from the
- territories of the East for Germany.”
-
-Once captured, once forced to become laborers in Germany, or workers in
-Germany, these Eastern women, by order of the slavemaster, Defendant
-Sauckel, were bound to the household to which they were assigned,
-permitted at the most 3 hours of freedom a week, and denied the right to
-return to their homes.
-
-I now refer to Document Number 3044(b)-PS. That is Exhibit Number
-USA-206. The document is a decree issued by the Defendant Sauckel
-containing instructions for housewives concerning Eastern household
-workers; and I ask that the Court take judicial notice of the original
-decree which appears on Pages 592 and 593 of the second volume of a
-publication of the Zentralverlag of the NSDAP, entitled _Verfügungen,
-Anordnungen und Bekanntgaben_, and I quote from the first paragraph of
-the English translation of a portion of the decree as follows:
-
- “There is no claim for free time. Female domestic workers from
- the East may, on principle, leave the household only to take
- care of domestic tasks. As a reward for good work, however, they
- may be given the opportunity to stay outside the home without
- work for 3 hours once a week. This leave must end with the onset
- of darkness, at the latest at 2000 hours. It is prohibited to
- enter restaurants, movies or other theaters, and similar
- establishments provided for German or foreign workers. Attending
- church is also prohibited. Special events may be arranged for
- Eastern domestics in urban homes by the German Workers’ Front,
- for Eastern domestics in rural homes by the Reich Food
- Administration in cooperation with the German Women’s League.
- Outside the home, the Eastern domestic must always carry her
- work card as a personal pass.
-
-
-
- “Vacations and return to homes are not granted as yet. The
- recruiting of Eastern domestics is for an indefinite period.”
-
-Always over these enslaved workers was the shadow of the Gestapo and the
-concentration camps. Like other major programs of the Nazi conspirators,
-the guards of the SS and Himmler’s methods of dealing with people were
-the instruments employed for enforcement.
-
-On the subject of the slave laborers, a secret order dated 20 February
-1942 issued by Reichsführer SS Himmler to SD and Security Police
-officers concerning Eastern Workers spells out the violence which was
-applied against them. It is our Document 3040-PS, which is Exhibit
-Number USA-207, and I ask this Court to take judicial notice of the
-original order, which is published in the _Allgemeine Erlass-Sammlung_
-Part II, Section 2-A, III, f, Pages 15 to 24. I wish to quote from Page
-3 of the English text, starting with Paragraph III—in the German text
-it appears in Section 2-A, III, f, at Page 19 of the publication—as
-follows:
-
- “III. Combatting violations against discipline. (1) In keeping
- with the equal status of laborers from the original Soviet
- Russian territory with prisoners of war, a strict discipline
- must be maintained in quarters and in workshops. Violations
- against discipline, including refusal to work and loafing at
- work, will be dealt with exclusively by the secret state police.
- The less serious cases will be settled by the leader of the
- guard according to instructions from the state police
- headquarters with measures as provided for in the appendix. To
- break acute resistance, the guards shall be permitted to use
- also physical compulsion against the laborers. But this may be
- done only for a cogent reason. The laborers should always be
- informed that they will be treated decently when conducting
- themselves with discipline and accomplishing good work. In
- serious cases, that is, in such cases where the measures at the
- disposal of the leader of the guard do not suffice, the state
- police is to step in. In such instances, as a rule, severe
- measures will be taken, that is, transfer to a concentration
- camp or special treatment. The transfer to a concentration camp
- is made in the usual manner. In especially serious cases special
- treatment is to be recommended at the Reich Security Main
- Office; personal data and the exact facts must be given. Special
- treatment is hanging. It should not take place in the immediate
- vicinity of the camp. A certain number of laborers from the
- original Soviet Russian territory should attend the special
- treatment; at that time they are to be advised of the
- circumstances which lead to this special treatment. Should
- special treatment be required within the camp for exceptional
- reasons of camp discipline, this must be applied for.”
-
-And I turn now to Page 4 of the text, Paragraph VI; in the German text
-it appears at Section 2-A, III, f, on Page 20:
-
- “VI. Sexual intercourse. Sexual intercourse is forbidden to
- laborers of the original Soviet Russian territory. Owing to
- their closely confined quarters they have no opportunity for it
- . . . For every case of sexual intercourse with German men or
- women application for special treatment is to be made for male
- labor from the original Soviet Russian territory, transfer to a
- concentration camp for female labor.”
-
-And finally from Page 5 of the same document, Paragraph VIII; and in the
-German text it appears at Section 2-A, III, f, at Page 21:
-
- “VIII. Search. Fugitive workers from the original Soviet Russian
- territory are to be announced on principle in the German search
- book. Furthermore, search measures are to be decreed locally.
- When caught the fugitive must in principle be proposed for
- special treatment.”
-
-We have said to this Tribunal more than once that the primary purpose of
-the entire slave labor program was, of course, to compel the people of
-the occupied countries to work for the German war economy. The decree by
-which Defendant Sauckel was appointed Plenipotentiary General for the
-Allocation of Labor reveals that the purpose of the appointment was to
-facilitate acquisition of the manpower required for German war
-industries, and in particular the armaments industry, by centralizing
-under Sauckel responsibility for the recruitment and allocation of
-foreign labor and prisoners of war in these industries. I refer to the
-document bearing our Number 1666-PS—Exhibit USA-208. This document is a
-decree signed by Hitler, Lammers, and the Defendant Keitel—and it is
-dated 21 March 1942—appointing the Defendant Sauckel the
-Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor. I ask that the
-Court take judicial notice of the original decree, which is published at
-Page 179, Part I, of the 1942 _Reichsgesetzblatt_; referring to the
-English text starting at Paragraph 1, as follows, and quoting directly:
-
- “In order to secure the manpower requisite for war industries as
- a whole and particularly for armaments, it is necessary that the
- utilization of all available manpower, including that of workers
- recruited abroad and of prisoners of war, should be subject to a
- uniform control directed in a manner appropriate to the
- requirements of war industry, and further that all still
- incompletely utilized manpower in the Greater German Reich,
- including the Protectorate as well as in the Government General
- and in the Occupied Territories, should be mobilized.
- Reichsstatthalter and Gauleiter Fritz Sauckel will carry out
- this task within the framework of the Four Year Plan, as
- Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor. In that
- capacity he will be directly responsible to the Delegate for the
- Four Year Plan. Section III (Wages) and Section V (Utilization
- of Labor) of the Reich Labor Ministry together with their
- subordinate authorities, will be placed at the disposal of the
- Plenipotentiary General for the accomplishment of his task.”
-
-Sauckel’s success can be measured from a letter which he himself wrote
-to Hitler on 15 April 1943 and which contained his report on 1 year of
-his activities. We refer to the Document as Number 407(VI)-PS, which
-bears Exhibit Number USA-209. I wish to quote from Paragraphs 6 and 9 on
-Page 1 of the English text; in the German text it appears at Page 2,
-Paragraphs 1 and 2:
-
- “After 1 year’s activity as Plenipotentiary for the Allocation
- of Labor, I can report that 3,638,056 new foreign workers were
- given to the German war economy from 1 April of last year to 31
- March of this year . . . .
-
-
-
- “The 3,638,056 are distributed amongst the following branches of
- the German war economy: Armament, 1,568,801 . . . .”
-
-Still further evidence of this steady use of enslaved foreign labor is
-found again in a report of the Central Planning Board, to which we have
-referred so many times this morning and yesterday. Another meeting of
-this Central Planning Board was held on the 16th day of February 1944;
-and I refer to our Document Number R-124, which contains the minutes of
-this meeting of the Central Planning Board and which has been offered in
-evidence already as Exhibit Number USA-179. And I want, to refer
-particularly to Page 26, Paragraph 1 of the English text of Document
-Number R-124. It is at Page 16, in Paragraph 2, of the German text:
-
- “The armament industry employs foreign workmen to a large
- extent; according to the latest figures—40 percent.”
-
-Moreover, our Document Number 2520-PS, which is in evidence as Exhibit
-Number USA-197, records that, according to Speer Ministry tabulations,
-as of 31 December 1944, approximately 2 million civilian foreign workers
-were employed directly in the manufacture of armaments and munitions
-(finished products or parts). That, the bulk of these workers had been
-forced to come to Germany against their will is made clear by Sauckel’s
-statement, which I previously quoted from Paragraph 3 of Page 11 of
-Document Number R-124. We quoted it this morning, the statement being
-that of 5 million foreign workers only 200,000, or less than 200,000,
-came voluntarily.
-
-The Defendants Sauckel, Speer, and Keitel succeeded in forcing foreign
-labor to construct military fortifications. Thus, citizens of France,
-Holland, and Belgium were compelled against their will to engage in the
-construction of the “Atlantic Wall”; and we refer to our Document Number
-556(2)-PS, which is Exhibit Number USA-194. This is a Hitler order dated
-the 8th of September 1942, and it is initialled by the Defendant Keitel.
-Quoting the order directly:
-
- “The extensive coastal fortifications which I have ordered to be
- erected in the area of Army Group West make it necessary that in
- the occupied territory all available workers be assigned and
- give the fullest extent of their productive capacities to this
- task. The previous allotment of workers originating from these
- countries is insufficient. In order to increase it I order the
- introduction of compulsory labor and the prohibition of changing
- the place of employment without permission of the authorities in
- the occupied territories. Furthermore, the distribution of food
- and clothing ration cards to those subject to labor draft should
- in the future depend on the possession of a certificate of
- employment. Refusal to accept an assigned job, as well as
- leaving the place of work without the consent of the authorities
- in charge, will result in the withdrawal of the food and
- clothing ration cards. The GBA”—Deputy General for
- Arbeitseinsatz—“in agreement with the military commander, as
- well as the Reich Commissioner, will issue the appropriate
- decrees.”
-
-Indeed, the Defendant Sauckel boasted to Hitler concerning the
-contribution of the forced labor program to the construction of the
-Atlantic Wall by the Defendant Speer’s Organization Todt. And we refer
-to Document 407(VIII)-PS, which is Exhibit Number USA-210. This document
-is a letter from the Defendant Sauckel to Hitler, dated the 17th day of
-May 1943. And I refer to the second and last paragraph:
-
- “In addition to the labor allotted to the total German economy
- by the Arbeitseinsatz since I took office, the Organization Todt
- was supplied with new labor continually . . . . Thus the
- Arbeitseinsatz has done everything to help make possible the
- completion of the Atlantic Wall.”
-
-Similarly, Russian civilians were forced into labor battalions and
-compelled to build fortifications to be used against their own
-countrymen. In Document 031-PS, in evidence as Exhibit Number USA-171,
-which is a memorandum of the Rosenberg Ministry, it is stated in
-Paragraph 1 at Page 1 of that document:
-
- “The men and women in the theaters of operations have been and
- will be conscripted into labor battalions to be used in the
- construction of fortifications.”
-
-In addition, the conspirators compelled prisoners of war to engage in
-operations of war against their own country and its allies. At a meeting
-of the Central Planning Board, again held on February 19, 1943, attended
-by the Defendant Speer and the Defendant Sauckel and Field Marshal
-Milch, the following conversation occurred and is recorded in our
-Document R-124, at Page 32, Paragraph 5, of the English text. It is Page
-20, the last paragraph, of the German text. And I quote it, the
-Defendant Sauckel speaking:
-
- “Sauckel: ‘If any prisoners are taken, they will be needed
- there.’
-
-
-
- “Milch: ‘We have made a request for an order that a certain
- percentage of men in the antiaircraft artillery must be
- Russians. Fifty thousand will be taken altogether, thirty
- thousand are already employed as gunners. It is an amusing thing
- that Russians must work the guns.’”
-
-We refer now to Documents Numbers 3027-PS and 3028-PS. They are,
-respectively, Exhibit USA-211 for 3027 and USA-212 for 3028. They will
-be found at the very back, I believe, of the document book, in a
-separate manila folder. They are official German Army photographs; and,
-if Your Honors will examine Document 3027-PS, the caption states that
-Russian prisoners of war are acting as ammunition bearers during the
-attack upon Tschedowo. Document 3028-PS consists of a series of official
-German Army photographs taken in July and August 1941 showing Russian
-prisoners of war in Latvia and the Ukraine being compelled to load and
-unload ammunition trains and trucks and being required to stack
-ammunition, all, we say, in flagrant disregard of the rules of
-international law, particularly Article 6 of the regulations annexed to
-the Hague Convention Number IV of 1907, which provides that the tasks of
-prisoners of war shall have no connection with the operations of war.
-The use of prisoners of war in the German armament industry was as
-widespread and as extensive almost as the use of the forced foreign
-civilian labor. We refer to Document Number 3005-PS, which is Exhibit
-USA-213. This document is a secret letter from the Reich Minister of
-Labor to the presidents of the regional labor exchange offices, which
-refers to an order of the Defendant Göring to the effect that—I quote
-now from Paragraph 1 of that document—I am quoting it directly:
-
- “Upon personal order of the Reich Marshal, 100,000 men are to be
- taken from among the French prisoners of war not yet employed in
- armament industry and are to be assigned to the armament
- industry (airplane industry). Gaps in manpower supply resulting
- therefrom will be filled by Soviet prisoners of war. The
- transfer of the above-named French prisoners of war is to be
- accomplished by 1 October.”
-
-The Reich Marshal referred to in that quotation is of course the
-Defendant Göring.
-
-A similar policy was followed with respect to Russian prisoners of war.
-The Defendant Keitel directed the execution of Hitler’s order to use
-prisoners of war in the German war economy. And I now make reference to
-our Document EC-194, which has Exhibit Number USA-214. This document is
-also a secret memorandum, according to its label, issued from Hitler’s
-headquarters on the 31st of October 1941; and I read from Page 1,
-Paragraphs 1 and 2, quoting it directly as follows:
-
- “The lack of workers is becoming an increasingly dangerous
- hindrance for the future German war and armament industry. The
- expected relief through releases from the Armed Forces is
- uncertain as to the extent and date; its probable extent will by
- no means correspond to expectations and requirements in view of
- the great demand.
-
-
-
- “The Führer has now ordered that even the manpower of the
- Russian prisoners of war should be utilized to a large extent by
- large-scale assignments for the requirements of the war
- industry. The prerequisite for production is adequate
- nourishment. Also very small wages to provide a few every-day
- necessities must be offered with additional premiums for special
- effort, as the case may be.”
-
-And quoting now from the same document, Paragraph 2, II and III—I am
-quoting directly:
-
- “II. Construction and armament industry.
-
-
-
- “(a) Work units for construction of all kinds, particularly for
- the fortification of coastal defenses (concrete workers,
- unloading units for essential war plants).
-
-
-
- “(b) Suitable armament factories which are to be selected in
- such a way that their personnel will consist in the majority of
- prisoners of war under guidance and supervision (upon withdrawal
- and other employment of the German workers).
-
-
-
- “III. Other war industries.
-
-
-
- “(a) Mining as under II (b).
-
-
-
- “(b) Railroad construction units for building tracks, _et
- cetera_.
-
-
-
- “(c) Agriculture and forestry in closed units. The utilization
- of Russian prisoners of war is to be regulated on the basis of
- the above examples:
-
-
-
- “To I. The Armed Forces.
-
-
-
- “To II. The Reich Minister for Armament and Munitions and the
- Inspector General for the German Road System in agreement with
- the Reich Minister for Labor and Supreme Commander of the Armed
- Forces (Economic Armament Office). Deputies of the Reich
- Minister for Armament and Munitions are to be admitted to the
- prisoner-of-war camps to assist in the selection of skilled
- workers.”
-
-The Defendant Göring, at a conference at the Air Ministry on the 7th day
-of November 1941, also discussed the use of prisoners of war in the
-armament industry. And we refer now to our Document Number 1206-PS,
-which bears Exhibit Number USA-215. This document consists of top-secret
-notes on Göring’s instructions as to the employment and treatment of
-prisoners of war in many phases of the German war industry. And I wish
-to quote from Paragraph 1 of Page 1 and Paragraph 4 of Page 2 of the
-English text and from Paragraph 1, Page 1, and Paragraph 1, Page 3 of
-the German text, as follows:
-
- “The Führer’s point of view as to employment of prisoners of war
- in war industries has changed basically. So far a total of 5
- million prisoners of war—employed so far 2 million.”
-
-And on Page 2:
-
- “In the interior and the Protectorate it would be ideal if
- entire factories could be manned by Russian prisoners of war
- except the employees necessary for directing. For employment in
- the interior and the Protectorate the following are to have
- priority:
-
-
-
- “(a) At the top, the coal mining industry. Order by the Führer
- to investigate all mines as to suitability for employment of
- Russians, in some instances manning the entire plant with
- Russian laborers.
-
-
-
- “(b) Transportation (construction of locomotives and cars,
- repair shops, _et cetera_). Railroad-repair and factory workers
- are to be sought out from the prisoners of war. Rail is the most
- important means of transportation in the East.
-
-
-
- “(c) Armament industries. Preferably factories of armor and
- guns. Possibly also construction of parts for aircraft engines.
- Suitable complete sections of factories to be manned exclusively
- by Russians if possible. For the remainder, employment in
- groups. Use in factories of tool machinery, production of farm
- tractors, generators, _et cetera_. In emergency, erect in some
- places barracks for casual workers who are used in unloading
- units and for similar purposes. (Reich Minister of the Interior
- through communal authorities.)
-
-
-
- “OKW/AWA is competent for procuring Russian prisoners of war.
- Employment through Planning Board for employment of all
- prisoners of war. If necessary, offices of Reich commissariats.
-
-
-
- “No employment where danger to men or supply exists, that is,
- factories exposed to explosives, waterworks, powerworks, _et
- cetera_. No contact with German population, especially no
- ‘solidarity.’ German worker as a rule is foreman of Russians.
-
-
-
- “Food is a matter of the Four Year Plan. Procurement of special
- food (cats, horses, _et cetera_).
-
-
-
- “Clothes, billeting, messing somewhat better than at home where
- part of the people live in caves.
-
-
-
- “Supply of shoes for Russians; as a rule wooden shoes, if
- necessary install Russian shoe repair shops.
-
-
-
- “Examination of physical fitness in order to avoid importation
- of diseases.
-
- “Clearing of mines as a rule by Russians; if possible by
- selected Russian engineer troops.”
-
-The Defendant Göring was not the only one of these defendants who
-sponsored and applied the policy of using prisoners of war in the
-armament industry. The Defendant Speer also sponsored and applied this
-same policy of using prisoners of war in the armament industry. And we
-refer to the document bearing our Number 1435-PS, which also carries
-Exhibit Number USA-216. This document is a speech to the Nazi Gauleiter
-delivered by the Defendant Speer on the 24th day of February of 1942,
-and I wish to read from Paragraph 2 of that document, and I quote as
-follows:
-
- “I therefore proposed to the Führer at the end of December that
- all my labor force, including specialists, be released for mass
- employment in the East. Subsequently the remaining prisoners of
- war, about 10,000, were put at the disposal of the armament
- industry by me.”
-
-He also reported at the 36th meeting of the Central Planning Board, held
-on the 22d day of April 1943, that only 30 percent of the Russian
-prisoners of war were engaged in the armament industry. This the
-Defendant Speer found unsatisfactory. And referring again to Document
-R-124, the minutes of the Central Planning Board, and particularly to
-Page 17 of that document, Paragraph 10 of the English text, and Page 14,
-Paragraph 7 of the German text, we find this statement by the Defendant
-Speer, quoting directly:
-
- “There is a detailed statement showing in what sectors the
- Russian prisoners of war have been distributed. This statement
- is quite interesting. It shows that the armaments industry
- received only 30 percent. I constantly complained about this.”
-
-And at Page 20 of the same document, R-124—Paragraph 1 on Page 20 of
-the English text and Page 14, the last paragraph of the German text—the
-Defendant Speer stated, and I quote from the paragraph directly:
-
- “The 90,000 Russian prisoners of war employed in the whole of
- the armament industry are for the greatest part skilled men.”
-
-The Defendant Sauckel, who was appointed Plenipotentiary General for the
-utilization of labor for the express purpose, among others, of
-integrating prisoners of war into the German war industry, made it plain
-that prisoners of war were to be compelled to serve the German armament
-industry. His labor mobilization program, which is Document 016-PS,
-already marked Exhibit USA-168, contains this statement on Page 6,
-Paragraph 10 of the English text and Page 9, Paragraph 1, of the German
-text:
-
- “All prisoners of war now in Germany, from the territories of
- the West as well as of the East, must be completely incorporated
- into the German armament and food industries. Their production
- must be brought to the highest possible level.”
-
-I wish to turn now from the exploitation of foreign labor in general to
-a rather special point of the Nazi program which appears to us to have
-combined the brutality and the purposes of the slave labor program with
-those of the concentration camp. The Nazis placed all Allied nationals
-in concentration camps and forced them, along with the other inmates of
-the concentration camps, to work under conditions which were set
-actually to exterminate them. This was what we call the Nazi program of
-extermination through work.
-
-In the spring of 1942 these conspirators turned to the concentration
-camps as a further source of slave labor for the armament industry. I
-refer to a new Document Number R-129, bearing Exhibit Number USA-217.
-This document is a letter to Himmler, the Reichsführer SS—and it is
-dated the 30th day of April 1942—from one of his subordinates, an
-individual named Pohl, SS Obergruppenführer and General of the
-Waffen-SS; and I wish to quote from the first page of that document.
-Quoting directly:
-
- “Today I report about the present situation of the concentration
- camps and about measures I have taken to carry out your order of
- the 3rd of March 1942.”
-
-Then moving on from paragraphs numbered 1, 2, and 3 on Page 2 of the
-English text and at Page 1 of the German text, I quote as follows:
-
- “1. The war has brought about a marked change in the structure
- of the concentration camps and has changed their duties
- fundamentally with regard to the employment of the prisoners.
- The custody of prisoners for the sole reasons of security,
- education, or as a preventive measure is no longer the main
- consideration. The importance now lies in the economic side. The
- mobilization of all prisoner labor for purposes of the war
- (increase of armament) now, and for purposes of construction in
- the forthcoming peace, is coming more and more to the
- foreground.
-
-
-
- “2. From this knowledge necessary measures result which require
- a gradual transformation of the concentration camps from their
- former one-sided political character into an organization
- adapted to economic tasks.
-
-
-
- “3. For this reason I called together all the leaders of the
- former inspectorate of concentration camps, all camp commanders,
- and all managers and supervisors of work, on the 23rd and 24th
- of April 1942 and explained personally to them this new
- development. I have compiled, in the order attached, the
- essential points which have to be brought into effect with the
- utmost urgency if the commencement of work for the purposes of
- the armament industry is not to be delayed.”
-
-Now the order referred to in that third paragraph set the framework for
-a program of relentless exploitation, providing in part as follows—and
-I now refer to the enclosure appended to the quoted letter which is also
-a part of Document R-129, found at Page 3, Paragraphs numbered 4, 5, and
-6 of the English text, and Page 3 of the German text:
-
- “4. The camp commander alone is responsible for the utilization
- of the manpower available. This utilization must be, in the true
- meaning of the word, complete, in order to obtain the greatest
- measure of performance. Work is allotted only centrally and by
- the Chief of the Department D. The camp commanders themselves
- may not accept on their own initiative work offered by third
- parties and may not negotiate about it.
-
-
-
- “5. There is no limit to working hours. Their duration depends
- on the kind of working establishments in the camps and the kind
- of work to be done. They are fixed by the camp commanders alone.
-
-
-
- “6. Any circumstances which may result in a shortening of
- working hours (for example, meals, roll-calls, _et cetera_),
- have therefore to be restricted to an irreducible minimum.
- Time-wasting walks and noon intervals, only for the purpose of
- taking meals, are forbidden.”
-
-The armament production program we have just described was not merely a
-scheme for mobilizing the manpower potential of the camps. It actually
-was integrated directly into the larger Nazi program of extermination;
-and I wish to refer, at this point, to our document bearing Number
-654-PS and Exhibit Number USA-218.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Do you think it will be convenient to break off now for a
-few minutes?
-
-MR. DODD: Very well.
-
- [_A recess was taken._]
-
-MR. DODD: At the recess time I had made reference to Document Number
-654-PS, which has the Exhibit Number USA-218. This document is a
-memorandum of an agreement between Himmler, Reichsführer SS, and the
-Minister of Justice, Thierack. It is dated the 18th of September 1942.
-The concept of extermination to which I referred shortly before the
-recess was embodied in this document and I wish to quote from Page 1,
-Paragraph 2:
-
- “2. Transfer of asocial elements from prison to the Reichsführer
- SS for extermination through work. To be transferred without
- exception are persons under protective arrest, Jews, Gypsies,
- Russians and Ukrainians, Poles with more than 3-year sentences,
- Czechs, and Germans with more than 8-year sentences, according
- to the decision of the Reich Minister for Justice. First of all
- the worst asocial elements amongst those just mentioned are to
- be handed over. I shall inform the Führer of this through
- Reichsleiter Bormann.”
-
-Now this agreement further provided, in Paragraph 12 on Page 2 of the
-English text and Page 3, Paragraph 14, of the German text, as follows:
-
- “14. It is agreed that, in consideration of the intended aims of
- the Government for the clearing up of the Eastern problems, in
- the future, Jews, Poles, Gypsies, Russians, and Ukrainians are
- no longer to be tried by the ordinary courts, so far as
- punishable offenses are concerned; but are to be dealt with by
- the Reichsführer SS. This does not apply to civil lawsuits, nor
- to Poles whose names are reported or entered in the German
- racial lists.”
-
-Now, in September of 1942, the Defendant Speer made arrangements to
-bring this new source of labor within his jurisdiction. Speer convinced
-Hitler that significant production could be obtained only if the
-concentration camp prisoners were employed in factories under the
-technical control of the Speer Ministry instead of the control in the
-camps. In fact, without Defendant Speer’s cooperation, we say it would
-have been most difficult to utilize the prisoners on any large scale for
-war production, since he would not allocate to Himmler the machine tools
-and other necessary equipment. Accordingly, it was agreed that the
-prisoners were to be exploited in factories under the Defendant Speer’s
-control. To compensate Himmler for surrendering this jurisdiction to
-Speer, the Defendant Speer proposed and Hitler agreed, that Himmler
-would receive a share of the armaments output, fixed in relation to the
-man-hours contributed by his prisoners. In the minutes of the Defendant
-Speer’s conference with Hitler on the 20th, 21st, and the 22d September
-1942—Document Number R-124, which is Exhibit Number USA-179—I wish to
-refer particularly to Page 34 of the English text. These are the
-Defendant Speer’s minutes on this conference. I am quoting from Page 34,
-Paragraph 36, beginning at the middle of the page; and it is at the top
-of Page 26 in the German text:
-
- “I pointed out to the Führer that, apart from an insignificant
- amount of work, no possibility exists of organizing armament
- production in the concentration camps, because: (1) the machine
- tools required are missing; (2) there are no suitable premises.
- Both these assets would be available in the armament industry,
- if use could be made of them by a second shift.
-
-
-
- “The Führer agrees to my proposal that the numerous factories
- set up outside towns for reasons of air raid protection should
- release their workers to supplement the second shift in town
- factories and should in return be supplied with labor from the
- concentration camps—also two shifts.
-
-
-
- “I pointed out to the Führer the difficulties which I expect to
- encounter if Reichsführer SS Himmler should be able, as he
- requests, to exercise authoritative influence over these
- factories. The Führer, too, does not consider such an influence
- necessary.
-
-
-
- “The Führer, however, agrees that Reichsführer SS Himmler should
- derive advantage from making his prisoners available; he should
- get equipment for his division.
-
-
-
- “I suggest giving him a share in kind (war equipment) in ratio
- to the man-hours contributed by his prisoners. A 3 to 5 percent
- share is being discussed, the equipment also being calculated
- according to man-hours. The Führer would agree to such a
- solution.
-
-
-
- “The Führer is prepared to order the additional allocation of
- this equipment and weapons to the SS, upon submission of a
- list.”
-
-After a demand for concentration-camp labor had been created and after a
-mechanism had been set up by the Defendant Speer for exploiting this
-labor in armament factories, measures were evolved for increasing the
-supply of victims for extermination through work. A steady flow was
-assured by an agreement between Himmler and the Minister of Justice
-mentioned above, which was implemented by such programs as the
-following—and I refer to Document L-61, Exhibit Number USA-177; and I
-wish to quote from Paragraph 3. That document, the Tribunal will recall,
-is the Defendant Sauckel’s letter, dated the 26th of November 1942, to
-the presidents of the Länder employment offices; and I wish to quote
-from Paragraph 3 of that letter:
-
- “The Poles who are to be evacuated as a result of this measure
- will be put into concentration camps and put to work insofar as
- they are criminal or asocial elements.”
-
-General measures were supplemented by special drives for persons who
-would not otherwise have been sent to concentration camps.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Didn’t you read that this morning?
-
-MR. DODD: Yes, I did, Your Honor. I was reading it again with particular
-reference to this feature of the proof.
-
-For example, for “reasons of war necessity” Himmler ordered that at
-least 35,000 prisoners qualified for work should be transferred to
-concentration camps. I now offer in evidence Document Number 1063(d)-PS,
-which is Exhibit Number USA-219. This document is a Himmler order dated
-the 17th of December 1942. The order provides, and I quote in part,
-beginning with the first paragraph of that document:
-
- “For reasons of war necessity not to be discussed further here,
- the Reichsführer SS and Chief of the German Police, on the 14th
- of December 1942, has ordered that by the end of January 1943 at
- least 35,000 prisoners fit for work are to be sent to the
- concentration camps. In order to reach this number, the
- following measures are required:
-
-
-
- “(1) As of now, to begin with, until 1 February 1943, all
- Eastern Workers or foreign workers who have been fugitives or
- who have broken contracts and who do not belong to allied,
- friendly, or neutral states . . . are to be brought by the
- quickest means to the nearest concentration camps . . . .
-
-
-
- “(2) The commanders and the commandants of the Security Police
- and the Security Service, and the chiefs of the state police
- headquarters will check immediately on the basis of a close and
- strict rule: (a) the prisons, and (b) the labor reformatory
- camps.
-
-
-
- “All prisoners fit for work, if it is practically and humanly
- possible, will be committed at once to the nearest concentration
- camp, according to the following instructions, even for example,
- those who are about to be brought to trial. Only such prisoners
- can be left there who, in the interest of further
- investigations, are to remain absolutely in solitary
- confinement.
-
-
-
- “Every single laborer counts!”
-
-Measures were also adopted to insure that this extermination through
-work was practiced with maximum efficiency. Subsidiary concentration
-camps were established near important war plants. The Defendant Speer
-has admitted that he personally toured Upper Austria and selected sites
-for concentration camps near various munitions factories in the area. I
-am about to refer to the transcript of an interrogation under oath of
-the Defendant Albert Speer.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, do you understand the last document you read,
-1063-PS, to refer to prisoners of war, or prisoners in ordinary prisons,
-or what?
-
-MR. DODD: We understood it to refer to prisoners in ordinary prisons.
-
-In view of the Tribunal’s ruling this morning, I think I should state
-that, with respect to this interrogation of Defendant Speer, we had
-provided the defendants’ counsel with the entire text in German. It
-happens to be a brief interrogation, and so we were able to complete
-that translation, and it has been placed in their Information Center.
-
-DR. HANS FLÄCHSNER (Counsel for Defendant Speer): In reference to the
-transcript of the interrogation, the reading of which the prosecutor has
-just announced, I should like to say the following:
-
-It is true that we have received the German transcript of the English
-protocol, if one may call it a protocol. A comparison of the English
-text with the German transcript shows that there are, both in the
-English text and in the German transcript, mistakes which change the
-meaning and which I believe are to be attributed to misunderstandings on
-the part of the certifying interpreter. I believe, therefore, that the
-so-called protocol and the English text do not actually give the
-contents of what Defendant Speer tried to express during the
-interrogation. It would, therefore, not further the establishment of the
-truth should this protocol ever be used.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, when was the German translation given to
-counsel for the defendant?
-
-MR. DODD: About 4 days ago, Your Honor.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, is there any certification by the interrogator
-as to the English translation?
-
-MR. DODD: There is, Your Honor. There is a certification at the end of
-the interrogation by the interrogator and by the interpreter and by the
-reporter as well. There are three certifications.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I think the best course will be, in these circumstances,
-to receive the interrogation now. You will have an opportunity, by
-calling the defendant, to show in what way he alleges, or you allege,
-that the interrogation is inaccurately translated.
-
-DR. FLÄCHSNER: Thank you, Sir.
-
-MR. DODD: May I respectfully refer, Your Honor, to the last document in
-the document book, 4 pages from the end?
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Which page do you refer to?
-
-MR. DODD: I refer to the page bearing the Number 16 of the English text
-of the transcript of the interrogation and Page 21 of the German text.
-The answer quoted is:
-
- “The fact was that we were anxious to use workers from
- concentration camps in factories and to establish small
- concentration camps near factories, in order to use the manpower
- that was then available there. But it did not come up only in
- connection with this trip . . . .”
-
-That is, Speer’s trip to Austria. (Exhibit USA-220)
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I think I ought to say to defendant’s counsel that if he
-had waited until he heard that piece of evidence read, he would have
-seen that it was quite unnecessary to make any objection.
-
-MR. DODD: Defendant Göring endorsed this use of concentration camp labor
-and asked for more. We refer to our Document 1584-PS, Part 1, which is
-Exhibit Number USA-221. This document is a teletype message from Göring
-to Himmler, dated 14th of February 1944. I quote from the document
-beginning with the second sentence:
-
- “At the same time, I ask you to put at my disposal as great a
- number of KZ”—concentration-camp—“convicts as possible for air
- armament, as this kind of manpower proved to be very useful
- according to previous experience. The situation of the air war
- makes subterranean transfer of industry necessary. For work of
- this kind KZ convicts can be especially well concentrated at
- work and in the camp.”
-
-Defendant Speer subsequently assumed responsibility for this program;
-and Hitler promised Speer that if the necessary labor for the program
-could not be obtained, a hundred thousand Hungarian Jews would be
-brought in by the SS.
-
-Speer recorded his conferences with Hitler on April 6 and April 7, 1944
-in Document R-124, which is Exhibit Number USA-179, already in evidence.
-I quote from Page 36 of the English text, Page 29 of the German text as
-follows:
-
- “Suggested to the Führer that, due to lack of builders and
- equipment, the second big building project should not be set up
- in German territory but in close vicinity to the border on a
- suitable site (preferably on gravel base and with transport
- facilities) in French, Belgian, or Dutch territory. The Führer
- agrees to this suggestion if the works could be set up behind a
- fortified zone. The strongest argument for setting up this plant
- in French territory is the fact that it would be much easier to
- procure the necessary workers. Nevertheless, the Führer asks
- that an attempt be made to set up the second factory in a safer
- area, namely the Protectorate. If it should prove impossible
- there, too, to get hold of the necessary workers, the Führer
- himself will contact the Reichsführer SS and will give an order
- that the required 100,000 men are to be made available by
- bringing in Jews from Hungary. Stressing the fact that in the
- case of the Industriegemeinschaft Schlesien the building
- organization was a failure, the Führer demands that these works
- must be built by the OT exclusively, and that the workers should
- be made available by the Reichsführer SS. He wants to hold a
- meeting shortly in order to discuss details with all the men
- concerned.”
-
-The unspeakably brutal, inhumane, and degrading treatment inflicted on
-Allied nationals and other victims of concentration camps, while they
-were indeed being literally worked to death, is described in Document
-L-159, which is not in the document book. It is an official report
-prepared by a U.S. Congressional committee, U.S. Senate Document Number
-47. This Congressional committee had inspected the liberated camps at
-the request of General Eisenhower. It bears Exhibit Number USA-222. I
-would like to quote from the document briefly, first from Page 14, the
-last paragraph, and from Page 15, the first two paragraphs, of the
-English text:
-
- “The treatment accorded to these prisoners in the concentration
- camps was generally as follows: They were herded together in
- some wooden barracks not large enough for one-tenth of their
- number. They were forced to sleep on wooden frames covered with
- wooden boards in tiers of two, three, and even four, sometimes
- with no covering, sometimes with a bundle of dirty rags serving
- both as pallet and coverlet.
-
-
-
- “Their food consisted generally of about one-half of a pound of
- black bread per day and a bowl of watery soup for noon and
- night, and not always that. Owing to the great numbers crowded
- into a small space and to the lack of adequate sustenance, lice
- and vermin multiplied, disease became rampant, and those who did
- not soon die of disease or torture began the long, slow process
- of starvation. Notwithstanding the deliberate starvation program
- inflicted upon these prisoners by lack of adequate food, we
- found no evidence that the people of Germany, as a whole, were
- suffering from any lack of sufficient food or clothing. The
- contrast was so striking that the only conclusion which we could
- reach was that the starvation of the inmates of these camps was
- deliberate.
-
-
-
- “Upon entrance into these camps, newcomers were forced to work
- either at an adjoining war factory or were placed ‘in commando’
- on various jobs in the vicinity, being returned each night to
- their stall in the barracks. Generally a German criminal was
- placed in charge of each ‘block’ or shed in which the prisoners
- slept. Periodically he would choose the one prisoner of his
- block who seemed the most alert or intelligent or showed most
- leadership qualities. These would report to the guards’ room and
- would never be heard from again. The generally accepted belief
- of the prisoners was that these were shot or gassed or hanged
- and then cremated. A refusal to work or an infraction of the
- rules usually meant flogging and other types of torture, such as
- having the fingernails pulled out, and in each case usually
- ended in death after extensive suffering. The policies herein
- described constituted a calculated and diabolical program of
- planned torture and extermination on the part of those who were
- in control of the German Government . . . .”
-
-I quote next from Page 11 of the English text beginning with the second
-sentence of Paragraph 2, a description of Camp Dora at Nordhausen, Page
-12, Paragraph 1 of the German text, quoting as follows:
-
- “On the whole, we found this camp to have been operated and
- administered much in the same manner as Buchenwald had been
- operated and managed. When the efficiency of the workers
- decreased as a result of the conditions under which they were
- required to live, their rations were decreased as punishment.
- This brought about a vicious circle in which the weak became
- weaker and were ultimately exterminated.”
-
-Such was the cycle of work, torture, starvation, and death for
-concentration-camp labor—labor which the Defendant Göring, while
-requesting that more of it be placed at his disposal, said had proved
-very useful; labor which the Defendant Speer was “anxious” to use in the
-factories under his control.
-
-The policy underlying this program, the manner in which it was executed,
-and the responsibility of the conspirators in connection with it has
-been dwelt upon at length. Therefore, we should like, at this point, to
-discuss the special responsibility of the Defendant Sauckel.
-
-The Defendant Sauckel’s appointment as Plenipotentiary General for
-manpower is explained probably first of all by his having been an old
-and trusted Nazi. He certified in Document 2974-PS, dated 17 November
-1945, which is already in evidence before this Tribunal as Exhibit
-Number USA-15, that he held the following positions:
-
-Starting with his membership in the NSDAP, he was thereafter a member of
-the Reichstag; he was Gauleiter of Thuringia; he was a member of the
-Thuringian legislature; he was Minister of Interior and head of the
-Thuringian State Ministry; he was Reichsstatthalter for Thuringia; he
-was an SA Obergruppenführer; he was SS Obergruppenführer; he was
-administrator for the Berlin-Suhler Waffen and Fahrzeugwerke in 1935; he
-was head of the Gustloff Werke Nationalsozialistische
-Industrie-Stiftung, 1936, and the honorary head of the Foundation. And
-from the 21st of March 1942 until 1945, he was the Plenipotentiary
-General for Labor Allocation.
-
-Sauckel’s official responsibilities are borne out by evidence. His
-appointment as Plenipotentiary General for manpower was effected by a
-decree of the 21st of March 1942, which we have read and which was
-signed by Hitler, Lammers, and the Defendant Keitel. And by that decree
-Sauckel was given authority, as well as responsibility, subordinate only
-to that of Hitler and Göring, who was the head of the Four Year
-Plan—subordinate only to those two for all matters relating to
-recruitment, allocation, and handling of foreign and domestic manpower.
-
-The Defendant Göring, to whom Sauckel was directly responsible,
-abolished the recruitment and allocation agencies of his Four Year Plan
-and delegated their powers to the Defendant Sauckel and placed his
-far-reaching authority as deputy for the Four Year Plan at Sauckel’s
-disposal.
-
-In Document 1666-PS, a second 1666-PS but of another date, the 27th of
-March 1942—I ask the Tribunal to take judicial notice of this original
-decree, which is published in the 1942 _Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I, at
-Page 180:
-
- “In pursuance of the Führer’s decree of 21st of March 1942, I
- decree as follows:
-
-
-
- “1. My manpower sections are hereby abolished (circular letter
- of 22d of October 1936). Their duties (recruitment and
- allocation of manpower, regulation of labor conditions) are
- taken over by the Plenipotentiary General for Allocation of
- Labor, who is directly under me.
-
-
-
- “2. The Plenipotentiary General for Allocation of Labor will be
- responsible for regulating the conditions of labor (wage policy)
- employed in the Reich territory, having regard to the
- requirements of labor allocation.
-
-
-
- “3. The Plenipotentiary General for Allocation of Labor is part
- of the Four Year Plan. In cases where new legislation is
- required or existing laws need to be modified; he will submit
- appropriate proposals to me.
-
-
-
- “4. The Plenipotentiary General for Allocation of Labor will
- have at his disposal for the performance of his task the right
- delegated to me by the Führer for issuing instructions to the
- highest Reich authorities and their subordinate offices, as well
- as the Party offices and their sections and their affiliated
- organizations, also to the Reich Protector, the Governor
- General, the military commanders, and heads of the civil
- administrations. In the case of ordinances and instructions of
- fundamental importance, a report is to be submitted to me in
- advance.”
-
-Document Number 1903-PS is a Hitler decree of the 30th of September 1942
-giving the Defendant Sauckel extraordinary powers over the civil and
-military authority of the territories occupied by Germany. We ask that
-judicial notice be taken by this Tribunal of the original decree, which
-is published in Volume II, Page 510, of the _Verfügungen, Anordnungen,
-und Bekanntgaben_, published by the Party Chancellery. This decree
-states as follows:
-
- “I herewith authorize the Plenipotentiary General for Allocation
- of Labor, Reich Governor and Gauleiter Fritz Sauckel to take all
- necessary measures for the enforcement of my decree of 21 March
- 1942, concerning a Plenipotentiary General for Allocation of
- Labor (_Reichsgesetzblatt_ I, Page 179), according to his own
- judgment, in the Greater German Reich, in the Protectorate, and
- in the Government General, as well as in the Occupied
- Territories—measures which will safeguard under all
- circumstances the regulated deployment of labor for the German
- war economy. For this purpose he may appoint commissioners to
- the bureaus of the military and civilian administration. These
- are responsible directly to the Plenipotentiary General for
- Allocation of Labor. In order to carry out their tasks, they are
- entitled to issue directives to the competent military and
- civilian authorities in charge of labor allocation and of wage
- policy.
-
-
-
- “More detailed directives will be issued by the Plenipotentiary
- General for Allocation of Labor.
-
-
-
- “Führer headquarters, 30 September 1942. The
- Führer,”—signed—“Adolf Hitler.”
-
-Within 1 month after his appointment, the Defendant Sauckel sent
-Defendant Rosenberg his “Labor Mobilization Program”. This program,
-Document Number 016-PS, already in evidence as Exhibit USA-168,
-envisaged a recruitment by force and the maximum exploitation of the
-entire labor resources of the conquered areas and of prisoners of war in
-the interests of the Nazi war machine at the lowest conceivable degree
-of expenditure to the German State.
-
-The Defendant Sauckel states—and I refer now to the bottom of Page 6 of
-the English text of that document. It is Page 9, Paragraph 2, of the
-German text, and I quote as follows:
-
- “It must be emphasized, however, that an additional tremendous
- number of foreign laborers has to be found for the Reich. The
- greatest pool for that purpose is the occupied territories of
- the East. Consequently, it is an imperative necessity to use the
- human reserves of the conquered Soviet territory to the fullest
- extent. Should we not succeed in obtaining the necessary amount
- of labor on a voluntary basis, we must immediately institute
- conscription of forced labor.
-
-
-
- “Apart from the prisoners of war still in the occupied
- territories, we must, therefore, requisition skilled or
- unskilled male and female labor from the Soviet territory from
- the age of 15 up, for the German allocation of labor.”
-
-Passing to Page 11 of the English text, first paragraph and Page 17,
-Paragraph 4, of the German text, I quote, as follows directly:
-
- “The complete employment of all prisoners of war as well as the
- use of a gigantic number of new foreign civilian workers, men
- and women, has become an indisputable necessity for the solution
- of the problem of the allocation of labor in this war.”
-
-The Defendant Sauckel proceeded to implement this plan, which he
-submitted, with certain basic directives. He provided that if voluntary
-recruitment of foreign workers was unsuccessful compulsory service
-should be instituted.
-
-Document Number 3044-PS is the Defendant Sauckel’s Regulation Number 4,
-dated the 7th of May 1942. And we ask that the Tribunal take judicial
-notice of the original regulation published in Volume II, Pages 516 to
-527 of the _Verfügungen, Anordnungen, und Bekanntgaben_, to which I have
-previously referred. Reading from Page 1, Paragraph 3, of the English
-text:
-
- “The recruitment of foreign labor will be done on principle on a
- volunteer basis. Where, however, in the occupied territories the
- appeal for volunteers does not suffice, obligatory service and
- drafting must, under all circumstances, be resorted to. This is
- an indisputable requirement of our labor situation.”
-
-Sauckel provided also for the allocation of foreign labor in the order
-of its importance to the Nazi war machine. We refer to Document Number
-3044(a)-PS, which is the Defendant Sauckel’s Regulation Number 10, and
-ask that the Court take judicial notice of the original regulation,
-published in Volume II, _Verfügungen, Anordnungen, und Bekanntgaben_, at
-Pages 531 to 533. Paragraph 3 of this regulation I quote as follows:
-
- “The resources of manpower that are available in the occupied
- territories are to be employed primarily to satisfy the
- requirements of importance for the war in Germany itself. In
- allocating the said labor resources in the Occupied Territories,
- the following order of priority will be observed:
-
-
-
- “(a) Labor required for the troops, the occupation authorities,
- and the civil authorities;
-
-
-
- “(b) Labor required for German armament;
-
-
-
- “(c) Labor required for food and agriculture;
-
-
-
- “(d) Labor required for industrial work in the interests of
- Germany, other than armaments;
-
-
-
- “(e) Labor required for industrial work in the interests of the
- population of the territory in question.”
-
-The Defendant Sauckel, and agencies subordinate to him, exercised
-exclusive authority over the recruitment of workers from every area in
-Europe occupied by, controlled by, or friendly to, the German nation. He
-affirmed, himself—the Defendant Sauckel did—this authority in a
-decree, Document Number 3044-PS, already in evidence as Exhibit Number
-USA-206. I refer to Paragraph 5 on Page 1 of the English text of that
-document, and I am quoting it directly:
-
- “The recruitment of labor in the areas occupied by Germany will
- be carried out exclusively by the labor allocation offices of
- the German military or civil administration in these areas.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Haven’t you read that already?
-
-MR. DODD: No, I have not, if Your Honor pleases. We have referred to
-that decree before, but we have not referred to this portion of it.
-
-I am passing to Paragraph II, 1-a on Page 2, and quoting again directly:
-
- “For the carrying out of recruitment in allied, friendly, or
- neutral foreign countries, my commissioners are solely
- responsible.”
-
-In addition, the following defendants, who were informed by Sauckel of
-the quotas of foreign laborers which he required, collaborated with
-Sauckel and his agents in filling these quotas: The Defendant Keitel,
-Chief of the OKW—which was the Supreme Command—who collaborated with
-Sauckel.
-
-We refer to Document Number 3012(1)-PS, which is Exhibit Number USA-190.
-This document is the record of a telephone conversation of the Chief of
-the Economic Staff East of the German Army, and it is dated March 11,
-1943. I wish to quote from the first two paragraphs of the document as
-follows:
-
- “The Plenipotentiary General for Allocation of Labor, Gauleiter
- Sauckel, points out to me in an urgent teletype that the
- allocation of labor in German agriculture, as well as all the
- most urgent armament programs ordered by the Führer, make the
- most rapid procurement of approximately 1 million women and men
- from the newly occupied Eastern Territories within the next 4
- months an imperative necessity. For this purpose, Gauleiter
- Sauckel demands the shipment of 5,000 workers daily beginning 15
- March; 10,000 workers, male and female, beginning 1 April, from
- the newly occupied Eastern Territories.”
-
-I am passing down to the next paragraph:
-
- “In consideration of the extraordinary losses of workers which
- occurred in German war industry because of the developments of
- the past months, it is now necessary that the recruiting of
- workers be taken up again everywhere with all vigor. The
- tendency momentarily noticeable in that territory, to limit
- and/or entirely stop the Reich recruiting program, is absolutely
- not bearable in view of this state of affairs. Gauleiter
- Sauckel, who is informed about these events, because of this
- applied directly to General Field Marshal Keitel on 10 March
- 1943, in a teletype, and emphasized on this occasion that, as in
- all other occupied territories, where all other methods fail, a
- certain pressure must be used, by order of the Führer.”
-
-At this point we were prepared to offer a transcript of an interrogation
-under oath of the Defendant Sauckel. Only the English of the transcript
-of the interrogation has been seen by the Counsel for the Defendant
-Sauckel. He has had it, however, for some time; and the excerpts on
-which we intended to rely were furnished to him as well in German.
-
-If I understood the ruling of the Tribunal correctly, it would be
-necessary for us to have furnished the entire record in German.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I think you might use this interrogation, as the excerpts
-have been submitted in German.
-
-MR. DODD: Yes, they have, Your Honor, and the entire English text as,
-well.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Very well.
-
-MR. DODD: I refer to a transcript of an interrogation under oath of the
-Defendant Sauckel, held on the morning of the 5th of October 1945
-(Exhibit USA-224). That is the very last document in the document book.
-I wish to quote from the bottom of Page 1 of the English text and Page
-1, Paragraph 11, of the German text, as follows:
-
- “Q: ‘Was it necessary, in order to accomplish the completion of
- the quotas given, to have liaison with the OKW?’
-
-
-
- “A: ‘I remember that the Führer had given directives to Marshal
- Keitel, telling him that my task was a very important one; and
- I, too, have often conferred with Keitel after such discussions
- with the Führer, when I asked him for his support.’
-
-
-
- “Q: ‘It was his task to supervise the proper performance of the
- military commanders in the occupied countries in carrying but
- their assigned mission, was it not?’
-
-
-
- “A: ‘Yes, the Führer had told me that he would inform the Chief
- of the OKW and the Chief of the Reich Chancellery as to these
- matters. The same applies to the Foreign Minister.’”
-
-We are also prepared to offer the transcript of an interrogation of the
-Defendant Alfred Rosenberg. There is this distinction insofar as this
-record is concerned. While we have supplied the counsel with the German
-translation of those parts of it which we propose to use, we have not
-had an opportunity to supply the whole text to counsel. However, they
-have been supplied with the German of the parts which we propose to use
-and to offer to this Tribunal.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Well, you are prepared to do it hereafter, I suppose?
-
-MR. DODD: Yes, we will, Your Honor, as soon as we can get these papers
-down to the Information Center.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Good.
-
-MR. DODD: The next document is rather lengthy, and I wonder what the
-Tribunal’s pleasure is. Do I understand that I may proceed with the
-interrogation?
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Yes.
-
-MR. DODD: I wish to refer to the Defendant Alfred Rosenberg, the Reich
-Minister for Eastern Occupied Territories, as one who also collaborated
-with the Defendant Sauckel, and specifically, to refer to a transcript
-of an interrogation under oath of the Defendant Rosenberg, on the
-afternoon of the 6th of October 1945 (Exhibit USA-187). That record may
-be found about the third from the last of the interrogation records in
-the document book, and I wish to read from Page 1 of the transcript:
-
- “Q: ‘Isn’t it a fact that Sauckel would allocate to the various
- areas under your jurisdiction the number of persons to be
- obtained for labor purposes?’
-
-
-
- “A: ‘Yes.’
-
-
-
- “Q: ‘And that thereafter your agents would obtain that labor in
- order to meet the quota which had been given. Is that right?’
-
-
-
- “A: ‘Sauckel, normally, had very far-reaching desires, which one
- could not fulfil unless one looked very closely into the
- matter.’
-
-
-
- “Q: ‘Never mind about Sauckel’s desires being far-reaching or
- not being far-reaching. That has nothing to do with it. You were
- given quotas for the areas over which you had jurisdiction, and
- it was up to you to meet that quota?’
-
-
-
- “A: ‘Yes. It was the responsibility of the administrative
- officials to receive this quota and to distribute the allotments
- over the districts in such a way, according to number and
- according to the age groups, that they would be most reasonably
- met.’
-
-
-
- “Q: ‘These administrative officials were part of your
- organization, isn’t that right?’
-
- “A: ‘They were functionaries or officials of the Reich
- Commissioner for the Ukraine; but, as such, they were placed in
- their office by the Ministry for the Eastern Occupied
- Territories.’
-
-
-
- “Q: ‘You recognized, did you not, that the quotas set by Sauckel
- could not be filled by voluntary labor; and you did not
- disapprove of the impressment of forced labor. Isn’t that
- right?’
-
-
-
- “A: ‘I regretted that the demands of Sauckel were so urgent that
- they could not be met by a continuation of voluntary
- recruitments, and thus I submitted to the necessity of forced
- impressment.’”
-
-Then, passing a little further down on that page:
-
- “Q: ‘The letters that we have already seen between you and
- Sauckel do not indicate, do they, any disagreement on your part
- with the principle of recruiting workers against their will?
- They indicate, as I remember, that you were opposed to the
- treatment that was later accorded these workers, but you did not
- oppose their initial impressment.’”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, I think you ought to read the next two answers
-in fairness to the Defendant Rosenberg, after the one where he said he
-submitted to the necessity of forced impressment.
-
-MR. DODD: Very well, I shall read those, Your Honor.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: “‘Did you ever argue with Sauckel . . .’”
-
-MR. DODD: Yes.
-
- “Q: ‘Did you ever argue with Sauckel that perhaps in view of the
- fact that the quotas could not be met by voluntary labor, the
- labor recruiting program be abandoned, except for what recruits
- could be voluntarily enrolled?’
-
-
-
- “A: ‘I could not do that because the numbers or allotments that
- Sauckel had received from the Führer to meet were absolutely
- binding for him, and I couldn’t do anything about that.’”
-
-And then, referring again to the question which I had just read, the
-answer is as follows:
-
- “‘That is right. In those matters I mostly discussed the
- possibility of finding the least harsh methods of handling the
- matter, whereas in no way did I place myself in opposition to
- the orders that he was carrying out for the Führer.’”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I think the Tribunal might adjourn now.
-
-MR. DODD: Very well, Your Honor.
-
- [_The Tribunal adjourned until 13 December 1945 at 1000 hours._]
-
-
-
-
- NINETEENTH DAY
- Thursday, 13 December 1945
-
-
- _Morning Session_
-
-MR. DODD: May it please the Tribunal, at the close of yesterday’s
-session we were discussing and had just completed reading the excerpts
-from the interrogation of 6 October 1945, wherein the Defendant Alfred
-Rosenberg was questioned.
-
-There have already been introduced Documents 017-PS and 019-PS and I
-have read excerpts from them. The Tribunal will recall that they are
-letters written by the Defendant Sauckel to the Defendant Rosenberg
-requesting the assistance of the Defendant Rosenberg in the recruitment
-of additional foreign laborers. I refer to them in passing, by way of
-recapitulation, with respect to the Defendant Sauckel’s participation in
-this slave-labor program and also the assistance of the Defendant
-Rosenberg. Also the Defendant Sauckel received help from the Defendant
-Seyss-Inquart who was the Reich Commissioner for the occupied
-Netherlands.
-
-I refer again to the transcript of the interrogation under oath of the
-Defendant Sauckel, which was read from yesterday; and I now refer to
-another part of it. The transcript of this interrogation will be found
-in the rear of the document book. It is the very last document and I
-wish to quote particularly from it. It is the first question:
-
- “Q: For a moment, I want to turn our attention to Holland. It is
- my understanding that the quotas for the workers from Holland
- were agreed upon, and then the numbers given to the Reich
- Commissioner Seyss-Inquart to fulfill, is that correct?
-
-
-
- “A: Yes, that is correct.
-
-
-
- “Q: After the quota was given to Seyss-Inquart, it was his
- mission to fulfill it with the aid of your representatives; was
- it not?
-
-
-
- “A: Yes. This was the only possible thing for me to do and the
- same applied to other countries.”
-
-And the Defendant Hans Frank, who was the Governor General of the
-Government General of Poland, also participated in the filling of
-Defendant Sauckel’s quota requirements.
-
-I refer again to the interrogation of the Defendant Sauckel and to Page
-1 of the excerpts from the transcript of this interrogation as it
-appears in the document book:
-
- “Q: Was the same procedure substantially followed of allocating
- quotas in the Government General of Poland?
-
-
-
- “A: Yes. I have principally to repeat that the only possibility
- I had in carrying through these missions was to get in touch
- with the highest German military authority in the respective
- country and to transfer to them the orders of the Führer and ask
- them very urgently, as I have always done, to fulfill these
- orders.
-
-
-
- “Q: Such discussions in Poland, of course, were with the
- Governor General Frank?
-
-
-
- “A: Yes. I spent a morning and an afternoon in Kraków twice or
- three times and I personally spoke to Governor General Frank.
- Naturally, there was also present Secretary Dr. Goebbels.”
-
-The SS, as in most matters involving the use of force and brutality,
-also extended its assistance. We refer to Document Number 1292-PS, which
-is Exhibit USA-225. This Document, 1292-PS, is the report of the chief
-of the Reich Chancellery, Lammers, of a conference with Hitler, which
-was attended by, among others, the Defendant Sauckel, the Defendant
-Speer, and Himmler, the Reichsführer SS. I turn to Page 2 of the
-document, beginning with the third line from the top of the page of the
-English text; and it is Page 4, Paragraph 2 of the German text. The
-quotation reads as follows:
-
- “The Plenipotentiary General for Allocation of Labor, Sauckel,
- declared that he will attempt with fanatical determination to
- obtain these workers. Until now he has always kept his promises
- as to the number of workers to be furnished. With the best of
- intentions, however, he is unable to make a definite promise for
- 1944. He will do everything in his power to furnish the
- requested manpower in 1944. Whether it will succeed depends
- primarily on what German executive agents will be made
- available. His project cannot be carried out with indigenous
- executive agents.”
-
-There are additional quotations, as the Tribunal may observe, in this
-very part from which I have been reading, but I intend to refer to them
-again a little further on.
-
-The Defendant Sauckel participated in the formulation of the over-all
-labor requirements for Germany and passed out quotas to be filled by and
-with the assistance of the individuals and agencies referred to, in the
-certain knowledge that force and brutality were the only means whereby
-his demands could be met. Turning to Document 1292-PS again, and quoting
-from Page 1:
-
- “1. A conference took place with the Führer today which was
- attended by:
-
-
-
- “The Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor,
- Gauleiter Sauckel; the Secretary for Armament and War
- Production, Speer; the Chief of the Supreme Command of the Army,
- General Field Marshal Keitel; General Field Marshal Milch; the
- acting Reich Minister for Food and Agriculture, State Secretary
- Backe; the Minister of the Interior, Reichsführer of the SS,
- Himmler; and myself. (The Minister for Foreign Affairs and the
- Minister of National Economy had repeatedly asked to be
- permitted to participate prior to the conference, but the Führer
- did not wish their attendance.)”
-
-Continuing the quotation:
-
- “The Führer declared in his introductory remarks:
-
-
-
- “‘I want a clear picture:
-
-
-
- “‘(1) How many workers are required for the maintenance of
- German war economy?
-
-
-
- “‘(a) For the maintenance of present output?
-
-
-
-
- “‘(b) To increase its output?
-
-
-
-
- “‘(2) How many workers can be obtained from occupied countries,
- or how many can still be gained in the Reich by suitable means
- (increased output)? For one thing, it is a matter of making up
- for losses of labor by death, infirmity, the constant
- fluctuation of workers, and so forth; and further it is a matter
- of procuring additional workers.’
-
-
-
- “The Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor,
- Sauckel, declared that, in order to maintain the present amount
- of workers he would have to add at least 2½ but probably 3
- million new workers in 1944. Otherwise production would fall
- off.
-
-
-
- “Reich Minister Speer declared that he needed an additional
- 1,300,000 laborers. However, this would depend on whether it
- will be possible to increase production of iron ore. Should this
- not be possible, he would need no additional workers.
- Procurement of additional workers from occupied territory would,
- however, be subject to the condition that these workers will not
- be withdrawn from armament and auxiliary industries already
- working there. For this would mean a decrease of production of
- these industries which he could not tolerate. Those, for
- instance, who are already working in France in industries
- mentioned above must be protected against being sent to work in
- Germany by the Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of
- Labor.
-
-
-
- “The Führer agreed with the opinions of Reich Minister Speer and
- emphasized that the measures taken by the Plenipotentiary
- General for the Allocation of Labor should create no
- circumstances which would lead to the withdrawal of workers from
- armament and auxiliary industries working in occupied
- territories, because such a shifting of workers would only cause
- disturbance of production in occupied countries.
-
-
-
- “The Führer further called attention to the fact that at least
- 250,000 laborers will be required for preparations against air
- attacks in the field of civilian air raid protection. For Vienna
- alone 2,000-2,500 are required immediately. The Plenipotentiary
- General for the Allocation of Labor will need at least 4 million
- workers considering that he requires 2½ million workers for
- maintenance of the present level, that Reich Minister Speer
- needs 1,300,000 additional workers, and that the above-mentioned
- preparations for security measures against air attacks call for
- 250,000 laborers.”
-
-Referring again to Page 2, the first full paragraph of the English text
-of this document, and Page 5, Paragraph 1, of the German text:
-
- “The Reichsführer SS explained that the executive agents put at
- his disposal are extremely few, but that he would try helping
- the Sauckel project to succeed by increasing them and working
- them harder. The Reichsführer SS made immediately available
- 2,000 to 2,500 men from concentration camps for air raid
- preparations in Vienna.”
-
-Passing the next paragraph of this document and continuing with the
-paragraph entitled “Results of the Conference” and quoting it directly
-after the small figure 1:
-
- “The Plenipotentiary General for Allocation of Labor shall
- procure at least 4 million new workers from occupied
- territories.”
-
-Moreover, as Document 3012-PS, which has already been offered as Exhibit
-USA-190, revealed, the Defendant Sauckel, in requesting the assistance
-of the Army for the recruitment of 1 million men and women from the
-Occupied Eastern Territories, informed the Defendant Keitel that prompt
-action was required and that, as in all other occupied countries,
-pressure had to be used if other measures were not successful. Again, as
-revealed by Document 018-PS, which has been offered and from which
-excerpts have been read, the Defendant Sauckel was informed by the
-Defendant Rosenberg that the enslavement of foreign labor was achieved
-by force and brutality. Notwithstanding his knowledge of these
-conditions, the Defendant Sauckel continued to request greater supplies
-of manpower from the areas in which the most ruthless methods had been
-applied. Indeed, when German field commanders on the Eastern Front
-attempted to resist or restrain the Defendant Sauckel’s demands, because
-forced recruitment was swelling the ranks of the partisans and making
-the Army’s task more difficult, Sauckel sent a telegram to Hitler, in
-which he implored him, Hitler, to intervene.
-
-I make reference to Document Number 407(II)-PS, which bears Exhibit
-Number USA-226. This document is a telegram from the Defendant Sauckel
-to Hitler dated 10 March 1943. It is a rather long message, but I wish
-to call particularly to the attention of the Tribunal the last paragraph
-on Page 1 of the English text. It is Page 2, Paragraph 5 of the German
-text. Quoting the last paragraph of the English text:
-
- “Therefore, my Führer, I ask you to abolish all orders which
- oppose the obligation of foreign workers for labor and kindly to
- report to me whether my conception of the mission presented here
- is still right.”
-
-Turning to Paragraph 5 on the first page of this English text, we find
-these words, quoting them directly:
-
- “If the obligation for labor and the forced recruiting of
- workers in the East is not possible any more, then the German
- war industries and agriculture cannot fulfill their tasks to the
- full extent.”
-
-The next paragraph:
-
- “I myself have the opinion that our Army leaders should not give
- credence, under any circumstances, to the atrocity and
- defamatory propaganda campaign of the partisans. The generals
- themselves are greatly interested that the support for the
- troops is made possible in time. I should like to point out that
- hundreds of thousands of excellent workers going into the field
- as soldiers now cannot possibly be replaced by German women not
- used to work, even if they are trying to do their best.
- Therefore, I have to use the people of the Eastern Territories.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I think you should read the next paragraph.
-
- MR. DODD: “I myself report to you that the workers belonging to
- all foreign nations are treated humanely, and correctly, and
- cleanly; are fed and housed well and are even clothed. On the
- basis of my own services with foreign nations I go as far as to
- state that never before in the world were foreign workers
- treated as correctly as they are now, in the hardest of all
- wars, by the German people.”
-
-In addition to being responsible for the recruitment of foreign civilian
-labor by force, Defendant Sauckel was responsible for the conditions
-under which foreign workers were deported to Germany and for the
-treatment to which they were subjected within Germany.
-
-We have already referred to the conditions under which these imported
-persons were transported to Germany and we have read from Document
-2241(3)-PS to show that Sauckel knew of these conditions. Yesterday we
-referred at length to the brutal, degrading, and inhumane conditions
-under which these laborers worked and lived within Germany. We again
-invite the attention of the Tribunal to Document 3044-PS, already
-offered as Exhibit USA-206. It is Regulation Number 4 of 7 May 1942,
-issued by Sauckel as the Plenipotentiary General for the mobilization of
-labor, concerning recruitment, care, lodging, feeding, and treatment of
-foreign workers of both sexes. By this decree Defendant Sauckel
-expressly directed that the assembly and operation of rail transports
-and the supplying of food therefor was the responsibility of his agents
-until the transports arrived in Germany. By the same regulation
-Defendant Sauckel directed that within Germany the care of foreign
-industrial workers was to be carried out by the German Labor Front and
-that the care of foreign agricultural workers was to be carried out by
-the Reich Food Administration. By the terms of the regulation, Sauckel
-reserved for himself ultimate responsibility for all aspects of care,
-treatment, lodging, and feeding of foreign workers while in transit to
-and within Germany.
-
-I refer particularly to the English text of this Document 3044-PS,
-Exhibit USA-206; and the part of it that I make reference to is at the
-bottom of Page 1 in the English text, and it appears at Page 518 of the
-volume in the German text. Quoting directly from the English text:
-
- “The care of foreign labor will be carried out:
-
-
-
- “(a) Up to the Reich border by my commissioners or, in the
- occupied areas, by competent military or civil labor allocation
- agencies; care of the workers will be carried out in
- co-operation with the respective, competent foreign
- organization;
-
-
-
- “(b) Within the area of the Reich (1) by the German Labor Front
- in the cases of non-agricultural workers, (2) by the Reich Food
- Administration in the case of agricultural workers.
-
-
-
- “The German Labor Front and the German Food Administration are
- bound by my directives in the carrying out of their tasks of
- caring for the workers.
-
-
-
- “The administrative agencies for the Allocation of Labor are to
- give far-reaching support to the German Labor Front and the
- German Food Administration in the fulfillment of their assigned
- tasks.
-
-
-
- “My competence for the execution of the care for foreign labor
- is not prejudiced by the assignment of these tasks to the German
- Labor Front and the Reich Food Administration.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, don’t you think that that sort of passage is
-the sort of passage which might be summarized and not read, because all
-that it is really stating is that Sauckel, his department and
-commissioners, were responsible and that is what he is saying.
-
-MR. DODD: Yes, indeed, Your Honor, we spelled it out, thinking that
-perhaps under the rule of getting it into the record it must be read
-fully. I quite agree.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: A summary will be quite sufficient, I think.
-
-MR. DODD: In the same document, I should like to make reference to the
-data on Page 3, Paragraph III, of the English text, which indicate,
-under the title of “Composition and Operation of the Transports” that
-this function is the obligation of the representatives of the Defendant
-Sauckel; and in Paragraph “c,” on Page 5 of the English text, under the
-title of “Supply for the Transport,” after setting out some
-responsibility for the Office of the German Workers Front, the Defendant
-Sauckel states that for the rest his offices effect the supply for the
-transport.
-
-The Defendant Sauckel had an agreement with the head of the German Labor
-Front, Dr. Robert Ley, and in this agreement the Defendant Sauckel
-emphasized his ultimate responsibility by creating a central
-inspectorate charged with examining the working and living conditions of
-foreign workers. We refer to Document 1913-PS, Exhibit USA-227. This
-agreement between the Defendant Sauckel and the then Chief of the German
-Labor Front is published in the 1943 edition of the
-_Reichsarbeitsblatt_, Part I, at Page 588. It is a rather lengthy
-agreement; and I shall not read it all or any great part of it except
-such part as will indicate the basic agreements between the Defendant
-Sauckel and Ley with respect to the foreign workers and their living
-conditions and working conditions.
-
-On the first page of the English text:
-
- “The Reichsleiter of the German Labor Front, Dr. Ley, in
- collaboration with the Plenipotentiary General for the
- Allocation of Labor, Gauleiter Sauckel, will establish a
- ‘Central Inspection’ for the continuous supervision of all
- measures concerning the care of the foreign workers mentioned
- under 1. This will have the designation: Central Inspection for
- Care of Foreign Workers.”
-
-Paragraph 4 marked with the Roman numeral IV, in the same text, states:
-
- “The offices for the administration of the Allocation of Labor
- will be constantly informed by the ‘Central Inspection for the
- Care of Foreign Workers’ of its observations, in particular,
- immediately in each case in which action of state organizations
- seems to be necessary.”
-
-I should also like to call the attention of the Tribunal to this
-paragraph, which is quoted on the same page. It is the fourth paragraph
-down after the small number 2 and it begins with the words:
-
- “The authority of the Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation
- of Labor to empower the members of his staff and the presidents
- of the state employment offices to get direct information on the
- conditions regarding the employment of foreigners in the
- factories and camps will remain untouched.”
-
-We have already offered to the Court proof that the Defendant Sauckel
-was responsible for compelling citizens of the occupied countries,
-against their will, to manufacture arms and munitions and to construct
-military fortifications for use in war operations against their own
-country and its allies. He was, moreover, responsible for having
-compelled prisoners of war to produce arms and munitions for use against
-their own countries and their actively resisting allies.
-
-The decree appointing Sauckel indicates that he was appointed
-Plenipotentiary General for manpower for the express purpose, among
-others, of integrating prisoners of war into the German war industry;
-and in a series of reports to Hitler, Sauckel described how successful
-he had been in carrying out that program. One such report states that in
-a single year the Defendant Sauckel had incorporated 1,622,829 prisoners
-of war into the German economy.
-
-I refer to Document Number 407(V)-PS, which is Exhibit USA-228. It is a
-letter from the Defendant Sauckel to Hitler on the 14th of April 1943.
-Although the figures in the document have been contained in another
-document, this is the first introduction of this particular document.
-Quoting from Paragraphs 1 and 2 of the English text, it begins:
-
- “My Führer:
-
-
-
- “. . . after having been active as Plenipotentiary for the
- Allocation of Labor for one year, I have the honor to report to
- you that 3,638,056 new foreign workers have been added to the
- German war economy between April 1st of the last year and March
- 31st of this year.”
-
-Passing on a little bit, with particular reference to the prisoners of
-war, we find this statement:
-
- “Besides the foreign civilian workers another 1,622,829
- prisoners of war are employed in the German economy.”
-
-A later report states that 846,511 additional foreign laborers and
-prisoners of war were incorporated into the German war industry; and
-quoting from Document 407(IX)-PS, Exhibit USA-229, which is also a
-letter from the Defendant Sauckel to Hitler, I read in part from Page 1,
-Paragraphs 1 and 2:
-
- “My Führer:
-
-
-
- “I beg to be permitted to report to you on the situation of the
- Arbeitseinsatz for the first 5 months of 1943. For the first
- time the following number of new foreign laborers and prisoners
- of war were employed in the German war industry . . . Total:
- 846,511.”
-
-This use of prisoners of war in the manufacture of armaments allocated
-by the Defendant Sauckel was confirmed by the Defendant Speer, who
-stated that 40 percent of all prisoners of war were employed in the
-production of weapons and munitions and in subsidiary industries. I wish
-to refer briefly to Paragraphs 6, 7, and 8 on Page 15 of the English
-text of an interrogation of the Defendant Speer, on the 18th of October
-1945, which was offered and referred to yesterday and has the Exhibit
-Number USA-220. Quoting from Paragraphs 6, 7 and 8 on Page 15—Paragraph
-1 on Page 19 of the German text—there are two questions which will
-establish the background for this answer:
-
- “Q: Let me understand; when you wanted labor from prisoners of
- war did you requisition prisoners of war separately, or did you
- ask for a total number of workers?
-
-
-
- “A: Only Schmelter can answer that directly. As far as the
- commitment of prisoners of war for labor goes, it was effected
- through employment officers of the Stalags. I tried several
- times to increase the total number of prisoners of war that were
- occupied in production, at the expense of the other demands.
-
-
-
- “Q: Will you explain that a little more?
-
-
-
- “A: In the last phase of production, that is, in the year 1944
- when everything collapsed, I had 40 percent of all prisoners of
- war employed in production. I wanted to have this percentage
- increased.
-
-
-
- “Q: And when you say ‘employed in production’, you mean in these
- subsidiary industries that you have discussed and also in the
- production of weapons and munitions, is that right?
-
-
-
- “A: Yes. That was the total extent of my task.”
-
-THE TRIBUNAL (Mr. Biddle): What do you mean by “subsidiary industries,”
-Mr. Dodd? Is that war industries?
-
-MR. DODD: Yes, Sir; war industries, as we understand it. It was referred
-to many times by these defendants as the component parts of the plans.
-
-I also would like to call the attention of the Tribunal again to the
-“Minutes of the 36th Meeting of the Central. Planning Board,” Document
-R-124, from which we read a number of excerpts yesterday, and remind the
-Tribunal that in the report of the minutes of that meeting the Defendant
-Speer stated that, “Ninety thousand Russian prisoners of war employed in
-the whole of the armament industry are for the greater part skilled
-men.”
-
-We should like, at this point, to turn to the special responsibility of
-the Defendant Speer and to discuss the evidence of the various crimes
-committed by Defendant Speer in planning and participating in the vast
-program of forcible deportation of the citizens of occupied countries.
-He was the Reich Minister of Armaments and Munitions and Chief of the
-Organization Todt, both of which positions he acquired on the 15th of
-February 1942; and by virtue of his later acquisition of control over
-the armament offices of the Army, Navy, and Air Force, and the
-production offices of the Ministry of Economics, the Defendant Speer was
-responsible for the entire war production of the Reich as well as for
-the construction of fortifications and installations for the Wehrmacht.
-Proof of the positions held by the Defendant Speer is supplied in his
-own statement as contained in Document 2980-PS, which has already been
-offered to the Tribunal and which bears Exhibit Number USA-18.
-
-The industries under the Defendant Speer’s control were really the most
-important users of manpower in Germany; and thus, according to the
-Defendant Sauckel, Speer’s labor requirements received unconditional
-priority over all other demands for labor. We refer to the transcript of
-the interrogation of the Defendant Sauckel on the 22d of September 1945.
-It is Exhibit USA-230. It is next to the last document in the document
-book. I wish to refer to Page 1 of that document, Paragraph 4. It is a
-brief reference, the last answer on the page. The question was asked of
-the Defendant Sauckel:
-
- “Q: Except for Speer, they would give the requirements in
- general for the whole field; but in Speer’s work you would get
- them allocated by industry, and so on—is that right?
-
-
-
- “A: The others only got whatever was left. Because Speer told me
- once in the presence of the Führer that I am here to work for
- Speer and that, mainly, I am his man.”
-
-The Defendant Speer has admitted under oath that he participated in the
-discussions during which the decision to use foreign forced labor was
-made. He has also said that he concurred in the decision and that it was
-the basis for the program of bringing foreign workers into Germany by
-compulsion. I make reference to the interrogation of the Defendant Speer
-of the 18th of October 1945. It bears the Exhibit Number USA-220. We
-have already read from it; and I particularly refer to the bottom of
-Page 12 and the top of Page 13 of the English text:
-
- “Q: But is it clear to you, Mr. Speer, that in 1942 when the
- decisions were being made concerning the use of forced foreign
- labor, that you participated in the discussions yourself?
-
-
-
- “A: Yes.
-
-
-
- “Q: So that I take it that the execution of the program of
- bringing foreign workers into Germany by compulsion under
- Sauckel was based on earlier decisions that had been made with
- your agreement?
-
-
-
- “A: Yes, but I must point out that only a very small part of the
- manpower that Sauckel brought into Germany was made available to
- me; a far larger part of it was allocated to other departments
- that demanded them.”
-
-This admission is confirmed by the minutes of Speer’s conferences with
-Hitler on 10, 11, and 12 August 1942 in Document R-124, which has been
-offered here and from which excerpts have been read. Page 34 of that
-document, Paragraph 1 of the English text, has already been quoted, and
-those excerpts have been read before the Tribunal yesterday. The
-Tribunal will recall that the Defendant Speer related the outcome of his
-negotiations concerning the forcible recruitment of 1 million Russian
-laborers for the German armaments industry; and this use of force was
-again discussed by Hitler and Defendant Speer on the 4th of January 1943
-as shown by the excerpts read from the Document 556(13)-PS, where it was
-decided that stronger measures were to be used to accelerate the
-conscription of French civilian workers.
-
-We say the Defendant Speer demanded foreign workers for the industries
-under his control and used those workers with the knowledge that they
-had been deported by force and were being compelled to work. Speer has
-stated under oath in his interrogation of 18 October 1945, Page 5,
-Paragraph 9, of the English text, quoting it directly:
-
- “I do not wish to give the impression that I want to deny the
- fact that I demanded manpower and foreign labor from Sauckel
- very energetically.”
-
-He has admitted that he knew he was obtaining foreign labor, a large
-part of which was forced labor; and referring again to that same
-interrogation of the 18th of October 1945, and to Pages 8 and 9 of the
-English text and Page 10 of the German text:
-
- “Q: So that during the period when you were asking for labor, it
- seems clear, does it not, that you knew you were obtaining
- foreign labor as well as domestic labor in response to your
- requests and that a large part of the foreign labor was forced
- labor?
-
-
-
- “A: Yes.
-
-
-
- “Q: So that, simply by way of illustration, suppose that on
- January 1, 1944 you require 50,000 workers for a given purpose;
- would you put in a requisition for 50,000 workers, knowing that
- in that 50,000 there would be forced foreign workers?
-
-
-
- “A: Yes.”
-
-The Defendant Speer has also stated under oath that he knew at least as
-early as September of 1942 that workers from the Ukraine were being
-forcibly deported for labor into Germany. Likewise he knew that the
-great majority of the workers of the western occupied countries were
-slave laborers forced against their will to come to Germany; and again
-referring to his interrogation of this 18th day of October 1945, and
-beginning with the fourth Paragraph from the bottom of Page 5 of the
-English text, Paragraph 10 on Page 6 of the German text, we find this
-series of questions and answers:
-
- “Q: When did you first find out then that some of the manpower
- from the Ukraine was not coming voluntarily?
-
-
-
- “A: It is rather difficult to answer this here, that is, to name
- a certain date to you. However, it is certain that I knew that
- at some particular point of time the manpower from the Ukraine
- did not come voluntarily.
-
-
-
- “Q: And does that apply also to the manpower from other occupied
- countries; that is, did there come a time when you knew that
- they were not coming voluntarily?
-
-
-
- “A: Yes.
-
-
-
- “Q: When, in general, would you say that time was without
- placing a particular month of the year?
-
-
-
- “A: As far as the Ukraine situation goes, I believe that they
- did not come voluntarily any more after a few months, because
- immense mistakes were made in their treatment by us. I should
- say offhand that this time was either in July, August, or
- September of 1942.”
-
-Turning to Paragraph 11 on Page 6 of the English text of this same
-interrogation and Page 7 and Paragraph 8 of the German text, we find
-this series of questions and answers—quoting:
-
- “Q: But many workers actually did come from the west to Germany,
- did they not?
-
-
-
- “A: Yes.
-
-
-
- “Q: That means then, that the great majority of the workers that
- came from the western countries—the western occupied
- countries—came against their will to Germany?
-
-
-
- “A: Yes.”
-
-These admissions are borne out, of course, by other evidence, for as
-Document R-124 shows and as we have shown by the readings from it, in
-all countries conscription for work in Germany could be carried out only
-with the active assistance of the police; and the prevailing methods of
-recruitment had provoked such violence that many German recruiting
-agents had been killed.
-
-And again, at a meeting with Hitler to discuss the manpower requirements
-for 1944, which is reported in Document 1292-PS, Speer was informed by
-the Defendant Sauckel that the requirements—including Speer’s
-requirement for 1,300,000 additional laborers—could be met only if
-German enforcement agents were furnished to carry out the enslavement
-program in the occupied countries.
-
-Now we say that notwithstanding this knowledge that these workers were
-conscripted and deported to Germany against their will, Speer
-nevertheless continued to formulate requirements for the foreign workers
-and requested their allocation to these industries which were subject to
-his control. This is borne out by the minutes of the Central Planning
-Board as contained in Document R-124, and particularly Page 13,
-Paragraph 4 of the English text; and that is Page 6 and Paragraph 4 of
-the German text. Speer speaking:
-
- “Now the labor problem in Germany. I believe it is still
- possible to transfer some from the western territories. Only
- recently the Führer stated he wishes to dissolve these foreign
- volunteers as he had the impression that the army groups were
- carting around with them a lot of ballast. Therefore, if we
- cannot settle this matter ourselves, we shall have to call a
- meeting with the Führer to clear up the whole coal situation.
- Keitel and Zeitzler will be invited to attend in order to
- determine the number of Russians from the rear army territories
- who must be sent to us. However, I see another possibility: We
- might organize another drive to pick out workers for the mines
- from the Russian prisoners of war in the Reich. But this
- possibility is none too promising.”
-
-At another meeting of the Central Planning Board the Defendant Speer
-rejected a suggestion that labor for industries under his control be
-furnished from German sources instead of from foreign sources. And again
-in this Document R-124, on Page 16, Paragraphs 3, 4, and 5 of the
-English text, and Page 12, Paragraphs 6 and 7 of the German text—I
-quote the Defendant Speer:
-
- “We do it that way: Kehrl collects the demands for labor
- necessary to complete the coal-and-iron plan and communicates
- the numbers to Sauckel. Probably there will be a conference at
- the Reich Marshal’s in the next week, and an answer from Sauckel
- should have arrived by then. The question of recruitment for the
- armaments industry will be solved together with Weger.”
-
-Kehrl speaking:
-
- “I wish to urge that the allotments to the mines should not be
- made dependent on the possibility of recruitment of men abroad.
- We were completely frustrated these last 3 months because this
- principle had been applied. We ended December with a deficit of
- 25,000 and we never get replacements. The number must be made up
- by men from Germany.
-
-
-
- “Speer: ‘No, nothing doing.’”
-
-We say also that, the Defendant Speer is guilty of advocating terror and
-brutality as a means of maximizing, production by slave laborers. And
-again I refer to this Document R-124. At Page 42 there is a discussion
-concerning the supply and exploitation of labor. That excerpt has been
-read to the Tribunal before, and I simply refer to it in passing. It is
-the excerpt wherein Speer said it would be a good thing; the effect of
-it was that nothing could be said against the SS and the police taking a
-hand and making these men work and produce more.
-
-We say he is also guilty of compelling allied nationals and prisoners of
-war to engage in the production of armaments and munitions and in direct
-military operations against their own country.
-
-We say that as Chief of the Organization Todt he is accountable for its
-policies, which were in direct conflict with the laws of war; for the
-Organization Todt, in violation of the laws of war, impressed allied
-nationals into its service.
-
-Document L-191, Exhibit USA-231, is an International Labor Office study
-of the exploitation of foreign labor by Germany. We have only one copy
-of this document, this International Labor Office study, printed at
-Montreal, Canada, in 1945. We ask that the Tribunal take judicial notice
-of it as an official publication of the International Labor Office.
-
-I might say to the Tribunal, with some apology, that this arrived at a
-time when we were not able even to have the excerpt mimeographed and
-printed to place in your document book, so this is the one document
-which is missing from the document book which is in your hands. However,
-I should like to quote from Page 73, Paragraph 2, of this study by the
-International Labor Office. It is not long; it is very brief. I am
-quoting directly. It says:
-
- “The methods used for the recruitment of foreign workers who
- were destined for employment in the Organization did not greatly
- differ from the methods used for the recruitment of foreigners
- for deportation to Germany.”
-
-“The Organization,” by the way, is the Organization Todt. Going on with
-the quotation:
-
- “The main difference was that, since the principal activities of
- the Organization lay outside the frontiers of Germany,
- foreigners were not transported to Germany but had either to
- work in their own country or in some other occupied country.
-
-
-
- “In the recruitment drives for foreign workers for the
- Organization, methods of compulsion as well as methods of
- persuasion were used, the latter usually with very little
- result.”
-
-Moreover, conscripted allied nationals were compelled by this same
-Organization Todt actually to engage in operations of war against their
-country.
-
-Document 407(VIII)-PS discloses that the foreign workers who were
-impressed into the Organization Todt through the efforts of the
-Defendant Sauckel did participate in the building of the Atlantic Wall
-fortifications.
-
-As chief of German war production, this Defendant Speer sponsored and
-approved the use of these prisoners of war in the production of
-armaments and munitions. This has been made plain by the evidence
-already discussed.
-
-To sum it up briefly finally we say that it shows first that after Speer
-assumed the responsibility for the armament production, his concern, in
-his discussions with his co-conspirators, was to secure a larger
-allocation of prisoners of war for his armament factories. That has been
-shown by the quotations from the excerpts of Document R-124, the minutes
-of the meeting of the Central Planning Board; and in this same meeting
-the Tribunal will recall that Speer complained because only 30 percent
-of the Russian prisoners of war were engaged in the armaments industry.
-
-We referred to a speech of Speer, Document 1435-PS—we quoted from
-it—in which he said that 10,000 prisoners of war were put at the
-disposal of the armaments industry upon his orders.
-
-And finally, Speer advocated the returning of escaped prisoners of war
-to factories as convicts. That is shown again by Document R-124, Page
-13, Paragraph 5, of the English text, where the Defendant Speer says
-that he has come to an arrangement . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, don’t you think that we have really got this
-sufficiently now?
-
-MR. DODD: Yes, Sir; I just . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: We have Speer’s own admission and any number of documents
-which prove the way in which these prisoners of war and other laborers
-were brought into Germany.
-
-MR. DODD: Well I just wanted to refer briefly to that passage in that
-document, R-124, as showing that this defendant advocated having escaped
-prisoners of war returned to the munitions factories.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: What page?
-
-MR. DODD: Thirteen. I don’t want to labor this responsibility of the
-Defendant Speer. I was anxious—or perhaps I should say we are all
-overanxious—to have the documents in the record, and before the
-Tribunal.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Which is the passage you want to refer to on Page 13?
-
-MR. DODD: I just referred in passing to the statement which begins with
-the words, “We have to come to an arrangement with the Reichsführer SS.”
-And in the next to the last sentence it says: “The men should be put
-into the factories as convicts.”
-
-Finally, with reference to the Defendant Speer, I should like to say to
-the Tribunal that he visited the concentration camp at Mauthausen and he
-also visited factories such as those conducted by the Krupp industries,
-where concentration camp labor was exploited under degrading conditions.
-Despite this first-hand knowledge of these conditions, both in
-Mauthausen and in the places where these forced laborers were at work in
-factories, he continued to direct the use of this type of labor in
-factories under his own jurisdiction.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: How do you intend to prove it as to these concentration
-camps?
-
-MR. DODD: I was going to refer the Tribunal to Page 9 of the
-interrogation of the 18th of October 1945; and I refer to Page 11,
-Paragraph 5, of the German text and Page 9, beginning with Paragraph 9,
-of the English text:
-
- “Q: But, in general, the use of concentration camp labor was
- known to you and approved by you as a source of labor?
-
-
-
- “A: Yes.
-
-
-
- “Q: And you knew also, I take it, that among the inmates of the
- concentration camps there were both Germans and foreigners?
-
-
-
- “A: I didn’t think about it at that time.
-
-
-
- “Q: As a matter of fact, you visited the Austrian concentration
- camp personally, did you not?
-
-
-
- “A: I did not—well, I was in Mauthausen once, but at that time
- I was not told just to what categories the inmates of the
- concentration camps belonged.
-
-
-
- “Q: But in general everybody knew, did they not, that foreigners
- who were taken away by the Gestapo or arrested by the Gestapo,
- as well as Germans, found their way into the concentration
- camps?
-
-
-
- “A: Of course, yes. I didn’t mean to imply anything like that.”
-
-And on Page 15 of this same interrogation, beginning with the 13th
-Paragraph of the English text and Page 20 in the German text, we find
-this question:
-
- “Q: Did you ever discuss, by the way, the requirements of Krupp
- for foreign labor?
-
-
-
- “A: It is certain that it was reported to me what lack Krupp had
- in foreign workers.
-
-
-
- “Q: Did you ever, discuss it with any of the members of the
- Krupp firm?
-
-
-
- “A: I cannot say that exactly; but during the time of my
- activities I visited the Krupp factory more than once and it is
- certain that this was discussed, that is, the lack of manpower.”
-
-Before closing I should like to take 2 minutes of the time of the
-Tribunal to refer to what we consider to be some of the applicable laws
-of the case for the assistance of the Tribunal in considering these
-documents which we have offered.
-
-We refer, of course, first of all, to Sections 6 (b) and 6 (c) of the
-Charter of this Tribunal. We also say that the acts of the conspirators
-constituted a flagrant violation of Articles 46 and 52 of the
-Regulations annexed to the Hague Convention Number IV of 1907.
-
-Article 46 seeks to safeguard the family honor, the rights and the lives
-of persons in areas under belligerent occupation.
-
-Article 52 provides in part that:
-
- “Requisitions in kind and services shall not be demanded from
- municipalities or inhabitants except for the needs of the army
- of occupation. They shall be in proportion to the resources of
- the country.”
-
-We say that these conspirators violated this article because the labor
-which they conscripted was not used to satisfy the needs of the army of
-occupation, but on the contrary, was forcibly removed from the occupied
-areas and exploited in the interest of the German war effort.
-
-Finally, we say that these conspirators—and particularly the Defendants
-Sauckel and Speer—by virtue of their planning, of their execution, and
-of their approval of this program, which we have been describing
-yesterday and today, the enslavement and the misuse of the forced labor
-of prisoners of war—that for this they bear a special responsibility
-for their Crimes against Humanity and their War Crimes.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Are you finishing, Mr. Dodd?
-
-MR. DODD: Yes, I have concluded.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I should like to ask you why you have not read Document
-3057-PS, which is Sauckel’s statement.
-
-MR. DODD: Yes. We had intended to offer that document. Counsel for the
-Defendant Sauckel informed me a day or two ago that his client
-maintained that he had been coerced into making the statement. Because
-we had not ample time to ascertain the facts of the matter, we preferred
-to withhold it, rather than to offer it to the Tribunal under any
-question of doubt.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: He objects to it, and therefore you have not put it in?
-
-MR. DODD: No, we did not offer it while there was any question about it.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Very well.
-
-MR. DODD: Might I suggest to the Tribunal that a recess be taken at this
-time? I am sorry to have to say that I am due to be before the Tribunal
-for a little while—that is, I am sorry for the Tribunal—with the
-matters on the concentration camps.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: You mean a recess now?
-
-MR. DODD: If Your Honor pleases.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Certainly, yes; 10 minutes.
-
- [_A recess was taken._]
-
-MR. DODD: May it please the Tribunal, we propose to offer additional
-evidence at this time concerning the use of Nazi concentration camps
-against the people of Germany and allied nationals. We propose to
-examine the purposes and the role of the concentration camp in the
-larger Nazi scheme of things. We propose to show that the concentration
-camp was one of the fundamental institutions of the Nazi regime, that it
-was a pillar of the system of terror by which the Nazis consolidated
-their power over Germany and imposed their ideology upon the German
-people, that it was really a primary weapon in the battle against the
-Jews, against the Christian church, against labor, against those who
-wanted peace, against opposition or non-conformity of any kind. We say
-it involved the systematic use of terror to achieve the cohesion within
-Germany which was necessary for the execution of the conspirators’ plans
-for aggression.
-
-We propose to show that a concentration camp was one of the principal
-instruments used by the conspirators for the commission, on an enormous
-scale, of Crimes against Humanity and War Crimes; that it was the final
-link in a chain of terror and repression which involved the SS and the
-Gestapo and which resulted in the apprehension of victims and their
-confinement without trial, often without charges, generally with no
-indication of the length of their detention.
-
-My colleagues will present full evidence concerning the criminal role of
-the SS and the Gestapo in this phase of Nazi terrorism, the
-concentration camp; but at this point I wish simply to point out that
-the SS, through its espionage system, tracked down the victims, that the
-criminal police and the Gestapo seized them and brought them to the
-camps, and that the concentration camps were administered by the SS.
-
-This Tribunal, we feel, is already aware of the sickening evidence of
-the brutality of the concentration camp from the showing of the moving
-picture. More than that, individual prosecutions are going on, going
-forward before other courts which will record these outrages in detail.
-Therefore, we do not propose to present a catalogue of individual
-brutalities but, rather, to submit evidence showing the fundamental
-purposes for which, the camps were used, the techniques of terror which
-were employed, the large number of victims, and the death and the
-anguish which they caused.
-
-The evidence relating to concentration camps has been assembled in a
-document book bearing the letter “S.” I might say that the documents in
-this book have been arranged in the order of presentation, rather than,
-as we have been doing, numerically. In this book we have put them in as
-they occur in the presentation. One document in this book, 2309-PS, is
-cited several times, so we have marked it with a tab with a view to
-facilitating reference back to it. It will be referred to more than
-once.
-
-The Nazis realized early that without the most drastic repression of
-actual and potential opposition they could not consolidate their power
-over the German people. We have seen that, immediately after Hitler
-became Chancellor, the conspirators promptly destroyed civil liberties
-by issuing the Presidential Emergency Decree of February 28, 1933. It is
-Document 1390-PS of the document book; and it sets forth that decree
-which has already been introduced in evidence before the Tribunal and is
-included in USA Exhibit B. It was this decree, which was the basis for
-the so-called “Schutzhaft,” that is, protective custody—the terrible
-power to imprison people without judicial proceedings. This is made
-clear by Document Number 2499-PS, which is a typical order for
-protective custody. We offer it for that purpose, as a typical order for
-protective custody which has come into the possession of the
-Prosecution. It bears Exhibit Number USA-232. I should like to quote
-from the body of that order:
-
- “Order of Protective Custody.
-
-
-
- “Based on Article 1 of the Decree of the Reich President for the
- Protection of People and State of 28 February 1933
- (_Reichsgesetzblatt_ I, Page 83), you are taken into protective
- custody in the interest of public security and order.
-
-
-
- “Reason: Suspicion of activities inimical toward the State.”
-
-The Defendant Göring in a book entitled _Aufbau einer Nation_, published
-in 1934, sought to give the impression, it appears, that the camps were
-originally directed at those whom the Nazis considered Communists and
-Social Democrats. We refer to Document 2324-PS, Exhibit USA-233. This
-document is an excerpt from Page 89 of the German book. We refer to the
-third and fourth paragraphs of the document, which I read as follows:
-
- “We had to deal ruthlessly with these enemies of the State. It
- must not be forgotten that at the moment of our seizure of
- power, over 6 million people officially voted for communism and
- about 8 million for Marxism in the Reichstag elections in March.
-
-
-
- “Thus the concentration camps were created to which we had to
- send first thousands of functionaries of the Communist and
- Social Democratic Parties.”
-
-In practical operation the power to order confinement in these camps was
-almost without limit. The Defendant Frick, in an order which he issued
-on the 25th day of January 1938 as Minister of the Interior, made this
-quite clear. An extract from this order is set forth in Document
-1723-PS, to which we make reference. It bears Exhibit Number USA-206. I
-wish to read Article 1, beginning at the bottom of Page 5 of the English
-translation of this order:
-
- “Protective custody can be decreed as a coercive measure of the
- Secret State Police to counter all hostile efforts of persons
- who endanger the existence and security of the people and the
- State through their attitude.”
-
-I wish also to read into the record the first two paragraphs of that
-order, which are found at the top of Page 1 of the English translation:
-
- “In a summary of all the previously issued decrees on the
- co-operation between the Party and the Gestapo I refer to the
- following and ordain:
-
-
-
- “1. To the Gestapo has been entrusted the mission by the Führer
- to watch over and to eliminate all enemies of the Party and the
- National State, as well as all disintegrating forces of all
- kinds directed against both. The successful solution of this
- mission forms one of the most essential prerequisites for the
- unhampered and frictionless work of the Party. The Gestapo, in
- its extremely difficult task, is to be granted support and
- assistance in every possible way by the NSDAP.”
-
-The conspirators then were directing their apparatus of terror against
-the “enemies of the State,” against “disintegrating forces,” against
-those people who endangered the State “through their attitude.” Whom did
-they consider as belonging in these broad categories? Well, first, there
-were the men in Germany who wanted peace. We refer to Document L-83
-(Exhibit USA-234).
-
-THE PRESIDENT: What was the date of that document that you have been
-referring to, Number 1723-PS?
-
-MR. DODD: January 25, 1938. It has already been introduced and is
-included in USA Exhibit B. This document consists of an affidavit of
-Gerhart H. Seger, and I wish only to read from Page 1, Paragraph 2 of
-that affidavit:
-
- “2. During the period after World War I, until I was committed
- to the Leipzig jail and Oranienburg Concentration Camp, in the
- spring of 1933 following the Nazi accession to power in January
- of that year, my business and political affiliations exposed me
- to the full impact of the Nazi theories and practice of violent
- regimentation and terroristic tactics. My conflict with the
- Nazis by virtue of my identification with the peace movement and
- as duly elected member of the Reichstag representing a political
- faith (Social Democratic Party) hostile to National Socialism,
- clearly demonstrated that even in the period prior to 1933 the
- Nazis considered crimes and terrorism a necessary and desirable
- weapon in overcoming democratic opposition.”
-
-Passing to Page 5 of the same document and the paragraph marked “(e)”:
-
- “That the Nazis had already conceived the device of the
- concentration camp as a means of suppressing and regimenting
- opposition elements was forcefully brought to my attention
- during the course of a conversation which I had with Dr. Wilhelm
- Frick in December 1932. Frick at that time was chairman of the
- Foreign Affairs Committee of the Reichstag of which I was a
- member. When I gave an emphatic answer to Frick concerning the
- particular matter discussed, he replied, ‘Don’t worry, when we
- are in power we shall put all of you guys into concentration
- camps.’ When the Nazis came into power, Frick was appointed
- Reich Minister of Interior and promptly carried out his threat
- in collaboration with Göring, as Chief of the Prussian State
- Police, and Himmler.”
-
-This paragraph shows that even before the Nazis had seized power in
-Germany they had conceived the plan to repress any potential oppositions
-by terror, and Frick’s statement to Seger is completely consistent with
-an earlier statement which he made on the 18th of October 1929. We refer
-to Document Number 2513-PS (Exhibit USA-235), which has also been
-received in evidence and has been included in USA Exhibit B. We refer to
-the first page of the English translation, Page 48 of the German text.
-On Page 1 the quotation begins:
-
- “This fateful struggle will first be taken up with the ballot;
- but this cannot continue indefinitely, for history has taught us
- that in a battle blood must be shed and iron broken. The ballot
- is the beginning of the fateful struggle. We are determined to
- promulgate by force that which we preach. Just as Mussolini
- exterminated the Marxists in Italy, so must we also succeed in
- accomplishing the same through dictatorship and terror.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: This is the defendant, is it?
-
-MR. DODD: Yes, the Defendant Frick.
-
-There are many additional cases of the use of the concentration camp
-against the men who wanted peace. There was, for example, a group called
-the Bibelforscher, that is, Bible research workers, most of whom were
-known as Jehovah’s Witnesses. They were pacifists, and so the
-conspirators provided not only for their prosecution in the regular
-courts but also for their confinement in concentration camps after they
-had served the judicial sentences; and we refer to Document Number D-84,
-Exhibit USA-236.
-
-This document is dated the 5th day of August 1937; and it is an order by
-the Secret State Police at Berlin, and I refer particularly to the first
-and last paragraphs of this order, as follows:
-
- “The Reich Minister of Justice had informed me that he does not
- share the opinion voiced by subordinate departments on various
- occasions according to which the arrest of the Bibelforscher
- after they have served a sentence is supposed to jeopardize the
- authority of the law courts. He is fully aware of the necessity
- for measures by the State Police after the sentence has been
- served. He asks, however, not to bring the Bibelforscher into
- protective custody under circumstances detrimental to the
- respect of the law courts.”
-
-And then, the Paragraph numbered “(2)”:
-
- “If information regarding the impending release of a
- Bibelforscher from arrest is received from the authorities
- carrying out the sentence, my decision regarding the ordering of
- measures by the State Police will be asked for without delay in
- accordance with my circular decree dated 22. 4. 37, so that
- transfer to a concentration camp can take place immediately
- after the sentence has been served. Should a transfer into
- concentration camp immediately after the serving of the sentence
- not be possible, Bibelforscher will be detained in police
- prisons.”
-
-The labor unions, of which I think it is safe to say the majority are
-traditionally opposed to wars of aggression, also felt the full force of
-Nazi terror. A member of the American staff, Major Wallis, has already
-submitted evidence before this Tribunal concerning the conspirators’
-campaign against the trade unions. But the concentration camp was an
-important weapon in this campaign; and the Tribunal will recall that in
-Document Number 2324-PS, to which I made reference this morning, the
-Defendant Göring made it plain that members of the Social Democratic
-Party were to be confined in concentration camps. Now labor leaders were
-very largely members of that party, and they soon learned the horrors of
-protective custody. We refer to Document Number 2330-PS (Exhibit
-USA-237), which has already been received as part of USA Exhibit G,
-which consists of an order that one Joseph Simon should be placed in
-protective custody. We refer to the middle of the first page of the
-English translation of that order, beginning with the material under the
-word “reasons.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I think you should read the sentence before that—the two
-lines before it. The words are, “The arrestee has no right to appeal
-against the decree of protective custody.”
-
-MR. DODD: “The arrestee has no right to appeal against the application
-of protective custody.” Then comes a title: “Reasons”:
-
- “Simon was for many years a member of the Socialist Party and
- temporarily a member of the Union Socialiste Populaire. From
- 1907 to 1918 he was Landtag deputy of the Socialist Party; from
- 1908 to 1930 Social Democratic City Counsellor (Stadtrat) in
- Nuremberg. In view of the decisive role which Simon played in
- the international trade unions and in regard to his connection
- with international Marxist leaders and central agencies, which
- he continued after the national recovery, he was placed under
- protective custody on the 3rd day of May 1933 and was kept,
- until 25 January 1934, in the Dachau Concentration Camp. Simon
- is under the grave suspicion that even after this date he played
- an active part in the illegal continuation of the Socialist
- Party. He took part in meetings which aimed at the illegal
- continuation of the Socialist Party and propagation of illegal
- Marxist printed matter in Germany. Through this radical
- attitude, which is hostile to the State, Simon directly
- endangers public security and order.”
-
-We do not wish to burden these proceedings with a multiplication of such
-instances, but we refer the Tribunal to documents which have already
-been offered in connection with the presentation of the evidence
-concerning the destruction of the trade unions. In particular, we wish
-to refer to Document Number 2334-PS and Document Number 2928-PS,
-(Exhibits USA-238 and 239) both of which are included within USA Exhibit
-G.
-
-Thousands of Jews, as the world so well knows, were, of course, confined
-in these concentration camps. The evidence on this point will be
-developed in a later presentation by another member of the prosecuting
-staff of the United States. But among the wealth of evidence available
-on this point showing the confinement of Germans only because they were
-Jews, we wish to offer a document, Number 3051-PS, which bears Exhibit
-Number USA-240. This is a copy of a teletype from SS Gruppenführer
-Heydrich, and it is dated the 10th of November 1938. It was sent to all
-headquarters of the State Police and all districts and subdistricts of
-the SD. We refer to Paragraph 5 of this teletype. Paragraph 5 is found
-on Page 3 of the English translation. It begins at the bottom of Page 2
-and runs over to Page 3. Quoting from Paragraph 5:
-
- “As soon as the course of events of this night allows the use of
- the officials employed for this purpose, as many Jews,
- especially rich ones, as can be accommodated in the existing
- prisons are to be arrested in all districts. For the time being
- only healthy men, not too old, are to be arrested. Upon their
- arrest, the appropriate concentration camps should be contacted
- immediately, in order to confine them in these camps as fast as
- possible.
-
-
-
- “Special care should be taken that the Jews arrested in
- accordance with these instructions are not ill-treated.”
-
-Himmler in 1943 indicated that use of the concentration camp against the
-Jews had been motivated not simply by Nazi racialism. Himmler indicated
-that this policy had been motivated by a fear that the Jews might have
-been an obstacle to aggression. There is no necessity to consider
-whether this fear was justified. The important consideration is that the
-fear existed; and with reference to it we refer to Document 1919-PS,
-which bears Exhibit Number USA-170. The document is a speech delivered
-by Himmler at the meeting of the SS major generals at Posen on 4 October
-1943, in the course of which he sought to justify the Nazi anti-Jewish
-policy. We refer to a portion of this document or this speech, which is
-found on Page 4, Paragraph 3, of the English translation, starting with
-the words, “I mean the clearing out of the Jews”:
-
- “I mean the clearing out of the Jews, the extermination of the
- Jewish race. It’s one of those things it is easy to talk about.
- ‘The Jewish race is being exterminated’, says one Party member,
- ‘that’s quite clear; it’s in our program; elimination of the
- Jews, and we’re doing it, exterminating them.’ And then there
- come 80 million worthy Germans and each one has his decent Jew.
- Of course, the others are vermin, but this one is an A-l Jew.
- Not one of all those who talk this way has witnessed it, not one
- of them has been through it. Most of you must know what it means
- when 100 corpses are lying side by side, or 500 or 1,000. To
- have stuck it out and at the same time—apart from exceptions
- caused by human weakness—to have remained decent fellows, that
- is what has made us hard. This is a page of glory in our history
- which has never been written and is never to be written, for we
- know how difficult we should have made it for ourselves,
- if—with bombing raids, the burden and deprivations of war—we
- still had Jews today in every town as secret saboteurs,
- agitators, and trouble-mongers.”
-
-It is clear, we say, from the foregoing that prior to the launching of
-the aggression, the concentration camp had been one of the principal
-weapons by which the conspirators achieved the social cohesion which was
-needed for the execution of their plans for aggression. After they
-launched their aggression and their armies swept over Europe, they
-brought the concentration camp to occupied countries; and they also
-brought the citizens of the occupied countries to Germany and subjected
-them to the whole apparatus of Nazi brutality.
-
-Document Number R-91 is Exhibit USA-241. This document consists of a
-communication dated the 16th day of December 1942 sent by Müller to
-Himmler, for the Chief of the Security Police and SD, and deals with the
-seizure of Polish Jews for deportation to concentration camps in
-Germany. I am beginning with the first paragraph. It says, quoting
-directly:
-
- “In connection with the increase in the transfer of labor to the
- concentration camps ordered to be completed by 30 January 1943,
- the following procedure may be applied in the Jewish section:
-
-
-
- “1. Total number: 45,000 Jews.
-
-
-
- “2. Start of transportation: 11 January 1943. End of
- transportation: 31 January 1943. (The Reich railroads are unable
- to provide special trains for the evacuation during the period
- from 15 December 1942 to 10 January 1943 because of the
- increased traffic of Armed Forces leave trains.)
-
-
-
- “3. Composition: The 45,000 Jews are to consist of 30,000 Jews
- from the district of Bialystok; 10,000 Jews from the Ghetto of
- Theresienstadt, 5,000 of whom are Jews fit for work who
- heretofore had been used for smaller jobs required for the
- ghetto and 5,000 Jews who are generally incapable of working,
- also Jews over 60-years old.”
-
-And passing the next sentence:
-
- “As heretofore only such Jews would be taken for the evacuation
- who do not have any particular connections and who are not in
- possession of any high decorations. Three thousand Jews from the
- occupied Dutch territories, 2,000 Jews from Berlin—45,000. The
- figure of 45,000 includes those unfit for work (old Jews and
- children). By use of a practical standard, the screening of the
- arriving Jews in Auschwitz should yield at least 10,000 to
- 15,000 people fit for work.”
-
-The Jews of Hungary suffered the same tragic fate. Between 19 March 1944
-and the 1st of August 1944, more than 400,000 Hungarian Jews were
-rounded up. Many of these were put in wagons and sent to extermination
-camps, and we refer to Document Number 2605-PS, Exhibit USA-242. This
-document is an affidavit made in London by Dr. Rudolph Kastner, a former
-official of the Hungarian Zionist Organization. We refer to Page 3 of
-the document, the third full paragraph. In March 1944, quoting:
-
- “Together with the German military occupation, there arrived in
- Budapest a ‘Special Section Commando’ of the German Secret
- Police with the sole object of liquidating the Hungarian Jews.
- It was headed by Adolf Aichmann, SS Obersturmbannführer, Chief
- of Section IV B of the Reich Security Head Office. His immediate
- collaborators were: SS Obersturmbannführer Hermann Krumey,
- Hauptsturmführer Wisliczeny, Hunsche, Novak, Dr. Seidl, and
- later Danegger, Wrtok. They arrested and later deported to
- Mauthausen all the leaders of Jewish political and business life
- and journalists, together with, the Hungarian democratic and
- anti-fascist politicians; taking advantage of the ‘interregnum’
- following upon the German occupation lasting 4 days, they have
- placed their Quislings in the Ministry of the Interior.”
-
-On Page 7 of that same document, the 8th paragraph, beginning with the
-words “Commanders of the death camps” and quoting:
-
- “Commanders of the death camps gassed only on direct or indirect
- instructions of Aichmann. The particular officer of IV B who
- directed the deportations from some particular country had the
- authority to indicate whether the train should go to a death
- camp or not and what should happen to the passengers. The
- instructions were usually carried by the SS non-commissioned
- officers escorting the train. The letters ‘A’ or ‘M’”—capital
- letters “A” or “M”—“on the escorting instruction documents
- indicated Auschwitz (Oswieczim) or Majdanek; it meant that the
- passengers were to be gassed.”
-
-And passing over the next sentence, we come to these words:
-
- “Regarding Hungarian Jews the following general ruling was laid
- down in Auschwitz: Children up to the age of 12 or 14, older
- people over 50, as well as the sick, or people with criminal
- records (who were transported in specially marked wagons) were
- taken immediately on their arrival to the gas chambers.
-
-
-
- “The others passed before an SS doctor who, on sight, indicated
- who was fit for work and who was not. Those unfit were sent to
- the gas chambers, while the others were distributed in various
- labor camps.”
-
-In the so-called “Eastern Territories” these victims were apprehended
-for extermination . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, don’t you want Page 5 for the numbers which you
-have stated “up to the 27th of June 1944”? You haven’t yet given us any
-authority for the numbers that you have stated.
-
-MR. DODD: Oh, yes. On Page 5 of that same document, 2605-PS, quoting:
-“Up to the 27th of June 1944, 475,000 Jews were deported.”
-
-In the so-called “Eastern Territories” these victims were apprehended
-for extermination in concentration camps without any charges having been
-made against them. In the western occupied territories charges seemed to
-have been made against some of the victims. Some of the charges which
-the Nazi conspirators considered sufficient basis for confinement to the
-concentration camps are shown by reference to Document Number L-215,
-which bears Exhibit Number USA-243. This document is the summary of the
-file, the dossier, of 25 persons arrested in Luxembourg for commitment
-to various concentration camps and sets forth the charges made against
-each person. Beginning with the paragraph after the name “Henricy,” at
-the bottom of the first page, and quoting:
-
- “Name: Henricy; charge: . . . by associating with members of
- illegal resistance movements and making money for them,
- violating legal foreign exchange rates, by harming the interests
- of the Reich and being expected in the future to disobey
- official administrative regulations and act as an enemy of the
- Reich; place of confinement—Natzweiler.”
-
-Next comes the name of “Krier” and the charge:
-
- “. . . by being responsible for continuous sabotage of labor and
- causing fear because of his political and criminal past—freedom
- would only further his anti-social urge; place of
- confinement—Buchenwald.”
-
-Passing to the middle of Page 2, after the name “Monti”:
-
- “Charge:. . . by being strongly suspected of aiding desertion;
- place of confinement—Sachsenhausen.”
-
-Next, after the name “Junker”:
-
- “Charge:. . . because as a relative of a deserter he is expected
- to endanger the interests of the Greater German Reich if allowed
- to go free; place of confinement—Sachsenhausen.”
-
-“Jaeger” is the next name and the charge against Jaeger, quoting:
-
- “. . . because as a relative of a deserter he is expected, to
- take advantage of every occasion to harm the Greater German
- Reich if allowed to go free; place of
- confinement—Sachsenhausen.”
-
-And down to the name “Ludwig” and the charge against Ludwig:
-
- “. . . for being strongly suspected of aiding desertion; place
- of confinement—Dachau.”
-
-Not only civilians of the occupied countries but also prisoners of war
-were subjected to the horrors and the brutality of the concentration
-camps; and we refer to Document Number 1165-PS, which bears Exhibit
-Number USA-244. This document is a memorandum to all officers of the
-State Police signed by Müller, the Chief of the Gestapo, dated the 9th
-of November 1941. The memorandum has the revealing title of—and I
-quote—“Transportation of Russian Prisoners of War, destined for
-Execution, into the Concentration Camps.”
-
-I wish to quote also from the body of this memorandum, which is found on
-Page 2 of the English translation, and I quote directly:
-
- “The commandants of the concentration camps are complaining that
- 5 to 10 percent of the Soviet Russians destined for execution
- are arriving in the camps dead or half dead. Therefore the
- impression has arisen that the Stalags are getting rid of such
- prisoners in this way.
-
-
-
- “It was particularly noted that when marching, for example, from
- the railroad station to the camp a rather large number of PW’s
- collapsed on the way from exhaustion, either dead or half dead,
- and had to be picked up by a truck following the convoy.
-
-
-
- “It cannot be prevented that the German people take notice of
- these occurrences.
-
-
-
- “Even if the transportation to the camps is generally taken care
- of by the Wehrmacht, the population will attribute this
- situation to the SS.
-
-
-
- “In order to prevent, if possible, similar occurrences in the
- future, I therefore order that, effective from today on, Soviet
- Russians declared definitely suspect and obviously marked by
- death (for example with hunger-typhus) and therefore not able to
- withstand the exertions of even a short march on foot shall in
- the future, as a matter of basic principle, be excluded from the
- transport into the concentration camps for execution.”
-
-More evidence of the confinement of Russian prisoners of war in
-concentration camps is found in an official report of the investigation
-of the Flossenbürg Concentration Camp by the Headquarters of the United
-States Third Army, the Judge Advocate Section, and particularly the War
-Crimes Branch, under the date of the 21st day of June 1945. It is our
-Document Number 2309-PS and bears Exhibit Number USA-245. At the bottom
-of Page 2 of the English text the last two sentences of that last
-paragraph say, and I quote:
-
- “In 1941 an additional stockade was added at the Flossenbürg
- camp to hold 2,000 Russian prisoners. Of these 2,000 prisoners
- only 102 survived.”
-
-Soviet prisoners of war found their allies in the concentration camps
-too; and at Page 4 of this same Document Number 2309-PS, it will show,
-particularly Paragraph 5 on Page 4, and I quote it:
-
- “The victims of Flossenbürg included among them: Russian
- civilians and prisoners of war, German nationals, Italians,
- Belgians, Poles, Czechs, Hungarians, British, and American
- prisoners of war. No practical means was available to complete a
- list of victims of this camp; however, since the foundation of
- the camp in 1938 until the day of liberation, it is estimated
- that more than 29,000 inmates died.”
-
-Escaped prisoners of war were sent to concentration camps by the
-conspirators, and these camps were specially set up as extermination
-centers; and we refer to Document Number 1650-PS, bearing Exhibit Number
-USA-246. This document is a communication from the Secret State Police
-of Cologne and it is dated the 4th day of March 1944. At the very top of
-the English text it says, “To be transmitted in secret—to be handled as
-a secret Government matter.”
-
-In the third paragraph, quoting:
-
- “Concerns: Measures to be taken against captured escaped
- prisoners of war who are officers or non-working noncommissioned
- officers, except British and American prisoners of war. The
- Supreme Command of the Army has ordered as follows:
-
-
-
- “1. Every captured escaped prisoner of war who is an officer or
- a non-working noncommissioned officer, except British and
- American prisoners of war, is to be turned over to the Chief of
- the Security Police and of the Security Service under the
- classification Step III regardless of whether the escape
- occurred during a transport, whether it was a mass escape, or an
- individual one.
-
-
-
- “2. Since the transfer of the prisoners of war to the Security
- Police and Security Service may not become officially known to
- the outside under any circumstances, other prisoners of war may
- by no means be informed of the capture. The captured prisoners
- are to be reported to the Army Information Bureau as ‘escaped
- and not captured.’ Their mail is to be handled accordingly.
- Inquiries of representatives of the protective power, of the
- International Red Cross, and of other aid societies will be
- given the same answer.”
-
-The same communication carried a copy of an order of SS General Müller,
-acting for the Chief of the Security Police and SD, directing the
-Gestapo to transport escaped prisoners directly to Mauthausen; and I
-quote the first two paragraphs of Müller’s order, which begins on the
-bottom of Page 1 and runs over to Page 2 of the English text. Quoting:
-
- “The State Police directorates will accept the captured escaped
- officer prisoners of war from the prisoner-of-war camp
- commandants and will transport them to the Concentration Camp
- Mauthausen following the procedure previously used, unless the
- circumstances render a special transport imperative. The
- prisoners of war are to be put in irons on the transport—not on
- the way to the station if it is subject to view by the public.
- The camp commandant at Mauthausen is to be notified that the
- transfer occurs within the scope of the action ‘Kugel.’ The
- State Police directorates will submit semi-yearly reports on
- these transfers giving merely the figures, the first report
- being due on 5 July 1944.”
-
-Passing the next three sentences, we come to this line:
-
- “For the sake of secrecy the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces
- has been requested to inform the prisoner-of-war camps to turn
- the captured prisoners over to the local State Police office
- concerned and not to send them directly to Mauthausen.”
-
-It is no coincidence that the literal translation for the German word
-“Kugel” is the English word “bullet,” since Mauthausen, where the
-escaped prisoners were sent, was an extermination center.
-
-Nazi conquest was marked by the establishment of concentration camps
-over all of Europe. In this connection we refer to Document Number
-R-129. It is a report on the location of concentration camps signed by
-Pohl, who was an SS general who was in charge of concentration camp
-labor policies. Document Number R-129 bears our Exhibit Number USA-217.
-
-I wish to refer particularly to Section 1, Paragraphs numbered 1 and 2
-of this document, which are found on Page 1 of the English translation.
-It is addressed to the Reichsführer SS and bears the stamp “secret”:
-
- “Reichsführer:
-
- “Today I report about the present situation of the concentration
- camps and about measures I have taken in order to carry out your
- order of 3 March 1942:
-
-
-
- “1. At the outbreak of war there existed the following
- concentration camps:
-
-
-
- “a. Dachau—1939, 4,000 prisoners; today, 8,000.
-
-
-
- “b. Sachsenhausen—1939, 6,500 prisoners; today, 10,000.
-
-
-
- “c. Buchenwald—1939, 5,300 prisoners; today, 9,000.
-
-
-
- “d. Mauthausen—1939, 1,500 prisoners; today, 5,500.
-
-
-
- “e. Flossenbürg—1939, 1,600 prisoners; today, 4,700.
-
-
-
- “f. Ravensbrück—1939, 2,500 prisoners; today, 7,500.”
-
-And then it goes on to say in Paragraph Number 2, quoting:
-
- “In the years 1940 and 1942 nine additional camps were erected:
-
-
-
- “a. Auschwitz, b. Neuengamme, c. Gusen, d. Natzweiler, e.
- Gross-Rosen, f. Lublin, g. Niederhagen, h. Stutthof, i.
- Arbeitsdorf.”
-
-In addition to the camps in the occupied territory mentioned in this
-Document R-129, from which I have just read these names and figures,
-there were many, many others. I refer to the official report by the
-United States Third Army Headquarters, to which we have already made
-reference, Document Number 2309-PS, on Page 2 in the English text,
-Section IV, Paragraph 4, quoting:
-
- “Concentration Camp Flossenbürg was founded in 1938 as a camp
- for political prisoners. Construction was commenced on the camp
- in 1938 and it was not until April 1940 that the first transport
- of prisoners was received. From this time on prisoners began to
- flow steadily into the camp. (Exhibit B-1.) Flossenbürg was the
- mother camp and under its direct control and jurisdiction were
- 47 satellite camps or outer-commandos for male prisoners and 27
- camps for female workers. To these outer-commandos were supplied
- the necessary prisoners for the various work projects
- undertaken.
-
-
-
- “Of all these outer-commandos, Hersbruck and Leitmeritz (in
- Czechoslovakia), Oberstaubling, Mulsen and Sall, located on the
- Danube, were considered to be the worst.”
-
-I do not wish to take the time of the Tribunal to discuss each of the
-Nazi concentration camps which dotted the map of Europe. We feel that
-the widespread use of these camps is commonly known and notorious. We
-do, however, wish to invite the Tribunal’s attention to a chart which we
-have had prepared. The solid black line marks the boundary of Germany
-after the Anschluss, and we call the Tribunal’s attention to the fact
-that the majority of the camps shown on the chart are located within the
-territorial limits of Germany itself. They are the red spots, of course,
-on the map. In the center of Germany there is the Buchenwald camp
-located near the city of Weimar, and at the extreme bottom of the chart
-there is Dachau, several miles outside of Munich. At the top of the
-chart are Neuengamme and Bergen-Belsen, located near Hamburg. To the
-left is the Niederhagen camp in the Ruhr Valley. In the upper right
-there are a number of camps near Berlin, one named Sachsenhausen
-(formerly Oranienburg, which was one of the first camps established
-after the Nazis came into power). Near to that is the camp of
-Ravensbrück which was used exclusively for women. Some of the most
-notorious camps were located indeed outside of Germany. Mauthausen was
-in Austria. In Poland was the infamous Auschwitz; and to the left of the
-chart is a camp called Hertogenbosch and this one was located in
-Holland, as the chart shows; and below it is Natzweiler, located in
-France.
-
-The camps were established in networks; and it may be observed that
-surrounding each of the major camps—the larger red dots—is a group of
-satellite camps; and the names of the principal camps, the most
-notorious camps, at least, are above the map and below it on the chart;
-and those names, for most people, symbolize the Nazi system of
-concentration camps as they have become known to the world since May or
-a little later in 1945.
-
-I should like to direct your attention briefly to the treatment which
-was meted out in these camps. The motion picture to which I have made
-reference a short time ago and which was shown to the members of this
-High Tribunal has disclosed the terrible and savage treatment which was
-inflicted upon these Allied nationals, prisoners of war, and other
-victims of Nazi terror. Because the moving picture has so well shown the
-situation, as of the time of its taking at least, I shall confine myself
-to a very brief discussion of the subject.
-
-The conditions which existed inside these camps were, of course, we say,
-directly related to the objectives which these Nazi conspirators sought
-to achieve outside of the camps through their employment of terror.
-
-It is truly remarkable, it seems to us, how easily the words
-“concentration camps” rolled off the lips of these men. How simple all
-problems became when they could turn to the terror institution of the
-concentration camps. I refer to Document Number R-124, which is already
-before the Tribunal as Exhibit USA-179. It is again that document
-covering the minutes of the Central Planning Committee on which the
-Defendant Speer sat and where the high strategy of the high Nazi
-armament production was formulated. I do not intend to read from the
-document again, because I read from it this morning to illustrate
-another point; but the Tribunal will recall that it was at this meeting
-that the Defendant Speer and others were discussing the so-called
-slackers, and the conversation had to do with having drastic steps taken
-against these workers who were not putting out sufficient work to please
-their masters. Speer suggested that, “There is nothing to be said
-against the SS and Police taking steps and putting those known as
-slackers into concentration camp industries,” and he used the words
-“concentration camp industries.” And he said, “Let it happen several
-times and the news will soon get around.”
-
-Words spoken in this fashion, we say, sealed the fate of many victims.
-As for getting the news around as suggested by the Defendant Speer, this
-was not left to chance, as we shall presently show.
-
-The deterrent effect of the concentration camps upon the public was a
-carefully planned thing. To heighten the atmosphere of terror, these
-camps were shrouded in secrecy. What went on in the barbed wire
-enclosures was a matter of fearful conjecture in Germany and countries
-under Nazi control; and this was the policy from the very beginning,
-when the Nazis first came into power and set up this system of
-concentration camps. We refer now to Document Number 778-PS, which bears
-Exhibit Number USA-247. This document is an order issued on the 1st of
-October 1933 by the camp commander of Dachau. The document prescribed a
-program of floggings, solitary confinement, and executions for the
-inmates for infractions of the rules.
-
-Among the rules were those prescribing a rigid censorship concerning
-conditions within the camp; and I refer to the first page of the English
-text, paragraph numbered Article 11, and quoting:
-
- “By virtue of the law on revolutionaries, the following
- offenders considered as agitators, will be hanged:
-
-
-
- “Anyone who, for the purpose of agitating, does the following in
- the camp, at work, in the quarters, in the kitchens and
- workshops, toilets and places of rest: holds political or
- inciting speeches and meetings, forms cliques, loiters around
- with others; who, for the purpose of supplying the propaganda of
- the opposition with atrocity stories, collects true or false
- information about the concentration camp and its institution,
- receives such information, buries it, talks about it to others,
- smuggles it out of the camp into the hands of foreign visitors
- or others by means of clandestine or other methods, passes it on
- in writing or orally to released prisoners or prisoners who are
- placed above them, conceals it in clothing or other articles,
- throws stones and other objects over the camp wall containing
- such information, or produces secret documents; who, for the
- purpose of agitating, climbs on barracks roofs and trees, seeks
- contact with the outside by giving light or other signals, or
- induces others to escape or commit a crime, gives them advice to
- that effect or supports such undertakings in any way
- whatsoever.”
-
-The censorship about the camps themselves was complemented by an
-officially inspired rumor campaign outside the camps. Concentration
-camps were spoken of in whispers, and the whispers were spread by agents
-of the Secret Police. When the Defendant Speer said that if the threat
-of the concentration camp were used, the news would get around soon
-enough, he knew whereof he spoke.
-
-We refer to Document 1531-PS. With reference to this document, I wish to
-submit a word of explanation. The original German text, the original
-German document, the captured document, was here in the document room
-and was translated into English as our translation shows. Yesterday we
-were advised that it has either been lost or misplaced, the original
-German text; and unfortunately no photostatic copy was available here in
-Nuremberg. A certified copy is, however, being sent to the office here
-from Frankfurt, and it is on its way today; and I ask the Tribunal’s
-permission to offer the English translation of the German original,
-which is certified to be accurate by the translator, into evidence,
-subject to a motion to strike it if the certified copy of the original
-German document does not arrive.
-
-I now refer to the Document Number 1531-PS. It bears our Exhibit Number
-USA-248. This document is marked “top secret” and it is addressed to all
-State Police district offices and to the Gestapo office and for the
-information of the Inspectors of the Security Police and the SD. It is
-an order relating to concentration camps, issued by the head of the
-Gestapo; and I read from the English text, beginning with the second
-paragraph, and quoting directly:
-
- “In order to achieve a further deterrent effect, the following
- must, in the future, be observed in each individual case:
-
-
-
- “3. The length of the period of custody must in no case be made
- known, even if the Reichsführer SS and Chief of the German
- Police or the Chief of the Security Police and the SD has
- already fixed it.
-
-
-
- “The term of commitment to a concentration camp is to be openly
- announced as ‘until further notice.’
-
-
-
- “In most serious cases there is no objection to increasing the
- deterrent effect by the spreading of cleverly carried out rumor
- propaganda, more or less to the effect that, according to
- hearsay, in view of the seriousness of his case, the arrested
- man will not be released for 2 or 3 years.
-
-
-
- “4. In certain cases the Reichsführer SS and Chief of the German
- Police will order flogging in addition to detention in a
- concentration camp. Orders of this kind will, in the future,
- also be transmitted to the State Police district office
- concerned. In this case, too, there is no objection to spreading
- the rumor of this increased punishment as laid down in Section
- 3, Paragraph 3, insofar as this appears suitable to add to the
- deterrent effect.
-
-
-
- “5. Naturally, particularly suitable and reliable people are to
- be chosen for the spreading of such news.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, the Tribunal think that they will take judicial
-notice of that United States Document, Number 2309-PS; and for the
-convenience of the Defense Counsel, the Tribunal having sat until 1 will
-not sit again until 2:15.
-
-MR. DODD: Very well, Your Honor.
-
- [_A recess was taken until 1415 hours._]
-
-
-
-
- _Afternoon Session_
-
-MR. DODD: May it please the Tribunal, the deterrent effect of the
-concentration camps was based on the promise of brutal treatment. Once
-in the custody of the SS guards, the victim was beaten, tortured,
-starved, and often murdered through the so-called “extermination through
-work” program which I described the other day or through the mass
-execution gas chambers and furnaces of the camps, which were shown
-several days ago on the moving picture screen in this courtroom.
-
-The reports of official government investigations furnish additional
-evidence of the conditions within the concentration camps.
-
-Document 2309-PS, which has already been referred to and of which the
-Tribunal has taken judicial notice, I now refer to again, particularly
-to the second page of the English text, beginning with the second
-sentence of the second paragraph:
-
- “The work at these camps mainly consisted of underground labor,
- the purpose being the construction of large underground
- factories, storage rooms, _et cetera_. This labor was performed
- completely underground and as a result of the brutal treatment,
- working and living conditions, a daily average of 100 prisoners
- died. To the one camp Oberstaubling 700 prisoners were
- transported in February 1945, and on the 15th of April 1945 only
- 405 of these men were living. During the 12 months preceding the
- liberation, Flossenbürg and the branch camps under its control
- accounted for the death of 14,739 male inmates and 1,300 women.
- These figures represent the deaths as obtained from the
- available records in the camp. However, they are in no way
- complete, as many secret mass executions and deaths took place.
- In 1941 an additional stockade was added at the Flossenbürg camp
- to hold 2,000 Russian prisoners. From these 2,000 prisoners only
- 102 survived.
-
-
-
- “Flossenbürg Concentration Camp can best be described as a
- factory dealing in death. Although this camp had in view the
- primary object of putting to work the mass slave labor, another
- of its primary objectives was the elimination of human lives by
- the methods employed in handling the prisoners.
-
-
-
- “Hunger and starvation rations, sadism, housing facilities,
- inadequate clothing, medical neglect, disease, beatings,
- hangings, freezing, forced hand hanging, forced suicides,
- shooting, all played a major role in obtaining their objective.
- Prisoners were murdered at random; spite killings against Jews
- were common. Injections of poison and shooting in the neck were
- everyday occurrences. Epidemics of typhus and spotted fever were
- permitted to run rampant as a means of eliminating prisoners.
- Life in this camp meant nothing. Killing became a common thing,
- so common that a quick death was welcomed by the unfortunate
- ones.”
-
-Passing to the next to the last sentence of this same paragraph, quoting
-directly . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: What are those exhibits that are referred to?
-
-MR. DODD: They are in evidence with the affidavit. They are attached to
-it.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: They are not, I suppose, mimeographed in our copy?
-
-MR. DODD: No, we have not had an opportunity to mimeograph each one of
-them.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Are they documents or photographs or what?
-
-MR. DODD: They are principally documents. There are some few plans and
-photographs, and so on.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Are they affidavits or what? There seem to be instances
-of . . .
-
-MR. DODD: Well, some of them are in the form of affidavits taken at the
-time of the liberation of the camp from persons who were there, and
-others are pictures of writings that were found there and of the plans
-and so on—such sort of thing.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Yes. Well the Tribunal will take judicial notice of those
-exhibits as well.
-
-MR. DODD: Very well, Your Honor.
-
-Reading from the last sentence of this same paragraph on the same page
-and quoting:
-
- “On Christmas, 1944, a number of prisoners were hanged at one
- time. The prisoners were forced to view this hanging. By the
- side of the gallows was a decorated Christmas tree; and as
- expressed by one prisoner, ‘It was a terrible sight, that
- combination of prisoners hanging in the air and the glistening
- Christmas tree.’”
-
-
-
- “In March or April, 13 American or British parachutists were
- hanged. They had been delivered to this camp some time before
- and had been captured while trying to blow up bridges.”
-
-We will not burden the Tribunal with a recital of all of these reports.
-We wish, however, to make reference to the Concentration Camp
-Mauthausen, one of the most notorious extermination centers; and I refer
-particularly to Document Number 2176-PS, which I have already placed in
-evidence as Exhibit Number USA-249. This is also an official report of
-the office of the Judge Advocate General of the United States 3rd Army,
-dated 17 June 1945. I wish to refer to the conclusions on Page 3 of the
-English text, at paragraph numbered Roman V, beginning with the second
-sentence as follows:
-
- “V. Conclusions. There is no doubt that Mauthausen was the basis
- for long-term planning. It was constructed as a gigantic stone
- fortress on top of a mountain flanked by small barracks.
- Mauthausen, in addition to its permanency of construction, had
- facilities for a large garrison of officers and men and had
- large dining rooms and toilet facilities for the staff. It was
- conducted with the sole purpose in mind of exterminating any
- so-called prisoner who entered within its walls. The so-called
- branches of Mauthausen were under direct command of the SS
- officials located there. All records, orders, and administrative
- facilities were handled for these branches through Mauthausen.
- The other camps, including Gusen and Ebensee, its two most
- notorious and largest branches, were not exclusively used for
- extermination; but prisoners were used as tools in construction
- and production until they were beaten or starved into
- uselessness, whereupon they were customarily sent to Mauthausen
- for final disposal.”
-
-Both from the showing of the moving picture and from these careful
-reports, which were made by the 3rd Army of the United States on their
-arrival at those centers, we say it is clear that the conditions in
-those concentration camps over Germany—and in a few instances outside
-of the actual borders of the Old Reich—followed the same general
-pattern. The wide-spread incidence of these conditions makes it clear
-that they were not the result of sporadic excesses on the part of
-individual jailers, but were the result of policies deliberately imposed
-from above. The crimes committed in these camps were on so vast a scale
-that individual atrocities pale into insignificance.
-
-We have had turned over to us two exhibits which we are prepared to show
-to this Tribunal only because they illustrate the depths to which the
-administration of these camps had sunk shortly before, at least, the
-time that they were liberated by the Allied Army. The Tribunal will
-recall that in the showing of the moving picture, with respect to one of
-the camps, there was a showing of sections of human skin taken from
-human bodies in the Buchenwald Concentration Camp and preserved as
-ornaments. They were selected, these particular hapless victims, because
-of the tattooing which appeared on the skin. This exhibit, which we have
-here, is Exhibit Number USA-252. Attached to the exhibit is an extract
-of an official United States Army report describing the circumstances
-under which this exhibit was obtained; and that extract is set forth in
-Document 3420-PS, which I refer to in part. It is entitled:
-
- “Mobile Field Interrogation Unit Number 2; PW Intelligence
- Bulletin; 13. Concentration Camp, Buchenwald.
-
-
-
- “Preamble. The author of this account is PW Andreas
- Pfaffenberger, 1 Coy, 9 Landesschützen Bn., 43 years old and of
- limited education. He is a butcher by trade. The substantial
- agreement of the details of his story with those found in PWIB
- (H) /LF/36 establishes the validity of his testimony. PW has not
- been questioned on statements which, in the light of what is
- known, are apparently erroneous in certain details, nor has any
- effort been made to alter the subjective character of the PW’s
- account, which he wrote without being told anything of the
- intelligence already known. The results of interrogation on
- personalities at Buchenwald have already been published (PWIB
- Number 2/12, item 31.).
-
-
-
- “‘In 1939 all prisoners with tattooing on them were ordered to
- report to the dispensary.’”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Is this what Pfaffenberger said?
-
-MR. DODD: Yes, Sir.
-
- “‘No one knew what the purpose was; but after the tattooed
- prisoners had been examined, the ones with the best and most
- artistic specimens were kept in the dispensary and then killed
- by injections administered by Karl Beigs, a criminal prisoner.
- The corpses were then turned over to the pathological department
- where the desired pieces of tattooed skin were detached from the
- bodies and treated. The finished products were turned over to SS
- Standartenführer Koch’s wife, who had them fashioned into lamp
- shades and other ornamental household articles. I myself saw
- such tattooed skins with various designs and legends on them,
- such as “Hänsel and Gretel,” which one prisoner had on his knee,
- and designs of ships from prisoners’ chests. This work was done
- by a prisoner named Wernerbach.”
-
-I also refer to Document 3421-PS, which bears Exhibit Number USA-253.
-
- “I, George C. Demas, Lieutenant, USNR, associated with the
- United States Chief of Counsel for the Prosecution of Axis
- Criminality, hereby certify that the attached exhibit,
- consisting of parchment, was delivered by the War Crimes
- Section, Judge Advocate General, United States Army, to me in my
- above capacity, in the usual course of business, as an exhibit
- found in Buchenwald Camp and captured by military forces under
- the command of the Supreme Commander, Allied Expeditionary
- Forces.”
-
-And the last paragraph of Document 3423-PS (Exhibit USA-252) is a
-conclusion reached in a United States Army report, and I quote it:
-
- “Based on the findings in Paragraph 2, all three specimens are
- tattooed human skin.”
-
-This document is also attached to this exhibit on the board. We do not
-wish to dwell on this pathological phase of the Nazi culture; but we do
-feel compelled to offer one additional exhibit, which we offer as
-Exhibit Number USA-254. This exhibit, which is on the table, is a human
-head with the skull bone removed, shrunken, stuffed, and preserved. The
-Nazis had one of their many victims decapitated, after having had him
-hanged, apparently for fraternizing with a German woman, and fashioned
-this terrible ornament from his head.
-
-The last paragraph of the official United States Army report from which
-I have just read deals with the manner in which this exhibit was
-acquired. It reads as follows:
-
- “There I also saw the shrunken heads of two young Poles who had
- been hanged for having relations with German girls. The heads
- were the size of a fist, and the hair and the marks of the rope
- were still there.”
-
-Another certificate by Lieutenant Demas is set forth in Document 3422-PS
-(Exhibit USA-254) and is similar to the one which I have read a few
-minutes ago with relation to the human skin, excepting that it applies
-to this second exhibit. We have no accurate estimate of how many persons
-died in these concentration camps and perhaps none will ever be made;
-but as the evidence already introduced before this Tribunal indicates,
-the Nazi conspirators were generally meticulous record keepers. But the
-records which they kept about concentration camps appear to have been
-quite incomplete. Perhaps the character of the records resulted from the
-indifference which the Nazis felt for the lives of their victims. But
-occasionally we find a death book or a set of index cards. For the most
-part, nevertheless, the victims apparently faded into an unrecorded
-death. Reference to a set of death books suggests at once the scale of
-the concentration camp operations, and we refer now and offer Document
-Number 493-PS as Exhibit Number USA-251. This exhibit is a set of seven
-books, the death ledger of the Mauthausen Concentration Camp. Each book
-has on its cover the word “Totenbuch” (or Death Book)—Mauthausen.
-
-In these books were recorded the names of some of the inmates who died
-or were murdered in this camp, and the books cover the period from
-January of 1939 to April of 1945. They give the name, the place of
-birth, the assigned cause of death, and time of death of each individual
-recorded. In addition each corpse is assigned a serial number, and
-adding up the total serial numbers for the 5-year period one arrives at
-the figure of 35,318.
-
-An examination of the books is very revealing insofar as the camp’s
-routine of death is concerned; and I invite the attention of the
-Tribunal to Volume 5 from Pages 568 to 582, a photostatic copy of which
-has been passed to the Tribunal. These pages cover death entries made
-for the 19th day of March 1945 between 15 minutes past 1 in the morning
-until 2 o’clock in the afternoon. In this space of 12 and three-quarter
-hours, on these records, 203 persons are reported as having died. They
-were assigned serial numbers running from 8390 to 8593. The names of the
-dead are listed. And interestingly enough the victims are all recorded
-as having died of the same ailment—heart trouble. They died at brief
-intervals. They died in alphabetical order. The first who died was a man
-named Ackermann, who died at 1:15 a.m., and the last was a man named
-Zynger, who died at 2 o’clock in the afternoon.
-
-At 20 minutes past 2 o’clock of that same afternoon, according to these
-records, on the 19th of March 1945, the fatal roll call began again and
-continued until 4:30 p.m. In a space of 2 hours 75 more persons died,
-and once again they died all from heart failure and in alphabetical
-order. We find the entries recorded in the same volume, from Pages 582
-through 586.
-
-There was another death book found at Camp Mauthausen. It is our
-Document Number 495-PS and bears Exhibit Number USA-250. This is a
-single volume, and again has on its cover the words “Death
-Book—Prisoners of War.” And I invite the attention of the Tribunal in
-particular to Pages 234 through 246. Here the entries record the names
-of 208 prisoners of war, apparently Russians, who at 15 minutes past
-midnight on the 10th day of May 1942 were executed at the same time. The
-book notes that the execution was directed by the chief of the SD and
-the Sipo, at that time Heydrich.
-
-It was called to my attention as late as this morning—a publication of
-a New York newspaper published in the United States, part of which is
-made up of three or more pages consisting of advertisements from the
-families, the relatives of people who once resided in Germany or in
-Europe, asking for some advice about them. Most of the advertisements
-refer to one of these concentration camps or another. The paper is
-called _Der Aufbau_. It is a German-language newspaper in New York City,
-published on the 23rd day—this particular issue—on the 23rd day of
-November 1945. I do not propose to burden the record of this Tribunal
-with the list of the names of all of these unfortunate individuals; but
-we refer to it as a publication in the City of New York, a
-German-language newspaper of recent date which illustrates the horrible
-extent of this terrible tragedy which has affected so many people as a
-result of this concentration-camp institution. We feel that no argument,
-no particular argument, is necessary to support our statement that the
-Nazi conspirators used these concentration camps and the related
-instruments of terror in them to commit Crimes against Humanity and to
-commit War Crimes.
-
-More about concentration camps will of necessity be involved in the
-presentation concerning the persecution of the Jews, but this concludes
-our presentation with respect to the concentration camps as a specific
-entity of proof.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, speaking for myself, I should like to know what
-these headings mean.
-
-MR. DODD: Yes, I have them here.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Document 495-PS?
-
-MR. DODD: Yes, Document 495-PS. Column 1 is the serial number assigned
-to the prisoners in the order of their deaths.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Yes.
-
-MR. DODD: Column 2, prisoners-of-war serial number. Column 3 is the last
-name, Column 4 is the first name.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Yes.
-
-MR. DODD: Column 5 is the date of birth. Column 6, the place of birth.
-Column 7, cause of death. In these cases their cause of death is stated
-as follows: “Execution pursuant to order of the Chief of the Sipo and SD
-dated 30th April 1942,” and the ditto marks beneath indicate that the
-same cause of death was assigned to the names which come beneath it. In
-the eighth column is the date of death and the hour of death. The first
-one being 9.5.42 at 2335 hours. In the ninth column there is a space
-which says it is reserved for comments.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: There are numbers there too—M1681 is the first one.
-
-MR. DODD: Well, the German word, I am told, means that it confirms the
-death with that number. Apparently the number of the . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I think you said the number of the corpse.
-
-MR. DODD: The number of the corpse, I think that is what it is as
-distinguished from the number of the prisoner. Each corpse was given a
-number as well after the individual died.
-
-COL. STOREY: If the Tribunal please, the next phase of War Crimes and
-Crimes against Humanity, the Persecution of the Jews, will be presented
-by Major Walsh.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Major Walsh.
-
-MAJOR WILLIAM F. WALSH (Assistant Trial Counsel for the United States):
-If the Tribunal please, on behalf of the United States Counsel, I now
-present to this august Tribunal the evidence to establish certain phases
-of the Indictment alleged in Count One under War Crimes and Crimes
-against Humanity, and by agreement between the prosecutors the
-allegations in Count Four, Paragraph X(B), Crimes against Humanity. The
-topical title of this presentation is “The Persecution of the Jews.”
-
-At this time I offer in evidence a Document Book of translations,
-lettered “T.” These documents contained in the books are arranged
-according to the D-, L-, PS-, and R-series; and under the series the
-translations are listed numerically. This title, “The Persecution of the
-Jews,” is singularly inappropriate when weighed in the light of the
-evidence to follow. Academically, I am told, to persecute is to afflict,
-harass, and annoy. The term used does not convey, and indeed I cannot
-conjure a term that does convey the ultimate aim, the avowed purpose to
-obliterate the Jewish race.
-
-This presentation is not intended to be a complete recital of all the
-crimes committed against the Jews. The extent and the scope of the
-crimes was so great that it permeated the entire German nation, its
-people and its organizations.
-
-I am informed that others to follow me will offer additional evidence
-under other phases of the Prosecution’s case. Evidence relating to the
-Party organizations and state organizations, whose criminality the
-Prosecution will seek to establish, will disclose and emphasize the part
-that these organizations played in the pattern and plan for
-annihilation.
-
-The French and the Soviet Prosecutors, too, have a volume of evidence
-all related to this subject, which will be submitted in the course of
-the Trial.
-
-Before I begin a recital of the overt acts leading to the elimination of
-the Jews, I am prepared to show that these acts and policies within
-Germany from the year 1933 to the end of the war related to the
-planning, preparation, initiation, and waging of aggressive wars, thus
-falling within the definition of Crimes against Humanity as defined in
-Article 6(c) of the Charter.
-
-It had long been a German theory that the first World War ended in
-Germany’s defeat because of a collapse in the zone of the interior. In
-planning for future wars it was determined that the home front must be
-secure to prevent a repetition of this 1918 debacle. Unification of the
-German people was essential to successful planning and waging of war,
-and the Nazi political premise must be established—“One race, one
-state, one Führer.”
-
-Free trade unions must be abolished, political parties (other than the
-National Socialist Party) must be outlawed, civil liberties must be
-suspended, and opposition of every kind must be swept away. Loyalty to
-God, church, and scientific truth was declared to be incompatible with
-the Nazi regime. The anti-Jewish policy was part of this plan for
-unification because it was the conviction of the Nazis that the Jews
-would not contribute to Germany’s military program, but on the contrary
-would hamper it. The Jew must therefore be eliminated.
-
-This view is clearly borne out by a statement contained in Document
-1919-PS, Exhibit USA-170. This document is a transcript of a Himmler
-speech at a meeting of the SS major generals on 4 October 1943, and from
-Page 4, Paragraph 3, of the translation before the Court, I read a very
-short passage:
-
- “We know how difficult we should have made it for ourselves if
- with the bombing raids, the burdens and deprivations of war, we
- still had Jews today in every town as secret saboteurs,
- agitators, and trouble mongers; we would now probably have
- reached the 1916-17 stage when the Jews were still in the German
- national body.”
-
-The treatment of the Jews within Germany was therefore as much of a plan
-for aggressive war as was the building of armaments and the conscription
-of manpower. It falls within the jurisdiction of this Tribunal as an
-integral part of the planning and preparation to wage a war of
-aggression.
-
-It is obvious that the persecution and murder of Jews throughout the
-conquered territories of Europe following 1939 are War Crimes as defined
-by Article 6(b) of the Charter. It further violates Article 46 of the
-Regulations of the Hague Convention of 1907, to which Germany was a
-signatory. I quote Article 46 and ask the Court to take judicial notice
-thereof:
-
- “Family honor and rights, the lives of persons, and private
- property, as well as religious convictions and practices, must
- be respected.”
-
-I know of no crime in the history of mankind more horrible in its
-details than the treatment of the Jews. It is intended to establish that
-the Nazi Party precepts, later incorporated within the policies of the
-German State, often expressed by the defendants at bar, were to
-annihilate the Jewish people. I shall seek to avoid the temptation to
-editorialize or to draw inferences from the documents, however great the
-provocation; rather I shall let the documentary evidence speak for
-itself—its stark realism will be unvarnished. Blood lust may have
-played some part in these savage crimes, but the underlying purpose and
-objective to annihilate the Jewish race was one of the fundamental
-principles of the Nazi plan to prepare for and to wage aggressive war. I
-shall from this point limit my proof to the overt acts committed; but I
-dare to request the Court’s indulgence, if it is necessary in weaving
-the pattern of evidence, to make reference to certain documents and
-evidence previously submitted.
-
-Now this ultimate objective, that is, the elimination and extermination
-of the Jews, could not be accomplished without preliminary steps and
-measures. The German State must first be seized by the Nazi Party, the
-force of world opinion must be faced, and even the regimented German
-people must be indoctrinated with hatred against the Jews.
-
-The first clear-cut evidence of the Party policies concerning the Jews
-was expressed in the Party program in February 1920. I offer in evidence
-Document 1708-PS, “Program of the National Socialist Party,” Exhibit
-USA-255. With the Court’s permission, I would like to quote the relevant
-part of that program, Paragraph (4):
-
- “Only a member of the race can be a citizen. A member of the
- race can only be one who is of German blood without
- consideration of confession. . . .”
-
-THE TRIBUNAL (Mr. Biddle): May I interrupt a minute. It is a little hard
-to know where these exhibits are or what volume you are now quoting
-from.
-
-MAJOR WALSH: This, Sir, is 1708-PS.
-
-THE TRIBUNAL (Mr. Biddle): Volume 2?
-
-MAJOR WALSH: Volume 2.
-
-THE TRIBUNAL (Mr. Biddle): And what page of that exhibit?
-
-MAJOR WALSH: That is Paragraph (4) and Paragraph (6), Sir, on the first
-page.
-
-Paragraph (4):
-
- “Only a member of the race can be a citizen. A member of the
- race can only be one who is of German blood, without
- consideration of confession. Consequently, no Jew can be a
- member of the race.”
-
-And again, in Paragraph (6):
-
- “The right to determine matters concerning administration and
- law belongs only to the citizen; therefore, we demand that every
- public office of any sort whatsoever, whether in the Reich, the
- county, or municipality, be filled only by citizens.”
-
-I now offer Document 2662-PS, _Mein Kampf_, Exhibit Number USA-256. On
-Pages 724-725, Hitler, in this book, speaking of the Jew, said that if
-the National Socialist movement was to fulfill its task—and I quote:
-
- “It must open the eyes of the people with regard to foreign
- nations and must remind them again and again of the true enemy
- of our present-day world. In the place of hate against
- Aryans—from whom we may be separated by almost everything but
- to whom, however, we are tied by common blood or the great tie
- of a common culture—it must dedicate to the general anger the
- evil enemy of mankind as the true cause of all suffering.
-
-
-
- “It must see to it, however, that at least in our country he be
- recognized as the most mortal enemy and that the struggle
- against him may show, like a flaming beacon of a better era, to
- other nations, too, the road to salvation for a struggling Aryan
- mankind.”
-
-A flood of abusive literature of all types and for all age groups was
-published and circulated throughout Germany. Illustrative of this type
-of publication is the book entitled _Der Giftpilz_. I offer in evidence
-Document 1778-PS, Exhibit Number USA-257. This book brands the Jew as a
-persecutor of the labor class, as a race defiler, devil in human form, a
-poisonous mushroom, and a murderer. This particular book instructed
-school children to recognize the Jew by caricature of his physical
-features, shown on Pages 6 and 7; taught them that the Jew abuses little
-boys and girls, on Page 30; and that the Jewish Bible permits all
-crimes, Pages 13-17. The Defendant Streicher’s periodical _Der Stürmer_,
-Number 14, April 1937, in particular, went to such extremes as to
-publish the statement that Jews at the ritual celebration of their
-Passover slaughtered Christians.
-
-I offer Document 2699-PS, Exhibit Number USA-258. On Page 2, Column 1,
-Paragraphs 6 to 9, I quote:
-
- “Also the numerous confessions made by the Jews show that the
- execution of ritual murders is a law of the Talmud Jew. The
- former chief Rabbi (and later monk) Teofiti declares that the
- ritual murders take place especially on the Jewish Purim (in
- memory of the Persian murders) and Passover (in memory of the
- murder of Christ). The rules are as follows:
-
-
-
- “The blood of the victims is to be tapped by force. On Passover
- it is to be used in wine and matzos. Thus a small part of the
- blood is to be poured into the dough of the matzos and into the
- wine. The mixing is done by the head of the Jewish family.
-
-
-
- “The procedure is as follows: The family head empties a few
- drops of the fresh and powdered blood into a glass, wets the
- fingers of the left hand with it and sprays (blesses) with it
- everything on the table. The head of the family then says, ‘Thus
- we ask God to send the 10 plagues to all enemies of the Jewish
- faith.’ Then they eat, and at the end the head of the family
- exclaims, ‘May all Gentiles perish, as the child whose blood is
- contained in the bread and wine.’
-
-
-
- “The fresh (or dried and powdered) blood of the slaughtered is
- further used by young married Jewish couples, by pregnant
- Jewesses, for circumcision and so on. Ritual murder is
- recognized by all Talmud Jews. The Jew believes he absolves
- himself thus of his sins.”
-
-It is difficult for our minds to grasp that falsehoods such as these
-could fall on fertile soil, that a literate nation could read, digest,
-or believe these doctrines. We must realize, however, that with a
-rigidly controlled press which precluded an exposé of such lying
-propaganda, some of the ignorant and gullible would be led to believe.
-
-I now offer in evidence Document 2697-PS, a copy of _Der Stürmer_,
-Exhibit Number USA-259. This publication, _Der Stürmer_, was published
-by the Defendant Streicher’s publishing firm. In this publication,
-Streicher, speaking of the Jewish faith, said, “The Holy Scripture is a
-horrible criminal romance abounding with murder, incest, fraud, and
-indecency.”
-
-And again he said, “The Talmud is the great Jewish book of criminal
-instructions that the Jew practices in his daily life.” This is
-contained in Document 2698-PS, _Der Stürmer_, which I now offer in
-evidence, Exhibit Number USA-260.
-
-This propaganda campaign of hate was too widespread and notorious to
-require further elaboration. Within the documents offered in evidence in
-this and in other phases of the case will be found similar and even more
-scurrilous statements, many by the defendants themselves and others by
-their accomplices.
-
-When the Nazi Party gained control of the German State, a new and
-terrible weapon against the Jews was placed within their grasp, the
-power to apply the force of the state against them. This was done by the
-issuance of decrees.
-
-Jewish immigrants were denaturalized: 1933 _Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I,
-Page 480, signed by Defendants Frick and Neurath.
-
-Native Jews were precluded from citizenship: 1935 _Reichsgesetzblatt_,
-Part I, Page 1146, signed by Defendant Frick.
-
-Jews were forbidden to live in marriage or to have extramarital
-relations with persons of German blood: 1935 _Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part
-I, Page 1146, signed by Frick and Hess.
-
-Jews were denied the right to vote: 1936 _Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I,
-Page 133, signed by Defendant Frick.
-
-Jews were denied the right to hold public office or civil service
-positions: _Reichsgesetzblatt_ 1933, Part I, Page 277, signed by
-Defendant Frick.
-
-It was determined to relegate the Jews to an inferior status by denying
-them common privileges and freedoms. Thus, they were denied access to
-certain city areas, sidewalks, transportation, places, of amusement,
-restaurants: 1938 _Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I, Page 1676.
-
-Progressively more and still more stringent measures were applied, even
-to the denial of private pursuits. They were excluded from the practice
-of dentistry: 1939 _Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I, Page 47, signed by
-Defendant Hess.
-
-The practice of law was denied: 1938 _Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I, Page
-1403, signed by Defendants Frick and Hess.
-
-The practice of medicine was denied: 1938 _Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I,
-Page 969, signed by Defendants Frick and Hess.
-
-They were denied employment by press and radio: 1933
-_Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I, Page 661.
-
-From stock exchanges and stock brokerage: 1934 _Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part
-I, Page 169.
-
-And even from farming: 1933 _Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I, Page 685.
-
-In 1938 they were excluded from business in general and from the
-economic life of Germany: 1938 _Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I, Page 1580,
-signed by the Defendant Göring.
-
-The Jews were forced to pay discriminatory taxes and huge atonement
-fines. Their homes, bank accounts, real estate, and intangibles were
-expropriated.
-
-To digress for a moment from a recital of decrees and to refer
-specifically to the atonement fines, I wish to offer Document 1816-PS,
-Exhibit Number USA-261. This exhibit is a stenographic report of a
-conference under the chairmanship of the Defendant Göring, attended by
-the Defendant Funk among others, held at 11 o’clock on 12 November 1938
-at the Reich Ministry for Air. From Pages 8 and 9 of Section 7, I quote
-the Defendant Göring:
-
- “One more question, gentlemen, what would you think the
- situation would be if I announced today that Jewry shall have to
- contribute this 1,000,000,000 as a punishment.”
-
-And then the last paragraph on Page 22 of the translation before the
-Court—I quote:
-
- “I shall choose the wording this way—that German Jewry shall,
- as punishment for their abominable crimes, _et cetera, et
- cetera_, have to make a contribution of 1,000,000,000. That will
- work. The pigs won’t commit another murder in a hurry. I should
- like to say again that I would not like to be a Jew in Germany.”
-
-It was whimsical remarks such as these that originated decrees, for
-following this meeting a decree was issued placing upon the German Jews
-the burden of 1,000,000,000 Reichsmark fine: 1938 _Reichsgesetzblatt_,
-Part I, Page 1579, date 12 November 1938, signed by the Defendant
-Göring.
-
-Similar decrees are contained in 1939 _Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I, Page
-282, signed by Defendant Göring, and 1941 _Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I,
-Page 722, signed by Defendants Frick and Bormann.
-
-Finally, in the year 1943, the Jews were placed beyond the protection of
-any judicial process by a decree signed by the Defendants Bormann and
-Frick and others; and the police became the sole arbiters of punishment
-and death: 1943 _Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I, Page 372, signed by Frick
-and Bormann.
-
-I ask the Court to take judicial notice of the _Reichsgesetzblatt_
-decrees cited.
-
-Side by side with the passage of these decrees and their execution went
-still another weapon, wielded by the Party and the Party-controlled
-state. These were the openly sponsored and official anti-Jewish boycotts
-against Jews. I now offer Document 2409-PS, the published diary of
-Joseph Goebbels, Exhibit Number USA-262, and I invite the Court’s
-attention to Page 290 where, under date of 29 March 1933—the Court will
-find the quotation on the top of Page 1 of the translation of
-2409-PS—“The boycott appeal is approved by the entire Cabinet.” And
-again on the 31st of March 1933 he wrote, on Page 1, first sentence of
-Paragraph 2, “We are having a last discussion among a very small circle
-and decide that the boycott is to start tomorrow with all severity.”
-
-The Defendant Streicher and the Defendant Frank, together with Himmler,
-Ley, and others, were members of a central committee who conducted the
-1933 boycott against the Jews. Their names are listed in Document
-2156-PS, _National Socialist Party Correspondence_, 29 March 1933,
-Exhibit Number USA-263.
-
-As early as 1933 violence against the Jews was undertaken. Raids were
-conducted, by uniformed Nazis, on services within synagogues. Attending
-members of the synagogues were assaulted and religious insignia and
-emblems were desecrated. A report of such an occurrence is contained in
-the official dispatch from the American Consul General in Leipzig, dated
-5 April 1933.
-
-I offer in evidence Document 2709-PS . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: What do you refer to 2156 for?
-
-MAJOR. WALSH: Only, Sir, to show the names of the Defendants Streicher
-and Frank as members of the boycott committee.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I see.
-
-MAJOR WALSH: Document 2709 has been given Exhibit Number USA-265. From
-Paragraph 1 of Page 1, I quote:
-
- “In Dresden, several weeks ago, uniformed Nazis raided the
- Jewish prayer house, interrupted the evening religious service,
- arrested 25 worshippers, and tore the holy insignia or emblems
- from their headcovering worn while praying.”
-
-At a meeting here in Nuremberg, before the representatives of the German
-press, the Defendant Streicher and Mayor Liebel of Nuremberg revealed in
-advance to the gathered members of the press that the Nuremberg
-synagogue was to be destroyed.
-
-I offer in evidence Document 1724-PS, Exhibit Number USA-266, which is
-minutes of this meeting, dated 4 August 1938. From Page 1, Paragraph 4
-of the original, I quote the translation before the Court:
-
- “The breaking up of the synagogue (information must still be
- secret). On August 10, 1938, at 10 o’clock a.m., the breakup of
- the synagogue will commence. Gauleiter Julius Streicher will
- personally set the crane into motion with which the Jewish
- symbols, Star of David, _et cetera_, will be torn down. This
- should be arranged in a big way. Closer details are still
- unknown.”
-
-The Defendant Streicher himself supervised the demolition.
-
-In support of this, I offer Document 2711-PS, a newspaper account of 11
-August 1938, Exhibit Number USA-267, Paragraph 1 of the translation
-before the Court:
-
- “In Nuremberg the synagogue is being demolished; Julius
- Streicher himself inaugurates the work by a speech lasting more
- than an hour and a half. By his order then—so to speak as a
- prelude of the demolition—the tremendous Star of David came off
- the cupola.”
-
-These accounts of violence were not localized anti-Semitic
-demonstrations but were directed and ordered from a centralized
-headquarters in Berlin. This is established by a series of teletype
-messages sent by the Berlin Secret State Police headquarters to chiefs
-of police throughout Germany on 10 November 1938, which contained
-instructions pertaining to the pre-arranged demonstration.
-
-I now refer to Document 3051-PS, previously offered in evidence as
-Exhibit Number USA-240. I shall quote the relevant part of one of these
-confidential orders signed by Heydrich, the translation before the
-Court, the last half on Page 2:
-
- “Because of the attempt on the life of the Secretary of the
- Legation, Von Rath, in Paris tonight, 9-10 November 1938,
- demonstrations against Jews are to be expected throughout the
- Reich. The following instructions are given on how to treat
- these events:
-
-
-
- “1) The Chiefs of the State Police or their deputies must get in
- telephonic contact with the political leaders who have
- jurisdiction over their districts and must arrange a joint
- meeting with the appropriate inspector or commander of the Order
- Police to discuss the organization of the demonstrations. At
- these discussions the political leaders have to be informed that
- the German Police has received from the Reichsführer SS and
- Chief of the German Police the following instructions, in
- accordance with which the political leaders should adjust their
- own measures.
-
-
-
- “a) Only such measures should be taken which do not involve
- danger to German life or property. (For instance synagogues are
- to be burned down only when there is no danger of fire to the
- surroundings.)
-
-
-
- “b) Business and private apartments of Jews may be destroyed but
- not looted. The police is instructed to supervise the execution
- of this order and to arrest looters.”
-
-To this point we have found a gradual and a mounting emphasis in the
-campaign against the Jews, one of the basic tenets of the Nazi Party and
-of the state. The flame of prejudice has now been lighted and fanned.
-The German people have been to a large degree indoctrinated, and the
-seeds of hatred have been sown. The German State is now armed and is
-prepared for conquest and the force of world opinion can now safely be
-ignored. Already they have forced out of Germany 200,000 of its original
-500,000 Jews. The Nazi-controlled German State is therefore emboldened;
-and Hitler, in anticipation of the aggressive wars already planned,
-casts about for a “whipping boy” upon whose shoulders can be placed the
-blame for the world catastrophe yet to come. The speech before the
-Reichstag on 30 January 1939 is set forth in Document Number 2663-PS,
-which I now offer in evidence as Exhibit Number USA-268. I quote:
-
- “If the international Jewish financiers within and without
- Europe succeed in plunging the nations once more into a world
- war, the result will not be the Bolshevization of the world and
- the victory of Jewry, but the obliteration of the Jewish race in
- Europe.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn for 10 minutes.
-
- [_A recess was taken._]
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Major Walsh, it would, I think, assist the Tribunal if
-you were careful to state the PS number which we have rather more
-clearly and slowly. You see, the United States Exhibit number we do not
-have and I do not know whether it would be better to state the United
-States Exhibit number first and then give us the PS number; I am not
-sure it would. Anyhow, if you would go a little more slowly and make
-certain we get the PS number, it would be helpful.
-
-MAJOR WALSH: Yes, Your Honor.
-
-The Chief Editor of the official organ of the SS, the _Schwarze Korps_,
-expressed similar sentiments on August 8, 1940.
-
-I offer in evidence Document 2668-PS; this is Exhibit Number USA-269,
-Page 2 of the original and the full excerpt before the Court in
-translation, as follows:
-
- “Just as the Jewish question will be solved for Germany only
- when the last Jew has been deported, so the rest of Europe
- should also realize that the German peace which awaits it must
- be a peace without Jews.”
-
-These were not the only officials of the Party and of the State to voice
-the same views. The Defendant Rosenberg wrote for the publication _World
-Struggle_. I offer in evidence Document 2665-PS, Exhibit Number USA-270.
-This publication, Volumes 1 and 2, April and September 1941, Page 71 of
-the original, reads, “The Jewish question will be solved only when the
-last Jew has left the European continent.”
-
-The Court will recall Mr. Justice Jackson’s reference to the apologetic
-note contained in the diary of Hans Frank when he wrote, and I quote
-from Document 2233(c)-PS, Exhibit Number USA-271, bottom of Page 1 of
-the translation:
-
- “Of course, I could neither eliminate all lice nor all Jews in
- only 1 year’s time. But in the course of time and, above all, if
- you will help me, this end will be attained.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I forgot to say, Major Walsh, it would help us too, when
-you do not begin at the beginning of a paragraph, if you would indicate
-about where it is.
-
-MAJOR WALSH: Yes, Sir; I shall do that.
-
-While this presentation is not necessarily intended to be a
-chronological narrative of events in the treatment of the Jewish people,
-it would appear at this point that we should pause to examine the record
-to date. We find that the Nazi Party and the Nazi-dominated State have,
-by writings and by utterances, by decrees and by official acts, clearly
-expressed their intent: the Jew must be eliminated.
-
-How do they now progress to the accomplishment of this purpose? The
-first requirement was a complete registration of all Jews; and inasmuch
-as the policy relating to the Jews followed on the heels of German
-aggression, such registration was required not only within the Reich but
-successively within the conquered territories. For example, within
-Germany registration was required by decree (_Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part
-I, 1938, Page 922, 23 July, signed by the Defendant Frick); within
-Austria (_Reichsgesetzblatt_, Volume 1, 1940, Page 694, 29 April);
-within Poland (Kurjer Krakowski, 5 October 1939); in France (_Journal
-Officiel_ Number 9, Page 92, 30 September 1940); in Holland
-(_Verordnungsblatt_, Number 6, 10 January 1941, signed by the Defendant
-Seyss-Inquart).
-
-The second step was to segregate and concentrate the Jews within
-restricted areas called ghettos. This policy was carefully worked out,
-and perhaps the confidential statement taken from the files of the
-Defendant Rosenberg will best serve as an illustration.
-
-I offer in evidence a copy of a memorandum from Defendant Rosenberg’s
-file entitled, “Directions for Handling of the Jewish Question,”
-Document 212-PS, Exhibit Number USA-272. I quote from the top of Page 2
-of the translation before the Court:
-
- “The first main goal of the German measures must be strict
- segregation of Jewry from the rest of the population. The
- presupposition of this is, first of all, the registration of the
- Jewish population by the introduction of a compulsory
- registration order and similar appropriate measures. . . .”
-
-And then, in the second sentence, in the second paragraph, on Page 2, I
-continue:
-
- “. . . all rights of freedom for Jews are to be withdrawn. They
- are to be placed in ghettos and at the same time are to be
- separated according to sexes. The presence of many more or less
- closed Jewish settlements in White Ruthenia and in the Ukraine
- makes this mission easier. Moreover, places are to be chosen
- which make possible the full use of the Jewish manpower as a
- consequence of present labor programs. These ghettos can be
- placed under the supervision of a Jewish self-government with
- Jewish officials. The guarding of the boundaries between the
- ghettos and the outer world is, however, the duty of the police.
-
-
-
- “Also, in the case in which a ghetto could not yet be
- established, care is to be taken through strict prohibition and
- similar suitable measures that a further intermingling of blood
- of the Jews and the rest of the populace does not continue.”
-
-In May 1941 Rosenberg, as the Reich Minister for the Eastern regions,
-issued directions confining the Jews to ghettos in the Ukraine.
-
-I offer in evidence Document 1028-PS, Exhibit Number USA-273, and from
-the first sentence of the translation before the Court, I read:
-
- “After the customary removal of Jews from all public offices,
- the Jewish question will have to be solved conclusively through
- the institution of ghettos.”
-
-The policies expressed in the quoted Rosenberg memoranda were not
-isolated instances nor the acts of one individual. It was the expressed
-state policy. Defendant Von Schirach played his part in the program of
-“ghettoization.” I offer in evidence Document 3048-PS, Exhibit Number
-USA-274. Before the Court is a full translation of that which I wish to
-quote. The Defendant Von Schirach spoke before the European Youth
-Congress held in Vienna on 14 September 1942, and from Page 2, Column 2,
-of the Vienna edition of the _Völkischer Beobachter_ of 15 September, I
-quote:
-
- “Every Jew who exerts influence in Europe is a danger to
- European culture. If anyone reproaches me with having driven
- from this city, which was once the European metropolis of Jewry,
- tens of thousands upon tens of thousands of Jews into the ghetto
- of the East, I feel myself compelled to reply, ‘I see in this an
- action contributing to European culture.’”
-
-One of the largest ghettos was within the City of Warsaw. The original
-report made by SS Major General Stroop concerning this ghetto is
-entitled, “The Warsaw Ghetto is no more.” I now offer this in evidence
-at this time, if the Court please, and request leave to refer to it
-later on in this presentation—Exhibit Number USA-275, 1061-PS, top of
-Page 3 of the translation, Document 1061-PS:
-
- “The Ghetto thus established in Warsaw was inhabited by about
- 400,000 Jews.
-
-
-
- “It contained 27,000 apartments with an average of two and a
- half rooms each. It was separated from the rest of the city by
- partitions and other walls and by walling-up of thoroughfares,
- windows, doors, open spaces, _et cetera_.”
-
-Some idea of the conditions within this ghetto can be gathered from the
-fact that an average of six persons lived in every room. Himmler
-received a report from the SS Brigadeführer Group A, dated 15 October
-1941 which further illustrates the establishment and operation of the
-ghettos. I offer Document L-180 in evidence as Exhibit Number USA-276.
-The translation, if the Tribunal please, is from the second paragraph
-from the bottom of Page 9:
-
- “Apart from organizing and carrying out measures of execution,
- the creation of ghettos was begun in the larger towns at once
- during the first days of operations. This was especially urgent
- in Kovno because there were 30,000 Jews in a total population of
- 152,400.”
-
-And from the last paragraph on Page 9 continuing to page 10 I quote:
-
- “In Riga the so-called ‘Moscow suburb’ was designated as a
- ghetto. This is the worst dwelling district of Riga, already now
- mostly inhabited by Jews. The transfer of the Jews into the
- ghetto district proved rather difficult because the Latvian
- dwellings in that district had to be evacuated and residential
- space in Riga is very crowded. Of the 28,000 Jews living in Riga
- 24,000 have been transferred into the ghetto so far. In creating
- the ghetto the Security Police restricted themselves to mere
- policing duties, while the establishment and administration of
- the ghetto as well as the regulation of the food supply for the
- inmates of the ghetto was left to civil administration; the
- Labor Offices were left in charge of labor allocation. In the
- other towns with a larger Jewish population ghettos shall be
- established likewise.”
-
-Jews were also forced into ghettos in the Polish Province of Galicia. No
-words in my vocabulary could describe quite so adequately the conditions
-as those contained in the report from Katzmann, Lieutenant General of
-Police, to Krüger, General of the Police East, dated 3 June 1943,
-entitled “Solution of Jewish Question in Galicia.” I offer Document L-18
-in evidence as Exhibit Number USA-277. From the translation, if the
-Court please, we will begin with the last three sentences on Page 11,
-that is, the last three sentences prior to the word “nothing” which is
-there on that page: “Nothing but catastrophical conditions were found in
-the ghettos of Rawa-Ruska and Rohatyn.”
-
- “The Jews of Rawa-Ruska, fearing the evacuation, had concealed
- those who suffered from spotted fever in underground holes. When
- evacuation was to start it was found that 3,000 Jews suffering
- from spotted fever lay about in this ghetto. In order to destroy
- this center of pestilence at once, every police officer
- inoculated against spotted fever was called into action. Thus we
- succeeded in destroying this plague-boil, losing thereby only
- one officer. Almost the same conditions were found in Rohatyn.”
-
-On Page 19 of this same document, L-18, the last paragraph, I wish to
-quote further.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Yes.
-
- MAJOR WALSH: “Since we received more and more alarming reports
- on the Jews becoming armed in an ever-increasing manner, we
- started, during the last fortnight in June 1943, an action
- throughout the whole of the District of Galicia with the intent
- to use strongest measures to destroy the Jewish gangsterdom.
- Special measures were found necessary during the action to
- dissolve the living quarters in Lvov where the dug-out mentioned
- above had been established. Here we had to act brutally from the
- beginning in order to avoid losses on our side; we had to blow
- up or to burn down several houses. On this occasion the
- surprising fact arose that we were able to catch about 20,000
- Jews instead of 12,000 Jews who had registered. We had to pull
- at least 3,000 Jewish corpses out of every kind of hiding place;
- they had committed suicide by taking poison.”
-
-On Page 20 of this document, the third paragraph I read:
-
- “Despite the extraordinary burden heaped upon every single SS
- and Police member during these actions, the mood and spirit of
- the men were extraordinarily good and praiseworthy from the
- first to the last day.”
-
-These acts and actions of removal and slaughter were not entirely
-without profit. The author of this report, on the ninth page of this
-translated copy stated, and I quote the last paragraph:
-
- “Together with the evacuation action we executed the
- confiscation of Jewish property. Very high values were
- confiscated and handed over to the Special Staff ‘Reinhard.’
- Apart from furniture and many textile goods, the following
- amounts were confiscated and turned over to Special Staff
- ‘Reinhard.’”
-
-I would like to read a few of the many and assorted items listed under
-this confiscation:
-
- “20.952 kilograms of golden wedding rings; 7 stamp collections,
- complete; 1 suitcase with pocket knives; 1 basket of fountain
- pens and propelling pencils; 3 bags filled with rings—not
- genuine; 35 wagons of furs.”
-
-I will not burden the Court with the detailed lists of objects of value
-and of the money confiscated; but the foregoing is cited to illustrate
-the thoroughness of the looting of a defenseless people, even to the
-11.73 kilograms of gold teeth and inlays.
-
-By the end of 1942 Jews in the Government General of Poland had been
-crowded into 55 localities whereas before the German invasion there had
-been approximately 1,000 Jewish settlements within this same area. This
-is reported in the 1942 official gazette for the Government General,
-Number 94, Page 665, 1 November 1942.
-
-The Jews having been registered and confined within the ghettos, they
-now furnished a reservoir for slave labor. It is believed pertinent at
-this time to point out the difference between the slave labor and labor
-duty. The latter group were entitled to reasonable compensation, stated
-work hours, medical care and attention, and other social security
-measures, while the former were granted none of these advantages, being
-in fact on a level below a slave.
-
-Defendant Rosenberg, as Reich Minister for the Eastern Occupied
-Territories, set up within his organization a department which, among
-other things, was to seek a solution for the Jewish problem by means of
-forced labor. His plans are contained in another document, 1024-PS,
-which I now offer in evidence, Exhibit Number USA-278.
-
-I quote the first part of Paragraph 3 of Page 1 of the document
-entitled, “General Organization and Tasks of Our Office for the General
-Handling of Problems in the Eastern Territory.” This is dated 29 April
-1941. This brief excerpt reads as follows:
-
- “A general treatment is required for the Jewish problem for
- which a temporary solution will have to be determined (forced
- labor for the Jews, creation of ghettos, _et cetera_).”
-
-Thereafter he issued instructions that Jewish forced labor should be
-effected and utilized for every manual labor; and I refer to Document
-212-PS, already in evidence, Exhibit Number USA-272. From Page 3 of this
-document, Paragraph 5 and Paragraph 7, I quote Paragraph 5:
-
- “The standing rule for the Jewish labor employment is the
- complete and unyielding use of Jewish manpower regardless of age
- in the reconstruction of the Eastern Occupied Territories.”
-
-And from Paragraph 7 of the same page I read:
-
- “Violations of German measures, especially evasions of the
- forced labor regulations, are to be punished by death in the
- case of the Jews.”
-
-From the ghettos Jewish labor was selected and sent to a concentration
-area. Here the usable Jews were screened from those considered
-worthless. For example, a contingent of 45,000 Jews would be expected to
-yield 10,000 to 15,000 usable laborers. My authority for this statement
-is contained in a RSHA telegram to Himmler, marked “urgent” and
-“secret,” dated 16 December 1942.
-
-I offer this document, 1472-PS, in evidence, Exhibit Number USA-279; and
-from the translation before the Court I read the last four lines:
-
- “In the total of 45,000 are included physically handicapped and
- others (old Jews and children). In making a distribution for
- this purpose, at least 10,000 to 15,000 laborers will be
- available when the Jews arriving at Auschwitz are assigned.”
-
-From Document L-18, a report from the Lieutenant General of the Police,
-Katzmann, to General of the Police East, Krüger, already in evidence,
-Exhibit Number USA-277, we find the clearly outlined nature of the
-forced labor situation for the Jews. On Page 2 of the translation,
-starting with Paragraph 6, I read:
-
- “The best remedy consisted in the formation of forced labor
- camps by the SS and Police Leader. The best opportunity for
- labor was offered by the necessity to complete the ‘Dg. 4’ road
- which was extremely important and necessary for the whole of the
- southern part of the front and which was in a catastrophically
- bad condition. On October 15, 1941, the establishment of camps
- along the road was commenced; and despite considerable
- difficulties there existed, after a few weeks only, seven camps
- containing 4,000 Jews.”
-
-From Page 2, Paragraph 7, I read:
-
- “Soon more camps followed these first ones, so that after a very
- short time the completion of 15 camps of this kind could be
- reported to the superior leader of SS and police. In the course
- of time about 20,000 Jewish laborers passed through these camps.
- Despite the hardly imaginable difficulties arising from this
- problem I can report today that about 160 kilometers of the road
- are completed.”
-
-And from Page 2, Paragraph 8, I read:
-
- “At the same time all other Jews fit for work were registered
- and distributed for useful work by the labor agencies.”
-
-And on Page 5, last part of Paragraph 1 . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Don’t you want the remainder of that paragraph on Page 2?
-
-MAJOR WALSH: It is such a lengthy document, I hesitated to burden the
-record with so much of it, and had extracted certain portions therefrom,
-but I shall be very glad to read it into the record.
-
- THE PRESIDENT: “Then, for instance, the Municipal Administration
- at Lvov had no success in their attempts to house the Jews
- within a closed district which would be inhabited only by Jews.
- This question, too, was solved quickly by the SS and Police
- Leader through his subordinate officials.”
-
-MAJOR WALSH: With the Court’s permission, I add that to the record.
-
-Reading the last paragraph of Page 2:
-
- “When the Jews were marked by the Star of David, as well as when
- they were registered by the labor agencies, the first symptoms
- appeared in their attempts to dodge the order of the
- authorities. The measures which were introduced thereupon led to
- thousands of arrests. It became more and more apparent that the
- civil administration was not in a position to solve the Jewish
- problem in an approximately satisfactory manner. Then, for
- instance, the municipal administration at Lvov had no success in
- their attempts to house the Jews within a closed district which
- would be inhabited only by Jews. This question, too, was solved
- quickly by the SS and Police Leader through his subordinate
- officials. This measure became the more urgent as in the winter
- of 1941 big centers of spotted fever were noted in many parts of
- the town . . . .”
-
-And on Page 5 of this document, L-18, last half of Paragraph 1, I read:
-
- “During the removal of the Jews into a certain quarter of the
- town several sluices were erected at which all the work-shy and
- asocial Jewish rabble were caught during the screening and
- treated in a special way. Owing to the peculiar fact that almost
- 90 percent of artisans working in Galicia were Jews, the task to
- be solved could be fulfilled only step by step, since an
- immediate evacuation would not have served the interest of war
- economy.”
-
-And again, on Page 5, Paragraph 2, the latter part, beginning with
-“cases were discovered”:
-
- “Cases were discovered where Jews, in order to acquire any
- certificate of labor, not only renounced all wages but even paid
- money themselves. Moreover, the organizing of Jews for the
- benefit of their employers grew to such catastrophical extent
- that it was deemed necessary to interfere in the most energetic
- manner for the benefit of the German name.
-
-
-
- “Since the administration was not in a position and showed
- itself too weak to master this chaos, the SS and Police leader
- simply took over the entire disposition of labor for Jews. The
- Jewish labor agencies, which were manned by hundreds of Jews,
- were dissolved. All certificates of labor given by firms or
- administrative offices were declared invalid, and the cards
- given to the Jews by the labor agencies were validated by the
- police offices by stamping them. In the course of this action,
- again, thousands of Jews were caught who were in possession of
- forged certificates or who had obtained, surreptitiously,
- certificates of labor by all kinds of pretexts. These Jews also
- were exposed to special treatment.”
-
-If the Court please, at this time I would like to arrange for the
-showing of a very short motion picture, perhaps one of the most unusual
-exhibits that will be presented during the Trial. With the Court’s
-permission I would like to call upon Commander Donovan to assist.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Need we adjourn for it or not?
-
-MAJOR WALSH: No, Sir. The movie itself is very, very short, Sir.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Very well.
-
-COMMANDER DONOVAN: May it please the Tribunal, the United States now
-offers in evidence Document Number 3052-PS, Exhibit Number USA-280,
-entitled “Original German 8-millimeter Film of Atrocities against Jews.”
-
-This is a strip of motion pictures taken, we believe, by a member of the
-SS and captured by the United States military forces in an SS barracks
-near Augsburg, Germany, as described in the affidavits now before the
-Tribunal.
-
-We have not been able to establish beyond doubt in which area these
-films were made, but we believe that to be immaterial.
-
-The film offers undeniable evidence, made by Germans themselves, of
-almost incredible brutality to Jewish people in the custody of the
-Nazis, including German military units.
-
-It is believed by the Prosecution that the scene is the extermination of
-a ghetto by Gestapo agents, assisted by military units. And, as the
-other evidence to be presented by the Prosecution will indicate, the
-scene presented to the Tribunal is probably one which occurred a
-thousand times all over Europe under the Nazi rule of terror.
-
-This film was made on an 8-millimeter home camera. We have not wished
-even to reprint it, and so shall present the original, untouched film
-captured by our troops. The pictures obviously were taken by an amateur
-photographer. Because of this, because of the fact that part of it is
-burned, because of the fact that it runs for only 1½ minutes, and
-because of the confusion on every hand shown on this film, we do not
-believe that the Tribunal can properly view the evidence if it is shown
-only once. We therefore ask the Tribunal’s permission to project the
-film twice as we did before the Defense Counsel.
-
-This is a silent film. The film has been made available to all Defense
-Counsel, and they have a copy of the supporting affidavits, duly
-translated.
-
- [_The film was shown._]
-
-COMMANDER DONOVAN: [_Continuing._] May it please the Tribunal, while the
-film is being rewound I wish to say that attached to the affidavits
-offered in evidence is a description of every picture shown in this
-film. And, with the Tribunal’s permission, I wish to read a few
-selections from that at this time, before again projecting the film, in
-order to direct the Tribunal’s attention to certain of the scenes:
-
-Scene 2—A naked girl running across the courtyard.
-
-Scene 3—An older woman being pushed past the camera, and a man in SS
-uniform standing at the right of the scene.
-
-Scene 5—A man with a skullcap and a woman are manhandled.
-
-Number 14—A half-naked woman runs through the crowd.
-
-Number 15—Another half-naked woman runs out of the house.
-
-Number 16—Two men drag an old man out.
-
-Number 18—A man in German military uniform, with his back to the
-camera, watches.
-
-Number 24—A general shot of the street, showing fallen bodies and naked
-women running.
-
-Number 32—A shot of the street, showing five fallen bodies.
-
-Number 37—A man with a bleeding head is hit again.
-
-Number 39—A soldier in German military uniform, with a rifle, stands by
-as a crowd centers on a man coming out of the house.
-
-Number 44—A soldier with a rifle, in German military uniform, walks
-past a woman clinging to a torn blouse.
-
-Number 45—A woman is dragged by her hair across the street.
-
- [_The film was shown again._]
-
-COMMANDER DONOVAN: [_Continuing._] We submit to the Tribunal for its
-permanent records this strip of 8-millimeter film.
-
-MAJOR WALSH: It is difficult from this point to follow the thread of
-chronological order or a topical outline. So numerous are the documents
-and so appalling the contents that in this brief recital the Prosecution
-will make no effort to itemize the criminal acts. Selected documents,
-however, will unfold the crimes in full detail.
-
-Before launching a discussion of the means utilized to accomplish the
-ultimate aim, that is the extermination of the Jewish people, I now turn
-to that fertile source of evidence, the diary of Hans Frank, then
-Governor General of occupied Poland. In a cabinet session on Tuesday, 16
-December 1941, in the government building at Kraków, the Defendant Frank
-made a closing address to the session. I offer now in evidence that part
-of the document, Number 2233(d)-PS, Exhibit Number USA-281, identified
-CV 1941, October to December, and from Page 76, line 10, to Page 77,
-line 33, of the original and of the entire translation before the Court.
-I quote:
-
- “As far as the Jews are concerned, I want to tell you quite
- frankly that they must be done away with in one way or another.
- The Führer said once: ‘Should united Jewry again succeed in
- provoking a world war, the blood of not only the nations which
- have been forced into the war by them will be shed, but the Jew
- will have found his end in Europe.’ I know that many of the
- measures carried out against the Jews in the Reich at present
- are being criticized. It is being tried intentionally, as is
- obvious from the reports on the morale, to talk about cruelty,
- harshness, _et cetera_. Before I continue, I would beg you to
- agree with me on the following formula: We will principally have
- pity on the German people only and nobody else in the whole
- world. The others, too, had no pity on us. As an old National
- Socialist I must also say: This war would be only a partial
- success if the whole lot of Jewry would survive it, while we
- would have shed our best blood in order to save Europe. My
- attitude towards the Jews will, therefore, be based only on the
- expectation that they must disappear. They must be done away
- with. I have entered negotiations to have them deported to the
- East. A large conference concerning that question, to which I am
- going to delegate the State Secretary Dr. Bühler, will take
- place in Berlin in January. That discussion is to take place in
- the Reich Security Main Office with SS Lieutenant General
- Heydrich. A great Jewish migration will begin, in any case. “But
- what should be done with the Jews? Do you think they will be
- settled down in the ‘Ostland’ in villages? This is what we were
- told in Berlin: Why all this bother? We can do nothing with them
- either in the ‘Ostland’ or in the ‘Reichskommissariat.’ So
- liquidate them yourselves.
-
-
-
- “Gentlemen, I must ask you to arm yourselves against all feeling
- of pity. We must annihilate the Jews, wherever we find them and
- wherever it is possible, in order to maintain there the
- structure of the Reich as a whole. This will, naturally, be
- achieved by other methods than those pointed out by Bureau Chief
- Dr. Hummel. Nor can the judges of the Special Courts be made
- responsible for it because of the limitations of the frame work
- of the legal procedure. Such outdated views cannot be applied to
- such gigantic and unique events. We must find at any rate a way
- which leads to the goal, and my thoughts are working in that
- direction.
-
-
-
- “The Jews represent for us also extraordinarily malignant
- gluttons. We have now approximately, 2,500,000 of them in the
- Government General, perhaps with the Jewish mixtures and
- everything that goes with it, 3,500,000 Jews. We cannot shoot or
- poison those 3,500,000 Jews; but we shall nevertheless be able
- to take measures which will lead, somehow, to their
- annihilation, and this in connection with the gigantic measures
- to be determined in discussions with the Reich. The Government
- General must become free of Jews, the same as the Reich. Where
- and how this is to be achieved is a matter for the offices which
- we must appoint and create here. Their activities will be
- brought to your attention in due course.”
-
-This, if the Tribunal please, is not the planning and scheming of an
-individual, but is the expression of the official of the German State,
-the appointed Governor General of occupied Poland. The methods used to
-accomplish the annihilation of the Jewish people were varied and,
-although not subtle, were highly successful.
-
-I have from time to time made reference to certain utterances and
-actions of the Defendant Rosenberg as one of the leaders and policy
-makers of the Nazi Party and German State. It is perhaps reasonable to
-assume that the Defendant Rosenberg will claim for many of his actions
-that he pursued them pursuant to superior orders. I have before me,
-however, a captured document, Number 001-PS, marked “secret,” dated 18
-December 1941, entitled “Documentary Memorandum for the
-Führer—Concerning Jewish Possessions in France,” Exhibit Number
-USA-282. I dare say that no document before this Tribunal will more
-clearly evidence the Defendant Rosenberg’s personal attitude, his
-temperament, and convictions toward the Jews more strongly than this
-memorandum, wherein he, in his own initiative, urges plundering and
-death. I offer in evidence Document Number 001-PS. The body of the
-memorandum reads as follows:
-
- “In compliance with the order of the Führer for protection of
- Jewish cultural possessions, a great number of Jewish dwellings
- remained unguarded. Consequently, many furnishings have
- disappeared because a guard could, naturally, not be posted. In
- the whole East the administration has found terrible conditions
- of living quarters, and the chances of procurement are so
- limited that it is not possible to procure any more. Therefore,
- I beg the Führer to permit the seizure of all Jewish home
- furnishings of Jews in Paris who have fled or will leave shortly
- and those of Jews living in all parts of the occupied West to
- relieve the shortage of furnishings in the administration in the
- East.
-
-
-
- “2. A great number of leading Jews were, after a short
- examination in Paris, again released. The attempts on the lives
- of members of the Forces have not stopped; on the contrary they
- continue. This reveals an unmistakable plan to disrupt the
- German-French co-operation, to force Germany to retaliate and,
- with this, evoke a new defense on the part of the French against
- Germany. I suggest to the Führer that, instead of executing 100
- Frenchmen, we shoot in their place 100 Jewish bankers, lawyers,
- _et cetera_. It is the Jews in London and New York who incite
- the French Communists to commit acts of violence, and it seems
- only fair that the members of this race should pay for this. It
- is not the little Jews but the leading Jews in France who should
- be held responsible. That would tend to awaken the anti-Jewish
- sentiment.”—Sighed—“A. Rosenberg.”
-
- [_Dr. Thoma approached the lectern._]
-
-THE PRESIDENT: May I ask you to speak slowly so that your application
-will come to me through the earphones correctly.
-
-DR. THOMA: Since the Prosecutor is now dealing with the case against my
-client, Rosenberg, may I be permitted to voice an objection to Document
-212-PS, Exhibit Number USA-272. The Prosecutor claims that this document
-was a directive issued by the Minister for the East. It begins with the
-words . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: None of that has come through on the earphones. I don’t
-understand you. You had better begin again.
-
-DR. THOMA: The Prosecutor presented earlier today Document Number
-212-PS, Exhibit Number USA-272, claiming that its content was a
-directive issued by the Minister for the East on the treatment of Jews.
-In this document he is said to have given instructions that violations
-of German regulations by Jews, especially violations of the compulsory
-labor laws, could only be punished by death. This document does not
-originate with the Defendant Rosenberg; nor did it by mistake . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: More slowly, please.
-
-DR. THOMA: This document does not originate with the Defendant
-Rosenberg. It bears neither a date nor an address, nor his signature. I,
-therefore, object to the assertion that this document originated with
-the Defendant Rosenberg.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Wait a minute. I don’t think that Counsel for the
-Prosecution said that, that Document 212-PS emanated from Rosenberg. I
-didn’t so understand him.
-
-DR. THOMA: I understood him to say that it was a directive issued by the
-Minister for the East; and if I am not mistaken, he also said it was
-dated April 1941. At that time there was no Ministry for the East.
-Rosenberg was only named Minister for the East in July 1941.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I will ask the Counsel for the Prosecution.
-
-MAJOR WALSH: It is my understanding, Sir, that that document, 212-PS,
-was taken from the captured files of Rosenberg.
-
-DR. THOMA: That is true, it was found among the papers of the Defendant
-Rosenberg; the Defendant Rosenberg claims, however, that he has never
-seen this document, that he knows nothing about it, and that it has
-never passed through his hands.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Rosenberg, when he is called as a witness or when you
-appear to speak for him, will be able to say that he has never seen the
-document before. All that Counsel, for the Prosecution has said—and it
-appears to be true—is that the document was found in Rosenberg’s file.
-You can say or prove by Rosenberg’s evidence when you call Rosenberg—if
-you do call him—that he never saw the document. Do you understand?
-
-DR. THOMA: Yes, thank you.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: It is 5 o’clock now, so we will adjourn.
-
- [_The Tribunal adjourned until 14 December 1945 at 1000 hours._]
-
-
-
-
- TWENTIETH DAY
- Friday, 14 December 1945
-
-
- _Morning Session_
-
-DR. KAUFFMANN: May I bring up two points with regard to yesterday’s and
-all future presentation of evidence on the section dealing with Crimes
-against Humanity.
-
-Firstly, I request that the affidavit of the witness Pfaffenberger,
-which was submitted yesterday, be stricken from the record. The witness
-himself will later have to be cross-examined, since his affidavit is
-fragmentary in most important points. In many cases it does not appear
-whether his statements are based on personal observations or on hearsay,
-and therefore it is too easy to draw false conclusions. The witness did
-not mention that the Camp Commander Koch and his inhuman wife were
-condemned to death by an SS court, among other things, on account of
-these occurrences. It is, of course, possible to ascertain the complete
-facts by questioning the witness at a later stage of the Trial. But
-until then the Tribunal and all members of the Prosecution and the
-Defense must be continually influenced by such dreadful testimony.
-
-The contents of this testimony are so horrifying and so degrading to the
-human mind that one would like to avert one’s eyes and ears. In the
-meantime such statements make their way into the press of the whole
-world, and civilization is justly indignant. The consequences of such
-prejudiced statements are incalculable. The Prosecutor clearly
-recognized the significance of this testimony and exposed the sorry
-documents in yesterday’s proceedings.
-
-If weeks or months pass before such testimony is rectified, its initial
-effect can never be wholly eliminated; but truth suffers and justice is
-endangered thereby. Surely, Article 19 of the Charter does not envisage
-bringing about such a state of affairs.
-
-Secondly, I should, therefore, like to suggest that at the present stage
-of the Trial the testimony of witnesses who live in Germany and whose
-appearance here in court is possible should not be read in the
-proceedings. For at this stage of the Trial the charges being made are
-even more terrible than those referring to wars of aggression, since the
-tortured lives and deaths of human beings are involved.
-
-At the beginning of the Trial the Tribunal refused to admit testimony of
-the witness Schuschnigg, and it is my opinion that what was valid then
-should be all the more valid at this stage of the Trial.
-
-I should like to emphasize my suggestion particularly with regard to the
-Defendant Dr. Kaltenbrunner himself, since it was not until the spring
-of 1943 that he became Chief of the Reich Security Main Office and
-since, in the opinion of the Defense, many, if not all, of his
-signatures were forged and the entire executive function attached to the
-concentration camps and the things connected with them lay exclusively
-in Himmler’s hands. That I hope to prove at a later date. I mentioned it
-now in order to justify my suggestion.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal would like to hear counsel for the Chief
-Prosecutor of the United States.
-
-MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: May it please the Tribunal, Mr. Dodd, who had
-charge of the matter which is under discussion, left for the United
-States yesterday; and I shall have to substitute for him as best I can.
-
-This Tribunal sits under a Charter which recognized the impossibility of
-covering a decade of time, a continent of space, a million acts, by
-ordinary rules of proof, and at the same time finishing this case within
-the lives of living men. We do not want to have a trial here that, like
-the trial of Warren Hastings, lasted 7 years. Therefore the Charter sets
-up only two standards by which any evidence, I submit, may be rejected.
-The first is that evidence must be relevant to the issue. The second is
-it must have some probative value. That was made mandatory upon this
-Tribunal in Article 19 because of the difficulty of ever trying this
-case if we used the technical rules of Common Law proof.
-
-One of the reasons this was a military tribunal, instead of an ordinary
-court of law, was in order to avoid the precedent-creating effect of
-what is done here on our own law and the precedent control which would
-exist if this were an ordinary judicial body.
-
-Article 19 provides that the Tribunal shall not be bound by technical
-rules of evidence. It shall adopt and apply to the greatest possible
-extent expeditious and non-technical procedure and shall admit any
-evidence which it deems to have probative value. That was made
-mandatory, that it shall admit any evidence which it deems to have
-probative value. The purpose of that provision, Your Honors, I may say,
-was this: That the whole controversy in this case—and we have no doubt
-that there is room for controversy—should be centered upon the value of
-evidence and not on its admissibility.
-
-We have no jury. There is no occasion for applying jury rules.
-Therefore, when a piece of evidence is offered, there are two questions
-which arise: Does it have probative value? If it has no probative value,
-then it should not encumber the records, of course. The second is, does
-it have relevancy? If it has not, of course it should not come in.
-
-The evidence in question has relevance; no one questions that. No one
-can say that an affidavit, duly sworn, does not have some probative
-value. What probative value it has, the weight of it, should be
-determined on the submission of the case. That is to say, if a witness
-has made a statement in an affidavit, and it is denied by Mr.
-Kaltenbrunner, and you believe that the denial has weight and
-credibility, of course, the affidavit should not be considered in the
-final consideration of the case. But we are dealing here with events
-that took place over great periods of time and great distances. We are
-dealing with witnesses widely scattered and a situation where
-communications are almost at a standstill.
-
-If this affidavit stands at the end of this case undenied, unchallenged,
-it is not, then, beyond belief that you would give it value and weight.
-An affidavit might bear internal evidence that it lacked credibility,
-such as evidence where the witness was talking of something of which he
-had no personal knowledge. I do not say that every affidavit that comes
-along has probative value just because it is sworn to. But it seems to
-me that if we are to make progress with this case, this simple system
-envisioned by this Charter, which was the subject of long consideration,
-must be followed; that if, when a piece of evidence is presented, even
-though it does not comply with technical rules governing judicial
-procedures, it is something which has probative value in the ordinary
-daily concerns of life, it should be admitted. If it stands undenied at
-the close of the case, as many of these things will, then, of course,
-there is no issue about it; and it saves the calling of witnesses, which
-will take an indefinite period of time as we have already seen. I may
-say that the testimony of the witness Lahousen, which took nearly 2
-days, could have been put in, in this Court, in 15 minutes in affidavit
-form, and all that was essential to it could have been placed before us;
-and if it were to be denied you could then have determined its weight.
-
-We want to adhere to this Charter. I submit it is no reason for
-deviating from the Charter that an affidavit recites horrors. I should
-have thought that the world could not be more shocked by recitals of
-horrors in affidavits than it has been in the documents that have
-proceeded from sources of the enemy itself. There is no reason in that
-for departing from the plain principles of the Charter.
-
-I think the question of orderly procedure and the question of time are
-both involved in this. I think that the Tribunal should receive
-affidavits, and we have prepared them—we hope carefully, we hope
-fairly—to present a great many things that would take days and days of
-proof. I may say that this ruling is more important in subsequent stages
-of this case than it is on this particular affidavit.
-
-There is another reason, perhaps. We have some situations in which a
-member of an accused organization, who is directly hostile to our
-position because the accusation would reach him within the accused
-class, has made an affidavit or affidavits which constitute admissions
-against interest; but on some other issue he makes statements which we
-believe are untrue and incredible; and we do not wish to vouch for his
-general credibility by calling him as a witness, but we wish to avail
-ourselves of his admission. Those things we think since we have to make
-our proof largely from enemy sources. All this proof and every witness 8
-months ago were in the hands of the enemy. We have to make our proof
-from them. God alone knows how much proof there is in this world that we
-have not been able to reach. We submit that the orderly procedure here
-is to abide by this Charter and admit these affidavits. If they stand
-unquestioned at the end of the case, there is no issue about them. If
-they are questioned, then the weight is a matter which you would
-determine on final submission.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Justice Jackson, I have three questions I should like
-to ask you. The first is: Where is Pfaffenberger?
-
-MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: That I cannot answer at the moment, but I will get
-an answer as quickly as I can. It is unknown to us at the moment. If we
-are able to ascertain, I will inform you at the conclusion of the noon
-recess.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The second point to which I wish to draw your attention
-is Article 16(e) of the Charter, which contemplates cross-examination of
-witnesses by the defendants. The only reason why it is thought that
-witnesses who are available should not give evidence by affidavit is
-because it denies to the Defense the opportunity of cross-examining
-them.
-
-MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: I think that this provision means just exactly what
-it says. If we call a witness, they have the right of cross-examination.
-If he is not called, they have the right to call him, if he is
-available, as their witness; but not, of course, the right of
-cross-examination. The provision itself, if Your Honor notices, reads
-that they have the right to cross-examine any witness called by the
-Prosecution; but that does not abrogate or affect Article 19, that we
-may obtain and produce any probative evidence in such manner as will
-expedite the Trial.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Then the next point to which I wish to draw your
-attention is Article 17(a). As I understood it, you were arguing that it
-was mandatory upon the Tribunal to consider any evidence which was
-relevant. Therefore, I draw your attention to Article 17(a) which gives
-the Tribunal power to summon witnesses to the Trial.
-
-MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: That is right. I think there is no conflict in that
-whatever. The power of the Tribunal to summon witnesses and to put
-questions to them was introduced into this Charter through the
-continental systems of jurisprudence. Usually there are not Tribunal
-witnesses in our procedure in the States. Witnesses are called only by
-one of the parties; but it was suggested by the continental scholars
-that in this kind of case, since we were utilizing a mixture of the two
-procedures, the Tribunal itself should have the right to do several
-things. One is to summon witnesses, to require their attendance, and to
-put questions to them. I submit that this witness, whose affidavit has
-been received, can be called, if we can find him, by the Tribunal and
-questioned.
-
-The next provision—and it bears, on the spirit of this—of Article 17
-is that the Tribunal has the right to interrogate any defendant. Of
-course, under our system of jurisprudence the Tribunal would have no
-such right, because the defendant has the unqualified right to refrain
-from being a witness; but in deference again to the continental system,
-the Tribunal was given the right to interrogate any defendant, and his
-immunities, which he would have under the Constitution of the United
-States, if he were being tried under our system, were taken away.
-
-I submit that the perfect consistency in those provisions empowers the
-Tribunal on its own motion (Article 17) to summon witnesses, to
-supplement anything that is offered, to put any questions to witnesses
-and to any defendant.
-
-If any witness is called, the right of cross-examination cannot be
-denied; but that does not abrogate Article 19, which was intended to
-enable us to put our case before the Tribunal so that the issue would
-then be drawn by the defendants and the weight of what we offer
-determined on final submission.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Lastly, there is Article 17(e), which I suppose, in your
-submission, would entitle the Tribunal, if they thought right, after
-receiving the affidavit, to take the evidence of Pfaffenberger on
-commission.
-
-MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: Yes, I think it would, Your Honor. I may say, in
-reference to that section—what, perhaps, may be surprising to those
-accustomed to our system of jurisprudence—that it was one of the most
-controversial issues we had in the framing of this Charter. We had in
-mind the authorization of what we call “masters” to go into various
-localities, perhaps, and take testimony, not knowing what might be
-necessary. Our practice, however, of sending “masters in equity” to take
-testimony and make recommendations was not acceptable to the continental
-system, and we finally compromised on this provision which authorizes
-the taking of testimony by commissions.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Thank you.
-
-GENERAL R. A. RUDENKO (Chief Prosecutor for the U.S.S.R.): Your Honors,
-I have come forward after my colleague, Mr. Jackson, to make my own
-statement, inasmuch as I think that the petition of the Defense is
-fundamentally wrong and should not be complied with.
-
-We are submitting our objections for the Tribunal’s consideration. I
-fully share the viewpoint held by the Chief Prosecutor of the U.S.A.,
-Mr. Jackson, and in addition should like to point out the following; The
-Defense Counsel, in his petition, raises the question of whether the
-Prosecution should refer to, or make public, documents containing
-affidavits of persons residing in Germany. A statement of this sort is
-completely out of order since, as is known, the defendants committed the
-greater part of their atrocities in all countries of Europe and it will
-be readily understood that the witnesses of these atrocities live in
-different parts of these countries; it is essential that the Prosecution
-have recourse to the testimony of such persons, whether it be written or
-oral. Your Honors, we have entered a phase of the Trial in which we have
-to set forth the atrocities connected with so-called War Crimes and
-Crimes against Humanity, atrocities which were committed by the
-defendants over extensive areas. We shall submit as evidence documents
-originating from the defendants themselves or from persons who suffered
-at the hands of the war criminals; it would be impossible to summon all
-these witnesses to the Trial so that they could give their evidence
-orally. It is absolutely necessary to have affidavits and written
-testimonies from these witnesses.
-
-As His Honor the President has already remarked, Article 17 provides for
-the right of summoning witnesses to the Trial. That is correct; but it
-is impossible to summon all the witnesses who could depose affidavits on
-the crimes committed by the defendants. I therefore refer to Article 19
-of the Charter which reads:
-
- “The Tribunal shall not be bound by technical rules of evidence.
- It shall adopt and apply to the greatest possible extent
- expeditious”—and I emphasize, Your Honor, _expeditious_—“and
- non-technical procedure and shall admit any evidence which it
- deems to have probative value.”
-
-I would ask the Tribunal to proceed according to this article which
-definitely admits written affidavits of witnesses as evidence. That is
-what I wished to say by way of a supplement to the statement of Mr.
-Jackson.
-
-MR. ROBERTS: May it please the Tribunal, as far as the British
-Delegation is concerned, they desire to support what the American Chief
-Prosecutor has said, and we do not feel we can usefully add anything.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: [_To M. Faure of the French Delegation._] Do you wish to
-add anything?
-
-M. EDGAR FAURE (Deputy Chief Prosecutor for the French Republic): Mr.
-President, I wish simply to inform the Court that the French Prosecution
-is entirely in accord with the remarks of the American and Soviet
-Prosecutors.
-
-I think, as the representative of the American Prosecution said, it is
-impossible to settle the question of evidence in this Trial solely by
-hearing oral testimony in the courtroom, for under those circumstances
-it might be opportune to call to the witness stand all the inhabitants
-of the territories involved, which is obviously impossible. The Defense
-will have every opportunity of discussing the documents which have been
-presented by the Prosecution, including the written testimony.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I do not think that Counsel for Kaltenbrunner was
-suggesting that every witness must be called but that witnesses who were
-in Germany and available should be called and that their evidence should
-not be given by affidavit.
-
-M. FAURE: The Defense has the right of calling them as witnesses if it
-so desires.
-
-DR. KAUFFMANN: May I add a few more words to this important question?
-The replies which have just been given illustrate that one of the main
-principles of the proceedings is that the Trial should proceed speedily.
-That is also expressed in Article 19 of the Charter, and no one can hope
-more than we that this principle be followed; but it is nevertheless my
-opinion that another principle, the highest known to mankind, the
-principle of truth, should not thereby suffer. If there is a fear that
-truth will suffer through an over-hasty trial, then formal methods of
-procedure must take a secondary place. There are human principles which
-remain unspoken, which need not be spoken.
-
-This spirit of truth is certainly contained in and governs Article 19;
-and the objections I raised to the testimony of this witness seem to me
-justified to such a degree that the important principle of speeding up
-the Trial should give way to the principle of truth. Humanity itself is
-in question here. We want to establish the truth for our own generation
-and for that of our children. But if such testimony remains untold for
-months, then a part of mankind might well despair of all humanity and
-the German people, in particular, would suffer.
-
-DR. FRIEDRICH BERGOLD (Counsel for the Defendant Bormann): May it please
-the Tribunal, I should like to bring up one other point, which appears
-to me important, because it was apparently the real source of this
-discussion. According to our legal system it is the duty of the
-Prosecution to produce not only the incriminating evidence but also
-evidence for the defense of the accused. I can well understand that my
-colleague, Dr. Kauffmann, protests the Prosecution’s failure to mention
-a very important point, namely, that the German authorities indicted
-this inhuman SS leader and his wife and condemned them to death. It is
-highly probable that the Prosecution knew of this and that these
-horrible exhibits of perverted human nature, which were presented to us,
-were found in the files of the German Court.
-
-I believe the whole discussion would not have arisen if the Prosecution
-had mentioned, as part of the ghastly evidence, the fact that the German
-authorities themselves passed judgment on this inhuman man and condemned
-him to death.
-
-We find ourselves in difficulties because, in contrast to our own
-procedure, the Prosecution for the most part simply presents
-incriminating evidence but omits to present the exculpating evidence
-which may form part of any document or part of the testimony of a
-witness. If the German procedure had been followed in the present case
-and if the Prosecution had stated that this man was condemned to death,
-then in the first place, the evidence against the Defendant
-Kaltenbrunner would not have appeared so weighty and secondly, public
-opinion would, on the whole, have been left with a different impression.
-My colleague Kauffmann could then have limited himself to proving at a
-later stage of the Trial that Kaltenbrunner had, in fact, nothing at all
-to do with this affair; and the inhuman character of the proceedings and
-the dreadful impression which it made on us would have been avoided.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Will you explain the part of the German law to which you
-were referring, where you say it is the duty of the Prosecution not only
-to produce evidence for the Prosecution but also to produce evidence for
-the Defense.
-
-DR. BERGOLD: That is a general principle of German jurisprudence,
-established in Paragraph 160 of the Reich Code of Penal Procedure. It is
-one of the basic principles of law in Germany to . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Give me that reference again.
-
-DR. BERGOLD: Paragraph 160. German law incorporates this principle in
-order to enable an accused person to . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: 160 of what?
-
-DR. BERGOLD: Of the Reich Code of Penal Procedure. The same is true of
-Austria. In the Austrian Code of Penal Procedure there is a similar
-paragraph with which, however, I am not quite familiar. This principle
-is established to permit the whole truth of a case to be brought to
-light, since a defendant in custody is frequently not in a position to
-produce all the evidence in his favor. Therefore, under German law it is
-the Prosecution’s duty to present the exculpating as well as the
-incriminating evidence in a particular case.
-
-DR. KUBUSCHOK: The question arising out of Pfaffenberger’s evidence does
-not specifically concern the Defendant Von Papen, because that part of
-the Indictment does not apply to his case. I am therefore speaking only
-of the principle behind it. I believe that in practice the effect of the
-different opinions expressed by the Prosecution and the Defense cannot
-be of very great importance. Justice Jackson agrees with us that every
-witness whose affidavit is presented can, if available, be called to the
-stand by the Defense. Thus, in all cases in which the Defense holds that
-an affidavit is evidence of secondary value and as such insufficient and
-that direct examination of the witness is necessary—in all such cases
-there would be duplication of evidence, namely, the reading of the
-affidavit and then the examination and cross-examination of the witness.
-This would undoubtedly delay the proceedings of the Trial; and to
-prevent that the Tribunal would, in all such cases, rule against the
-reading, of the affidavit. Consequently, it is futile for the
-Prosecution to present affidavits of witnesses who can be expected to
-appear in person later in the proceedings.
-
-I do not think that the Prosecution should be worried about this. It is
-a matter of course that we—and we assume the same is true of the
-Prosecution—that we, the members of the Defense, want the Trial to be
-as speedy as possible but also want it to proceed cautiously to
-establish the full truth. But, it is obvious, if evidence is introduced
-which is a potential cause of completely unjust findings, that such
-evidence will have to be clarified in a more complicated and
-time-consuming way when the witness is called in person.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will consider the objection that has been
-raised when the Court adjourns.
-
-MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: May I have one word?
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Justice Jackson, it is unusual to hear counsel who
-opposes an objection a second time.
-
-MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: I merely want to give you the answer to the
-question which you asked me as to the whereabouts of Pfaffenberger. My
-information is that these affidavits were taken by the American Army at
-the time it liberated the people in these concentration camps, at the
-same time the films were taken and the whole evidence that was available
-gathered. This witness was present at the concentration camp, and at
-that time his statements were taken. We do not know his present
-whereabouts, and I see no reasonable likelihood that we will be able to
-locate him within any short time. We will make an effort.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Thank you.
-
-MR. ROBERTS: May it please the Tribunal, might I endeavor to assist? I
-think I have now obtained the German order to which the Defense Counsel
-referred, Paragraph 160. It is, My Lord, of course, in German. Perhaps I
-might hand it up, and the court translators will no doubt deal with the
-paragraph.
-
-MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: I think one bit of additional information should be
-furnished in view of the statements made here that we have information
-that we are withholding. Kaltenbrunner has been interrogated. At no time
-has he made such a claim, so I am advised by our interrogators; and
-under the Charter our duty is to present the case for the Prosecution. I
-do not, in any instance, serve two masters.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Now, I call upon Major Walsh. Major Walsh, did you give a
-lettering to the document book with which you are dealing?
-
-MAJOR WALSH: Yes. If Your Honor please, it is the letter “T.” May it
-please the Tribunal, during the last session the Prosecution presented
-briefly the preliminary steps leading to the ultimate objective of the
-Nazi Party and the Nazi-controlled State, that is, the extermination of
-the Jews. Propaganda, decrees, the infamous Nuremberg Laws, boycotts,
-registration, and “ghettoization” were the initial measures in the
-program. I shall, with the Court’s permission, continue with a
-discussion of the methods utilized for the annihilation of the Jewish
-people.
-
-I would like first to discuss starvation. Policies were designed and
-adopted to deprive the Jews of the most elemental necessities of life.
-Again the Defendant Hans Frank, then Governor General of Poland, wrote
-in his diary that hunger rations were introduced in the Warsaw ghetto;
-and referring to the new food regulations in August 1942, he callously,
-and perhaps casually, noted that by these food regulations he virtually
-condemned more than 1 million Jews to death. I offer in evidence that
-part of Document 2233(e)-PS, diary of Hans Frank, “Conference Volume,”
-24 August 1942, Exhibit USA-283. And I quote:
-
- “That we sentence 1,200,000 Jews to die of hunger should be
- noted only marginally. It is a matter of course that should the
- Jews not starve to death it would, we hope, result in a speeding
- up of the anti-Jewish measures.”
-
-Frank’s diary was not the only guide to the deliberate policy of
-starvation of the Jews. They were prohibited from pursuing agricultural
-activities in order to cut them off from access to the source of food. I
-offer Document 1138-PS in evidence, Exhibit USA-284. I refer the Court
-to Page 4 of the translation, marked with the Roman numeral V,
-Paragraphs a and b. The document is entitled “Provisional Directive on
-the Treatment of Jews . . .” and it was issued by the Reich Commissioner
-for the Ostland. I read:
-
- “Jews must be cleaned out from the countryside. The Jews are to
- be removed from all trades, especially from trade with
- agricultural products and other foodstuffs.”
-
-Jews were excluded from the purchase of basic food, such as wheat
-products, meat, eggs, and milk.
-
-I offer in evidence Document 1347-PS, Exhibit USA-285, and I quote from
-Paragraph 2 on the first page of the translation before the Court. This
-is an original decree, dated 18 September 1942, from the Ministry of
-Agriculture. I quote:
-
- “Jews will no longer receive the following foods, beginning with
- the 42d distribution period (19 October 1942): meat, meat
- products, eggs, wheat products, (cake, white bread, wheat rolls,
- wheat flour, _et cetera_), whole milk, fresh skimmed milk, as
- well as such food distributed not on food ration cards issued
- uniformly throughout the Reich but on local supply certificates
- or by special announcement of the nutrition office on extra
- coupons of the food cards. Jewish children and young people over
- 10 years of age will receive the bread ration of the normal
- consumer.”
-
-The sick, the old, and the pregnant mothers were excluded from the
-special food concessions allotted to non-Jews. Seizure by the State
-Police of food shipments to Jews from abroad was authorized, and the
-Jewish ration cards were distinctly marked with “Jew,” in color, across
-the face of the cards, so that the storekeepers could readily identify
-and discriminate against Jewish purchasers.
-
-The Czechoslovakian Government published in 1943 an official document
-entitled “Czechoslovakia Fights Back.” I offer this book in evidence,
-Document 1689-PS, Exhibit USA-286. To summarize the contents of Page
-110, it states that the Jewish food purchases were confined to certain
-areas and to certain days and hours. As might be expected, the period
-permitted for the purchases was during the time when food stocks were
-likely to be exhausted.
-
-By Special Order Number 44 for the Eastern Occupied Territories, dated 4
-November 1941, the Jews were limited to rations as low as only one-half
-of the lowest basic category of other people; and the Ministry of
-Agriculture was empowered to exclude Jews entirely or partially from
-obtaining food, thus exposing the Jewish community to death by
-starvation.
-
-I now offer in evidence Document L-165.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Did you read anything from 1689-PS?
-
-MAJOR WALSH: Just to summarize, Sir, the contents of Page 110.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I see. Now you are offering L. . .
-
-MAJOR WALSH: L-165, Your Honor, Exhibit USA-287. I refer the Court to
-the last half of the first paragraph of the translation. This is a press
-bulletin issued by the Polish Ministry of Information, dated 15 November
-1942. The Polish Ministry concludes that, upon the basis of the nature
-of the separate rationing and the amount of food available to Jews in
-the Warsaw and Kraków ghettos, the system was designed to bring about
-starvation; and from the quotation I read:
-
- “In regard to food supplies they are brought under a completely
- separate system, which is obviously aimed at depriving them of
- the most elemental necessities of life.”
-
-I would now like to discuss annihilation within the ghettos. Justice
-Jackson in his opening address to the Tribunal made reference to
-Document 1061-PS, “The Warsaw Ghetto Is No More,” marked Exhibit
-USA-275.
-
-This finest example of ornate German craftsmanship, leather bound,
-profusely illustrated, typed on heavy bond paper, is the almost
-unbelievable recital of a proud accomplishment by Major General of the
-Police Stroop, who signed the report with a bold hand. General Stroop in
-this report first pays tribute to the bravery and heroism of the German
-forces who participated in the ruthless and merciless action against a
-helpless, defenseless group of Jews, numbering, to be exact, 56,065,
-including, of course, the infants and the women. In this document he
-proceeds to relate the day-by-day account of the ultimate accomplishment
-of his mission—to destroy and to obliterate the Warsaw ghetto.
-
-According to this report, the ghetto, which was established in Warsaw in
-November 1940, was inhabited by about 400,000 Jews; and prior to the
-action for the destruction of this ghetto, some 316,000 had already been
-deported. The Court will note that this report is approximately 75 pages
-in length, and the Prosecution believes that the contents are of such
-striking evidentiary value that no part should be omitted from the
-permanent records of the Tribunal and that the Tribunal should consider
-the entire report in judging the guilt of these defendants.
-
-The defendants were furnished with several photostatic copies of the
-entire document at least 20 days ago and have had ample time, I am sure,
-to scrutinize it in detail. If the Court, in the exercise of its
-judgment, determines that the entire report may be accepted _in toto_,
-the Prosecution believes that the reading of a portion of the summary,
-together with brief excerpts from the daily teletype reports, will
-suffice for the oral record. I would like the Court to examine it; and I
-present it to the Court, together with the duplicate original thereof,
-and ask that the Court rule that the entire document may be accepted.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Major Walsh, the Court will take that course, provided
-that the Prosecution supplies as soon as possible, both to the Soviet
-and to the French members of the Tribunal, copies in Russian and French
-of the whole document.
-
-MAJOR WALSH: Yes, Sir; may I consult with . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I do not say present immediately, but present as soon as
-possible.
-
-MAJOR WALSH: Yes.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: You are going to read the passages that you think
-necessary?
-
-MAJOR WALSH: Yes. From Page 6 of the translation before the Court of
-Document 1061-PS I would like to read the boastful but nonetheless vivid
-account of some of this ruthless action within the Warsaw ghetto. I
-quote, second paragraph, Page 6:
-
- “The resistance put up by the Jews and bandits could be broken
- only by the relentless and energetic use of our shock-troops by
- day and night. On 23 April 1943 the Reichsführer SS issued
- through the Higher SS and Police Leader East at Kraków his order
- to complete the combing out of the Warsaw ghetto with the
- greatest severity and relentless tenacity. I therefore decided
- to destroy the entire Jewish residential area by setting every
- block on fire, including the blocks of residential buildings
- near the armament works. One building after the other was
- systematically evacuated and subsequently destroyed by fire. The
- Jews then emerged from their hiding places and dugouts in almost
- every case. Not infrequently the Jews stayed in the burning
- buildings until, because of the heat and the fear of being
- burned alive, they preferred to jump down from the upper stories
- after having thrown mattresses and other upholstered articles
- into the street from the burning buildings. With their bones
- broken they still tried to crawl across the street into blocks
- of buildings which had not yet been set on fire or were only
- partially in flames. Often the Jews changed their hiding places
- during the night by moving into the ruins of burnt-out
- buildings, taking refuge there until they were found by our
- patrols. Their stay in the sewers also ceased to be pleasant
- after the first week. Frequently from the street we could hear
- loud voices coming through the sewer shafts. Then the men of the
- Waffen-SS, the Police, or the Wehrmacht Engineers courageously
- climbed down the shafts to bring out the Jews and not
- infrequently they then stumbled over Jews already dead or were
- shot at. It was always necessary to use smoke candles to drive
- out the Jews. Thus one day we opened 183 sewer entrance holes
- and at a fixed time lowered smoke candles into them, with the
- result that the bandits fled from what they believed to be gas
- into the center of the former ghetto, where they could then be
- pulled out of the sewer holes there. A great number of Jews who
- could not be counted were exterminated by blowing up sewers and
- dugouts.
-
-
-
- “The longer the resistance lasted, the tougher the men of the
- Waffen-SS, Police, and Wehrmacht became. They fulfilled their
- duty indefatigably in faithful comradeship and stood together as
- models and examples of soldiers. Their duty hours often lasted
- from early morning until late at night. At night search patrols,
- with rags wound around their feet, remained at the heels of the
- Jews and gave them no respite. Not infrequently they caught and
- killed Jews who used the night hours for supplementing their
- stores from abandoned dugouts and for contacting neighboring
- groups or exchanging news with them.
-
-
-
- “Considering that the greater part of the men of the Waffen-SS
- had only been trained for 3 to 4 weeks before being assigned to
- this action, high credit should be given to the pluck, courage,
- and devotion to duty which they showed. It must be stated that
- the Wehrmacht Engineers, too, executed the blowing up of
- dugouts, sewers, and concrete buildings with indefatigability
- and great devotion to duty. Officers and men of the Police, a
- large part of whom had already been at the front, again excelled
- by their dashing spirit.
-
-
-
- “Only through the continuous and untiring work of all involved
- did we succeed in catching a total of 56,065 Jews whose
- extermination can be proved. To this should be added the number
- of Jews who lost their lives in explosions or fires but whose
- number could not be ascertained.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Major Walsh, in the section that you are just upon now,
-ought you not to read the opening paragraphs of this document, which set
-out the amount of the losses of the German troops?
-
-MAJOR WALSH: I will do so, Sir. On Page 1 of the translation, I quote.
-The title: “The Warsaw Ghetto is no more.”
-
- “For the Führer and their country the following fell in the
- battle for the destruction of Jews and bandits in the former
- Jewish residential area of Warsaw.”—Fifteen names are
- thereafter listed.
-
-
-
- “Furthermore, the Polish Police Sergeant Julian Zielenski, born
- 13 November 1891, 8th Commissariat, fell on 19 April 1943 while
- fulfilling his duty. They gave their utmost, their life. We
- shall never forget them.
-
-
-
- “The following were wounded. . . .”
-
-Then follow the names of 60 Waffen-SS personnel, 11 watchmen from
-training camps (probably Lithuanians), 12 Security Police officers in SS
-units, 5 men of the Polish Police, and 2 soldiers of the Wehrmacht
-Engineers.
-
-Permit me to read some brief excerpts of the daily teletype reports.
-Page 13 of the translation, from the teletype message of 22 April 1943,
-I read:
-
- “Our setting the block on fire achieved the result in the course
- of the night that those Jews whom we had not been able to find
- despite all our search operations left their hideouts under the
- roofs, in the cellars, and elsewhere and appeared on the outside
- of the building, trying to escape the flames anyhow. Masses of
- them—entire families—were already aflame and jumped from the
- windows or endeavored to let themselves down by means of sheets
- tied together or the like. Steps had been taken so that these
- Jews as well as the remaining ones were liquidated at once.”
-
-And from Page 28 of the translation, the last part of the first
-paragraph, I read:
-
- “When the blocks of buildings mentioned above were destroyed,
- 120 Jews were caught and numerous Jews were destroyed when they
- jumped from the attics to the inner courtyards, trying to escape
- the flames. Many more Jews perished in the flames or were
- destroyed when the dugouts and sewer entrances were blown up.”
-
-And on Page 30, second half of the second paragraph, I read:
-
- “Not until the blocks of buildings were well aflame and were
- about to collapse did a considerable number of Jews emerge,
- forced to do so by the flames and the smoke. Time and again the
- Jews tried to escape even through burning buildings. Innumerable
- Jews whom we saw on the roofs during the conflagration perished
- in the flames. Others emerged from the upper stories in the last
- possible moment and were only able to escape death from the
- flames by jumping down. Today we caught a total of 2,283 Jews of
- whom 204 were shot; and innumerable Jews were destroyed in
- dugouts and in the flames.”
-
-And from Page 34, the second paragraph, I read, beginning the second
-line:
-
- “The Jews testify that they emerge at night to get fresh air,
- since it is unbearable to stay permanently within the dugouts
- owing to the long duration of the operation. On the average the
- raiding parties shoot 30 to 50 Jews each night. From these
- statements it was to be inferred that a considerable number of
- Jews are still underground in the ghetto. Today we blew up a
- concrete building which we had not been able to destroy by fire.
- In this operation we learned that the blowing up of a building
- is a very lengthy process and takes an enormous amount of
- explosives. The best and only method for destroying the Jews
- therefore still remains the setting of fires.”
-
-And from Page 35, the last part of the second paragraph, I read:
-
- “Some depositions speak of three to four thousand Jews still
- remaining in underground holes, sewers, and dugouts. The
- undersigned is resolved not to terminate the large-scale
- operation until the last Jew has been destroyed.”
-
-And from the teletype message of 15 May 1943 on Page 44, we gather that
-the operation is in its last stage. I read the end of the first
-paragraph on Page 44:
-
- “A special unit once more searched the last block of buildings,
- which was still intact, in the ghetto and subsequently destroyed
- it. In the evening the chapel, mortuary, and all other buildings
- in the Jewish cemetery were blown up or destroyed by fire.”
-
-On 24 May 1943 the final figures have been compiled by Major General
-Stroop. He reports on Page 45, last paragraph:
-
- “Of the total of 56,065 caught, about 7,000 were destroyed in
- the former Jewish residential area during large-scale
- operations; 6,929 Jews were destroyed by transporting them to T.
- II”—which we believe to be Treblinka, Camp Number 2, which will
- later be referred to—“the sum total of Jews destroyed is
- therefore 13,929. Beyond the number of 56,065 an estimated
- number of 5,000 to 6,000 Jews were destroyed by being blown up
- or by perishing in the flames.”
-
-The Court has noted within the report 1061-PS a number of photographs;
-and with the Court’s permission I should like to show a few of these
-photographs, still pictures, on the screen, unless the Court believes
-that reference to the original text will be sufficient for the Court’s
-purpose.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: No; if you want to put them on the screen, you may do so.
-Perhaps it would be convenient to adjourn now and you can put them on
-the screen afterwards.
-
- [_A recess was taken._]
-
- [_Still pictures were projected on the screen in the courtroom._]
-
-MAJOR WALSH: This first picture [_pointing to a picture on the screen_]
-is shown on Page 27 of the photographs in Document 1061-PS. It is
-entitled “The Destruction of a Block of Buildings.” The Court will
-recall those portions of the teletype messages that referred to the
-setting of fires for the purpose of driving out the Jews. This picture,
-taken from the record, portrays such a scene.
-
-This picture [_pointing to a picture on the screen_] is from Page 21 of
-the photographs contained in the exhibit, and the caption is “Smoking
-out of the Jews and Bandits.” Excerpts from the teletype messages read
-in the record relate to the use of smoke as a means of forcing Jews out
-of the hiding places.
-
-This picture [_pointing to a picture on the screen_] is from Page 36 of
-the photographs in the exhibit and it is called “Fighting a Nest of
-Resistance.” It is obviously a picture of an explosive blast being used
-to destroy one of the buildings, and the Court may recall the message of
-7 May 1943 that related to the blowing up of buildings as a lengthy
-process requiring an enormous amount of explosive. The same message
-reported that the best method for destroying the Jews was the setting of
-fires.
-
-This picture [_pointing to a picture on the screen_] is taken from Page
-36 of the photographs. The Court’s attention is invited to the figure of
-a man in mid-air who appears in the picture about halfway between the
-center and the upper right-hand corner. He has jumped from one of the
-upper floors of the burning building. A close examination of this
-picture by the Court in the original photograph will disclose other
-figures, in the upper floor windows, who apparently are about to follow
-him. The teletype message of 22 April reported that entire families
-jumped from burning buildings and were liquidated at once.
-
-This picture [_pointing to a picture on the screen_] is from Page 39 of
-the photographs. It is entitled “The Leader of the Large-scale Action.”
-The Nazi-appointed commander of this action was SS Major General Stroop,
-who probably is the central figure in this picture. I cannot refrain
-from commenting at this point on the smiling faces of the group shown
-there, in the midst of the violence and destruction.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Are you passing from that document now?
-
-MAJOR WALSH: Yes, Sir.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Will you tell the Tribunal where the document was found?
-
-MAJOR WALSH: It is a captured document, Sir. I do not have the history,
-but I shall be very pleased to submit the background and history to the
-Court at the beginning of the afternoon session.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal, I think, would like to know where it was
-found and to whom it was submitted.
-
-MAJOR WALSH: I have that. I believe that is contained in the document.
-The teletype messages, Sir, that are contained in this exhibit were all
-addressed to the Higher SS and Police Führer, SS Obergruppenführer and
-General of the Police Krüger or his deputy.
-
-It was not always necessary, or perhaps desirable, first to place the
-Jews within the ghettos to effect the elimination. In the Baltic States
-a more direct course of action was followed. I refer to Document L-180,
-now in evidence, which is Exhibit USA-276. This is a report by SS
-Brigade Führer Stahlecker to Himmler, dated 15 October 1941, entitled
-“Action Group A,” found in Himmler’s private files. He reported that
-135,567 persons, nearly all Jews, were murdered in accordance with basic
-orders directing the complete annihilation of the Jews. This voluminous
-document provides me with the following statement by the same SS Brigade
-Führer, and from the translation at the bottom of Page 6, the second
-sentence of the last paragraph, I read:
-
- “To our surprise it was not easy, at first, to set in motion an
- extensive pogrom against the Jews. Klimatis, the leader of the
- partisan unit mentioned above, who was used for this purpose
- primarily, succeeded in starting a pogrom on the basis of advice
- given to him by a small advanced detachment acting in Kovno and
- in such a way that no German order or German instigation was
- noticed from the outside. During the first pogrom in the night
- from 25 to 26 June the Lithuanian partisans did away with more
- than 1,500 Jews, setting fire to several synagogues or
- destroying them by other means and burning down a Jewish
- dwelling district consisting of about 60 houses. During the
- following nights 2,300 Jews were eliminated in a similar way.”
-
-From the last part of Paragraph 3, Page 7, I read:
-
- “It was possible, though, through similar influences on the
- Latvian auxiliary to set in motion a pogrom against the Jews
- also in Riga. During this pogrom all synagogues were destroyed
- and about 400 Jews were killed.”
-
-Nazi ingenuity reached a new high mark with the construction and
-operation of the gas van as a means of mass annihilation of the Jews. A
-description of these vehicles of horror and death and the operation of
-them is fully set forth in a captured top-secret document, dated 16 May
-1942, addressed to SS Obersturmbannführer Rauff, 8
-Prinz-Albrecht-Strasse, Berlin, from Dr. Becker, SS Untersturmführer. I
-offer this document, 501-PS, Exhibit USA-288. I quote:
-
- “The overhauling of vans by groups D and C is finished. While
- the vans in the first series can also be put into action if the
- weather is not too bad, the vans of the second series (Saurer)
- stop completely in rainy weather. If it has rained for instance
- for only one-half hour, the van cannot be used because it simply
- skids away. It can only be used in absolutely dry weather. It is
- a question now of whether the van can be used only when it
- stands at the place of execution. First the van has to be
- brought to that place, which is possible only in good weather.
- The place of execution is usually 10 to 15 kilometers away from
- the highway and is difficult of access because of its location;
- in damp or wet weather it is not accessible at all. If the
- persons to be executed are driven or led to that place, then
- they realize immediately what is going on and get restless,
- which is to be avoided as far as possible. There is only one way
- left: to load them at the collecting point and to drive them to
- the spot.
-
-
-
- “I ordered the vans of group D to be camouflaged as
- house-trailers by putting one set of window shutters on each
- side of the small van and two on each side of the larger vans,
- such as one often sees on farm houses in the country. The vans
- became so well-known that not only the authorities but also the
- civilian population called the van ‘death van’ as soon as one of
- the vehicles appeared. It is my opinion the van cannot be kept
- secret for any length of time, not even camouflaged.”
-
-And then I read the fourth paragraph on this page:
-
- “Because of the rough terrain and the indescribable road and
- highway conditions the caulkings and rivets loosen in the course
- of time. I was asked if in such cases the vans should not be
- brought to Berlin for repairs. Transportation to Berlin would be
- much too expensive and would demand too much fuel. In order to
- save these expenses I ordered them to have smaller leaks
- soldered and, if that should no longer be possible, to notify
- Berlin immediately by radio, that License Number . . . is out of
- order. Besides that I ordered that during application of gas all
- the men were to be kept as far away from the vans as possible,
- so that they should not suffer damage to their health by the gas
- which eventually would escape. I should like to take this
- opportunity to bring the following to your attention: Several
- commands have had the unloading, after the application of gas,
- done by their own men. I brought to the attention of the
- commanders of these special detachments concerned the immense
- psychological injury and damage to their health which that work
- can have for those men, even if not immediately, at least later
- on. The men complained to me about headaches which appeared
- after each unloading. Nevertheless they don’t want to change the
- orders, because they are afraid prisoners called for that work
- could use an opportune moment to flee. To protect the men from
- such damage, I request orders be issued accordingly. The
- application of gas usually is not undertaken correctly. In order
- to come to an end as fast as possible, the driver presses the
- accelerator to the fullest extent. By doing that the persons to
- be executed suffer death from suffocation and not death by
- dozing off as was planned. My directions now have proved that by
- correct adjustment of the levers death comes faster and the
- prisoners fall asleep peacefully. Distorted faces and
- excretions, such as could be seen before, are no longer noticed.
-
-
-
- “Today I shall continue my journey to group B, where I can be
- reached with further news. Signed, Doctor Becker, SS
- Untersturmführer.”
-
-On Page 3 in Document 501-PS we find a letter signed by Hauptsturmführer
-Trühess on the subject of S-Vans, addressed to the Reich Security Main
-Office, Room II-D-3-A, Berlin, marked “top secret.” This letter
-establishes that the vans were used for the annihilation of the Jews. I
-read this top-secret message; subject, “S-Vans”:
-
- “A transport of Jews, which has to be treated in a special way,
- arrives weekly at the office of the commandant of the Security
- Police and the Security Service of White Ruthenia.
-
-
-
- “The three S-vans which are there are not sufficient for that
- purpose. I request assignment of another S-van (5 tons). At the
- same time I request the shipment of 20 gas hoses for the three
- S-vans on hand (two Diamond, one Saurer), since the ones on hand
- are leaky already.”—Signed—“the Commandant of the Security
- Police and the Security Service, Ostland.”
-
-It would appear from the documentary evidence that a certain amount of
-discord existed between the officials of the German Government as to the
-proper means and methods used in connection with the program of
-extermination. A secret report dated 18 June 1943, addressed to
-Defendant Rosenberg, complained that 5,000 Jews killed by the police and
-SS might have been used for forced labor and chided them for failing to
-bury the bodies of those liquidated. I offer in evidence this file,
-Document Number R-135, Exhibit USA-289.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Is it in these volumes, Major Walsh?
-
-MAJOR WALSH: I think, Sir, that will be found in the assembly of the
-document book in our case; that has been placed in front of R-124. I
-quote from the letter referred to, addressed to the Reich Minister for
-the Occupied Eastern Territories, the first paragraph of the
-translation:
-
- “The fact that Jews receive special treatment requires no
- further discussion. However, it appears hardly believable that
- this was done in the way described in the report of the General
- Commissioner of 1 June 1943. What is Katyn against that? Imagine
- only that these occurrences might become known to the other side
- and be exploited by them! Most likely such propaganda would have
- no effect, only because people who hear and read about it simply
- would not be ready to believe it.”
-
-The last part of Paragraph 3 on this page reads:
-
- “To lock men, women, and children into barns and to set fire to
- them does not appear to be a suitable method for combatting
- bands, even if it is desired to exterminate the population. This
- method is not worthy of the German cause and hurts our
- reputation severely.”
-
-Günther, the prison warden at Minsk, in a letter dated 31 May 1943,
-addressed to the General Commissioner for White Ruthenia, subject:
-“Action against Jews,” was critical by implication. With the Court’s
-permission I would like to read this entire letter, part of Document
-R-135, Page 5, subject: “Action Against Jews”:
-
- “On 13 April 1943 the former German dentist Ernst Israel
- Tichauer and his wife, Elisa Sara Tichauer, née Rosenthal, were
- committed to the court prison by the Security Service . . . .
- Since that time all German and Russian Jews who were turned over
- to us had their gold bridgework, crowns, and fillings pulled or
- broken out. This happens always 1 to 2 hours before the
- respective action.
-
-
-
- “Since 13 April 1943, 516 German and Russian Jews have been
- finished off. On the basis of a definite investigation gold was
- taken only in two actions—on 14 April 1943, from 172, and on 27
- April 1943, from 164 Jews. About 50 percent of the Jews had gold
- teeth, bridgework, or fillings. Hauptscharführer Rübe of the
- Security Service was always personally present, and he took the
- gold along, too.
-
-
-
- “Before 13 April 1943 this was not done. Signed, Günther, Prison
- Warden.”
-
-This letter was forwarded to the Defendant Rosenberg as Reich Minister
-for the Occupied Eastern Territories on 1 June 1943. I will read the
-covering letter, part of Document R-135, Page 4, to the Reich Minister
-of the Occupied Eastern Territories, Berlin, through the Reich
-Commissioner for the Ostland, Riga; Subject, “Actions against Jews in
-the Prison of Minsk”:
-
- “The enclosed official report from the warden of the prison in
- Minsk is submitted to the Reich Minister and the Reich
- Commissioner for Information.”—Signed—“the General
- Commissioner in Minsk.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Does “respective action,” as indicated in the letter
-dated the 31st of May 1943, mean execution?
-
-MAJOR WALSH: Yes, Sir; we so interpret it. The Court will recall that
-the ridding of the Jews via gas vans ties in very closely with the
-second letter of the transport of Jews arriving for that purpose.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Was this document found in Rosenberg’s file?
-
-MAJOR WALSH: I am so informed, Sir. A further complaint is contained in
-a secret letter addressed to General of the Infantry Thomas, chief of
-the industrial armament department, dated 2 December 1941. It might be
-noted with interest that the apprehensive writer of this letter stated
-that he did not forward the communication through official channels. I
-offer in evidence captured Document 3257-PS; and I quote from the first
-paragraph. This is Exhibit USA-290:
-
- “For the personal information of the chief of the industrial
- armament department, I am forwarding a total account of the
- present situation in the Reichskommissariat Ukraine in which the
- difficulties and tensions encountered so far and the problems
- which give rise to serious anxiety are stated with unmistakable
- clarity.
-
-
-
- “Intentionally I have desisted from submitting such a report
- through official channels or from making it known to other
- departments interested in it because I do not expect any results
- that way, but on the contrary am apprehensive that the
- difficulties and tensions and also the divergent opinions might
- only be increased due to the peculiarity of the situation.”
-
-
-
- “Jewish problem”—Paragraph c, Page 1:
-
-
-
- “Regulation of the Jewish question in the Ukraine was a
- difficult problem because the Jews constituted a large part of
- the urban population. We therefore have to deal—just as in the
- Government General—with a mass problem of policy concerning the
- population. Many cities had a percentage of Jews exceeding 50
- percent. Only the rich Jews had fled from the German troops. The
- majority of Jews remained under German administration. The
- latter found the problem more complicated through the fact that
- these Jews represented almost entire trade and even a part of
- the manpower in small and medium industries, besides business,
- which had in part become superfluous as a direct or indirect
- result of the war. The elimination therefore necessarily had
- far-reaching economic consequences and even direct consequences
- for the armament industry (production for supplying the
- troops).”
-
-Paragraph 1 on Page 2:
-
- “The attitude of the Jewish population was anxious—obliging
- from the beginning. They tried to avoid everything that might
- displease the German administration. That they hated the German
- administration and army inwardly goes without saying and cannot
- be surprising. However, there is no proof that Jewry as a whole
- or even to a greater part was implicated in acts of sabotage
- . . . . Surely there were some terrorists or saboteurs among
- them, just as among the Ukrainians. But it cannot be said that
- the Jews as such represented a danger to the German Armed
- Forces. The output produced by Jews who, of course, were
- prompted by nothing but the feeling of fear, was satisfactory to
- the troops and the German administration.
-
-
-
- “The Jewish population remained temporarily unmolested shortly
- after the fighting. Only weeks, sometimes months later,
- specially detached formations of police executed a planned
- shooting of Jews. This action as a rule proceeded from east to
- west. It was done entirely in public with the use of the
- Ukrainian militia; and unfortunately, in many instances also
- with members of the Armed Forces taking part voluntarily. The
- way these actions, which included men and old men, women, and
- children of all ages, were carried out was horrible. The great
- masses executed make this action more gigantic than any similar
- measure taken so far in the Soviet Union. So far about 150,000
- to 200,000 Jews may have been executed in the part of the
- Ukraine belonging to the Reichskommissariat; no consideration
- was given to the interests of economy.
-
-
-
- “Summarizing, it can be said that the kind of solution of the
- Jewish problem applied to the Ukraine, which obviously was based
- on the ideological theories as a matter of principle, had the
- following results:
-
-
-
- “(a) Elimination of a part of partly superfluous eaters in the
- cities;
-
-
-
- “(b) Elimination of a part of the population which undoubtedly
- hated us;
-
-
-
- “(c) Elimination of badly needed tradesmen who were in many
- instances indispensable even in the interests of the Armed
- Forces;
-
-
-
- “(d) Consequences as to foreign policy propaganda which are
- obvious;
-
-
-
- “(e) Bad effects on the troops which in any case get indirect
- contact with the execution;
-
-
-
- “(f) Brutalizing effect on the formations which carry out the
- execution—regular police.”
-
-Lest the Court be persuaded to the belief that these conditions related,
-existed only in the East, I invite attention to the official Netherlands
-Government report by the Commissioner for Repatriation as indicative of
-the treatment of the Jews in the West.
-
-This document is a recital of the German measures taken in the
-Netherlands against the Dutch Jews. The decrees, the anti-Semitic
-demonstrations, the burning of synagogues, the purging of Jews from the
-economic life of their country, the food restrictions against them,
-forced labor, concentration camp confinement, deportation, and
-death—all follow the same pattern that was effected throughout
-Nazi-occupied Europe.
-
-I how refer to Document 1726-PS, Exhibit USA-195, already in evidence.
-It is not intended to read this document in evidence, but it is deemed
-important to invite the Court’s attention to that portion of the report
-relating to the deportation of Dutch Jews shown on Page 5 of the
-translation. There the Court will note that full Jews being liable to
-deportation number 140,000. The Court will also note that the total
-number of deportees was 117,000, representing more than 83 percent of
-all the Jews in the Netherlands. Of these 115,000 were deported to
-Poland for slave labor, according to the Netherlands report, and after
-departure all trace of them was lost. Regardless of victory or defeat to
-Germany, the Jew was doomed. It was the expressed intent of the Nazi
-State that, whatever the German fate might be, the Jew would not
-survive.
-
-I offer in evidence Document L-53, stamped “top secret,” Exhibit
-USA-291. This message is from the Commandant of the Sipo and SD for the
-Radom District, addressed to SS Hauptsturmführer Thiel on the subject,
-“Clearance of Prisons.” I read the body of this message:
-
- “I again stress the fact that the number of inmates of the Sipo
- and SD prisons must be kept as low as possible. In the present
- situation, particularly, those suspects handed over by the civil
- police need only be subjected to a short formal interrogation
- provided there are no serious grounds for suspicion. They are
- then to be sent by the quickest route to a concentration camp
- should no court-martial proceeding be necessary or should there
- be no question of discharge. Please keep the number of
- discharges very low. Should the situation at the front
- necessitate it, early preparations are to be made for the total
- clearance of prisons. Should the situation develop suddenly in
- such a way that it is impossible to evacuate the prisoners, the
- prison inmates are to be eliminated and their bodies disposed of
- as far as possible (burning, blowing up the building, _et
- cetera_). If necessary, Jews still employed in the armament
- industry or on other work are to be dealt with in the same way.
-
-
-
- “The liberation of prisoners or Jews by the enemy—be it the WB
- or the Red Army—must be avoided under all circumstances, nor
- may they fall into their hands alive.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: What is the WB?
-
-MAJOR WALSH: I have inquired about the WB, Your Honor, from several
-sources and have not found an understanding or a statement of it.
-Perhaps before the afternoon session I may be able to enlighten the
-Court. I have not yet been able to find out.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Where was the document found?
-
-MAJOR WALSH: It is a captured document, Sir.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Does it relate to prisoners of war, did you say?
-
-MAJOR WALSH: No, Sir; including therein, of course, prisoners of war as
-well as all Jews. The history of the document, Sir, I will try to gather
-for the Court’s information.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Yes. Did you tell us what the Sipo were?
-
-MAJOR WALSH: Yes, Sir; I furnished the Court with that; that is the
-Security Police, Sir.
-
-This presentation, if the Court please, would be incomplete without
-incorporating herein reference to the concentration camps insofar as
-they relate to the hundreds of thousands—millions—of Jews who died by
-mass shooting, gas, poison, starvation, and other means. The subject of
-concentration camps and all its horrors was shown to this Tribunal not
-only in the motion picture film but by the most able presentation of Mr.
-Dodd yesterday; and it is not intended, at this time, to refer to the
-camps—only insofar as they relate to the part they played in the
-annihilation of the Jewish people. For example, in the camp at Auschwitz
-during July 1944 Jews were killed at the rate of 12,000 daily. This
-information is contained in Document L-161, Exhibit USA-292. The
-Document L-161 is an official Polish report on Auschwitz Concentration
-Camp. It is dated 31 May 1945. I have taken a short excerpt from this
-report on the original marked . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I think you made a mistake, did you not? It is not a
-Polish report; it is a British report.
-
-MAJOR WALSH: I understand, Sir, it was compiled originally by the Polish
-Government and perhaps distributed from London.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I see. Very well.
-
-MAJOR WALSH: I quote:
-
- “During July 1944 Hungarian Jews were being liquidated at the
- rate of 12,000 daily; and as the crematoria could not deal with
- such numbers, many bodies were thrown into large pits and
- covered with quicklime.”
-
-I offer in evidence Document 3311-PS, Exhibit USA-293. This is an
-official Polish Government Commission report on the investigation of
-German crimes in Poland. The document describes the concentration camp
-at Treblinka; and from Page 1, Paragraph 3 and 4, I read as follows:
-
- “In March 1942 the Germans began to erect another camp,
- Treblinka B, in the neighborhood of Treblinka A, intended to
- become a place of torment for Jews.
-
-
-
- “The erection of this camp was closely connected with the German
- plans aimed at a complete destruction of the Jewish population
- in Poland, which necessitated the creation of a machinery by
- means of which the Polish Jews could be killed in large numbers.
- Late in April 1942 erection was completed of the first chambers
- in which these general massacres were to be performed by means
- of steam. Somewhat later the erection of the real death
- building, which contains 10 death chambers, was finished. It was
- opened for wholesale murders early in autumn 1942.”
-
-And on Page 3 of this report, beginning with the second paragraph, the
-Polish Commission describes graphically the procedure for the
-extermination within the camp:
-
- “The average number of Jews dealt with at the camp in the summer
- of 1942 was about two railway transports daily, but there were
- days of much higher efficiency. From autumn 1942 this number was
- falling.
-
-
-
- “After unloading in the siding, all victims were assembled in
- one place, where men were separated from women and children. In
- the first days of the existence of the camp the victims were
- made to believe that after a short stay in the camp, necessary
- for bathing and disinfection, they would be sent farther east
- for work. Explanations of this sort were given by SS men who
- assisted at the unloading of the transports, and further
- explanations could be read in notices stuck up on the walls of
- the barracks. But later, when more transports had to be dealt
- with, the Germans dropped all pretenses and only tried to
- accelerate the procedure.
-
-
-
- “All victims had to strip off their clothes and shoes, which
- were collected afterwards, whereupon all victims, women and
- children first, were driven into the death chambers. Those too
- slow or too weak to move quickly were driven in by rifle butts,
- by whipping and kicking, often by Sauer himself. Many slipped
- and fell; the next victims pressed forward and stumbled over
- them. Small children were simply thrown inside. After being
- filled up to capacity, the chambers were hermetically closed and
- steam was let in. In a few minutes all was over. The Jewish
- menial workers had to remove the bodies from the platform and to
- bury them in mass graves. By and by, as new transports arrived,
- the cemetery grew, extending in an easterly direction.
-
-
-
- “From reports received it may be assumed that several hundred
- thousands of Jews have been exterminated in Treblinka.”
-
-I now offer in evidence the document identified by Number L-22, Exhibit
-USA-294. This is an official United States Government report issued by
-the Executive Office of the President of the United States, War Refugee
-Board, on the German camps at Auschwitz and Birkenau, dated 1944. On
-Page 33 of this report is set forth the number of Jews gassed in
-Birkenau in the 2-year period between April 1942 and April 1944. I have
-been assured that the figure printed in this report is not a
-typographical error. The number shown is 1,765,000.
-
-I would now like to turn to the German bookkeeping and statistics for
-enlightenment on the extermination of Jews in Poland. Referring again to
-the diary of Hans Frank already in evidence, Document 2233-PS, Exhibit
-USA-281, I read briefly from the beginning of the fourth paragraph on
-Page 1:
-
- “For us the Jews also represent extraordinarily malignant
- gluttons.
-
-
-
- “We have now approximately 2,500,000 of them in the Government
- General . . .”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Major Walsh, you have read this already yourself.
-
-MAJOR WALSH: Yes, Sir, that is true. I just want to make reference to it
-again, Sir, for comparison with other figures.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Very well.
-
- MAJOR WALSH: “. . . perhaps with the Jewish mixtures, and
- everything that goes with it, 3,500,000 Jews.”
-
-Now this figure, if the Court please, was as of 16 December 1941. I now
-wish to turn to 25 January 1944, 3 years and 1 month later, and make
-reference to another excerpt from Frank’s diary, 2233-PS, loose-leaf
-volume Exhibit USA-295. This volume covers the period from 1 January
-1944 to 28 February 1944, and Page 5 of the original reads:
-
- “At the present time we still have in the Government General
- perhaps 100,000 Jews.”
-
-In this period of 3 years, according to the records of the then Governor
-General of Occupied Poland, between 2,400,000 and 3,400,000 Jews had
-been eliminated.
-
-The Prosecution could offer this Tribunal a wealth of evidence on the
-total number of Jews who died by Nazi hands, but it is believed that
-cumulative evidence would not vary the guilt of these defendants.
-
-I do wish, however, to offer one document, a statement, to establish the
-deaths of 4 million Jews in camps and deaths of 2 million Jews by the
-State Police in the East, making a total of 6 million—Document 2738-PS,
-Exhibit USA-296. This is a statement—of Adolf Eichmann, Chief of the
-Jewish Section of the Gestapo, and the source of the figures
-quoted—made by Dr. Wilhelm Hoettl, Deputy Group Leader of the foreign
-section of the Security Service, Amt VI of the RSHA. Dr. Wilhelm Hoettl,
-in affidavit form, made the following statement; and I quote from Page
-2:
-
- “Approximately 4 million Jews had been killed in the various
- concentration camps, while an additional 2 million met death in
- other ways, the major part of which were shot by operational
- squads of the Security Police during the campaign against
- Russia.”
-
-May I, in conclusion, emphasize that the captured documents in evidence
-are, almost without exception, from the official sources of the Nazi
-Party.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: You only read that one statement, but where does the
-person who made the affidavit get his information from?
-
-MAJOR WALSH: I shall be pleased to read that in there, Sir. I made a
-statement that Eichmann has been the source of the information given to
-Dr. Wilhelm Hoettl, one of his assistants, and on Page 1 it says:
-
- “According to my knowledge Eichmann was at that time a section
- leader in the Amt IV (Gestapo) of RSHA; and in addition he had
- been ordered by Himmler to get hold of the Jews in all the
- European countries and to transport them to Germany. Eichmann
- was then very much impressed with the fact that Romania had
- withdrawn from the war in those days. Therefore, he had come to
- me to get information about the military situation, which I
- received daily from the Hungarian . . . Ministry of War and from
- the Commander of the Waffen-SS in Hungary. He expressed his
- conviction that Germany had lost the war and that he personally
- had no further chance. He knew that he would be considered one
- of the main war criminals by the United Nations, since he had
- millions of Jewish lives on his conscience. I asked him how many
- that was, to which he answered that although the number was a
- great Reich secret, he would tell me since I, as a historian
- too, would be interested and that probably he would not return
- anyhow from his command in Romania. He had, shortly before that,
- made a report to Himmler, as the latter wanted to know the exact
- number of Jews who had been killed.”
-
-It was on that basis of this information, Sir, that I read the following
-quotation.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will adjourn now.
-
- [_A recess was taken until 1400 hours._]
-
-
-
-
- _Afternoon Session_
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The motion that was made this morning on behalf of the
-Defendant Kaltenbrunner is denied, and the affidavit is admitted and
-will not be stricken from the record. But the Tribunal wished me to say
-that it is open to the Defendants’ Counsel, in accordance with the
-Charter and the Rules, to make a motion, in writing, if they wish to do
-so, for the attendance of Pfaffenberger for cross-examination and to
-state in that motion the reasons therefor.
-
-DR. KAUFFMANN: May I now bring up a question similar, though in some
-respects different, from that of Pfaffenberger? I request that the
-evidence of Dr. Hoettl, which was read into the record this morning be
-stricken out again for the following two reasons. As far as I know, Dr.
-Hoettl is here in Nuremberg . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: One minute. Do you understand that the Tribunal has just
-denied the motion that you made this morning?
-
-DR. KAUFFMANN: Yes, I understood that perfectly.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: What is your motion now?
-
-DR. KAUFFMANN: I should like to ask that the evidence of Dr. Hoettl be
-stricken from the record. My reasons for this request are rather
-different from those given this morning in the Pfaffenberger case.
-
-As can be seen from the affidavit, Dr. Hoettl was interrogated on the
-26th of November hardly 3 weeks ago. Moreover I gather that Dr. Hoettl
-is kept in custody here in Nuremberg. No delay would therefore be
-involved if this witness were called to the stand.
-
-This man held a significant position in the SS and for that reason I
-have already applied in writing that he be called as a witness. I am
-convinced that there is a large amount of important evidence which he
-can reveal to the Court. Dr. Hoettl’s deposition is infinitely
-important. The death of millions of people is involved here. His
-affidavit is based largely on inferences, on hearsay; I believe that the
-facts are very different, and I would not like to apply later, after
-weeks or months, for the witness to be brought into Court.
-
-MAJOR WALSH: If the Court please, excerpts from the affidavit of Dr.
-Wilhelm Hoettl were read into the record this morning for the purpose
-. . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Wait—what was the number?
-
-MAJOR WALSH: Document 2738-PS.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Yes, go on.
-
-MAJOR WALSH: Dr. Hoettl’s affidavit 2738 was in part read into the
-record this morning for the sole purpose of showing the approximate
-number of Jews, according to his estimates, that had met death at the
-hands of the German State. No other portion of his testimony was
-referred to and the evidence offered was only for the sole purpose of
-establishing his estimate of the number. His position in the Party and
-in the state, as well as the position of Adolf Eichmann, the source of
-his information, was also stated into the record.
-
-I believe that Dr. Hoettl, if he is desired for any other purpose by the
-Defense, may be called by the Defense, but the Prosecution had no other
-purpose in utilizing his evidence.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Do you wish to add anything more?
-
-MAJOR WALSH: That is all, Sir.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal makes the same ruling in this case as in the
-case of Pfaffenberger, namely, that the affidavit is admitted in
-evidence but that it is open to Defendants’ Counsel to make a motion, in
-writing, for the attendance of the witness for cross-examination and to
-state in that motion the reasons for it.
-
-MAJOR WALSH: During the morning session the Court requested certain
-information concerning documents that had been offered and accepted in
-evidence. I refer to Document 1061-PS, the report “The Warsaw Ghetto Is
-No More.” This report, I am told, was prepared for presentation at a
-meeting of the SS Police leaders to be held on 18 May 1943. That is
-indicated on Page 45 of the translation before the Court.
-
-This document was captured by the 7th United States Army and delivered
-by them to the G-2 of the United States Forces in the European Theater.
-In turn they were delivered to Colonel Storey of the United States
-prosecutors’ staff, some months ago. The Court also ignored . . .
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Major Walsh, I think the Tribunal also wished to know
-whether you could tell us to whom the report had been made?
-
-MAJOR WALSH: The report, Sir, according to the teletypes—the daily
-teletypes, Sir—was addressed to the Higher SS and Police Leader East,
-SS Obergruppenführer and General of the Police Krüger, or his deputy.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Thank you.
-
-MAJOR WALSH: The Court further inquired about Document L-53 and I have
-obtained some information concerning this document. This document was
-captured by T-Force of the Counter Intelligence Corps Detachment Number
-220, found among the German records at Weimar, Germany, sometime prior
-to 10 May 1945.
-
-The Court further inquired, concerning this document, the meaning of the
-letters “WB.” I regret that I have been unable to obtain definite
-information as to the meaning of “WB” but it has been suggested to me
-that it might mean Westbund or Western Ally because it is used in
-connection with the capture—the destruction of all prisoners before
-capture by either the WB or the Red Armies, and I presume that it may
-mean Westbund.
-
-The slaughter of the Jews in Europe cannot be expressed in figures
-alone, for the impact of this slaughter is even more tragic to the
-future of the Jewish people and mankind. Ancient Jewish communities with
-their own rich spiritual, cultural, and economic life, bound up for
-centuries with the life of the nations in which they flourished, have
-been completely obliterated. The contribution of the Jewish people to
-civilization, the arts, the sciences, industry, and culture, need not, I
-am sure, be elaborated upon before this Tribunal. Their destruction,
-carried out continuously, deliberately, intentionally, and methodically
-by the Nazis, represents a loss to civilization of special qualities and
-abilities that cannot possibly be recouped.
-
-I have not attempted to recount the multitudinous and diabolical crimes
-committed against the Jewish people by the state which these defendants
-ruled, because, with sober regard for contemporary and historical truth,
-a detailed description of some of these crimes would transcend the
-utmost reaches of the human faculty of expression. The mind already
-recoils and shrinks from the acceptance of the incredible facts already
-related. Rather, it is my purpose to elucidate the pattern, the
-successful and successive stages, the sequence and concurrence of the
-crimes committed, the pre-determined means to a pre-ordained end.
-
-Yet, these cold, stark, brutal facts and figures, drawn largely from the
-defendants’ own sources and submitted in evidence before this Tribunal,
-defy rebuttal.
-
-From conception to execution, from the Party program of 1920 to the
-gloating declarations of Himmler and the Defendant Frank in 1943 and
-1944, the annihilation of the Jewish people in Europe was man-made—made
-by the very men, sitting in the defendants’ box, brought to judgment
-before this Tribunal.
-
-Before closing may I acknowledge with appreciation the untiring services
-of the group of the staff of the United States’ Prosecution, through
-whose painstaking search, analysis, and study, this presentation of
-evidence was made possible: Captain Seymour Krieger, Lieutenant Brady
-Bryson, Lieutenant Frederick Felton, Sergeant Isaac Stone, and Mr. Hans
-Nathan.
-
-COL. STOREY: If the Tribunal please, the next presentation, concerning
-Germanization and spoliation in occupied countries, will be presented by
-Captain Sam Harris.
-
-CAPTAIN SAMUEL HARRIS (Assistant Trial Counsel for the United States):
-May the Tribunal please, documents relating to the Nazi program of
-Germanization and spoliation have been assembled in a document book
-bearing the letter “U.” These document books are now being distributed
-for the use of the members of the Tribunal. I ask Your Honors to note
-that the tabs on the side of the document book are numbered 1 to 30. The
-index sheet at the front of the book keys these numbers to the EC, PS,
-and R numbers of our exhibits.
-
-For Your Honors’ convenience we have also numbered the pages of each
-exhibit in pencil at the upper right-hand corner of each exhibit.
-
-The documents which we shall introduce were collected by Lieutenant
-Kenyon, who sits at my right, and by Doctors Derenberg and Jacoby.
-Without their untiring efforts, this presentation would not have been
-possible.
-
-Evidence has already been introduced by Mr. Alderman to prove that the
-defendants conspired to wage aggressive war. It has also been proved
-that the desire for Lebensraum was one of the chief forces motivating
-the conspirators to plan, launch, and wage their wars of aggression. We
-propose at this time to present evidence disclosing what the
-conspirators intended to do with conquered territories, called by them
-Lebensraum, after they had succeeded in overpowering the victims of
-their aggressions.
-
-We have broadly divided this subject into two categories: Germanization
-and spoliation. When we speak of plans to germanize, we mean plans to
-assimilate conquered territories politically, culturally, socially, and
-economically into the German Reich. Germanization, we shall demonstrate,
-meant the obliteration of the former national character of the conquered
-territories and the extermination of all elements which could not be
-reconciled with the Nazi ideology. By spoliation, we mean the plunder of
-public and private property and, in general, the exploitation of the
-people and the natural resources of occupied countries.
-
-We propose, with the permission of Your Honors, to introduce at this
-time 30 documents in all. These documents lay bare some of the secret
-plans of the conspirators to germanize, to plunder, to despoil, and to
-destroy. They do not, of course, tell the whole story of all the
-conspirators’ plans in this field. In some instances proof of the plan
-is derived from the acts committed by the conspirators. But these few
-documents are particularly illuminating with respect to the
-conspirators’ plans for Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Russia; and they
-indicate the outlines of carefully conceived plans for the rest of
-Europe. Others who follow will fill in this outline by showing a series
-of outrages committed on so vast a scale that no doubts will exist that
-they were committed according to plan.
-
-Poland was, in a sense, the testing ground for the conspirators’
-theories upon Lebensraum; and I turn to that country first.
-
-The four western provinces of Poland were purportedly incorporated into
-Germany by an order of 8 October 1939. This order, which was signed by
-Hitler, Lammers, and Defendants Göring, Frick, and Hess, is set forth in
-_Reichsgesetzblatt_, 1939, Part I, Page 2042; and we ask the Tribunal to
-take judicial notice thereof. These areas of Poland are frequently
-referred to in correspondence among the conspirators as “incorporated
-Eastern Territories.” The remainder of Poland, which was seized by the
-Nazi invaders, was established as the Government General of Poland by an
-order of Hitler dated 12 October 1939. By that same order Defendant Hans
-Frank was named Governor General of the newly created Government
-General; and Defendant Seyss-Inquart was named Deputy Governor General.
-This order is set forth in _Reichsgesetzblatt_, 1939, Part I, Page 2077;
-and we ask the Tribunal also to take judicial notice of it.
-
-The plans with respect to Poland were rather complicated; and I believe
-that the significance of specific items of proof may be more readily
-apparent if, in advance of the introduction of the documents, I am
-permitted briefly to indicate the broad pattern of these plans.
-
-We submit that the documents we are about to introduce on Poland show
-the following:
-
-First: The conspirators specifically planned to exploit the people and
-material resources of the Government General of Poland in order to
-strengthen the Nazi war machine, to impoverish the Government General,
-and to reduce it to a vassal state. At a later stage plans were
-formulated for creating islands of German settlements in the more
-fertile regions of the Government General in order to engulf the native
-Polish population and accelerate the process of Germanization.
-
-Second: The incorporated area of Poland, which was deemed to be a part
-of the German Reich, was to be ruthlessly germanized. To that end, the
-conspirators planned:
-
-(a) To permit the retention of the productive facilities in the
-incorporated area, all of which, of course, would be dedicated to the
-Nazi war machine.
-
-(b) They planned to deport to the Government General many hundreds of
-thousands of Jews, members of the Polish intelligentsia, and other
-non-compliant elements. We shall show that the Jews who were deported to
-the Government General were doomed to speedy annihilation. Moreover,
-since the conspirators felt that members of the Polish intelligentsia
-could not be germanized and might serve as a center of resistance
-against their New Order, they too were to be eliminated.
-
-(c) They planned to deport all able-bodied Polish workers to Germany for
-work in the Nazi war machine. This served the twofold purpose of helping
-to satisfy the labor requirements of the Nazi war machine and preventing
-the propagation of a new generation of Poles. Mr. Dodd has already
-produced abundant proof on this topic, and I shall do no more than refer
-to it.
-
-(d) They planned to mould all persons in the incorporated area who were
-deemed to possess German blood into German subjects who would
-religiously adhere to the principles of National Socialism. To that end
-the conspirators set up an elaborate racial register. Those who resisted
-or refused to co-operate in this program were sent to concentration
-camps.
-
-(e) They planned to bring thousands of German subjects into the
-incorporated area for purposes of settlement.
-
-(f) And finally, they planned to confiscate the property—particularly
-the farms—of the Poles, the Jews, and all dissident elements. The
-confiscation of the property of Jews was part of the conspirators’
-larger program of extermination of the Jews. Confiscation likewise
-served three additional purposes: (1) It provided land for the new
-German settlers and enabled the conspirators to reward their adherents;
-(2) dispossessed Polish property owners could be shipped to Germany for
-work in the production of implements of war; and (3) the separation of
-Polish farmers from their wives furthered the plan to prevent the growth
-of a new generation of Poles.
-
-We turn now to the specific items of proof.
-
-I first offer in evidence Document Number EC-344 (16), which is Exhibit
-Number USA-297. This document is a report of an interview with Defendant
-Frank on 3 October 1939 and was found among the files of the OKW, which
-were assembled in bulk at the Fechenheim document center. This
-particular document was included in a large report prepared in the OKW
-by one Captain Varain at the direction of General Thomas, then chief of
-the military economic staff of the OKW. I quote from the first 19 lines
-of Page 3 of the English text. The German text appears on Page 29, lines
-25-36, and Page 30, lines 1-6. The report states, and I quote:
-
- “In the first interview which the chief of the Central Division
- and the liaison officer between the Armament Department Upper
- East and the Chief Administrative Officer (subsequently Governor
- General) had with Reich Minister Frank on 3 October 1939 in
- Posen, Frank explained the instruction which had been entrusted
- to him by the Führer and the economic political directives
- according to which he intended to administer Poland. According
- to these directives, Poland could be administered only by
- utilizing the country by means of ruthless exploitation; removal
- of all supplies—raw materials, machines, factory installations,
- _et cetera_—which are important for the German war economy;
- availability of all workers for work within Germany; reduction
- of the entire Polish economy to the absolute minimum necessary
- for the bare existence of the population; closing of all
- institutions, especially technical schools and colleges in order
- to prevent the growth of a new Polish intelligentsia.
- Poland”—Defendant Frank stated—and this is an exact
- quotation—“Poland shall be treated as a colony; the Poles shall
- be the slaves of the Greater German World Empire.”
-
-I should like also to quote from the last six lines of the English text
-of this Exhibit. In the German text it is lines 18 to 23 of Page 30.
-Defendant Frank further stated, and I quote:
-
- “By destroying Polish industry its subsequent reconstruction
- after the war would become more difficult, if not impossible, so
- that Poland would be reduced to its proper position as an
- agrarian country which would have to depend upon Germany for
- importation of industrial products.”
-
-As further proof of the defendant’s plan to plunder and despoil the
-Government General of Poland, I next offer in evidence Document Number
-EC-410, which is Exhibit Number USA-298. In addition to the proof of the
-defendant’s plans to plunder and despoil the Government General, this
-document demonstrates the difference in treatment which the conspirators
-planned for the incorporated area of Poland and the Government General.
-It is a copy of a directive issued and signed by Defendant Göring on 19
-October 1939 and was likewise found among the captured OKW files. I
-quote from lines 1 to 19 on Page 1 of the English text. In the German
-text it is all of Page 1 and the first line of Page 2. Defendant
-Göring’s directive states, and I quote:
-
- “In the meeting of October 13th I have given detailed
- instructions for the economical administration of the occupied
- territories. I will repeat them here in short:
-
-
-
- “1. The task for the economic treatment of the various
- administrative regions is different, depending on whether a
- country which will be incorporated politically into the German
- Reich is involved or whether we deal with the Government
- General, which in all probability, will not be made a part of
- Germany,
-
-
-
- “In the first-mentioned territories the reconstruction and
- expansion of the economy, the safeguarding of all their
- production facilities and supplies must be aimed at, as well as
- a complete incorporation into the Greater German economic system
- at the earliest possible time. On the other hand, there must be
- removed from the territories of the Government General all raw
- materials, scrap materials, machines, _et cetera_ which are of
- use for the German war economy. Enterprises which are not
- absolutely necessary for the meager maintenance of the naked
- existence of the population must be transferred to Germany,
- unless such transfer would require an unreasonably long period
- of time and would make it more practical to exploit those
- enterprises by giving them German orders to be executed at their
- present location.”
-
-Once the Government General had been stripped of its industrial
-potential, the defendants planned to leave the country desolate. Not
-even the war damage was to be repaired. This is the clear import of the
-documents previously introduced and is likewise made clear by Document
-Number EC-411, which is Exhibit Number USA-299. I offer this document in
-evidence. This document is a copy of an order dated 20 November 1939, by
-Defendant Hess, in his capacity as Deputy Führer. This document was also
-found in the captured OKW files. I quote the English and German texts in
-their entirety. Defendant Hess stated, and I quote:
-
- “I hear from Party members who came from the Government General
- that various agencies, as for instance, the Military Economic
- Staff, the Reich Ministry for Labor, _et cetera_, intend to
- reconstruct certain industrial enterprises in Warsaw. However,
- in accordance with a decision by Minister Dr. Frank approved by
- the Führer, Warsaw shall not be rebuilt nor is it the intention
- of the Führer to rebuild or reconstruct any industry in the
- Government General.”
-
-Turning from the defendants’ program of economic spoliation in the
-Government General to their program of deportation and resettlement, I
-next offer in evidence Document Number 661-PS, which is Exhibit Number
-USA-300. This is a secret report, prepared by the Academy of German Law
-in January 1940, upon plans for the mass migration of Poles and Jews
-from incorporated areas of Poland to the Government General and for the
-forcible deportation of able-bodied Poles to Germany. This document was
-obtained from the ministerial collecting center at Kassel, Germany. The
-date does not appear in the English translation, but it is clearly set
-forth on the cover page of the original document as January 1940. Before
-quoting from this document, I ask first that the Tribunal take judicial
-notice of the decree of 11 July 1934, embodied in the
-_Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I, Page 605, 11 July 1934, which provided that
-the Academy of German Law would be a public corporation of the Reich
-under the supervision of the Reich Ministers of Justice and the
-Interior, and that its task would be:
-
- “To promote the reconstruction of German legal life and to
- realize, in constant close collaboration with the competent
- legislative organizations, the National Socialist program in the
- entire sphere of the law.”
-
-Second, before quoting from the afore-mentioned report of the Academy of
-German Law, I should like to offer in evidence Document Number 2749-PS,
-which is Exhibit Number USA-301. This is the title page of the
-publication of the Academy of German Law for 1940. It is offered for the
-purpose of showing that defendant Frank was the President of the Academy
-of German Law during the period that the above-mentioned secret report
-of the Academy was made. The document specifically states, and I quote:
-
- “Reich Minister Dr. Hans Frank, President of the Academy for
- German Law, 7th year 1940.”
-
-Now, if I may ask Your Honors to turn to Document Number 661-PS, I
-should first like to quote Page 1, lines 6 to 24, of the English text.
-In the German text these extracts appear at Page 6, lines 6 to 10; and
-line 22, Page 6, to line 4, Page 7. I quote:
-
- “In the carrying out of costly and long-term measures for the
- increase of agricultural production, the Government General can,
- at the most, absorb 1 to 1.5 million resettlers, as it is
- already over-populated in many cases. . . . By further
- absorption of 1.6 million resettlers the 1925 Reich census
- figure of 133 inhabitants per square kilometer would be reached,
- which practically, because of already existing rural
- over-population and lack of industry, would result in a double
- over-pressure.
-
-
-
- “This figure of 1.6 million will barely suffice for deportations
- from the Reich:
-
- “The Jews from the liberated East (over 600,000); groups of the
- remaining Jews, preferably the younger age groups from Germany
- proper, Austria, Sudetengau and the Protectorate (altogether
- over 1 million).”
-
-Continuing the quotation, the report goes on with respect to transfers
-from the Reich, and I continue to quote:
-
- “The Polish intelligentsia, who have been branded as
- politicians, and potential political leaders; the leading
- economic personalities, comprising owners of large estates,
- industrialists and businessmen, _et cetera_; the peasant
- population, so far as it has to be removed in order to carry
- out, by strips of German settlements, the encirclement of Polish
- territories in the East.”
-
-Next I quote the last paragraph on Page 1 of the English text. The
-German text is at Page 8, lines 3-10:
-
- “In order to relieve the living space of the Poles in the
- Government General as well as in the liberated East, one should
- temporarily remove cheap labor by the hundreds of thousands,
- employ them for a few years in the Old Reich, and thereby hamper
- their native biological propagation. (Their assimilation into
- the Old Reich must be prevented.)”
-
-Finally, I quote from the last paragraph of Page 2 of the English text.
-In the German text it is the last 5 lines on Page 40:
-
- “Strictest care is to be taken that secret documents, memoranda,
- and official correspondence which contain instructions
- detrimental to the Poles are kept steadily under lock and key,
- so that they will not some day fill the White Books printed in
- Paris or the U.S.A.”
-
-Your Honors will recall, from your own experiences, the vicious
-propaganda campaigns conducted by Nazi Germany to discredit the Polish
-books when they made their appearance in countries friendly to Poland.
-The last paragraph of this document which I have just read gives the lie
-to that whole Nazi propaganda campaign.
-
-The plans for the deportation of thousands of innocent people, which are
-set forth in the document from which I have just quoted, were not mere
-theories spun by lawyers. They represented, as the next three documents
-to be offered in evidence will show, a program which was, in fact,
-ruthlessly executed.
-
-I next offer in evidence Document Number 2233(g)-PS, the Frank diaries,
-1939, from 25 October to 15 December, which is Exhibit Number USA-302.
-This document was obtained from the 7th Army document center at
-Heidelberg. I quote from the last paragraph of Page 1, carrying over to
-the first two lines of Page 2 of the English text. In the German text
-the statements appear at Page 19, lines 19 to 28. Defendant Frank
-stated, and I quote:
-
- “The Reichsführer SS”—meaning Himmler—“wishes that all Jews be
- evacuated from the newly gained Reich territories. Up to
- February approximately 1 million people are to be brought in
- this way into the Government General. The families of good
- racial extraction present in the occupied Polish territory
- (approximately 4 million people) should be transferred into the
- Reich and individually housed, thereby being uprooted as a
- people.”
-
-I next offer in evidence Document Number EC-305, which is Exhibit Number
-USA-303. This exhibit is the top-secret minutes of a meeting held on 12
-February 1940, under the chairmanship of Defendant Göring, on “Questions
-Concerning the East.” The document was found in the captured OKW files.
-Himmler and Defendant Frank likewise were present at this meeting.
-
-I initially quote from Page 1, lines 15 to 17, of the English text.
-These extracts are found in the front page, lines 1 to 8, of the German
-text. The minutes state, and I quote:
-
- “By way of introduction the General Field Marshal”—meaning
- Defendant Göring—“explained that the strengthening of the war
- potential of the Reich must be the chief aim of all measures to
- be taken in the East.”
-
-I next quote the first two lines of the last paragraph on Page 1 of the
-English text. The German text appears at Page 2, lines 2 to 4.
-
- “Agriculture: The task consists of obtaining the greatest
- possible agricultural production from the new eastern Gaue,
- disregarding questions of ownership.”
-
-I next quote from the second paragraph of Page 2 of the English text.
-This is at Page 3, lines 22-24, of the German text:
-
- “Special questions concerning the Government General. . . . The
- Government General will have to receive the Jews who are ordered
- to emigrate from Germany and the new eastern Gaue.”
-
-Finally, I quote the paragraph numbered 2 under Roman numeral II of Page
-2 of the English text. These statements appear in the German text at
-Page 4, lines 3-19:
-
- “The following reported on the situation in the Eastern
- territories. . . .
-
-
-
- “2. Reichsstatthalter Gauleiter Forster”—who said—“‘The
- population of the Danzig-West Prussia Gau (newly acquired
- territories) is 1.5 million, of whom 240,000 are Germans,
- 850,000 well-established Poles, and 300,000 immigrant Poles,
- Jews, and asocials (1,800 Jews). There have been evacuated
- 87,000 persons, 40,000 of these from Gdynia. From there also the
- numerous shirkers, who are now looked after by welfare, will
- have to be deported to the Government General. Therefore an
- evacuation of 20,000 additional persons can be counted on for
- the current year.’”
-
-Comparable reports were made by other Gauleiter at the meeting. The
-figures that were quoted, it may be noted, were only as of February
-1940. The forcible deportations, which are reported in the exhibits from
-which I have just read, did not involve merely ordering the unfortunate
-victims to leave their homes and to take up new residences elsewhere.
-These deportations were accomplished according to plan in an utterly
-brutal and inhuman manner. Document Number 1918-PS, which is Exhibit
-Number USA-304, affords striking proof of this fact; and I offer it in
-evidence. This is a speech delivered by Himmler to officers of the SS on
-a day commemorating the presentation of the Nazi flag. It is contained
-in a compilation of speeches delivered by Himmler, and was captured by
-the Counter-Intelligence branch of the United States Army. The exact
-date of the speech does not appear in the exhibit, but its contents
-plainly show that it was delivered sometime after Poland had been
-overrun. I quote from the second to the eighth lines of Page 1 of the
-English text. In the German text this quotation appears on Page 52,
-lines 2 to 10. In this speech Himmler said, and I quote:
-
- “Very frequently the member of the Waffen-SS thinks about the
- deportation of these people here. These thoughts came to me
- today when watching the very difficult work out there performed
- by the Security Police, supported by your men, who help them a
- great deal. Exactly the same thing happened in Poland in weather
- 40 degrees below zero, where we had to haul away thousands, ten
- thousands, a hundred thousand; where we had to have the
- toughness—you should hear this but also forget it again—to
- shoot thousands of leading Poles.”
-
-I repeat the latter statement:
-
- “Where we had to have the toughness . . . to shoot thousands of
- leading Poles.”
-
-Such Poles from the incorporated area as managed to survive the journey
-to the Government General could look forward, at best, to extreme
-hardship and exposure to every form of degradation and brutality. Your
-Honors will recall Defendant Frank’s statement contained in Document
-Number EC-344(16), now Exhibit Number USA-297, which was introduced a
-short while ago, that the Polish economy would be reduced to the
-absolute minimum necessary for the bare existence of the population.
-
-Your Honors Will also recall Defendant Göring’s directive in Document
-Number EC-410, now Exhibit Number USA-298, also introduced a few moments
-ago, that all industrial enterprises in the Government General not
-absolutely necessary for the maintenance of the naked existence of the
-Polish population must be removed to Germany. A bare and naked
-existence, by the precepts of the conspirators, meant virtual
-starvation.
-
-For the Jews who were forcibly deported to the Government General there
-was, of course, absolutely no hope. They were, in effect, deported to
-their graves. The Defendant Frank, by his own admissions, had dedicated
-himself to their complete annihilation. I refer Your Honors to the Frank
-diaries, conference volume, 1941, October to December, which is Document
-Number 2233(d)-PS, which was introduced by Major Walsh earlier as
-Exhibit Number USA-281. The particular statement that I want to quote
-appears on Page 4, Your Honor, of Document Number 2233-PS. I believe it
-appears at Page 77, lines 9 and 10 of the German text. I quote—this is
-what Defendant Frank stated, “We must annihilate the Jews, wherever we
-find them, and wherever it is possible. . . .”
-
-I turn next to that aspect of the conspirators’ program which involved
-the forcible Germanization of persons in the incorporated area who were
-deemed to possess German blood. I refer you now, Your Honors, to the
-incorporated area, to persons who were deemed to possess German blood.
-Such persons, the evidence will show, were given the choice of the
-concentration camp or submission to Germanization. Himmler was the chief
-executioner of this program; and initially I should like to introduce a
-few documents which disclose the powers bestowed upon him and his
-conception of his task.
-
-First, I offer in evidence Document Number 686-PS. This is Exhibit
-Number USA-305. This is a copy of a secret decree signed by Hitler and
-Defendants Göring and Keitel, dated 7 October 1939, entrusting Himmler
-with the task of executing the conspirators’ Germanization program. This
-particular document came from the ministerial collection center at
-Kassel, Germany. I quote from Page 1, lines 9 to 21 of the English text.
-In the German text these extracts appear at Page 1, lines 13 to 25:
-
- “The Reichsführer SS”—that was Himmler—“has the obligation in
- accordance, with my directives:
-
-
-
- “1. To bring back for final return into the Reich all German
- nationals and racial Germans in the foreign countries.
-
-
-
- “2. To eliminate the harmful influence of such alien parts of
- the population which represent a danger to the Reich and the
- German folk community.
-
-
-
- “3. The forming of new German settlements by resettling and, in
- particular, by settling the returning German citizens and racial
- Germans from abroad.
-
-
-
- “The Reichsführer SS is authorized to take all necessary general
- and administrative measures for the execution of his
- obligation.”
-
-Himmler’s conception of his task under this decree is plainly stated in
-the foreword which he wrote for the _Deutsche Arbeit_ issue of June-July
-1942. The foreword is contained in Document Number 2915-PS, now Exhibit
-Number USA-306. I quote from the first four lines of the English text.
-The German text appears at Page 157:
-
- “It is our task”—Himmler wrote—“to germanize the East, not in
- the old sense—that is, to teach the people there the German
- language and German law—but to see to it that only people of
- purely German, Germanic blood live in the East. Signed,
- Himmler.”
-
-I next offer in evidence Document Number 2916-PS, which is Exhibit
-Number USA-307. This document contains various materials taken out of
-_Der Menscheneinsatz_ of 1940, a confidential publication issued by
-Himmler’s office for the consolidation of German nationhood. I quote
-initially from Page 1, lines 7 to 11. In the German text these extracts
-appear at Page 51, first four lines under the letter “D.” I quote:
-
- “The removal of foreign races from the incorporated Eastern
- Territories is one of the most essential goals to be
- accomplished in the German East. This is the chief national
- political task, which has to be executed in the incorporated
- Eastern Territories by the Reichsführer SS, Reich Commissioner
- for the Preservation of German Nationality.”
-
-I next quote from lines 33 to 39 of Page 1 of the English text. In the
-German text these extracts appear on Page 52, lines 14 to 20. I quote:
-
- “There are the following two primary reasons which make the
- regaining of this lost German blood an urgent necessity:
-
-
-
- “1. Prevention of a further increase of the Polish
- intelligentsia through families of German descent, even if they
- are Polonized.
-
-
-
- “2. Increase of the population by racial elements desirable for
- the German nation and the acquisition of ethno-biologically
- unobjectionable forces for the German reconstruction of
- agriculture and industry.”
-
-Further light is thrown upon the goals which the conspirators had set
-for their Germanization program in conquered Eastern areas by a speech
-delivered by Himmler on 14 October 1943. This speech was published by
-the National Socialist leadership staff of the OKW. The document came to
-us through the Document Section, 3rd U.S. Infantry Division. Excerpts
-from this speech are set forth in L-70, which is Exhibit Number USA-308.
-I quote all of the English text; and in the German text these excerpts
-appear at Page 23, lines 6 to 11, 12 to 15, 20 to 23, and Page 30, lines
-7 to 16. Himmler said, and I quote:
-
- “Therefore, I consider that in dealing with members of a foreign
- country, especially some Slav nationality, we must not start
- from German points of view, we must not endow these people with
- decent German thoughts and logical conclusions of which they are
- not capable, but we must take them as they really are.
-
-
-
- “Obviously in such a mixture of peoples there will always be
- some racially good types. Therefore I think that it is our duty
- to take their children with us, to remove them from their
- environment, if necessary, by robbing or stealing them. Either
- we win over the good blood that we can use for ourselves and
- give it a place in our people or . . . we destroy that blood.”
-
-Continuing the German text on Page 30, lines 7 to 16, which is a
-continuation of the English text, I believe, Your Honor—Himmler stated
-and I quote:
-
- “For us the end of this war will mean an open road to the East,
- the creation of the Germanic Reich in this way or that . . . the
- fetching home of 30 million human beings of our blood, so that
- still during our lifetime we shall be a people of 120 million
- Germanic souls. That means that we shall be the sole and
- decisive power in Europe. That means that we shall then be able
- to tackle the peace, during which we shall be willing for the
- first 20 years to rebuild and spread out our villages and towns,
- and that we shall push the borders of our German race 500
- kilometers farther to the East.”
-
-In furtherance of the unlawful plans disclosed by the last four
-exhibits, which have been offered in evidence, the conspirators
-contrived a racial register in the incorporated area of Poland. The
-racial register was, in effect, an elaborate classification of persons
-deemed to be of German blood, and contained provisions setting forth
-some of the rights, privileges, and duties of the persons in each
-classification. Persons were classified into four groups:
-
-(1) Germans who had actively promoted the Nazi cause;
-
-(2) Germans who had been more or less passive in the Nazi struggle, but
-had retained their German nationality;
-
-(3) Persons of German extraction who, although previously connected with
-the Polish nation, were willing to submit to Germanization;
-
-(4) Persons of German descent, who had been “politically absorbed by the
-Polish nation,” and who would be resistant to Germanization.
-
-The racial register was inaugurated under a decree of 12 September 1940
-issued by Himmler as Reich Commissioner for the consolidation of German
-nationhood, and this is contained in Document Number 2916-PS, previously
-introduced in evidence. That is Exhibit Number USA-307. I quote from
-Page 4 of the English text, lines 14 to 46. In the German text these
-extracts appear at Page 92, lines 29 to the end of the page, and lines 1
-to 9 of Page 93. I quote:
-
- “For inter-office use the list of racial Germans will be divided
- into four groups:
-
-
-
- “1. Racial Germans who fought actively in the ethnic struggle.
- Besides the membership of a German organization, every other
- deliberated activity in favor of the Germans against a foreign
- nationality will be considered an active manifestation.
-
-
-
- “2. Racial Germans who did not actively intervene in favor of
- the German nationality but had preserved their traceable German
- nationality.
-
-
-
- “3. Persons of German descent who became connected with the
- Polish nation in the course of the years but have, on account of
- their attitude, the pre-requisites to become full-fledged
- members of the German national community. To this group belong
- also persons of non-German descent who live in a people’s mixed
- marriage with an ethnic German in which the German spouse has
- prevailed. Persons of Masurian, Kushubian, Slonzak, or Upper
- Silesian descent, who are to be recognized as racial Germans
- usually belong to this group 3.
-
-
-
- “4. Persons of German descent politically absorbed by the Polish
- nation (renegades). Persons not included on the list of radial
- Germans are Poles or other foreign nationals. Their treatment is
- regulated by B II. . . .
-
-
-
- “Members of groups 3 and 4 have to be educated as full Germans,
- that is, they have to be re-germanized in the course of time
- through an intensive educational training in Old Germany.
-
-
-
- “The establishment of members of group 4 has to be based on the
- doctrine that German blood must not be utilized in the interest
- of a foreign nation. Against those who refuse re-Germanization,
- Security Police measures are to be taken. . . .”
-
-The basic idea of creating a racial register for persons of German
-extraction was later incorporated in a decree of 4 March 1941 signed by
-Himmler and the Defendants Frick and Hess. This decree is dated 4 March
-1941; and is set forth in the _Reichsgesetzblatt_, 1941, Part 1, Page
-118. We ask the Tribunal to take judicial notice thereof.
-
-The entire apparatus of the SS was thrown behind the vigorous execution
-of these decrees. Proof of this fact is contained in Document Number
-R-112, which is Exhibit Number USA-309, and I now offer it in evidence.
-This exhibit contains directives issued by Himmler as the Reich
-Commissioner for the consolidation of German nationhood. I quote first
-from the last two paragraphs of the English text of the directives, 16
-February 1942, which is on Page 3 of this exhibit. In the German text
-this provision appears on Page 1 of the first decree, dated 16 February
-1942, Paragraph 1 and 2. The directive provided, and I now quote:
-
- “I. Where racial Germans have not applied for entry in the
- German ethnical list you will instruct the subordinate agencies
- to turn over their names to the local State Police (superior)
- Office. Subsequently, you will report to me.
-
-
-
- “II. The local State Police (superior) Office will charge the
- persons whose names are turned over to it to prove within 8 days
- that they have applied for entry in the German ethnical list.
-
-
-
- “If such proof is not submitted, the person in question is to be
- taken into protective custody for transfer to a concentration
- camp.”
-
-The measures taken against persons in the fourth category—“Polonized
-Germans” as the conspirators called them—were particularly harsh. These
-persons were resistant to Germanization, and ruthless measures
-calculated to break their resistance were prescribed. Where the
-individual’s past history indicated that he could not be effectively
-germanized, he was thrown into a concentration camp.
-
-Some of these measures are set forth in Subparagraph A of Paragraph II
-on Page 5 of Document R-112, and I quote in full from the English text
-of that particular paragraph. This passage is set forth in the German
-text at Pages 2 and 3 of the second decree dated 16 February 1942 under
-II. This is what the directive provides:
-
- “II. The re-Germanization of the Polonized Germans presupposes
- their complete separation from Polish surroundings. For that
- reason the persons entered in Division 4 of the German ethnical
- list are to be dealt with in the following manner:
-
-
-
- “A. They are to be resettled in Old Reich territory.
-
-
-
- “1. The Higher SS and Police Leaders are charged with evacuating
- and resettling them in Old Reich territory according to
- instructions which will follow later.
-
-
-
- “2. Asocial persons and others who are of inferior hereditary
- quality will not be included in the resettlement. Their names
- will be turned over at once by the Higher SS and Police Leaders
- (Inspectors of Security Police and Security Service) to the
- competent State Police (superior) Office. The latter will
- arrange for their transfer to a concentration camp.
-
-
-
- “3. Persons with a particularly bad political record will not be
- included in the resettlement action. Their names will also be
- given by the Higher SS and Police Leaders (Inspectors of
- Security Police and Security Service) to the competent State
- Police (superior) Office for transfer to a concentration camp.
-
-
-
- “The wives and children of such persons are to be resettled in
- Old Reich territory and to be included in the Germanization
- measures. Where the wife also has a particularly bad political
- record and cannot be included in the resettlement action, her
- name, too, is to be turned over to the competent State Police
- (superior) Office with a view to transferring her to a
- concentration camp. In such cases the children are to be
- separated from their parents and dealt with according to III,
- Paragraph 2 of this decree.
-
-
-
- “Persons are to be considered as having a particularly bad
- political record who have offended the German nation to a very
- great degree (for example, those who participated in
- persecutions of Germans, or boycotts of Germans, _et cetera_.)”
-
-Coincident with the program of germanizing persons of German extraction
-in the incorporated areas, the conspirators, as previously indicated,
-undertook to settle large numbers of Germans of proven Nazi convictions
-in that area. This aspect of their program is clearly shown by an
-article by SS Obergruppenführer and General of the Police Wilhelm Koppe,
-who was one of Himmler’s trusted agents.
-
-Excerpts from this article are contained in Document Number 2915-PS,
-which was earlier introduced as Exhibit Number USA-306. I quote from the
-second paragraph of the English text of this exhibit. The German text
-appears at the third line from the bottom of Page 170 and continues to
-the first full paragraph of Page 171. I now quote Koppe’s statement:
-
- “The victory of German weapons in the East must, therefore, be
- followed by the victory of the German race over the Polish race,
- if the regained Eastern sphere—according to the Führer’s
- will—shall henceforth remain for all time an essential
- constituent part of the Greater German Reich. It is therefore of
- decisive importance to infiltrate German farmers, laborers,
- civil servants, merchants, and artisans into the regained German
- region so that a living and deep-rooted bastion of German people
- can be formed as a protective wall against foreign penetration
- and possibly as a starting point for the racial infusion of the
- territories farther east.”
-
-THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn now for 10 minutes.
-
- [_A recess was taken._]
-
-CAPT. HARRIS: Up to this point we have been speaking of the
-Germanization measures in the incorporated areas. I should like now
-briefly to turn to the Germanization program in the Government General.
-
-In the Government General there were relatively few persons, at the
-outset, who qualified as Germans according to the conspirators’
-standards. Hence little would be served by the introduction of a racial
-register categorizing persons of German extraction on the model of the
-one instituted in the incorporated area; and to our knowledge, no such
-racial register was prescribed in the Government General. Rather, the
-plan seems to have been (a) to make the Government General a colony of
-Germany, which—as Your Honors will recall from Document EC-344(16),
-which has been introduced as Exhibit Number USA-297—was the objective
-expressed by the Defendant Frank; and (b) to create so-called “German
-island settlements” in the productive farming areas. These island
-settlements were to be created by an influx of German persons who
-faithfully adhered to the principles of National Socialism.
-
-In this connection I offer in evidence Document Number 910-PS. This is
-Exhibit Number USA-310. These are secret notes bearing the date line,
-“Department of the Interior, Kraków, 30 March 1942,” and they concerned
-Himmler’s statements upon the planned Germanization of the Government
-General. This document was obtained from the 3rd Army intelligence
-center at Freising, Germany; and I now quote from Page 2 of the English
-text, from line 3 to the end of the report. This appears in the German
-text at Page 2, line 21, continuing to the end of the report. The
-document states, and I quote:
-
- “The Reichsführer SS”—Himmler—“developed additional trains of
- ideas to the effect that, in the first 5-year plan for
- resettlement after the war, the new German Eastern territories
- should first be filled; it is intended afterwards to provide the
- Crimea and the Baltic countries with a German upper class at
- least. Into the Government General, perhaps, further German
- island settlements should be newly transplanted from European
- nations. An exact decision in this respect, however, has not
- been issued. In any case, it is wished that at first a heavy
- colonization along the San and the Bug be achieved so that the
- parts of Poland with alien populations are encircled. Hitherto,
- it has been always proved that this kind of encircling leads
- most quickly to the desired nationalization.”
-
-In this same connection, I offer in evidence Document Number 2233(h)-PS.
-This is Defendant Frank’s diary, 1941, Volume II, Page 317. This is
-Exhibit Number USA-311. I quote from the last sentence at the bottom of
-our Page 3 of the English text of this exhibit. In the German text this
-passage appears on Page 317, lines 25 to 28. Defendant Frank stated in
-this diary, and I quote:
-
- “Thanks to the heroic courage of our soldiers this territory has
- become German; and the time will come when the valley of the
- Vistula, from its source to its mouth at the sea, will be as
- German as the valley of the Rhine.”
-
-I now turn to another phase of the program that I mentioned earlier,
-that is the conspirators’ plan to confiscate the property of Poles,
-Jews, and dissident elements. As I previously mentioned, the evidence
-will show that these plans were designed to accomplish a number of
-objectives. Insofar as the Jews were concerned, they were part and
-parcel of the conspirators’ overall program of extermination.
-Confiscation was also a means of providing property for German settlers
-and of rewarding those who had rendered faithful service to the Nazi
-State. This phase of their program likewise made available dispossessed
-Polish farmers for slave labor in Germany and operated to further the
-conspirators’ objective of preventing the growth of another generation
-of Poles.
-
-Proof of the fact that the conspirators confiscated the property of
-Poles in furtherance of their Germanization and slave labor program is
-contained in Document Number 1352-PS, previously introduced by Mr. Dodd
-as Exhibit Number USA-176. This exhibit contains a number of reports by
-one Kusche, who appears to have been one of Himmler’s chief deputies in
-Poland. Mr. Dodd quoted from one of Kusche’s confidential reports, dated
-22 May 1940, at our Page 4, Paragraph 5 of the English text. In the
-German text it is at Page 9, lines 16 to 18. In this statement Kusche
-pointed out that it was possible, without difficulty, to confiscate
-small farms and that—and I now quote:
-
- “The former owners of Polish farms together with their families
- will be transferred to the Old Reich by the labor offices for
- employment as farm workers.”
-
-I now desire to quote from another report by Kusche contained in the
-same exhibit and bearing the same date, 22 May 1940. I think the upper
-right-hand corner numbers might simplify it. The report from which I now
-quote is marked “secret” and is entitled, “. . . Details of the
-Confiscation in the Bielsko Region.” Initially, I should like to quote
-from the last paragraph at the bottom of Page 1 of this exhibit. This
-exhibit, you will recall, is 1352-PS, last paragraph at the bottom of
-Page 1. The German text is at Page 11, Paragraphs 1 and 2. Kusche
-stated, and I quote:
-
- “Some days ago the commandant of the concentration camp being
- built at Auschwitz called on Staff Leader Müller and requested
- support for the carrying out of his assignments. He said that it
- was absolutely necessary to confiscate the agricultural
- enterprises within a certain area around the concentration camp,
- since not only the fields but also in some cases the farm houses
- of these border directly on the concentration camp. A local
- inspection held on the 21st of this month revealed the
- following:
-
-
-
- “There is no room for doubt that agricultural enterprises
- bordering on the concentration camp must be confiscated at once.
- In addition, the camp commandant requests that further plots of
- farm land be placed at his disposal, so that he can keep the
- prisoners busy. This, too, can be done without difficulty since
- enough land can be made available for the purpose. The owners of
- the plots are all Poles.”
-
-I next quote from Page 2, lines 22 to 31, of the English text of this
-same exhibit. The German text is at Page 12, Paragraph 2, continuing
-through to line 22 from the top of the page. I quote:
-
- “I had the following discussion with the chief of the labor
- office in Bielsko:
-
-
-
- “The lack of agricultural laborers still exists in the Old
- Reich. The transfer of the previous owners of the confiscated
- agricultural enterprises to the Reich as farm workers, together
- with their entire families, is possible without any difficulty.
- It is only necessary for the labor office to receive the lists
- of the persons in time, in order to enable it to take the
- necessary steps (collection of transportation; distribution over
- the various regions in need of such labor).”
-
-Finally, I quote from Page 3 of this same exhibit, lines 6 to 13 of the
-English text. The German text appears at Page 13, the last three lines,
-continuing through to Page 14, line 9:
-
- “The confiscation of these Polish enterprises in Alzen will also
- be carried out within the next few days. The commandant of the
- concentration camp will furnish SS men and a truck for the
- execution of the action. Should it not yet be possible to take
- the Poles from Alzen to Auschwitz”—and Auschwitz, Your Honors
- will recall, is where the concentration camp was—“they should
- be transferred to the empty castle at Zator. The liberated
- Polish property is to be given to the needy racial German
- farmers for their use.”
-
-In order to regularize the program of confiscation, Defendant Göring
-issued a decree on September 17, 1940. This decree appears in the
-_Reichsgesetzblatt_, 1940, Part I, Page 1270; and I ask the Tribunal to
-take judicial notice of it. Under Section 2 of this decree sequestration
-of movable and immovable property, stores, and other intangible
-property, interests of Jews and “persons who have fled or are not merely
-temporarily absent”, was made mandatory. In addition, sequestration was
-authorized under Section 2, Subsection 2, if the property was required
-“for the public welfare, particularly in the interests of Reich defense
-or the strengthening of German folkdom.” By Section 9 of this decree,
-issued by Defendant Göring, confiscation of sequestrated property was
-authorized “if the public welfare, particularly the defense of the
-Reich, or the strengthening of German folkdom, so requires.” However,
-Section 1, Subsection 2, of the decree provided that property of German
-nationals was not subject to sequestration and confiscation; and Section
-13 provided that sequestration would be suspended if the owner of the
-property asserted that he was a German. The decree, on its face,
-indicates very clearly a purpose to strip Poles, Jews, and dissident
-elements of their property. It was, moreover, avowedly designed to
-promote Germanism.
-
-We ask the Court to take judicial notice of it. It is in the
-_Reichsgesetzblatt_.
-
-Apparently some question arose at one point as to whether the decree
-required that a determination be made in each case, involving the
-property of a Pole, that the property was required “for the public
-welfare, particularly in the interests of Reich defense or the
-strengthening of German folkdom.” The answer supplied by the
-conspirators was firm and clear. In any case in which the property of a
-Pole is involved, the “strengthening of German folkdom” required its
-seizure. In this connection I offer in evidence document Number R-92,
-which is Exhibit Number USA-312. This document, which is dated 15 April
-1941, bears the letterhead of the Reich Leader SS, commissioner for the
-consolidation of German nationhood, and is entitled, “Instruction for
-Internal Use on the Application of the Law Concerning Property of the
-Poles, of 17 September 1940.” This document was captured by the U.S.
-Counter-Intelligence Corps. I quote from Page 2, lines 11 to 14 of the
-English text. In the German text this statement appears at Page 3,
-Paragraph 2, Subparagraph 2. I quote:
-
- “The objective conditions permitting seizure according to
- Section II, Subsection 2(a), are to be assumed whenever, for
- example, the property belongs to a Pole, for the Polish real
- estate will be needed without exception for the preservation of
- the German folkdom.”
-
-In the Government General Defendant Frank promulgated a decree on 24
-January 1940 authorizing sequestration for the “performance of tasks
-serving the public interest” and liquidation of “anti-social or
-financially unremunerative concerns.” The decree is embodied in the
-_Verordnungsblatt_ of the Government General, Number 6, 27 January 1940,
-Page 23; and we ask the Tribunal to take judicial notice of it. The
-undefined criteria in this decree obviously empowered Nazi officials in
-the Government General to engage in wholesale seizure of property.
-
-The magnitude of the conspirators’ confiscation program in Poland was
-staggering. I ask Your Honors to turn to the chart on the sixth page of
-Document Number R-92, which was introduced into evidence a moment ago as
-Exhibit Number USA-312.
-
-This chart shows that as of 31 May 1943 the staggering total of 693,252
-estates, comprising 6,097,525 hectares, had been seized and 9,508
-estates, comprising 270,446 hectares, had been confiscated by the Estate
-Offices Danzig-West Prussia, Posen, Ciechanów, and Silesia. This, it
-will be noted, represented the seizure and confiscation of only four
-offices.
-
-That, Your Honors, concludes our discussion on Poland; and I now turn to
-Czechoslovakia. At this point of the proceedings we shall introduce only
-one document upon Czechoslovakia. This one document, however, contains a
-startling revelation of the conspirators’ plans to germanize Bohemia and
-Moravia. It relates how three plans, each characterized by its severity,
-were discussed; and finally how the Führer decided on plan (c), which
-involved the assimilation of about one-half of the Czech population by
-the Germans and the extermination of the other half. Moreover, the plan
-envisaged a large influx into Czechoslovakia of Germans whose loyalty to
-the Führer was unquestioned. I offer this document in evidence. It is
-Document Number 862-PS, and it is Exhibit Number USA-313. This is a
-top-secret report, dated 15 October 1940, which was written by General
-Friderici, Deputy General of the Wehrmacht in Bohemia and Moravia. On
-the face of the document, it appears that only four copies were made.
-The document we offer in evidence is the original document, which was
-found among the captured files of the OKW. This document bears the
-handwritten letters “K” and “J” on the first page on the left-hand side,
-and I am advised that the handwriting is unquestionably that of
-Defendants Keitel and Jodl. I quote the document in its entirety:
-
- “On 9 October of this year the office of the Reich Protector
- held an official conference in which State Secretary SS
- Gruppenführer R. H. Frank spoke about the following . . . .”
-
-SS Gruppenführer K. H. Frank, it may be noted, was Secretary of State
-under Defendant Von Neurath, who at the date of this report was the
-Protector of Bohemia and Moravia.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Who did you say Frank was?
-
-CAPT. HARRIS: Frank was an SS Gruppenführer, and Secretary of State
-under Defendant Von Neurath. He is not the Defendant Hans Frank. At the
-date of this particular report Von Neurath, under whom K. H. Frank
-served, was the Protector of Bohemia and Moravia. Continuing the
-quotation:
-
- “Since creation of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia,
- Party agencies, industrial circles, as well as agencies of the
- central authorities of Berlin, have considered a solution for
- the Czech problem.
-
-
-
- “After ample deliberation, the Reich Protector expressed his
- views about the various plans in a memorandum. In this three
- ways of solution were indicated:
-
-
-
- “a) German infiltration of Moravia and confinement of the Czech
- nationals to a residual Bohemia. This solution is considered
- unsatisfactory, because the Czech problem, even if in diminished
- form, will continue to exist.
-
-
-
- “b) Many arguments can be brought up against the most radical
- solution, namely, the deportation of all Czechs. Therefore, in
- the memorandum it is concluded that it cannot be carried out
- within a reasonable period of time.
-
-
-
- “c) Assimilation of the Czechs, that is, absorption of about
- half of the Czech nationals by the Germans insofar as these are
- of racial or otherwise valuable importance. This will also be
- caused, among other things, by increased employment of Czechs in
- the Reich territory (with the exception of the Sudeten German
- border districts), in other words, by dispersing the
- concentrations of Czech nationals.
-
-
-
- “The other half of the Czech nationals must be deprived of their
- power, eliminated, and shipped out of the country by all sorts
- of methods. This applies particularly to the racially mongoloid
- part and to the major part of the intellectual class. The latter
- can scarcely be converted and would become a burden by
- constantly making claims for the leadership over the other Czech
- classes and thus interfering with a possible rapid assimilation.
-
-
-
- “Elements which counteract the planned Germanization ought to be
- handled roughly and eliminated.
-
-
-
- “The above development naturally pre-supposes an increased
- influx of Germans from the Reich territory into the
- Protectorate.
-
-
-
- “Having been reported, the Führer has chosen solution (c)
- (assimilation) as a directive for the solution of the Czech
- problem and decided that, while keeping up the autonomy of the
- Protectorate on the surface, the Germanization will have to be
- carried out in a centralized way by the office of the Reich
- Protector for years to come.
-
-
-
- “From the above no particular conclusions are to be drawn by the
- Armed Forces. This is the line which has always been taken here.
- In this connection I refer to my memorandum submitted to the
- Chief of the High Command of the Armed Forces, dated 12 July
- 1939, file number 6/39, top secret, entitled ‘The Czech Problem’
- (attached as annex).
-
-
-
- “The Representative of the Armed Forces with the Reich Protector
- in Bohemia and Moravia.”—Signed—“Friderici, General of
- Infantry.”
-
-With the permission of Your Honors, I should like to comment further
-upon some parts of this memorandum. First, I invite your attention to
-solution (a). This solution would have called for German infiltration
-into Moravia and the forcible removal of the Czechs from that area to
-Bohemia. As Your Honors know, Moravia lies between Bohemia and Slovakia.
-Thus solution (a) would have involved the erection of a German State
-between Bohemia and Slovakia, and would have prevented effective
-inter-communications between the Czechs and the Slovaks. In this manner,
-the historic desire for unity of these two groups of peace-loving people
-and the continued existence of their Czechoslovakian State would have
-been frustrated. Solution (a), it may be noted, was rejected because the
-surviving Czechs, even though compressed into a “residual Bohemia”,
-would have remained to plague the conspirators.
-
-Solution (b) which involved the forcible deportation of all Czechs was
-rejected, not because its terms were deemed too drastic, but rather
-because a more speedy resolution of the problem was desired.
-
-Solution (c), as shown in the exhibit, was regarded as the most
-desirable and was adopted. This solution first provided for the
-assimilation of about one-half of the Czechs. This meant two things: a.
-Enforced Germanization for those who were deemed racially qualified and
-b. deportation to slave labor in Germany for others. “Increased
-employment of Czechs in the Reich territory” as stated in the exhibit
-meant, in reality, slave labor in Germany.
-
-Solution (c) further provided for the elimination and deportation “by
-all sorts of methods” of the other half of the Czech population,
-particularly the intellectuals and those who did not meet the racial
-standards of the conspirators. Intellectuals everywhere were an anathema
-to the Nazi conspirators, and the Czech intellectuals were no exception.
-Indeed, the Czech intellectuals, as the conspirators well knew, had a
-conspicuous record of gallantry, self-sacrifice, and resistance to the
-Nazi ideology. They were, therefore, to be exterminated. As will be
-shown in other connections, that section of the top-secret report which
-stated “elements which counteract the planned Germanization are to be
-handled roughly and eliminated” meant that intellectuals and other
-dissident elements were either to be thrown in concentration camps or
-immediately exterminated.
-
-In short, the provisions of solution (c) were simply a practical
-application of the conspirators’ philosophy as expressed in Himmler’s
-speech, part of which we have quoted in L-70, already presented in
-evidence as Exhibit Number USA-308. Himmler said that “either we win
-over any good blood that we can use for ourselves . . . or we destroy
-this blood.”
-
-I now turn briefly to the conspirators’ program of spoliation and
-Germanization in the western occupied countries. Evidence which will be
-presented at a later stage of this proceeding will show how the
-conspirators sought to germanize the western occupied countries; how
-they stripped the conquered countries in the West of food and raw
-materials, leaving to them scarcely enough to maintain a bare existence;
-how they compelled local industry and agriculture to satisfy the
-insatiable wants of the German civilian population and the Wehrmacht;
-and finally how the spoliation in the western occupied countries was
-aided and abetted by excessive occupation charges, compulsory and
-fraudulent clearing arrangements, and confiscation of their gold and
-foreign exchange. The evidence concerning these matters which will be
-presented in great detail by the Prosecutor for the Republic of France
-is so overwhelming that the inference is inescapable that the
-conspirators’ acts were committed according to plan.
-
-However, it will not be until after the Christmas recess that the
-evidence concerning the execution of the conspirators’ plans in the West
-will be presented to this Tribunal. Accordingly, by way of illustration,
-and for the purpose of showing in this presentation that the
-conspirators’ plans embraced the occupied Western countries as well as
-the East, we now offer in evidence a single exhibit on this aspect of
-the case, R-114, which is Exhibit Number USA-314. This document was
-obtained from the U.S. Counter-Intelligence branch. This exhibit
-consists of a memorandum dated 7 August 1942 and a memorandum dated 29
-August 1942 from Himmler’s personal files. The former memorandum deals
-with a conference of SS officers and bears the title, “Directions for
-the Treatment of Deported Alsatians.” The latter memorandum is marked
-secret and is entitled, “Shifting of Alsatians into the Reich.” The
-memoranda comprising this exhibit show that plans were made and
-partially executed to remove all elements from Alsace which were hostile
-to the conspirators and to germanize the province. I quote from Page 1,
-lines 21 to 31, of the English text entitled, “Directions for the
-Treatment of Deported Alsatians.” These extracts contained in the German
-text at Page 1, the last 8 lines, and Page 2, lines 1 to 5. I now quote:
-
- “The first expulsion action was carried out in Alsace in the
- period from July to December 1940; in the course of it 105,000
- persons were either expelled or prevented from returning. They
- were in the main Jews, gypsies and other foreign racial
- elements, criminals, asocial and incurably insane persons, and
- in addition Frenchmen and Francophiles. The _patois_-speaking
- population was combed out by this series of deportations in the
- same way as the other Alsatians.
-
-
-
- “Referring to the permission the Führer had given him to cleanse
- Alsace of all foreign, sick, or unreliable elements, Gauleiter
- Wagner has recently pointed out the political necessity of a new
- deportation”—zweite Aussiedlungsaktion—“which is to be
- prepared as soon as possible.”
-
-I should like Your Honors to permit me to defer the remainder of this
-presentation until Monday. Mr. Justice Jackson would like to make a few
-remarks to the Tribunal.
-
-MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: May it please the Tribunal, I wish to bring to the
-attention of the Tribunal and of the Defense Counsel some matters
-concerning the case as it will take its course next week, in the belief
-that it will result in expediting our procedure if, over the weekend,
-our program can be considered.
-
-Captain Harris’ presentation will take a short time longer on Monday;
-and when it has concluded, the presentation by the United States will
-have reached that part of the Indictment which seeks a declaratory
-judgment of this Tribunal that six of the organizations named therein
-are criminal organizations. They effect such a finding only that they
-may constitute such a basis for prosecution against individual members
-in other courts than this, proceedings in which every defense will be
-open to an accused individual, except that he may not deny the findings
-made by this Tribunal as to the character of the organization of which
-he was a member.
-
-The United States desires to offer this evidence under conditions which
-will save the time of the Tribunal and advance the prosecution as
-rapidly as possible so that United States personnel can be released.
-
-We also desire defendants’ counsel to have before them as much as
-possible of our evidence against organizations before the Christmas
-recess so that they may use that recess time to examine it and to
-prepare their defenses and that we may be spared any further
-applications for delay for that purpose.
-
-The substance of our proposal is that all of the ultimate questions on
-this branch of the case be reserved for consideration after the evidence
-is before the Tribunal. The real question, we submit, is not whether to
-admit the evidence. The real question is its value and its legal
-consequences under the provisions of this Charter. All of the evidence
-which we will tender will be tendered in the belief that it cannot be
-denied to have some probative value and that it is relevant to the
-charges made in the Indictment. And those are the grounds upon which the
-Charter authorizes a rejection of evidence.
-
-At the time we seek no advantage from this suggestion except the
-advantage of saving time to the Tribunal and to ourselves to get as much
-of the case as possible in the hands of the defendants before the
-Christmas recess and to urge the ultimate issues only when they can be
-intelligibly argued and understood on the basis of a real record instead
-of on assumptions and hypothetical statements of fact.
-
-In offering this evidence as to the organizations, therefore, we propose
-to stipulate as follows:
-
-Every objection of any character to any item of the evidence offered by
-the United States, as against these organizations, may be deemed to be
-reserved and fully available to Defense Counsel at any time before the
-close of the United States case with the same effect as if the objection
-had been made when the evidence was offered. All evidence on this
-subject shall remain subject to a continuing power of the Tribunal, on
-motion of any counsel or on its own motion, to strike, unprejudiced by
-the absence of objection. Every question as to the effect of the
-evidence shall be considered open and unprejudiced by the fact it has
-been received without objection.
-
-Now we recognize the adherent controversial character of the issues
-which may be raised concerning this branch of the case. What this
-evidence proves, what organizations it is sufficient to condemn, and how
-the Charter applies to it are questions capable of debate, which we are
-quite ready to argue when it can be done in orderly and intelligible
-fashion. We had expected to do it in final summation, but we will do it
-at any time suggested by the Tribunal, after there is a record on which
-to found the argument; and we are willing to do it either before or
-after the defendants take up the case. But we do suggest that, if it is
-done step by step as the evidence is produced and on questions of
-admissibility, it will be disorderly and time-consuming. Piecemeal
-argument will consume time by requiring counsel on both sides to recite
-evidence that is either in the case, or to speculate as to evidence that
-is not yet in, to resort to hypothetical cases, and to do it over and
-over again to each separate objection. It will also be disorderly
-because of our plan of presentation.
-
-Questions which relate to these organizations go to the very basis of
-the proposal made by President Roosevelt to the Yalta Conference,
-agreement upon which was the basis for this proceeding. The United
-States would not have participated in this kind of determination of
-question of guilt but for this or some equivalent plan of reaching
-thousands of others, who, if less conspicuous, are just as guilty of
-these crimes as the men in the dock. Because of participation in the
-framing of the Charter and knowledge of the problem it was designed to
-reach, I shall expect to reach the legal issues involved in these
-questions.
-
-The evidence, however, will be presented by the lawyers who have
-specialized in the search for the arrangement of evidence on a
-particular and limited charge or indictment. Piecemeal argument,
-therefore, would not be orderly, but would be repetitious, incomplete,
-poorly organized, and of little help to the Tribunal. The issues deserve
-careful, prepared presentation of the contentions on both sides.
-
-We will ask, therefore, upon these conditions, which we think protect
-everybody’s rights and enable the Defense as well as ourselves to make a
-better presentation of their questions because they will have time to
-prepare them, to lay before the Tribunal, as rapidly as possible next
-week and as uninterruptedly as possible, the evidence which bears upon
-the accusations against the organizations.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Justice Jackson, have you yet communicated that to
-the defendants’ counsel in writing or not?
-
-MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: I have not communicated it, unless it has been sent
-to the Information Center since noon.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: I think, perhaps, it might be convenient that you should
-state what you have stated to us as to objections to the evidence in
-writing so they may thoroughly understand it.
-
-MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: I have prepared to do that and to supply sufficient
-copies for members of the Tribunal and for all defense counsel.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Yes.
-
-HERR BÖHM: I represent the members of the S.A. who have volunteered to
-be questioned before the Tribunal. I understood the statement of Justice
-Jackson only partially. As Defense Counsel I have no one who can supply
-me with information and I cannot, under any circumstances, agree to give
-my views on statements which I do not know or which are made known to me
-in such a way that I am not in a position to get information.
-
-I should like to ask first that I be supplied with a German translation
-of the statement which the Prosecution has made on the future course of
-the Trial, so that I can express my views on it. I do not represent here
-just one person but millions of people who will, after the Trial, come
-forward with all sorts of accusations against me, possibly even
-justified accusations. My own responsibility, as well as that of my
-colleagues who represent the organizations, is immense. I should
-therefore like to request, as a matter of principle, that anything which
-is presented in this Trial at all be submitted to me in the German
-language, because I am not in a position to have whole volumes of
-documents translated into German from one day to the next—documents
-which could quite easily be given to me in the German original. This is
-a circumstance which makes it dreadfully hard for me, as well as for a
-number of my colleagues, to follow the Trial at all.
-
-Of the incriminatory evidence against the organizations, I have
-previously gathered little in the proceedings up to now. Since,
-according to today’s statements, however, the evidence against the
-organizations is to be presented shortly, I should like to ask
-emphatically that, if we are to continue to represent the organizations,
-the proceedings be conducted in such a way that, in a technical respect,
-too, we shall be in a position to carry on the defense in a responsible
-manner.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: As you know or have been told, only those parts of
-documents which are read before the Tribunal are treated as being in
-evidence and therefore you hear through your earphones everything that
-is in evidence read to you in German. You know also that there are two
-copies of the documents in your Information Center which are in German.
-So much for that. That has been the procedure up to now.
-
-In order to meet the legitimate wishes of German counsel, the proposal
-which Mr. Justice Jackson has just made is perfectly simple, as I
-understand it, and it is this:
-
-That the question of the criminality of these organizations should not
-be argued before the evidence is put in; that the United States counsel
-should put in their evidence first, and that they hope to put the
-majority of it in evidence before the Christmas recess, but that the
-German counsel (defendants’ counsel) shall be at liberty at any time, up
-to the time the United States case is finished, to make objection to any
-part of the evidence on these criminal organizations. Is that not clear?
-
-HERR BÖHM: Yes, that is clear.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: Have you any objection to that procedure?
-
-HERR BÖHM: Yes. The procedure as suggested is clear, but I think it is
-highly inadequate. I have as yet had no opportunity to get into my hands
-either of the two copies, which are said to be downstairs in Room 54,
-maybe because two copies are not sufficient for the purposes of 25
-lawyers, especially if these copies are placed in Room 54 at 10:30 in
-the morning, when the session starts at 10:00 o’clock. It would not even
-suffice if these two copies for 25 of us were placed into our room on
-the day before, since it is not possible for all of us to make
-satisfactory use of these two copies in so short a time. Arrangements
-should therefore be made—just how the Prosecution will make them, I
-cannot say—to enable us to know at the proper time—and I emphasize
-again, in the German language—what the Prosecution expects of us, so
-that our work may be of avail to the Tribunal.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: What you have just stated is a general objection to the
-procedure which has been adopted up to now and has nothing to do with
-the procedure which has been suggested by Mr. Justice Jackson with
-reference to these criminal organizations. His suggestion was that
-argument on the law of the criminal issue or the criminal nature of
-these organizations should be postponed until the evidence was put in
-and that the right of Counsel for the Defense should be to make
-objection at any stage or, rather, to defer their objections until the
-evidence had been put in; and it was hoped that the evidence would be
-completed or nearly completed by the Christmas recess. What you say
-about the general procedure may be considered by the Tribunal.
-
-So far as the particular question is concerned, namely, the question of
-the procedure suggested by Mr. Justice Jackson, have you any objection
-to that?
-
-HERR BÖHM: I have objections to this procedure only—and in this respect
-I reserve for myself all rights, for the sake of the great number of
-people I represent—if it handicaps or hinders me in any way in
-representing the interests of my many clients.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: We are aware of that fact, but that does not seem to be
-material to the question whether the legal argument should be deferred
-until after the evidence is presented. The fact that you have millions
-of people to represent has nothing to do with the question whether the
-legal argument shall take place before, or in the middle of, or at the
-end of the presentation of the evidence. What I am asking you is: Have
-you any objection to the legal argument taking place at the end of the
-presentation of the evidence?
-
-HERR BÖHM: I have no objection to these suggestions if they do not
-impair my defense in any way.
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will now adjourn.
-
- [_The Tribunal adjourned until 17 December 1945 at 1000 hours._]
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER NOTES
-
-Punctuation and spelling has been maintained except where obvious
-printer errors have occurred such as missing periods or commas for
-periods. English and American spellings occur throughout the document
-depending on the author; however, American spellings are the rule,
-hence, 'Defense' versus 'Defence'. Multiple occurrences of the following
-spellings which differ and are found throughout this volume are as
-follows:
-
- cooperation co-operation
- Sudeten Gau Sudetengau
- Sudeten-Deutsche territory Sudeten-German territory
- Sudeten German(s) Sudeten-German(s)
-
-Although some sentences may appear to have incorrect spellings or verb
-tenses, the original text has been maintained as it represents what the
-tribunal read into the record and reflects the actual translations
-between the German, English, Russian and French documents presented in
-the trial(s).
-
-An attempt has been made to produce this ebook in a format as close as
-possible to the original document's presentation and layout.
-
-[The end of _Trial of the Major War Criminals Before the International
-Military Tribunal: Nuremberg 14 November 1945-1 October 1946 (Vol. 3)_,
-by Anonymous.]
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Trial of the Major War Criminals
-Before the International Militar, by Various
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Trial of the Major War Criminals Before the
-International Military Tribunal, Volume III, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Trial of the Major War Criminals Before the International Military Tribunal, Volume III
- Nuremburg 14 November 1945-1 October 1946 (Vol. 3)
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: February 23, 2017 [EBook #54225]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRIAL MAJOR WAR CRIMINALS, VOLUME III ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Larry Harrison, Cindy Beyer and the online
-Project Gutenberg team at www.pgdpcanada.net.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0000' style='width:380px;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='lgc' style=''> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0' style='margin-top:2em;font-size:1.5em;'>TRIAL</p>
-<p class='line0' style='margin-top:.2em;margin-bottom:.2em;font-size:.7em;'>OF</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:1.5em;'>THE MAJOR WAR CRIMINALS</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:.7em;'>BEFORE</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:1.2em;'>THE INTERNATIONAL</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:1.2em;'>MILITARY TRIBUNAL</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:.7em;'><span class='gesp'>NUREMBERG</span></p>
-<p class='line0' style='margin-top:.2em;font-size:.7em;'>14 NOVEMBER 1945-1 OCTOBER 1946</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/title.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0001' style='width:80px;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:.7em;'><span class='gesp'>PUBLISHED AT NUREMBERG, GERMANY</span></p>
-<p class='line0' style='margin-top:.2em;font-size:.7em;'><span class='gesp'>1947</span></p>
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-
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-<div class='literal-container' style='margin-top:4em;margin-bottom:20em;'><div class='literal'> <!-- rend=';fs:.8em;' -->
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:.8em;'>This volume is published in accordance with the</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:.8em;'>direction of the International Military Tribunal by</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:.8em;'>the Secretariat of the Tribunal, under the jurisdiction</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:.8em;'>of the Allied Control Authority for Germany.</p>
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-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='lgc' style='margin-top:8em;margin-bottom:4em;'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'>VOLUME III</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<hr class='tbk100'/>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:1.2em;'><span class='gesp'>OFFICIAL TEXT</span></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:.8em;'><span class='gesp'>IN THE</span></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:1.2em;'>ENGLISH LANGUAGE</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<hr class='tbk101'/>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:1.2em;'><span class='gesp'>PROCEEDINGS</span></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:.8em;'>1 December 1945&nbsp;—&nbsp;14 December 1945</p>
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-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;margin-top:4em;margin-bottom:2em;font-size:1.5em;'>CONTENTS</p>
-
-<table id='tab1' summary='' class='center'>
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-<col span='1' style='width: 17em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 2em;'/>
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-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>Tenth Day, Saturday, 1 December 1945,</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>Morning Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_1'>1</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>Eleventh Day, Monday, 3 December 1945,</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>Morning Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_35'>35</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>Afternoon Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_64'>64</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>Twelfth Day, Tuesday, 4 December 1945,</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>Morning Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_91'>91</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>Afternoon Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_120'>120</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>Thirteenth Day, Wednesday, 5 December 1945,</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>Morning Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_152'>152</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>Afternoon Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_178'>178</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>Fourteenth Day, Thursday, 6 December 1945,</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>Morning Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_209'>209</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>Afternoon Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_241'>241</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>Fifteenth Day, Friday, 7 December 1945,</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>Morning Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_272'>272</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>Afternoon Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_303'>303</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>Sixteenth Day, Monday, 10 December 1945,</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>Morning Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_335'>335</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>Afternoon Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_367'>367</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>Seventeenth Day, Tuesday, 11 December 1945,</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>Morning Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_400'>400</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>Afternoon Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_402'>402</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>Eighteenth Day, Wednesday, 12 December 1945,</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>Morning Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_415'>415</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>Afternoon Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_447'>447</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>Nineteenth Day, Thursday, 13 December 1945,</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>Morning Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_477'>477</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>Afternoon Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_512'>512</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>Twentieth Day, Friday, 14 December 1945,</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>Morning Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_542'>542</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle0'>Afternoon Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_571'>571</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='1' id='Page_1'></span><h1>TENTH DAY<br/> <span style='font-size:smaller'>Saturday, 1 December 1945</span></h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'><span class='it'>Morning Session</span></h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT (Lord Justice Sir Geoffrey Lawrence): I will
-begin the session by reading the judgment of the Tribunal upon
-the application made by counsel for the Defendant Hess.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal has given careful consideration to the motion of
-counsel for the defense of the Defendant Hess, and it had the
-advantage of hearing full argument upon it both from the Defense
-and the Prosecution. The Tribunal has also considered the very full
-medical reports, which have been made on the condition of the
-Defendant Hess, and has come to the conclusion that no grounds
-whatever exist for a further examination to be ordered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After hearing the statement of the Defendant Hess in Court
-yesterday, and in view of all the evidence, the Tribunal is of the
-opinion that the Defendant Hess is capable of standing his trial at
-the present time, and the motion of the Counsel for the Defense is,
-therefore, denied, and the Trial will proceed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now the witness under examination should come back to the
-witness box.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>[<span class='it'>Erwin Lahousen resumed the stand.</span>]</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. G. D. ROBERTS (Leading Counsel for the United Kingdom):
-May it please the Tribunal, Sir David Maxwell-Fyfe yesterday said
-he had no questions to ask this witness. He has now requested me
-very shortly to cross-examine this witness on one incident mentioned
-in the Indictment, namely, the murder of 50 R.A.F. officers
-who escaped from Stalag Luft 3 in March of 1944.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: You said to “cross-examine”?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ROBERTS: I realize that this is a matter which falls in
-the part of the Indictment which is being dealt with by the
-prosecutors for the U.S.S.R. My Lord, I have mentioned that matter
-to General Rudenko, who with his usual courtesy and kindness, has
-said that he has no objection to my asking some questions on that
-matter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Very well, Mr. Roberts.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ROBERTS: Much obliged.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>[<span class='it'>Turning to the witness.</span>] Might I ask you this? Do you know
-anything of the circumstances of the death of 50 R.A.F. officers in
-<span class='pageno' title='2' id='Page_2'></span>
-March 1944, who had escaped from Stalag Luft 3 at Sagan and
-were recaptured?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>ERWIN LAHOUSEN (Witness): No, I have nothing to say because
-at that time I was on the Eastern front, as commander of my regiment,
-and no longer had any contact with my former duties.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ROBERTS: Did you hear of the matter from any of your
-fellow officers?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No, I heard nothing about it whatsoever.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ROBERTS: You can’t assist the Court at all with the matter?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No, not at all.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. EGON KUBUSCHOK (Counsel for Defendant Von Papen):
-Witness, you stated yesterday that you were the intimate friend
-and collaborator of Admiral Canaris. Since I can no longer address
-my question directly to Admiral Canaris, I ask you to answer the
-following questions for me: Did Admiral Canaris know of Defendant
-Von Papen’s attitude toward Hitler’s war policies, and how did
-Admiral Canaris express himself to you on this point?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: First, I should like to make a slight correction on
-the question addressed to me. I never asserted that I was the
-intimate friend of Canaris. Pieckenbrock was a friend of Canaris,
-whereas I was merely one of his confidants. From this relationship,
-however, I recall that Von Papen’s and Canaris’ attitude toward
-the matter which the Counsel has just brought up, was a negative one.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. KUBUSCHOK: Was this negative attitude only toward the
-war policy, or was it also toward all the violent methods used in
-the execution of such a policy?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: According to my recollection I have to answer this
-question in the affirmative, judging from a conversation between
-Admiral Canaris and Von Papen, during the visit of the latter in
-Berlin at which I was present.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. KUBUSCHOK: Did you know that Von Papen told Canaris
-that there could be no resistance against Hitler’s aggressive policies
-from political quarters, but that such resistance would have to be
-sought among the ranks of the military?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: In this connection, that is to say, in the direct
-connection as it is now being presented, I personally cannot say
-anything. In other words, I personally was not an ear witness at
-any conversation between Canaris and Von Papen during which
-this matter was brought up, and I cannot recall today whether
-Canaris ever told me anything regarding such conversations with
-Von Papen. It is quite possible, however, but I cannot recall it and
-consequently my oath as witness does not permit me to make any
-statement other than the one I have made.
-<span class='pageno' title='3' id='Page_3'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. KUBUSCHOK: Witness, do you conclude from this that
-Canaris believed that Von Papen purposely continued to hold an
-exposed political office in order to exercise a mitigating influence?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I believe so, though I have no tangible proof from
-any of his statements. But that is my impression, from what I still
-recollect today.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. OTTO NELTE (Counsel for Defendant Keitel): My client
-has requested me to ask you the following questions: How long
-have you known Canaris and Pieckenbrock?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I have known Canaris and Pieckenbrock since 1937
-through my previous activity in the Austrian Intelligence Department.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: At that time were there any relations of a military
-nature between yourself and the Abwehr, which was being run by
-Admiral Canaris?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Not only did such connections exist with the
-Austrian intelligence, but the Austrian Federal Army and the German
-Wehrmacht maintained it that time an absolutely legal and
-purely military exchange of information—legal in the sense that
-this exchange and collaboration of military intelligence was carried
-on with the knowledge of the Austrian authorities. To state it
-clearly, this was a purely military collaboration for exchanging
-intelligence on countries bordering upon Austria.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: May I ask if this contact between you and Canaris
-was also of a personal nature, in other words I want to determine
-how the Austrian Army felt about the question of the Anschluss?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: This and similar questions, that is to say, all
-questions of a political nature, particularly the question of the Anschluss
-or the very intense illegal Nazi activities, at that time, had
-to be and were completely ignored. It was generally agreed between
-Count Marogna, the official liaison man—he also was executed
-after the 20th of July—and Canaris and Generaloberst Beck that this
-line should be taken.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Do I understand you wish to imply that this personal
-contact did not mean that the Austrian General Staff officers
-gave information on everything regarding their attitude to the
-idea of the Anschluss, or that they were willing or able to give
-this information?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: This personal contact started on the day when I
-saw Canaris for the first time, while I was still an Austrian officer.
-It was in the offices of the Federal Ministry of Defense, where
-Canaris was with the Chief of the Austrian General Staff.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Would you please repeat the question?
-<span class='pageno' title='4' id='Page_4'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: I asked the witness to what extent a personal
-contact existed between the officers of the German General Staff or
-the Abwehr and the officers of the Intelligence Section or the
-Austrian General Staff for the purpose of determining the feelings
-about the Anschluss.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: First of all, there was no such personal contact in
-the sense that the word is used here. The contact which actually
-did take place—and there are witnesses in this room who can confirm
-this statement: Von Papen must be informed thoroughly of this—took
-place on a single day, during which I never spoke with Canaris
-alone, but always in the presence of my superior officers. In any
-case, no questions relating to the Anschluss and no political questions
-on Austrian internal problems were discussed there. Naturally
-I myself did not raise any, and Canaris expressly refrained from
-doing so.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: What was your job in the Abwehr Office II?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: In the Abwehr Section II, which I took over at the
-beginning of 1939—I described it yesterday, and I am willing to
-repeat it, if you wish—this particular job had no special name.
-Actually my task was to carry out various undertakings and actions,
-which I can define very precisely: Nuisance activity, acts of sabotage,
-or prevention of sabotage and nuisance activity, or in general those
-types of activities that are carried out by Kommandos. All these
-activities were carried out in agreement with, and conformed to, the
-military demands of the Armed Forces Operations Staff or the
-General Staff.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Who generally gave you your orders regarding co-ordinating
-these activities with the military activities?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: My immediate chief, Canaris, usually gave me
-orders concerning the whole of my activity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: I was referring to the office, whether they came
-from the OKH or the OKW?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: They did not come from the OKW as a rule.
-Usually they came by way of the OKW represented by the Chief
-of the OKW, Keitel, or the chief of the Wehrmacht Operations
-Staff; and when the General Staff or the Air Force Operations
-Staff were interested in any undertaking, the orders, as far as I
-can remember, were also transmitted by way of the Armed Forces
-Operations Staff, and the representatives of the three Armed Forces,
-that is, the Army, Air Force, and Navy, appointed to it. All these
-orders came through the same channels to the Canaris Foreign Intelligence
-Department (Ausland Abwehr) which transmitted those
-concerning my activities to me for necessary action.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Are you now describing the official channels
-through which you received the orders? Were the orders issued by
-<span class='pageno' title='5' id='Page_5'></span>
-the Army or the Armed Forces Operations Staff? Or did the Army
-give the orders for transmission by way of the High Command of
-the Armed Forces?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Actually, speaking of myself, in questions of this
-kind, regarding matters which concerned my department, I had
-dealings only with my immediate superior, Canaris; and the superior
-of Canaris at that time was the OKW under Keitel, and he
-was in touch with the gentlemen of the Armed Forces Operational
-Staff, and now and then with the members of the General Staff
-of the Army. I could mention specific cases from memory. But in
-general the procedure was such as I described it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Is it true that Keitel, as the Chief of the OKW,
-at first every year, and then from 1943 on, at regular and shorter
-intervals, spoke to the office and department chiefs of the OKW;
-and on such occasions made a point of telling them that anyone
-who believed that something was being asked of him which his conscience
-would not allow him to carry out should tell him, Keitel,
-about it personally?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: It is true that the Chief of the OKW did several
-times address the circle just mentioned. I cannot recall any exact
-words of his which could be interpreted in such a way as to mean
-that one could take the risk, in cases about which I testified yesterday,
-of speaking with him so openly and frankly as myself and
-others, that is, witnesses still alive, could speak to Canaris at any
-time. I definitely did not have that impression, whatever the
-meaning might have been which was given to his words at that time.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Do I understand you correctly to mean that in
-principle you do not wish to challenge the fact that Keitel actually
-said these words?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I can neither challenge it, nor can I add anything
-to it, because I have no exact recollection of it. I do recall that
-these addresses or conferences took place, and it is quite possible
-that the Chief of the OKW at that time might have used those
-words. I can only add what I have already said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Is it true that on several occasions, you, in the
-company of Admiral Canaris, as well as alone, had audience with
-the Chief of the OKW, in order to discuss with him plans or undertakings
-of a delicate nature, which were in the purview of your
-official duties?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes, I said a great deal about that yesterday; and
-I do not feel I have the right to talk about such things unless I
-was there personally.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: I had the impression yesterday that in many
-respects you were acting as a mouthpiece for Admiral Canaris, who
-<span class='pageno' title='6' id='Page_6'></span>
-used you as a mentor for the entries in his diary. Was that your
-testimony?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: The impression is completely fallacious. I am not
-a mouthpiece, and am now, as I was then, completely independent
-inwardly in what I say. I have never allowed myself, nor shall I
-ever allow myself, to become the mouthpiece for any conception,
-or to make any statements that are contrary to my inner convictions
-and to my conscience.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: You misunderstood me if you believe that I used
-the word “mouthpiece” derogatorily. I simply wanted to bring out
-the fact that yesterday you made frequent references to the remarks
-in Canaris’ diary, that is to the remarks of Canaris quoted by you.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes, I did so in those cases where the matter discussed
-affected Canaris. He himself cannot testify, since he is dead.
-Just because I know a great deal about this, and because my information
-is exact, I felt it my duty to say what I know.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Did Keitel ever ask questions or order any inquiries
-to be made about the political views of the officers in the
-Intelligence Department? Did he ever ask whether there were any
-National Socialists in the departments of the intelligence service?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: At the afore-mentioned periodical meetings he
-asked this question and others of this nature in an unmistakable
-way, and he left no doubt that in an office such as the OKW he
-could not tolerate any officers who did not believe in the idea of
-final victory, or who did not give proof of unswerving loyalty to
-the Führer and much more besides.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Could these statements be taken to mean that he
-demanded obedience in the military sense, or do you think he was
-speaking from a political point of view?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Of course, he was speaking from a military point
-of view, but no less clearly from the political aspect, for it was not
-admissible to make any distinction between the two. The Wehrmacht
-was to form a single whole—the National Socialistic Wehrmacht.
-Here he touched upon the root problem.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: You believe, therefore, that the basic attitude was
-really the military one, also in the OKW?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: The basic attitude was, or should have been,
-National Socialistic, and not military. In other words, first and
-foremost National Socialistic, and everything else afterwards.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: You said “should have been.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes, because it actually was not the case.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Quite so. You mean, therefore, that in the first
-place it was military and not National Socialistic.
-<span class='pageno' title='7' id='Page_7'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: It should have been a purely military one, according
-to our conception, but according to the point of view put forward
-by the Chief of the OKW at that time—whether he received
-an order in this sense I am not in a position to say, as I was not
-there—the basic attitude should be one of absolute obedience in a
-National Socialistic sense.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Do you know anything about the attitude of the
-generals to this problem?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Of course, I do, because immediately after such
-conferences, as have been mentioned here, a lively exchange of
-opinions took place on this subject and a large number of those
-who were present—I could name them and some of them are
-present—resented that fact that the words addressed to them had
-this strong political flavor, and were couched in this “higher level
-language” (Sprachregelung von oben) as we used to call it, and
-contained so little that was relevant and purely military, let alone
-anything else.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Yesterday, when discussing the meeting that took
-place in the Führer’s train, on the 12th September of 1939, you said,
-regarding the communication of the Chief of the OKW to you, that
-the Defendant Keitel addressed himself to you, or rather to the
-gentlemen present; and said that these measures had been
-determined between the Führer and Göring. He, Keitel, had no influence
-on them. The Führer and Göring telephoned frequently to
-one another. Sometimes he knew something about it; sometimes he
-knew nothing. Is that what you said?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: That is correct. I made a record of everything that
-was said in my presence; and I repeated it here because it is true.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: May I ask whether the remark, “Sometimes I
-find out something about it, sometimes I do not,” relates to a
-concrete, specific case, or was that a general rule?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: That was to be understood as a general statement,
-to the best of my recollection.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: At this conference in the Führer’s train on the 12th
-of September 1939, did you first of all speak about the transmission
-of the political aims which, according to you, came from Ribbentrop.
-Did I understand you correctly?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: That is correct.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: And you said that the Defendant Keitel transmitted
-these aims to those who were present. Now, what I am not clear
-about is whether this referred to the order regarding the bombardment
-of Warsaw from the air. Did I understand rightly?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes, as regards the air bombardment of Warsaw,
-to the best of my recollection and from what is recorded in the
-notes, I can only say in this connection, the same as when the
-<span class='pageno' title='8' id='Page_8'></span>
-question of shootings in Poland came up, that Canaris took the
-initiative by provoking a discussion on this subject—I no longer
-remember how he did this—and then pointing out the terrible
-political repercussions that this would have, especially abroad.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: The Defendant Keitel is anxious that I should put
-the question to you, whether, when this order for the bombing of
-Warsaw was made known he did not stress the fact that this was to
-be put into effect only if the fortress of Warsaw did not surrender
-after the demand made by the bearer of the flag of truce, and even
-then only after an opportunity to evacuate the city had been given
-to the civilian population and the diplomats.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I cannot recall the precise words he used but
-according to my knowledge of the situation at that time it is quite
-possible, indeed probable, that the Chief of the OKW, Keitel, did
-make this remark.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Do you know that the Commander-in-Chief of the
-army at that time, Von Brauchitsch, and the Chief of the OKW,
-Keitel, before the Polish War began, categorically objected to the
-use of Gestapo and SD Kommandos, maintaining that these were
-unbearable in the Wehrmacht, and in this connection asked for
-Hitler’s concurrence and received it?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No, I did not know that, and could not have known
-it because of my subordinate position at that time. Please do not
-overrate the importance of my position at that time.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: As we are also concerned here with taking
-cognizance of a document, which, I take it, was transmitted to all
-departments and sections of the OKW, I thought you might
-remember. They were the so-called directives, were they not? And
-these directives, mentioned in connection with the campaign against
-Poland, in contrast to what happened later .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I think you were going a little bit too fast.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: I said that in connection with these military
-actions, the decrees and directives were always transmitted to the
-various offices of the OKW in the form of carbon copies—I mean
-the offices which were in any way concerned. I thought, therefore .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes, but these were things which did not concern
-my particular department, I stress the word “particular,” I did not
-even see them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: As later on in the conversation you were drawn
-into the discussion on these questions—it is true you did stress
-that you did not know the actual wording of the orders .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Orders which I did not see and read. Of course,
-I knew a great many things, because I came to hear of them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: For that reason, I want to ask you whether you
-recall that the Gestapo and SD had interfered behind the advance
-<span class='pageno' title='9' id='Page_9'></span>
-in connection with Poland, contrary to the intentions expressed in
-the orders of the military leaders?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I cannot recall that today. I can only refer to what
-I heard and what is recorded in the files on this matter, namely,
-the remark of Hitler’s, which was passed down by Keitel, who was
-chief at that time, and which was to the effect, that if the armed
-forces objected to these measures, the armed forces as well as the
-high command—that is apparently what you mean—would have
-to put up with it if the Gestapo and the SS went ahead with these
-things. That is all I can tell you. I know that because I was present
-at these discussions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: During this conversation, were you not told that
-General Blaskowitz—in other words, the Army—had made a
-complaint about the methods of the SS and the SD?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Whether or not this question was brought up at
-this conference, I cannot recall. I can hardly assume that it was
-brought up, because otherwise this question would have been recorded
-in the notes of that conference, particularly since the complaint
-came from General Blaskowitz, whose attitude in such
-matters was quite clear and well known. But apart from this
-conversation in the Führer’s train, I do recall something about the
-matter just mentioned, that is, the objections raised by Blaskowitz.
-I cannot say today how these objections were made, whether in
-writing or by word of mouth, neither do I know the occasion on
-which they were made. While I do remember the substance of the
-matter, I cannot recall whether it came up for discussion at the
-meeting where I was present.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: What appears to me to be important in this matter,
-is the fact that the Wehrmacht, the troops, really did protest, or at
-least refused .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: That the Armed Forces did object, is, of course,
-quite evident.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: That is what I wanted to know. Who gave the
-order .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: One moment, please. When I say “the Armed
-Forces,” I mean the masses of common soldiers, the ordinary simple
-men. Of course, there were in these Armed Forces other men whom
-I wish to exclude. I do not wish to be misunderstood. The concept
-“Armed Forces” does not include everybody, but it does include the
-mass of simple men with natural feelings.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: When using the term “Wehrmacht” I only wanted
-to bring out the contrast between the broad masses of the soldiers
-and the SS and SD, and I think we are agreed on this.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I think we have ample and fairly conclusive proof
-of this contract in the conditions prevailing and the methods used
-<span class='pageno' title='10' id='Page_10'></span>
-at that time, which in that form and scope were then for the first
-time shown openly enough to become apparent to the broad masses
-of the Wehrmacht—quite apart from anything I can say about it in
-this short, extremely short exposition.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Who gave the order regarding the collaboration
-with the Ukrainian group? You spoke yesterday .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes, I have to go back somewhat farther. First of
-all I must say that this group was composed of citizens from various
-countries, that is, Hungarians, Czechs, and afterwards Polish
-citizens, who because of their attitude of opposition, had emigrated
-or gone to Germany. I cannot say who gave the order for the
-collaboration, because at the time when these things happened—it
-was some time back, I remember quite clearly it was in 1938 or
-even earlier—I was not even working in the Amt Ausland Abwehr
-and was not in touch with the Department, which I did not take
-over until the beginning of 1939. It was already on a firm footing
-when I took it over.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In this connection I must add, since it was also touched upon
-yesterday, that these Ukrainians, at least the majority of them, had
-no ties whatsoever with Germany. I can say definitely that a large
-proportion of these people with whom the Amt Ausland Abwehr
-had contact at that time were in German concentration camps, and
-that some of these people were fighting for their country in Soviet
-partisan groups. That is a fact.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Did Admiral Canaris not tell you that the Chief of
-the OKW, Keitel, when informed by the SS of the demand for Polish
-uniforms and military equipment, had given the clear order that the
-Abteilung Abwehr should have nothing to do with this game?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: As I stated yesterday, this matter was handled very
-mysteriously and secretly also in our circle. Not only myself, but
-the others also, knew absolutely nothing about the game which was
-being played until after it actually happened. The War Diary of the
-Department makes this very clear. It records that one day, quite
-suddenly, like a bolt from the blue, a demand was received, by order
-of Canaris, for so and so many uniforms for an undertaking known
-as “Himmler”. My amazement and my enquiry as to how Himmler
-came to have anything to do with an undertaking which required
-Polish uniforms is also recorded in the War Diary, not by me, but by
-the officer who kept this diary. In reply I was merely told that these
-articles of equipment would be picked up by a certain person on a
-certain day, and no further explanation was given. And there the
-matter ended. Of course, when the name of Himmler was mentioned,
-besides being mysterious, the thing immediately began to appear
-suspicious to us. By us, I mean everybody who had to do with it
-in the course of his duty, right down to the ordinary sergeant, who,
-<span class='pageno' title='11' id='Page_11'></span>
-of course, had to procure these uniforms by some means or other
-and deliver them to a certain Hauptsturmführer SS—the name is
-recorded in the War Diary. These people had their misgivings.
-That was a thing which could not be forbidden.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Yesterday you also made statements about the
-treatment of prisoners of war. In what way was Abwehr II concerned
-with prisoner-of-war questions?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: That is quite simple. Abwehr II was naturally very
-interested in an objective way that prisoners of war should be
-treated as well and as decently as possible, and the same applies to
-any intelligence service in the world. That was all.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Do I understand you to mean that Abwehr II, as a
-department, was not concerned with prisoner-of-war questions?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: It had absolutely nothing to do with prisoner-of-war
-questions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Yesterday you spoke about the problem of the treatment
-of prisoners of war in connection with a conference that took
-place, if I remember rightly, at the end of July 1941?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes, at this conference I did not represent only my
-section, but the whole Amt Ausland Abwehr, that is to say—for
-general questions of international law and military political questions,
-that is, those questions which to the greatest extent generally
-concerned foreign countries, and the intelligence sections. Department
-III which dealt with espionage was practically interested—because
-after all, the officers affiliated with it were in the prisoner-of-war
-camps. Naturally, from the point of view of my section it
-was important to be informed about those matters—and that my
-section was only interested within the frame of the entire problem,
-that people should not be killed off, but treated decently, quite
-apart from any of the other considerations which were mentioned.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: You said yesterday that the prisoner-of-war camps
-in the operations zone of the Eastern sector were under the OKW.
-Is that correct?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes, what I said about prisoner-of-war camps
-yesterday I knew from the conference with Reinecke, and not from
-any knowledge of the orders themselves, which I had neither seen
-nor read. At this conference I was able to obtain a clear idea of the
-prisoner-of-war question owing to the presence of Reinecke, the chief
-of the prisoner-of-war department, who represented his own department
-and the OKW, and I repeated everything I remembered about
-this.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: What I was really asking was about the limitation
-of the jurisdictions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes.
-<span class='pageno' title='12' id='Page_12'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Do you know that in the Army Operational Zone the
-army on operations was responsible for the care of prisoners of war?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: And that the OKW became responsible for their care
-only when the prisoners of war arrived in Germany?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes, I repeated what I knew about the matter at
-the time from what I had heard. This was that the General Staff
-of the Army had made all preparations to bring these people back,
-and Hitler then authorized the OKW to hold this up, and the OKW
-was then held responsible by the General Staff for the consequences.
-What happened after that I do not know and have no right to judge.
-I can only repeat what I saw and heard.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: I thought that yesterday you expressed the conjecture
-that the prisoners were not brought back owing to an order
-from Hitler.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I did not express a conjecture. I simply repeated
-what I heard at the time and what I know. It might, of course, have
-been wrong.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Heard from whom?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I heard this from the people with whom I was in
-daily contact, that is, at the daily situation conferences, at which
-Canaris, the department chiefs, and other people who came there to
-report were present. I heard it there, and a great deal was said about
-this matter. I have always made this clear since my first interrogation.
-I told Reinecke to his face that what he himself said about this
-question at the time .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: That has nothing to do with my question.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I understand your question perfectly. I only want
-to make it quite clear how I came yesterday to say what I did—to
-examine how far this applies according to the actual, organizational
-and other divisions .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: But you know that in principle the OKW had charge
-of prisoners of war only in Germany?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: There is no question about that.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: How could it happen that the Abwehr office adopted
-the attitude you defined yesterday regarding the question of enemy
-commando activities? You were supposed to deal with these things
-from the German side, but you—that is, your department—were not
-officially concerned with the handling of these things?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No, not immediately concerned. The Amt Ausland
-had something to do with these things because somehow it received
-intelligence of any order that was under consideration, even before
-it was put into shape, and certainly as soon as it was drawn up. The
-<span class='pageno' title='13' id='Page_13'></span>
-order in question had, of course, a bearing on an essential point of
-international law, and the Ausland section of the Abwehr department—or
-rather the “Sachbearbeiter” (expert) as he was called—was
-naturally concerned with it. As a matter of fact, my department was
-directly concerned with these things for reasons which I have
-already explained, because it might turn out that persons for whom
-I was responsible might be directly affected.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Did the department which dealt with international
-law in the Amt Ausland Abwehr ever put its official attitude in
-writing?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: As I pointed out yesterday, I wrote a contribution on
-the subject, from the point of view of my section, which was transmitted
-to Canaris and was to be part of the long document. I only
-learned what use was made of it from what Bürckner said at the
-time, and which was that his department passed the thing on in this
-manner, either in writing or verbally, as a protest or counter remonstrance,
-at any rate pointing out the dangers. This happened a
-second time, and again I cannot say in what form, whether verbally
-or in writing or <span class='it'>vice versa</span>—the first time in writing and then verbally—after
-executions had already taken place, and because I had
-again started to make myself heard because of the executions that
-had already taken place. That was the logical development.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: You also said something yesterday about putting a
-distinguishing mark on Russian prisoners by branding. Did it become
-known to you that such a scheme, as brought out in this question,
-was cancelled by a telephoned order from the Chief of the OKW,
-who had gone to the Führer’s headquarters for this purpose, and
-that it was only because of a regrettable, a terrible misunderstanding,
-that a few copies of this order were issued?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No, I do not know about this, because, generally
-speaking, I only heard of the things which happened in the Amt
-Ausland Abwehr, that is, from Canaris’ section downwards, if I was
-directly concerned with them. What happened on the higher levels,
-that is, from Canaris upwards, was and could only be known to me
-if I was in some way connected with it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: You yourself did not see the order?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Which order are you referring to?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: The one concerning the branding of Russian prisoners.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No. As in the case of the Commando Order and
-others, I attended only the very lively discussion of this question,
-and with regard to the branding of Russian prisoners I remember
-Canaris mentioning that a doctor had furnished a written report on
-how this could be done most efficiently.
-<span class='pageno' title='14' id='Page_14'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: You stated yesterday that Admiral Canaris had said
-that the Defendant Keitel had given the order to do away with
-General Weygand?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: The Defendant Keitel denies that. He now asks
-whether you ever saw any document or written proof of this order.
-He wants to know the origin of any statement which concerned
-General Weygand.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: This order was not given in writing, but it came
-to me because I was supposed to put it into execution, that is, not I,
-but my department. It came up through Canaris, in that circle which
-I have so often described, and which means that it was known
-only to a few. I was brought into the matter through a talk which
-Canaris gave at Keitel’s office in the OKW and at which I was
-present. Keitel had already addressed me on the matter. I recorded
-this in my personal notes and I mentioned the date. After all, such
-a thing was not an everyday occurrence, at least not to me. It was
-23 December 1940.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Do you not remember the actual wording of the
-question that Defendant Keitel was supposed to have asked?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Of course I cannot remember the precise wording;
-the incident happened too long ago. I remember the gist very well.
-What he meant was, “What has been done in this matter? How do
-things stand?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: You said yesterday that you gave an evasive
-answer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I said yesterday that I could not remember exactly
-how I worded my answer but I certainly did not say what I had
-said in the presence of Canaris, namely, “I would not think of executing
-such a murderous order; my section and my officers are not
-an organization of murderers. Anything but that.” What I probably
-said to Keitel was something about how difficult the matter
-was, or any evasive answer that I may have thought of.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: If the Chief of the OKW had ordered such an action
-on his own initiative or on higher orders, this would, because of the
-high rank of General Weygand, have amounted to an act of state.
-You did not tell us yesterday whether after December 23, 1940
-anything transpired in this matter, that is to say, whether the Chief
-of the OKW took up this question again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No, I did not say anything about that yesterday, but
-I frequently mentioned during the interrogations that after that the
-Chief of the OKW did nothing more about it. Canaris’ attitude made
-it obvious that nothing further had been heard of it, for in the hierarchy
-of commands which for me was authoritative, he would have
-<span class='pageno' title='15' id='Page_15'></span>
-had to transmit orders to me. On the other hand, the information
-which I received in the Giraud matter was authoritative.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: We shall come to that presently. It is extraordinary
-that if an act of state, such as the murder of General Weygand, had
-been ordered, nothing more should have been heard of it. Can you
-explain this?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I can only explain it in the light of the construction
-which not only I myself, but also the others, put on the matter
-at that time. The situation at that time was very agitated; events
-followed each other very rapidly and something happened all the time,
-and we assumed—I shall come back to why we assumed it—that this
-matter and the importance attached to it had been superseded by
-some more important military or political event, and that it had
-receded into the background.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Do you wish to say anything else?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes. I wish to state that what I am saying now
-has a certain bearing on the inner development of the Giraud
-affair. We—that is, Canaris, myself, and the others—who knew
-about this when the matter started, had hoped that it would take
-the same course as the Weygand affair; that is, that the matter
-would be dropped. Whether the order had been given by Keitel, or
-Hitler or Himmler, it would have been shelved when it came to
-Canaris and to me. In our circles it would have been relatively
-easy to intercept it or to divert it. That was what we hoped when
-the Giraud affair came up, as we had seen what actually had happened
-in the Weygand affair. Whether that was right or wrong
-I cannot judge. This is the explanation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: For a less important matter your argument might
-be plausible, but in such an important matter as the Weygand case
-it does not seem to me to hold water. But even if it had been so,
-had the intention to do away with Weygand existed in any quarters
-and for any reason, how do you explain the fact that Weygand,
-who later was taken to Germany and housed in a villa, lived
-undisturbed and honored and met with no harm? It would have
-been understandable if the order to eliminate him had been seriously
-expressed in any quarters, that it should have been carried
-out on this occasion.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I can only answer to this that the attitude towards
-personalities in public life, whether at home or abroad, varied a
-great deal. There were high personalities who at one moment were
-in great favor and thought of very highly, and at the next moment
-were to be found in a concentration camp.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Now regarding the Giraud case, you stated that Admiral
-Canaris said in your presence and the presence of others that
-<span class='pageno' title='16' id='Page_16'></span>
-General Giraud was to be done away with on orders from higher
-quarters.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes. That it is so is borne out by the remark that
-Pieckenbrock made, and which I remember very well, that Herr
-Keitel should tell these things to Herr Hitler once and for all.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: So according to the communication made to you by
-Admiral Canaris, it was not an order of Keitel’s but an order of
-Hitler’s.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: As far as we knew in the Abwehr office, it was
-Keitel who gave the order to Canaris. I can only assume this in
-view of an order Hitler made to this effect I do not know who
-actually gave this order, because I had no insight into the hierarchy
-of command beyond Canaris. It was, as far as I was concerned, an
-order from Canaris—an order which I could discuss immediately
-with him, in the same way as I can discuss it here.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: You yourself did not hear this order?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No, I personally did not hear it. I never said I did.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: But you mentioned that later Keitel spoke to you
-about this matter?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: The procedure was the same as in the case of
-Weygand.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Do you remember whether any precise or positive
-expression such as “killing,” “elimination,” or something similar
-was used on this occasion?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: The word generally used was “elimination” (umlegen).</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: What I mean is whether in this connection such a
-word was used by the Defendant Keitel in addressing you?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes, of course—when I gave my report, the notes
-of which I have, together with the date, just as in the Weygand
-case. For reasons unknown to me, the Giraud affair was apparently
-carried further than the Weygand affair, for Canaris and I could
-determine the different stages in its development.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: You did not answer my question. What did the
-Defendant Keitel say to you in this instance, when you were present
-at the occasion of a report by Canaris and the question of Giraud
-was brought up? What did he say?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: The same thing: “How does the matter stand?”
-And by “matter” he clearly meant Giraud’s elimination, and that
-was the very subject we discussed under similar conditions in the
-Weygand affair.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: That is your opinion, but that is not the fact on
-which you have to give evidence. I wish to find out from you what
-<span class='pageno' title='17' id='Page_17'></span>
-Keitel actually said to you. When speaking to you or in your
-presence, did he use the expression “dispose of” or “eliminate”?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I cannot remember the expression he used, but it
-was perfectly clear what it was all about. Whatever it was, it was
-not a question of sparing Giraud’s life or imprisoning him. They
-had had the opportunity to do that while he was in occupied territory.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: That is what I want to speak about now. You are
-familiar with the fact that after Giraud’s flight and his return to
-Unoccupied France, a conference took place in Occupied France.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes, I heard of that.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Ambassador Abetz had a talk with General Giraud
-which dealt with the question of his voluntary return to confinement.
-You know that?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes, I heard of that.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Then you probably also know that at that time the
-local military commander immediately called up the Führer’s headquarters
-by way of Paris. It was believed that an important communication
-was to be made; namely, that Giraud was in Occupied
-France and could be taken prisoner?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I know about this in its broad outline.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Then you know also that the OKW—that is to say
-in this case, Keitel—then decided that this should not happen.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No, that I do not know.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: But you do know that General Giraud returned to
-Unoccupied France without having been harmed?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes, I do know that.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Well, in that case, the answer to my previous
-question is self-apparent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I speak the truth when I say I do not know. I
-could not have known unless they had talked about it in my
-presence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Well, it is so, and the facts prove it to be so. Did
-you know that General Giraud’s family lived in Occupied France?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No, I did not know that.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: I thought the Abwehr division was entrusted with
-surveillance of this region?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No, you are mistaken—certainly not my department.
-I do not know whether another department was in charge
-of that.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: The question was asked simply to prove that the
-family did not suffer because General Giraud escaped and later
-<span class='pageno' title='18' id='Page_18'></span>
-refused to return to captivity. I have one more question which you
-may be able to answer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I beg your pardon. May I return, please, to the
-question of Giraud?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: This question also has to do with General Giraud.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Very well.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Do you know that one day your chief, Canaris, received
-by special courier a letter from Giraud in which Giraud
-asked whether he might return to France? Do you know that?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No. No, I do not know about it. Perhaps I was
-not in Berlin at the time. I was not always in Berlin.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: I am aware of that. I thought it might be mentioned
-in the diary.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No, I did not keep the diary. I simply made additions
-to it so far as my particular department was concerned, but
-I was not familiar with the diary in its entirety.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Thank you.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will adjourn now for 10 minutes.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>FLOTTENRICHTER OTTO KRANZBUEHLER (Counsel for Defendant
-Dönitz): I would like to make a motion in connection with
-the technical side of the proceedings. In the course of the proceedings,
-many German witnesses will be heard. It is important that
-the Tribunal should know exactly what the witnesses say. During
-the hearing of this witness I have tried to compare what the witness
-actually said with the English translation. I think I can state
-that in many essential points the translation did not entirely correspond
-to the statement of the witness. I would, therefore, like
-to suggest that German stenographers take down directly the statements
-of the witness in German so that Defense Counsel will have
-an opportunity of comparing what the witness actually says with
-the English translation and, if necessary, of making an application
-for the correction of the translation. That is all.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes, Mr. Justice Jackson.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. JUSTICE ROBERT H. JACKSON (Chief of Counsel for the
-United States): I just want to inform the Court and Counsel, in
-connection with the observation that has just been made, that that
-has been anticipated and that every statement of the witness is
-recorded in German, so that if any question arises, if Counsel addresses
-a motion to it, the testimony can be verified.
-<span class='pageno' title='19' id='Page_19'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Is that German record available to Defendants’
-Counsel?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: I don’t think it is. It is not, so far
-as I know. It would not be available unless there were some occasion
-for it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: It is transcribed, I suppose?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: I don’t know how far that process is
-carried. I will consult the technicians and advise about it, but I
-know that it is preserved. The extent of my knowledge now is that
-it is preserved in such a form that, if a question does arise, it can
-be accurately determined by the Tribunal, so that if they call attention
-to some particular thing, either the witness can correct it
-or we can have the record produced. It would not be practicable
-to make the recording available without making reproducing machines
-available. While I am not a technician in that field, I would
-not think it would be practicable to place that at their disposal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Wouldn’t it be practicable to have a transcription
-made of the shorthand notes in German and, within the
-course of one or two days after the evidence has been given, place
-that transcription in the Defendants’ Counsel room?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: I think that is being done. I think
-perhaps Colonel Dostert can explain just what is being done better
-than I can, because he is the technician in this field. I am sure that
-no difficulty need arise over this matter of correct translations.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COLONEL LEON DOSTERT (Chief of Interpreters): Your
-Honors, the reports of the proceedings are taken down in all four
-languages and every word spoken in German is taken down in
-German by German court stenographers. The notes are then
-transcribed and can be made available to Defense Counsel. Moreover,
-there is a mechanical recording device which registers every
-single word spoken in any language in the courtroom, and in case
-of doubt about the authenticity of the reporters’ notes, we have the
-further verification of the mechanical recording, so that Defense
-Counsel should have every opportunity to check the authenticity
-of the translation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: I am advised further by Colonel
-Dostert that 25 copies of the German transcript are being delivered
-to the defendants each day.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBUEHLER: Mr. President, I was
-not informed that the German testimony is being taken down in
-shorthand in German. I assumed that the records handed over to
-us were translations. If German shorthand notes are being taken
-in the court, I withdraw my motion.
-<span class='pageno' title='20' id='Page_20'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I think we shall get on faster if the Defendants’
-Counsel, before making motions, inquire into the matters
-about which they are making the motions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. FRITZ SAUTER (Counsel for Defendant Ribbentrop):
-I would like to ask a few questions of the witness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Witness, you previously stated that at some time an order was
-given, according to which, Russian prisoners of war were to be
-marked in a certain manner and that this order had been withdrawn
-by the Defendant Keitel. You did say that, did you not?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes, I said that I have knowledge that there was
-this purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: This is interesting from the point of view of
-the Defendant Ribbentrop, and I would like to hear from you
-whether you know about this matter. Ribbentrop maintains that
-when he heard about the order to brand Russian prisoners of war,
-he, in his capacity as Reich Foreign Minister, went immediately to
-the Führer’s headquarters to inform General Field Marshal Keitel
-of this order, and pointed out to him that he, Ribbentrop, in his
-capacity as Foreign Minister, as well as in his capacity as the
-guarantor of international law, objected to such treatment of Russian
-prisoners of war.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I would be interested to know, Witness, whether in your circle
-something was said as to who drew Keitel’s attention to this order
-and asked him to retract it?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I was not informed of that and I only knew, as
-I said yesterday, that there had been this intention, but it was not
-carried out.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: Then I have another question.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Witness, you spoke yesterday about some remarks of the
-Defendant Ribbentrop, especially one statement to the effect that
-an uprising should be staged in Poland—not in Russia—and that
-all Polish farm houses should go up in flames and all Jews should
-be killed. That, roughly, was how the statement ran.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: Now, later on, I believe, in answering a question
-of one of the Russian prosecutors, you amplified your statement by
-mentioning an order of the Defendant Ribbentrop. I would now
-like to know whether you really meant to say that it was an order
-from Ribbentrop to a military department?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: Just a minute please, so that you can answer
-both questions together.
-<span class='pageno' title='21' id='Page_21'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I would also like to remind you that yesterday, when this
-matter was first discussed, you spoke of a directive which, I believe,
-your superior officer had, as you said, received from Ribbentrop?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No, the Chief of the OKW received it, not my
-superior officer, who was Canaris. I would like to repeat it, in
-order to clarify this matter. It was a matter that came up for
-discussion on the 12th of September 1939 in the Führer’s train.
-These meetings took place in the following sequence with respect
-to time and locality: At first a short meeting took place between
-the Reich Foreign Minister Ribbentrop and Canaris in his coach.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: Were you present?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I was present at that meeting. General political
-questions regarding Poland and the Ukrainians in Poland were
-discussed. I do not know anything more about this meeting, which
-was the first.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After that there was another meeting in the coach of Keitel,
-who was then Chief of the OKW, and in the course of this meeting
-Keitel summarized and commented on the general political
-directives issued by Ribbentrop. He then mentioned several possible
-solutions for the handling of the Polish problem from the point of
-view of foreign policy—this can happen, or something else can
-happen; it is quite possible. In this connection he said:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“You, Canaris, have to promote an uprising with the aid of
-the Ukrainian organizations which are working with you
-and which have the same objectives, namely, the Poles and
-the Jews.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then a third discussion, or rather, a very brief remark at
-the end of a very short conversation between the Foreign Minister
-Ribbentrop and Canaris was made in connection with this subject,
-after the intention had been made quite clear. It was about how
-the uprising was to be carried out and what was to happen.
-I remember this so well, because he demanded that the farm
-houses must burn. Canaris discussed the matter with me in detail
-later on and referred to this remark.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That is what happened, as I have described it. This was the
-sequence: Directives from the High Command to Keitel; then
-passed on by Keitel to Canaris at this meeting; then repeated to
-Canaris in the form of a remark which I remember so well because
-it contained the words about farm houses in flames, which is rather
-an unusual thing to say.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: It would assist the Tribunal if one question
-at a time were asked and if the witnesses would answer “yes” or
-“no” to the question asked, and explain, if they must, afterwards.
-<span class='pageno' title='22' id='Page_22'></span>
-But questions and answers should be put as shortly as possible
-and only one question should be asked at a time.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: Now, witness, something else has struck me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: You heard what I said did you? Do you
-understand it?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: [<span class='it'>Continuing.</span>] Yesterday you said that these
-remarks of Ribbentrop are not in the diary, if I understood you
-correctly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No, this is not from the diary but has a connection
-with Canaris’ diary, by means of which I can make this remark.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: You said yesterday that this remark struck you
-as being rather surprising.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: And today you said that General Blaskowitz also
-made some striking statements. You also mentioned, however, that
-these statements of Blaskowitz were not entered in the diary.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: Now, it occurs to me—and I would like you to
-answer this question: Why, if this remark of the Defendant Ribbentrop
-surprised you, was it not entered in the diary?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Regarding Blaskowitz, I have to say—or rather—repeat
-the following:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I said that I did not hear the Blaskowitz matter mentioned in
-this connection during the meeting, and I cannot assume that this
-subject came up concurrently, otherwise it would have been
-entered in these notes. It may be, of course, that the Blaskowitz
-matter was discussed at a time when I was not there. I have only
-put down what I heard or what Canaris told me to enter in the
-record.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: But did you yourself hear that from Ribbentrop?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes, but the substance was not altered. Whether
-one speaks of extermination, elimination, or the burning of farms,
-they all amount to terroristic measures.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: Did Von Ribbentrop really talk of killing Jews?
-Are you sure you remember that?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes, I definitely remember that, because Canaris
-talked not only to me, but also to others in Vienna about this
-matter and called me time and again as a witness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: You heard that too?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: That did not settle the matter, but these words of
-Ribbentrop’s were frequently discussed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: Witness, something else. You have told us about
-murderous designs on which you or your department or other
-<span class='pageno' title='23' id='Page_23'></span>
-officers were employed or which you were charged to carry out.
-Did you report these to any police station as the law required? May
-I point out that according to German law failure to report intended
-crimes is punishable with imprisonment or in serious cases with
-death.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Well, when you talk about German law, I cannot
-follow you. I am not a lawyer, but just an ordinary man.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: As far as I know, that is also punishable according
-to Austrian law.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: At that time Austrian law, as far as I know, was
-no longer valid.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: In other words, you never reported the intended
-crime, either as a private person or as an official?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I should have had to make a great many reports—about
-100,000 projected murders, of which I knew and could not
-help but know. You can read about them in the records—and
-about shootings and the like—of which of necessity I had knowledge,
-whether I wanted to know or not, because, unfortunately, I
-was in the midst of it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: It is not a matter of shootings which had taken
-place and could no longer be prevented, but rather a matter of
-intended murder at a time when perhaps it could have been
-prevented.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I can only answer: Why did the person who
-received this order at first hand not do the same thing? Why did
-he not denounce Hitler for instance?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: You, as a general of the German Wehrmacht,
-should have asked Hitler .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I am sorry, you overestimate my rank, I had
-only been a general in the German Wehrmacht since the first of
-January 1945, that is, only for 4 months. At that time I was
-lieutenant colonel and later colonel of the General Staff, not in the
-General Staff.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: But in 1938, immediately after Hitler’s attack
-on Austria, you at once made a request to be taken into the German
-Wehrmacht by Hitler.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I did not make a request, and I did not have to
-do this. Wherever I was in the service, I was known for my
-special services. I was not a stranger. With the knowledge of the
-Austrian Government and also, in a restricted sense, with the
-knowledge of the German authorities (that is, of certain persons)
-I was working for the Austrian Government in a matter which
-exclusively concerned things outside the scope of Austrian internal
-<span class='pageno' title='24' id='Page_24'></span>
-policy. I co-operated with the Wehrmacht, as well as with the
-Italian and Hungarian Governments with the knowledge of the
-Austrian Government and the competent authorities. There were
-matters of politics which were not my domain.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: But I believe, Witness, your memory deceives
-you, because immediately after Hitler’s attack on Austria, you
-called on the General Staff in Berlin and there you tried to get a
-commission in the German Wehrmacht, and you now deny this.
-You also filled in and signed a questionnaire, in which you declared
-your complete allegiance to the Greater German Reich and to
-Adolf Hitler; and shortly afterwards you took the oath of allegiance
-to Adolf Hitler.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes, of course, I did it just as everybody else who
-was in the position of being transferred from one office and
-capacity to another.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: Before, you said you did not apply for this
-appointment, and I have information to the contrary: That you, in
-the company of two or three other officers were the first to go to
-Berlin with the sole purpose of asking the Chief of the German
-General Staff Beck to take you into the German Army.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I am very glad that you mention this subject,
-because it allows me to make my position perfectly clear. It was
-not necessary for me to make an application for my future position
-in the German Wehrmacht. I was known because of my
-military activities, just as any military attaché is known in the
-country where he is accredited.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Moreover, I can easily explain why my rise in office was so
-rapid. I have said that my activities and my co-operation with
-the Austrian Military Intelligence Service, which were not
-determined by me but by my superior Austrian office, were at
-that time directed against the neighboring country of Czechoslovakia.
-Czechoslovakia was the country that was next on the list
-after Austria. Therefore, it was natural that my later chief, Canaris,
-who knew me from my former position, was very interested in
-having me promoted in his department. He put in a word for me,
-and so did Colonel General Beck, whom I was visiting. Other people
-also know this; and I have now told everything that General Beck
-told me at that time.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: Then it is true, you did go to Berlin and apply
-to be transferred into the German Wehrmacht, which you at first
-denied?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No, that is not true, I did not apply. Others made
-the request. I can even say that I did not go there: I flew there.
-Canaris, who knew me not only in my military capacity but also in
-<span class='pageno' title='25' id='Page_25'></span>
-regard to my personal attitude (just as Marogna had known me and
-just as Colonel General Beck, who was informed about me by
-Canaris), made the request for me. I myself did not apply, but
-others applied for me, for reasons which only later became clear
-to me, because they knew my personal attitude, just as my Austrian
-comrades—they were necessarily few—knew about this and about
-me. That is how things stood.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: I have no other questions to ask this witness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Before the cross-examination I wish to announce
-that there will be no public session of the Tribunal this
-afternoon.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. OTTO STAHMER (Counsel for Defendant Göring): I am
-counsel for the Defendant Göring, and I would like to address a
-few questions to the witness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Witness, if I understood you correctly, you said yesterday that
-it was Canaris’ personal conviction that his failure to prevent the
-attack on Poland would mean the end of Germany and a great
-misfortune for us. A triumph of the system would mean an even
-greater disaster, and it was the purpose of General Canaris to
-prevent this. Did I understand you correctly?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes, except for one point: Not that he had not
-been successful in preventing it, but that it was not possible to
-prevent it. Canaris had no way of knowing this .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: Is it known to you that Admiral Canaris, in
-the first years of the war, had very active sabotage organizations
-behind the enemy front and that he personally worked very hard
-for these organizations?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Naturally I knew about that, and I have fully
-informed the American authorities who were interested in this
-subject.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: But how is that possible? This would not be in
-conformity with his inner political beliefs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: This is explained by the fact that in the circle in
-which he was active he could never say what he really thought,
-and thousands of others could not do so either—what I said is a
-truth without saying. The essential thing is not what he said,
-or what he had to say in order to follow a purpose; but what he
-did and how he did it. This I know and others know it, too.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: This is not a question of what he said, but of
-what he actually did. He not only proposed such measures, but also
-applied himself to their execution—is that true?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Ostensibly he had, of course, to remain within the
-limits of his office, in order to keep his position. That was the
-important thing, that he should remain in this position, to prevent
-<span class='pageno' title='26' id='Page_26'></span>
-in 1939 the thing that actually happened in 1944: that Himmler
-should take things in hand. I place before you these two men,
-one against the other: Canaris and Himmler—and I think I need
-hardly tell you what Canaris was striving for when he (Canaris)
-took part—ostensibly took part in these activities.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: You mentioned the name of Himmler, in this
-connection, I would like to ask the following question:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Is it known to you that Admiral Canaris, during the first years
-of the war, laid great stress on his good relations with the SS
-and the necessity for close co-operation with the SS, so much so,
-that the Defendant Göring had to advise him to be more independent
-of the SS in his military functions?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: You are going too quickly and I do not think
-you are observing what I said just now, that it will help the
-Tribunal if you will ask one question at a time.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: I will put my question briefly; did the witness
-know that Admiral Canaris, during the first years of the war, had
-good connections with the SS and recognized the necessity for close
-co-operation with the formation, and never failed to stress this?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes, this is known to me. I also know why.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: And why?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: So that he might be in a position to see and
-to know and keep himself informed of everything these people were
-doing, and be able to intervene wherever and whenever possible.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: Was it the duty of your organization, or the duty
-of Canaris’ department to pass on important enemy intelligence to
-the military leadership in good time?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I do not understand what the office of Canaris
-has to do with this?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: Your section of the office of Canaris?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes, of course, the Department I.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: Now, according to my information, your office
-did not pass on to the military departments concerned information
-of the Anglo-American landing in North Africa. Is that true?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I do not know. Please do not make me responsible
-for the department. This is a question which could easily be
-answered by Colonel Pieckenbrock, but not by me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: Regarding the Case “Rowehl,” you said yesterday
-that a colonel of the Air Force, Rowehl, had formed a special
-squadron, which had the tasks of making reconnaissance flights
-over Poland, England, and the southeast sector prior to the Polish
-campaign. Is that true?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes.
-<span class='pageno' title='27' id='Page_27'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: You also said that Colonel Rowehl went to
-see Admiral Canaris to report on the results of these flights and
-to submit photographs. Is that true?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes. How should I have known about it otherwise?
-I did not invent it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: I did not say that. How did Colonel Rowehl
-come to report to Admiral Canaris about this?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I believe I mentioned yesterday, that this was a
-function of the Amt Ausland Abwehr, Abteilung I.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: Have you yourself seen the photographs that
-were taken over England?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes, I have seen them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: When and where were these pictures shown
-to you?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: In the office of Canaris they were shown to me.
-I had nothing to do with them in an official way. I happened to
-be present at the time. I was interested in seeing what was going on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: What did these photographs show?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I have forgotten the details. They were photographs
-taken from airplanes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: The photographs were not shown to you
-officially?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No, the photographs were not shown to me
-officially, I was merely an interested spectator on this occasion, as
-I have just told you.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: Did Rowehl give any written reports about
-these flights to the Amt?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I do not know.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: You do not know? You also said that Rowehl’s
-squadron made flights from Budapest?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: Do you know that from your own experience
-or from some other information?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I know it through personal investigation. The
-date is entered in the War Diary kept by the section. At that time
-I was in Budapest, and I was asked to attend the conferring of a
-citation in Budapest.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: That was before the Polish campaign?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: And why were these flights carried out from
-Budapest?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I do not know. I said that yesterday. A gentleman
-of the Air Force would have to answer that.
-<span class='pageno' title='28' id='Page_28'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. RUDOLF DIX (Counsel for Defendant Schacht): Witness,
-do you know Captain Strünck from the Abwehr?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I would like you to tell me something more
-than the name. The name alone does not mean anything to me.
-Give me a few points that will refresh my memory.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. DIX: He is a lawyer who was a reserve officer with the
-Abwehr. I do not know in which department, but I would say it
-was in the department of Pieckenbrock. However, if you do not
-know him I will not question you any further.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: If he was with Pieckenbrock I do not know him.
-I knew a few. Is Strünck still alive?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. DIX: No, he is no longer living.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Was he executed?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. DIX: He suffered the same death as Canaris and Oster. For
-the information of the Court, I should like to add that I asked
-this question because I named Strünck as a witness and the Court
-has admitted him as such. I wish to take this opportunity—but
-if you do not know him I will not continue questioning you.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: When I asked whether he is still alive, I seemed
-to recall that this man, together with others whom I knew very
-well, might have been killed, but I cannot be more definite on
-this point.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. HEINZ FRITZ (Counsel for Defendant Fritzsche): I would
-like to ask the witness a few questions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Witness, do you know that the Defendant Fritzsche, when in
-May 1942 he was transferred to the 6th Army as a soldier and
-there heard for the first time of the existence of an order for
-executions, recommended to the Commander-in-Chief of the
-6th Army, Paulus, that he should have this order suspended
-within the jurisdiction of his army and have this decision made
-known by leaflets to be dropped over the Russian front?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Be careful only to ask one question at a
-time. You have just asked three or four questions at once.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. FRITZ: Yes, Sir. Is it known to you that Fritzsche gave
-Paulus the advice to rescind the order for his army sector?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: That order had already been given to his army.
-Will you kindly give me the approximate date?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. FRITZ: That was during the Russian campaign, as I
-mentioned yesterday. Most of these things occurred in May 1942.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No. I do not know anything about this in connection
-with Fritzsche. In connection with the name Reichenau,
-which was mentioned before, I do remember a conversation between
-Reichenau and Canaris at which I was present. It made a great
-<span class='pageno' title='29' id='Page_29'></span>
-impression on me. During this conversation, and in this circle,
-where there were several other gentlemen present, Reichenau held
-quite different ideas and judged things quite differently from what
-I had expected of him. Apart from that, I do not know anything
-about this particular question.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. FRITZ: Also nothing concerning the fact that Paulus had
-rescinded the order within the sector of his army?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No, not in connection with the name Paulus, but
-in general I believe, as I also stated yesterday, that several army
-commanders, whose names are no longer in my memory today, or
-whose names have been recorded, were mentioned by me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. KURT KAUFFMANN (Counsel for Defendant Kaltenbrunner):
-Do you know Mr. Kaltenbrunner?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Kaltenbrunner? I met Kaltenbrunner only once
-in my life, and that was on a day that will always remain in my
-memory. It was also the first meeting between Canaris and Kaltenbrunner.
-It took place in Munich in the Regina Hotel, and it was
-on the day when two young people, a student and his sister, were
-arrested and executed. They had distributed leaflets in the auditorium
-of the University of Munich. I read the contents of the
-leaflets, and I remember, among other things, that they contained
-an appeal to the Wehrmacht.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I can easily reconstruct that day. It was the first and last time
-that I saw Kaltenbrunner, with whose name I was familiar. Of
-course, Kaltenbrunner mentioned this subject to Canaris, who was
-completely shattered because of what had happened that day and
-was still under the painful impression—and thank God there are
-still witnesses available who can testify to this. When discussing
-the matter Kaltenbrunner was very much to the point, but at the
-same time he was quite cynical about it. That is the only thing
-I can tell you about this matter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. KAUFFMANN: Kaltenbrunner claims that Himmler retained
-full executive powers for himself, while he was only in charge of
-the intelligence service. Is this borne out by the conversation that
-you just mentioned?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I would like you to know what bearing that has
-on the Kaltenbrunner-Himmler matter—the struggle for power
-which was taking place in the SS. I have merely described this
-event. I can give you the names of the people present, who like
-myself were very much impressed for the reasons which I have
-mentioned.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR GEORG BÖHM (Counsel for the SA): You were asked
-yesterday whether the orders regarding the treatment of Soviet
-prisoners of war were known to the leaders of the SA and other
-organizations, and your answer was that these orders must have
-<span class='pageno' title='30' id='Page_30'></span>
-been known to them. I would now like to ask you who these leaders
-were at the time and what were their names?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Who they were and what their names were, I do
-not know. I also stated explicitly yesterday why I said so. They
-must have been known to them and to a large circle through the
-execution of these orders, and, of course, through the return of the
-wounded. The German people must have learned about them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: In other words, it was only an opinion of yours,
-but in no way a fact-based on personal observation?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No, it was not. I personally never had anything to
-do with any SA leader. I never had anything to do with them, and
-I do not think any one of them knows me well.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: Could you make a statement on this, that is,
-whether the orders which were mentioned yesterday were given
-to the formations of the SA?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Would you kindly formulate that question again?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: Could you make another statement as to whether
-the contents of these orders, which were discussed yesterday, were
-sent to the formations of the SA through official channels?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No, not through official channels, but in the way I
-have previously indicated; in other words, members of the SA who
-were also in the Wehrmacht could see actually what happened out
-there, and when they came back they spoke about it, the same as
-anyone else. It was only in this connection .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: Is it known to you whether members of the SA
-had anything at all to do with the handling of prisoners of war?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: When members of the SA were in the Wehrmacht,
-yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: Did you make any personal observations in this
-connection?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No, I never said that. I said I had already talked
-about the SA.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: I asked you which leaders of the SA formations
-knew about them, and you answered that they should have known
-about them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I said the leaders of these organizations came to
-know about them in this way.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: And today I ask you whether the individual formations
-of the SA had received these orders.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I can only repeat what I said yesterday, and I think
-I was very clear on the subject, in other words, how these orders
-were issued. I myself did not read these orders, but I know the
-effects they had.
-<span class='pageno' title='31' id='Page_31'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: I can imagine myself how this happened, but I
-asked you whether you know anything about how these orders
-reached the SA?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: You do not know? Do you know anything from
-your own personal observations about members of the SA being
-employed for the supervision of prisoner-of-war camps?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes, because from my personal observations, once
-when I was on my way to the Army Group North, I caught an SA
-man who was kicking a Russian prisoner of war and I pulled him
-up about it. I think that is mentioned somewhere in my records,
-and also an episode about an Arbeitsdienst man.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: Did you report any of these incidents through the
-proper channels? Did you see to it that the leaders of this organization
-were informed about them?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I reported it to my superior officer, or it was mentioned
-in my report on my visit either orally or in writing. There
-were discussions on this and similar incidents.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: Have you got anything in your records?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: Will you please submit it?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I am looking it up. This is about the Arbeitsdienst
-man, this document.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: It is not about the SA man?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: Then you cannot submit anything in answer to
-my question?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I do not have it here. I would have to look it up.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: Do you think you might find some records?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: I would have to have an opportunity of going
-through the whole of the material which is in the hands of the
-American authorities to find this one.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: I will ask the Court that you be given this opportunity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I would also like to inquire whether you were ever able to observe
-that members of the SA whom you ascertained were employed
-on supervisory duties, ever took any measures which were in line
-with the orders against Soviet soldiers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LAHOUSEN: No, not personally.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: Thank you.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: I would like to ask the Court for a fundamental
-ruling on whether the defendant also has the right personally to ask
-<span class='pageno' title='32' id='Page_32'></span>
-the witness questions. According to the German text of the Charter,
-Paragraph 16, I believe this is permissible.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will consider the point you
-have raised and will let you know later.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: The United States Prosecution would
-desire to be heard, I am sure, if there were any probability of that
-view being taken by the Tribunal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Perhaps we had better hear you now, Mr.
-Justice Jackson.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: Well, I think it is very clear that
-these provisions are mutually exclusive. Each defendant has the
-right to conduct his own defense or to have the assistance of
-counsel. Certainly this would become a performance rather than a
-trial if we go into that sort of thing. In framing this Charter, we
-anticipated the possibility that some of these defendants, being
-lawyers themselves, might conduct their own defenses. If they
-do so, of course they have all the privileges of counsel. If they
-avail themselves of the privileges of counsel, they are not, we
-submit, entitled to be heard in person.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: I would like to point out once more that
-Paragraph 16 (e), according to my opinion, speaks very clearly for
-my point of view. It says that the defendant has the right, either
-personally or through his counsel, to present evidence, and according
-to the German text it is clear that the defendant has the right
-to cross-examine any witness called by the Prosecution. According
-to the German text there reference can be made only to the
-defendant—with respect to terms as well as to the contents. In my
-opinion it is made clear that the defendant has the right to cross-examine
-any witness called by the Prosecution.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Does any other German counsel, defendant’s
-counsel, wish to cross-examine the witness?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. ROBERT SERVATIUS (Counsel for Defendant Sauckel): I
-would only like to point out that in the written forms given to us
-by the Court, the defendant, as well as his counsel can make a
-motion. A place is left for two signatures on the questionnaire.
-I conclude, therefore, that the defendant himself has the right to
-speak on the floor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: What I asked was whether any other
-defendant’s counsel wished to cross-examine the witness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>[<span class='it'>Herr Böhm approached the lectern.</span>]</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: What is it? Would you put the earphones on,
-please, unless you understand English. What is it you want to ask
-now? You have already cross-examined the witness.
-<span class='pageno' title='33' id='Page_33'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: Yes, I have cross-examined him, but he has given
-me to understand that he made a report about an incident which
-occurred during one of his visits of inspection, and that he has
-some written notes. As I am not yet able to release the witness, I
-should like to move that the Prosecution allow to be placed at the
-disposal of the witness any available notes or reports on the
-observations made by him at the time, so that he may find the
-evidence he wants.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I think you must conclude your cross-examination
-now.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: Certainly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Court thinks it would be better if you
-want to make any further application with reference to this witness,
-that you should make it in writing later.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Then, as no other defendant’s counsel wishes
-to cross-examine the witness, the Tribunal will now retire for the
-purpose of considering the question raised by Dr. Stahmer as to
-whether a defendant has the right to cross-examine as well as his
-own counsel.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal has carefully considered the
-question raised by Dr. Stahmer, and it holds that defendants who
-are represented by counsel have not the right to cross-examine
-witnesses. They have the right to be called as witnesses themselves
-and to make a statement at the end of the Trial.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Do the Prosecutors wish to ask any questions of this witness in
-re-examination?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COLONEL JOHN HARLAN AMEN (Associate Trial Counsel for
-the United States): Just one question, your Lordship.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Let the witness come back here.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE MARSHAL (Colonel Charles W. Mays): He was taken away.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Taken away?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE MARSHAL: That’s right. He was taken away by some
-captain who brought him here for the Trial. They have sent after
-him now.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Do you know how far he has been taken
-away?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE MARSHAL: No, Sir, I do not. I will find out immediately.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Colonel Amen, are the questions that you
-wish to ask of sufficient importance for the Tribunal to wait for
-this witness or for him to be recalled on Monday?
-<span class='pageno' title='34' id='Page_34'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COL. AMEN: I don’t believe so, Your Lordship.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Very well then. The Tribunal will adjourn,
-and it will be understood that in the future no witness will be
-removed whilst he is under examination, from the precincts of this
-Court except on the orders of the Tribunal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COL. AMEN: I do not know how that happened Your Lordship,
-I understood he was still here.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>The Tribunal adjourned until 3 December 1945 at 1000 hours.</span>]</h3>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='35' id='Page_35'></span><h1>ELEVENTH DAY<br/> <span style='font-size:smaller'>Monday, 3 December 1945</span></h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'><span class='it'>Morning Session</span></h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I call on the prosecutor for the United States.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>SIDNEY S. ALDERMAN (Associate Trial Counsel for the United
-States): May it please the Tribunal, it occurs to me that perhaps the
-Tribunal might be interested in a very brief outline of what might
-be expected to occur within the next week or two weeks in this
-Trial.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I shall immediately proceed with the aggressive war case, to
-present the story of the rape of Czechoslovakia. I shall not perhaps
-be able to conclude that today.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sir Hartley Shawcross, the British chief prosecutor, has asked
-that he be allowed to proceed tomorrow morning with his opening
-statement on Count Two and I shall be glad to yield for that purpose,
-with the understanding that we shall resume on Czechoslovakia
-after that.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thereafter, the British prosecutor will proceed to present the
-aggressive warfare case as to Poland, which brought France and
-England into the war. Thereupon the British prosecutor will proceed
-with the expansion of aggressive war in Europe, the aggression
-against Norway and Denmark, against Holland, Belgium, and
-Luxembourg, against Yugoslavia and Greece. And in connection
-with those aggressions the British prosecutor will present to the
-Tribunal the various treaties involved and the various breaches of
-treaties involved in those aggressions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That, as I understand it, will complete the British case under
-Count Two and will probably take the rest of this week.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then it will be necessary for the American prosecuting staff to
-come back to Count One to cover certain portions which have not
-been covered, specifically, persecution of the Jews, concentration
-camps, spoliation in occupied territories, the High Command, and
-other alleged criminal organizations, particularly evidence dealing
-with individual responsibility of individual defendants.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Roughly, I would anticipate that that would carry through the
-following week—two weeks. However, that is a very rough
-estimate.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thereupon, the French chief prosecutor will make his opening
-statement and will present the evidence as to Crimes against
-<span class='pageno' title='36' id='Page_36'></span>
-Humanity and War Crimes under Counts Three and Four as to
-Western Occupied countries.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Following that, the Russian chief prosecutor will make his opening
-statement and will present corresponding evidence regarding
-War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity in the Eastern countries.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That, in very rough outline, is what we have in mind to present.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I turn now to the third section in the detailed chronological
-presentation of the aggressive war case: Aggression against Czechoslovakia.
-The relevant portions of the Indictment are set forth in
-Subsection 3, under Section IV (F), appearing at Pages 7 and 8 of
-the printed English text of the Indictment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This portion of the Indictment is divided into three parts:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>(a) The 1936-38 phase of the plan; that is, the planning for the
-assault both on Austria and Czechoslovakia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>(b) The execution of the plan to invade Austria; November 1937
-to March 1938.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>(c) The execution of the plan to invade Czechoslovakia; April
-1938 to March 1939.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On Thursday, last, I completed the presentation of the documents
-on the execution of the plan to invade Austria. Those documents
-are gathered together in a document book which was handed to the
-Tribunal at the beginning of the Austrian presentation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The materials relating to the aggression against Czechoslovakia
-have been gathered in a separate document book, which I now
-submit to the Tribunal and which is marked “Document Book 0.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal will recall that in the period 1933 to 1936 the
-defendants had initiated a program of rearmament, designed to give
-the Third Reich military strength and political bargaining power to
-be used against other nations. You will recall also that beginning
-in the year 1936 they had embarked on a preliminary program of
-expansion which, as it turned out, was to last until March 1939.
-This was intended to shorten their frontiers, to increase their
-industrial and food reserve, and to place them in a position, both
-industrially and strategically, from which they could launch a more
-ambitious and more devastating campaign of aggression.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the moment—in the early spring of 1938—when the Nazi
-conspirators began to lay concrete plans for the conquest of Czechoslovakia,
-they had reached approximately the half-way point in this
-preliminary program.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The preceding autumn, at the conference in the Reich Chancellery
-on November 5, 1937, covered by the Hossbach minutes, Hitler
-had set forth the program which Germany was to follow. Those
-Hossbach minutes, you will recall, are contained in Document 386-PS
-<span class='pageno' title='37' id='Page_37'></span>
-as United States Exhibit Number 25, which I read to the Tribunal
-in my introductory statement a week ago today.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The question for Germany,” the Führer had informed his military
-commanders at that meeting, “is where the greatest possible
-conquest can be made at the lowest cost.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the top of his agenda stood two countries, Austria and Czechoslovakia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On March 12, 1938 Austria was occupied by the German Army,
-and on the following day it was annexed to the Reich. The time
-had come for a redefinition of German intentions regarding Czechoslovakia.
-A little more than a month later two of the conspirators,
-Hitler and Keitel, met to discuss plans for the envelopment and
-conquest of the Czechoslovak State.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Among the selected handful of documents which I read to the
-Tribunal in my introduction a week ago to establish the corpus of
-the crime of aggressive war was the account of this meeting on
-21 April 1938. This account is Item 2 in our Document Number
-388-PS, as United States Exhibit Number 26.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal will recall that Hitler and Keitel discussed the
-pretext which Germany might develop to serve as an excuse for a
-sudden and overwhelming attack. They considered the provocation
-of a period of diplomatic squabbling which, growing more serious,
-would lead to an excuse for war. In the alternative—and this alternative
-they found to be preferable—they planned to unleash a
-lightning attack as the result of an incident of their own creation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Consideration, as we alleged in the Indictment and as the document
-proved, was given to the assassination of the German Minister
-at Prague to create the requisite incident.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The necessity of propaganda to guide the conduct of Germans
-in Czechoslovakia and to intimidate the Czechs was recognized.
-Problems of transport and tactics were discussed, with a view to
-overcoming all Czechoslovak resistance within 4 days, thus presenting
-the world with a <span class='it'>fait accompli</span> and forestalling outside interventions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thus, in mid-April 1938, the designs of the Nazi conspirators to
-conquer Czechoslovakia had already readied the stage of practical
-planning.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now all of that occurred, if the Tribunal please, against a background
-of friendly diplomatic relations. This conspiracy must be
-viewed against that background. Although they had, in the fall of
-1937, determined to destroy the Czechoslovak State, the leaders of
-the German Government were bound by a treaty of arbitration and
-assurances freely given, to observe the sovereignty of Czechoslovakia.
-By a formal treaty signed at Locarno on 16 October 1925—Document
-<span class='pageno' title='38' id='Page_38'></span>
-TC-14, which will be introduced by the British prosecutor—Germany
-and Czechoslovakia agreed, with certain exceptions,
-to refer to an arbitral tribunal or to the Permanent Court
-of International Justice matters of dispute. I quote, they would
-so refer:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“All disputes of every kind between Germany and Czechoslovakia
-with regard to which the parties are in conflict as to
-their respective rights, and which it may not be possible to
-settle amicably by the normal methods of diplomacy.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And the preamble to this treaty stated:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The President of the German Reich and the President of the
-Czechoslovak Republic equally resolved to maintain peace
-between Germany and Czechoslovakia by assuring the peaceful
-settlement of differences, which might arise between the
-two countries; declaring that respect for the rights established
-by treaty or resulting from the law of nations, is obligatory
-for international tribunals; agreeing to recognize that the
-rights of a state cannot be modified save with its consent, and
-considering that sincere observance of the methods of peaceful
-settlement of international disputes permits of resolving,
-without recourse to force, questions which may become the
-cause of divisions between states, have decided to embody in
-a treaty their common intention in this respect.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That ends the quotation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Formal and categoric assurances of their good will towards
-Czechoslovakia were both coming from the Nazi conspirators as
-late as March 1938. On March 11 and 12, 1938, at the time of the
-annexation of Austria, Germany had a considerable interest in
-inducing Czechoslovakia not to mobilize. At this time the Defendant
-Göring assured Masaryk, the Czechoslovak Minister in Berlin, on
-behalf of the German Government that German-Czech relations
-were not adversely affected by the development in Austria and that
-Germany had no hostile intentions towards Czechoslovakia. As a
-token of his sincerity, Defendant Göring accompanied his assurance
-with the statement, “Ich gebe Ihnen mein Ehrenwort (I give you
-my word of honor).”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the same time, the Defendant Von Neurath, who was handling
-German foreign affairs during Ribbentrop’s stay in London, assured
-Masaryk, on behalf of Hitler and the German Government, that
-Germany still considered herself bound by the Arbitration Convention
-of 1925.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>These assurances are contained in Document TC-27, another of
-the series of documents which will be presented to the Tribunal
-by the British prosecutor under Count Two of the Indictment.
-<span class='pageno' title='39' id='Page_39'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Behind the screen of these assurances the Nazi conspirators proceeded
-with their military and political plans for aggression. Ever
-since the preceding fall it had been established that the immediate
-aim of German policy was the elimination both of Austria and of
-Czechoslovakia. In both countries the conspirators planned to undermine
-the will to resist by propaganda and by Fifth Column
-activities, while the actual military preparations were being developed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Austrian operation, which received priority for political and
-strategic reasons, was carried out in February and March 1938.
-Thenceforth the Wehrmacht planning was devoted to “Fall Grün”
-(Case Green), the designation given to the proposed operation
-against Czechoslovakia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The military plans for Case Green had been drafted in outline
-from as early as June 1937. The OKW top-secret directive for the
-unified preparation of the Armed Forces for war—signed by Von
-Blomberg on June 24, 1937, and promulgated to the Army, Navy,
-and Luftwaffe for the year beginning July 1, 1937,—included, as a
-probable war-like eventuality for which a concentrated plan was
-to be drafted, Case Green, “War on two fronts, with the main
-struggle in the southeast.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This document—our Number C-175, Exhibit USA-69—was introduced
-in evidence as part of the Austrian presentation and is an
-original carbon copy, signed in ink by Von Blomberg. The original
-section of this directive dealing with the probable war against
-Czechoslovakia—it was later revised—opens with this supposition.
-I read <span class='it'>from the bottom</span> of Page 3 of the English translation of this
-directive, following the heading II, and Subparagraph (1) headed
-“Suppositions”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The war in the East can begin with a surprise German
-operation against Czechoslovakia in order to parry the imminent
-attack of a superior enemy coalition. The necessary
-conditions to justify such an action politically, and in the
-eyes of international law must be created beforehand.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After detailing possible enemies and neutrals in the event of such
-action, the directive continues as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(2) <span class='it'>The task of the German Armed Forces</span>”—and that much
-is underscored—“is to make their preparations in such a way
-that the bulk of all forces can break into Czechoslovakia
-quickly, by surprise, and with the greatest force, while in the
-West the minimum strength is provided as rear-cover for this
-attack.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk102'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The aim and object of this surprise attack by the German
-Armed Forces should be to eliminate from the very beginning
-<span class='pageno' title='40' id='Page_40'></span>
-and for the duration of the war, the threat by Czechoslovakia
-to the rear of the operations in the West, and to take from
-the Russian Air Force the most substantial portion of its
-operational base in Czechoslovakia. This must be done by
-the defeat of the enemy armed forces and the occupation of
-Bohemia and Moravia.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The introduction to this directive sets forth as one of its guiding
-principles the following statement—and I now read from Page 1
-of the English translation, that is, the third paragraph following
-Figure 1:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Nevertheless, the politically fluid world situation, which does
-not preclude surprising incidents, demands constant preparedness
-for war on the part of the German Armed Forces:”—and
-then—“(a) to counterattack at any time; (b) to make
-possible the military exploitation of politically favorable
-opportunities should they occur.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This directive ordered further work on the plan for “mobilization
-without public announcement.” I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. in order to put the Armed Forces in a position to be able
-to begin a sudden war which will take the enemy by surprise,
-in regard to both strength and time of attack.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This is, of course, a directive for staff planning, but the nature
-of the planning and the very tangible and ominous developments
-which resulted from it, give it a significance that it would not have
-in another setting.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Planning along the lines of this directive was carried forward
-during the fall of 1937 and the winter of 1937-38. On the political
-level, this planning for the conquest of Czechoslovakia received the
-approval and support of Hitler in the conference with his military
-commanders on 5 November 1937, reported in the Hossbach minutes,
-to which I have frequently heretofore referred.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In early March 1938, before the march into Austria, we find the
-Defendants Ribbentrop and Keitel concerned over the extent of the
-information about war aims against Czechoslovakia to be furnished to
-Hungary. On 4 March 1938, Ribbentrop wrote to Keitel, enclosing for
-General Keitel’s confidential cognizance the minutes of a conference
-with Sztojay, the local Hungarian Ambassador, who had
-suggested an interchange of views. This is Document 2786-PS, a
-photostat of the original captured letter, which I now offer in
-evidence as Exhibit USA-81. In his letter to Keitel, Ribbentrop said:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I have many doubts about such negotiations. In case we should
-discuss with Hungary possible war aims against Czechoslovakia,
-the danger exists that other parties as well would
-be informed about this. I would greatly appreciate it if you
-<span class='pageno' title='41' id='Page_41'></span>
-would notify me briefly whether any commitments were made
-here in any respect. With best regards and Heil Hitler.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the 21 April meeting between Hitler and Keitel, the account
-of which I read last week and alluded to earlier this morning (Document
-388-PS, Item 2), specific plans for the attack on Czechoslovakia
-were discussed for the first time. This meeting was followed, in
-the late spring and summer of 1938, by a series of memoranda and
-telegrams advancing Case Green (Fall Grün). Those notes and communications
-were carefully filed at Hitler’s headquarters by the
-very efficient Colonel Schmundt, the Führer’s military adjutant, and
-were captured by American troops in a cellar at Obersalzberg, near
-Berchtesgaden. This file, which is preserved intact, bears out
-Number 388-PS, and is United States Exhibit Number 26. We affectionately
-refer to it as “Big Schmundt”—a large file. The individual
-items in this file tell more graphically than any narrative the
-progress of the Nazi conspirators’ planning to launch an unprovoked
-and brutal war against Czechoslovakia. From the start the Nazi
-leaders displayed a lively interest in intelligence data concerning
-Czechoslovakian armament and defense. With the leave of the
-Tribunal I shall refer to some of these items in the Big Schmundt
-file without reading them. The documents to which I refer are Item
-4 of the Schmundt file, a telegram from Colonel Zeitzler, in General
-Jodl’s office of the OKW, to Schmundt at Hitler’s headquarters.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Are you proposing not to read them?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: I hadn’t intended to read them in full, unless
-that may be necessary.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I am afraid we must adhere to our decision.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: If the Tribunal please, I should simply wish
-to refer to the title or heading of Item 12, which is headed, “Short
-Survey of Armament of the Czech Army,” dated Berlin, 9 June
-1938, and initialed “Z” for Zeitzler, and Item 13, “Questions of the
-Führer,” dated Berlin, 9 June 1938, and classified “Most Secret.”
-I should like to read four of the questions which Hitler wanted
-authoritative information about, as shown by that document, and I
-read indicated questions on Pages 23, 24, 25, and 26 of Item 13 of
-Document 388-PS.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Question 1: Hitler asked about armament of the Czech Army.
-I don’t think it necessary to read the answers. They are detailed
-answers giving information in response to these questions posed
-by Hitler.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Question 2: How many battalions, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>, are employed in
-the West for the construction of emplacements?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk103'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Question 3: Are the fortifications of Czechoslovakia still
-occupied in unreduced strength?
-<span class='pageno' title='42' id='Page_42'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk104'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Question. 4: Frontier protection in the West.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I say, those questions were answered in detail by the OKW
-and initialed by Colonel Zeitzler of Jodl’s staff.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As a precaution against French and British action during the
-attack on Czechoslovakia, it was necessary for the Nazi conspirators
-to rush the preparation of fortification measures along the western
-frontier in Germany. I refer you to Item 8, at Page 12 of the Big
-Schmundt file, a telegram presumably sent from Schmundt in Berchtesgaden
-to Berlin, and I quote from this telegram. It is, as I say,
-Item 8 of the Schmundt file, Page 12 of Document 388-PS: “Inform
-Colonel General Von Brauchitsch and General Keitel.” And then,
-skipping a paragraph: “The Führer repeatedly emphasized the
-necessity of pressing forward greatly the fortification work in the
-West.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In May, June, July, and August of 1938 conferences between
-Hitler and his political and military advisors resulted in the issuance
-of a series of constantly revised directives for the attack on
-Czechoslovakia. It was decided that preparations for X-Day, the
-day of the attack, should be completed no later than 1 October. I
-now invite the attention of the Tribunal to the more important of
-these conferences and directives.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On 28 May 1938 Hitler called a conference of his principal advisors.
-At this meeting he gave the necessary instructions to his
-fellow conspirators to prepare the attack on Czechoslovakia. This
-fact Hitler later publicly admitted. I now refer and invite the notice
-of the Tribunal to Document 2360-PS, a copy of the <span class='it'>Völkischer
-Beobachter</span> of 31 January 1939. In a speech before the Reichstag
-the preceding day, reported in this newspaper, reading now from
-Document 2360-PS, Hitler spoke as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“On account of this intolerable provocation which had been
-aggravated by a truly infamous persecution and terrorization
-of our Germans there, I have determined to solve once and
-for all, and this time radically, the Sudeten-German question.
-On 28 May I ordered first: That preparation should be made
-for military action against this state by 2 October. I ordered
-second: The immense and accelerated expansion of our defensive
-front in the West.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Two days after this conference, on 30 May 1938, Hitler issued
-the revised military directive for Case Green. This directive is Item
-11 in the Big Schmundt file, Document 388-PS. It is entitled, “Two-front
-War, with Main Effort in the Southeast,” and this directive
-replaced the corresponding section, Part 2, Section II, of the previous
-quote, “Directive for Unified Preparation for War,” which had
-been promulgated by Von Blomberg on 26 June 1937, which I have
-already introduced in evidence as our Document C-175, United
-<span class='pageno' title='43' id='Page_43'></span>
-States Exhibit Number 69. This revised directive represented a further
-development of the ideas for political and military action discussed
-by Hitler and Keitel in their conference on 21 April. It is
-an expansion of the rough draft submitted by the Defendant Keitel
-to Hitler on 20 May, which may be found as Item 5 in the Schmundt
-file. It was signed by Hitler. Only five copies were made. Three
-copies were forwarded with a covering letter from Defendant Keitel
-to General Von Brauchitsch for the Army, to Defendant Raeder for
-the Navy, and to Defendant Göring for the Luftwaffe. In his covering
-memorandum Keitel noted that its execution must be assured—I
-quote: “As from 1 October 1938 at the latest.” I now read from
-this document, which is the basic directive under which the Wehrmacht
-carried out its planning for Case Green, a rather lengthy
-quotation from the first page of Item 11, Page 16 of the English
-version:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. Political prerequisites. It is my unalterable decision to
-smash Czechoslovakia by military action in the near future.
-It is the job of the political leaders to await or bring about
-the politically and militarily suitable moment.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk105'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“An inevitable development of conditions inside Czechoslovakia
-or other political events in Europe, creating a surprisingly
-favorable opportunity and one which may never
-come again, may cause me to take early action.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk106'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The proper choice and determined and full utilization of a
-favorable moment is the surest guarantee of success. Accordingly
-the preparations are to be made at once.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk107'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. Political possibilities for the commencement of the action.
-The following are necessary prerequisites for the intended
-invasion:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk108'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“a. Suitable obvious cause and with it, b. sufficient political
-justification, c. action unexpected by the enemy, which will
-find him prepared in the least possible degree.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk109'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“From a military as well as a political standpoint the most
-favorable course is a lightning-swift action as the result of an
-incident through which Germany is provoked in an unbearable
-way for which at least part of world opinion will grant
-the moral justification of military action.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk110'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“But even a period of tension, more or less preceding a war,
-must terminate in sudden action on our part, which must
-have the elements of surprise as regards time and extent, before
-the enemy is so advanced in military preparedness that
-he cannot be surpassed.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk111'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3. Conclusions for the preparation of Fall Grün.
-<span class='pageno' title='44' id='Page_44'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk112'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“a. For the ‘armed war’ it is essential that the surprise element,
-as the most important factor contributing to success,
-be made full use of by appropriate preparatory measures, already
-in peacetime and by an unexpectedly rapid course of
-the action. Thus it is essential to create a situation within
-the first 2 or 3 days which plainly demonstrates to hostile
-nations, eager to intervene, the hopelessness of the Czechoslovakian
-military situation and which, at the same time, will
-give nations with territorial claims on Czechoslovakia an incentive
-to intervene immediately against Czechoslovakia. In
-such a case, intervention by Poland and Hungary against
-Czechoslovakia may be expected, especially if France—due to
-the obvious pro-German attitude of Italy—fears, or at least
-hesitates, to unleash a European war by intervening against
-Germany. Attempts by Russia to give military support to
-Czechoslovakia mainly by the Air Force are to be expected.
-If concrete successes are not achieved by the land operations
-within the first few days, a European crisis will certainly
-result. This knowledge must give commanders of all ranks
-the impetus to decided and bold action.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk113'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“b. The Propaganda War must on the one hand intimidate
-Czechoslovakia by threats and wear down her power of resistance;
-on the other hand issue directions to national groups
-for support in the ‘armed war’ and influence the neutrals into
-our way of thinking. I reserve further directions and determination
-of the date.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk114'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“4. Tasks of the Armed Forces. Armed Forces preparations
-are to be made on the following basis:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk115'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“a. The mass of all forces must be employed against Czechoslovakia.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk116'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“b. For the West, a minimum of forces are to be provided as
-rear cover which may be required, the other frontiers in the
-East against Poland and Lithuania are merely to be protected,
-the southern frontiers to be watched.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk117'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“c. The sections of the Army which can be rapidly employed
-must force the frontier fortifications with speed and decision
-and must break into Czechoslovakia with the greatest daring
-in the certainty that the bulk of the mobile army will follow
-them with the utmost speed. Preparations for this are to be
-made and timed in such a way that the sections of the army
-which can be rapidly employed cross the frontier at the appointed
-time, at the same time as the penetration by the Air
-Force, before the enemy can become aware of our mobilization.
-For this, a timetable between Army and Air Force is
-<span class='pageno' title='45' id='Page_45'></span>
-to be worked out in conjunction with OKW and submitted to
-me for approval.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk118'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“5. Missions for the branches of the Armed Forces.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk119'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“a. Army. The basic principle of the surprise attack against
-Czechoslovakia must not be endangered nor the initiative of
-the Air Force be wasted by the inevitable time required for
-transporting the bulk of the field forces by rail. Therefore it
-is first of all essential to the Army that as many assault columns
-as possible be employed at the same time as the surprise
-attack by the Air Force. These assault columns—the
-composition of each, according to their tasks at that time—must
-be formed with troops which can be employed rapidly
-owing to their proximity to the frontier or to motorization
-and to special measures of readiness. It must be the purpose
-of these thrusts to break into the Czechoslovakian fortification
-lines at numerous points and in a strategically favorable direction,
-to achieve a break-through, or to break them down
-from the rear. For the success of this operation, co-operation
-with the Sudeten-German frontier population, with deserters
-from the Czechoslovakian Army, with parachutists or airborne
-troops and with units of the sabotage service will be
-of importance. The bulk of the army has the task of frustrating
-the Czechoslovakian plan of defense, of preventing the
-Czechoslovakian army from escaping .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Is it necessary to read all this detail?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: I was just worried about not getting it into
-the transcript.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: It seems to me that this is all detail, that
-before you pass from the document you ought to read the document
-on Page 15, which introduces it and which gives the date of it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: I think so. It is a letter dated:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Berlin, 30 May 1938; copy of the fourth copy; Supreme
-Commander of the Armed Forces; most secret; access only
-through officer; written by an officer. Signed Keitel; distributed
-to C-in-C Army, C-in-C Navy, C-in-C Air Force.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk120'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“By order of the Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces,
-Part 2, Section II, of the directive on the unified preparations
-for war of the Armed Forces dated 24 June 1937, (Ob. d. W)”—with
-some symbols, including “Chefsache” (top secret)—“(two-front
-war with main effort on the Southeast—strategic
-concentration Green) is to be replaced by the attached version.
-Its execution must be assured as from 1 October 1938
-at the latest. Alterations in other parts of the directives must
-be expected during the next week.
-<span class='pageno' title='46' id='Page_46'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk121'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“By order of Chief of the Supreme Command of the Armed
-Forces, signed, Keitel.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk122'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Certified a true copy, Zeitzler, Oberstleutnant on the General
-Staff.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In line with the suggestion of the presiding Justice, I shall omit
-the detailed instructions which are set out for action by the Luftwaffe
-and by the Navy, and I turn next to the last paragraph of
-the directive, which will be found on Page 19 of the English version:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In war economy it is essential that in the field of the armament
-industry a maximum deployment of forces is made possible
-through increased supplies. In the course of operations,
-it is of value to contribute to the reinforcement of the total
-war—economic strength—by rapidly reconnoitering and restarting
-important factories. For this reason the sparing of
-Czechoslovakian industrial and factory installations, insofar
-as military operations permit, can be of decisive importance
-to us.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In other words, the Nazi conspirators, 4 months before the date
-of their planned attack, were already looking forward to the contribution
-which the Czech industrial plant would make to further
-Nazi war efforts and economy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And the final paragraph of this directive, Paragraph 7, on Page 19:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“All preparations for sabotage and insurrection will be made
-by OKW. They will be made, in agreement with, and according
-to, the requirement of the branches of the Armed Forces,
-so that their effects accord with the operations of the Army
-and Air Force as to time and locality.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk123'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Signed Adolf Hitler.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk124'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Certified a true copy, Zeitzler, Oberstleutnant on the General
-Staff.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Three weeks later, on 18 June 1938, a draft for a new directive
-was prepared and initialed by the Defendant Keitel. This is Item 14
-at Pages 27 to 32 of the Big Schmundt file. It did not supersede
-the 30 May directive. I shall read the third and fifth paragraphs on
-Page 28 of the English translation, and the last paragraph on
-Page 29:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The immediate aim is a solution of the Czech problem by
-my own free decision; this stands in the foreground of my
-political intentions. I am determined as from 1 October 1938
-to use to the full every favorable political opportunity to
-realize this aim.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then skipping a paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“However, I will decide to take action against Czechoslovakia
-only if I am firmly convinced, as in the case of the occupation
-<span class='pageno' title='47' id='Page_47'></span>
-of the demilitarized zone and the entry into Austria, that
-France will not march and therefore England will not intervene.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then skipping to the last paragraph on the 29th page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The directives necessary for the prosecution of the war itself
-will be issued by me from time to time.”</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk125'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“K”—initial of Keitel, and—“Z”—initial of Zeitzler.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The second and third parts of this directive contain general
-directions for the deployment of troops and for precautionary measures
-in view of the possibility that during the execution of the Fall
-Grün (or Case Green) France or England might declare war on Germany.
-Six pages of complicated schedules which follow this draft
-in the original have not been translated into English. These schedules,
-which constitute Item 15 in the Schmundt file, give a timetable
-of specific measures for the preparation of the Army, Navy,
-and Luftwaffe for the contemplated action.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Corroboration for the documents in the Schmundt file is found
-in General Jodl’s diary, our Document Number 1780-PS and United
-States Exhibit Number 72, from which I quoted portions during the
-Austrian presentation. I now quote from three entries in this diary
-written in the spring of 1938. Although the first entry is not dated
-it appears to have been written several months after the annexation
-of Austria, and here I read under the heading on Page 3 of the English
-translation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Later undated entry:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk126'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“After annexation of Austria the Führer mentions that there
-is no hurry to solve the Czech question, because Austria had
-to be digested first. Nevertheless, preparations for Case Green
-will have to be carried out energetically. They will have to
-be newly prepared on the basis of the changed strategic position
-because of the annexation of Austria. State of preparation,
-see Memorandum L-1-A of 19 April, reported to the
-Führer on 21 April.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk127'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The intention of the Führer not to touch the Czech problem
-as yet will be changed because of the Czech strategic troop
-concentration of 21 May, which occurs without any German
-threat and without the slightest cause for it. Because of Germany’s
-self-restraint the consequences lead to a loss of prestige
-for the Führer, which he is not willing to take once
-more. Therefore, the new order is issued for Green on
-30 May.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then the entry, 23 May:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Major Schmundt reports ideas of the Führer.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Further
-conferences, which gradually reveal the exact intentions of
-<span class='pageno' title='48' id='Page_48'></span>
-the Führer, take place with the Chief of the Armed Forces
-High Command (OKW) on 28 May, 3 and 9 June,—see inclosures
-(War Diary).”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then the entry of 30 May:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer signs directive Green, where he states his final
-decision to destroy Czechoslovakia soon and thereby initiates
-military preparation all along the line. The previous intentions
-of the Army must be changed considerably in the direction
-of an immediate break-through into Czechoslovakia right
-on D-Day”—X-Tag—“combined with aerial penetration by
-the Air Force.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk128'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Further details are derived from directive for strategic concentration
-of the Army. The whole contrast becomes acute
-once more between the Führer’s intuition that we must do it
-this year, and the opinion of the Army that we cannot do it
-as yet, as most certainly the Western Powers will interfere
-and we are not as yet equal to them.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>During the spring and summer of 1938 the Luftwaffe was also
-engaged in planning in connection with the forthcoming Case Green
-and the further expansion of the Reich.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now offer in evidence Document R-150, as United States Exhibit
-82. This is a top-secret document dated 2 June 1938, issued
-by Air Group Command 3, and entitled “Plan Study 1938, Instruction
-for Deployment and Combat, ‘Case Red.’ ”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Case Red” is the code name for action against the Western
-Powers if need be. Twenty-eight copies of this document were
-made, of which this is number 16. This is another staff plan, this
-time for mobilization and employment of the Luftwaffe in the event
-of war with France. It is given significance by the considerable progress
-by this date of the planning for the attack on Czechoslovakia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I quote from the second paragraph on Page 3 of the English
-translation, referring to the various possibilities under which war
-with France may occur. You will note that they are all predicated
-on the assumption of a German-Czech conflict.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“France will either (a) interfere in the struggle between the
-Reich and Czechoslovakia in the course of Case Green, or (b)
-start hostilities simultaneously with Czechoslovakia. (c) It is
-possible but not likely that France will begin the fight while
-Czechoslovakia still remains aloof.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then, reading down lower on the page under the heading
-“Intention”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Regardless of whether France enters the war as a result of
-Case Green or whether she makes the opening move of the
-war simultaneously with Czechoslovakia, in any case the mass
-<span class='pageno' title='49' id='Page_49'></span>
-of the German offensive formations will, in conjunction with
-the Army, first deliver the decisive blow against Czechoslovakia.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By mid-summer direct and detailed planning for Case Green
-was being carried out by the Luftwaffe. In early August, at the
-direction of the Luftwaffe General Staff, the German Air Attaché
-in Prague reconnoitered the Freudenthal area of Czechoslovakia
-south of Upper Silesia for suitable landing grounds.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I offer in evidence Document 1536-PS as Exhibit USA-83, a report
-of the Luftwaffe General Staff, Intelligence Division, dated
-12 August 1938. This was a top-secret document for general officers
-only, of which only two copies were made.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Attached as an enclosure was the report of Major Moericke, the
-German Attaché in Prague, dated 4 August 1938. I quote the first
-four paragraphs of the enclosure:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I was ordered by the General Staff of the Air Force to
-reconnoiter the land in the region Freudenthal-Freihermersdorf
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Page 3 of the document?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: Yes. “.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. for landing possibilities.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“For this purpose I obtained private lodgings in Freudenthal
-with the manufacturer Macholdt, through one of my trusted
-men in Prague.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk129'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I had specifically ordered this man to give no details about
-me to Macholdt, particularly about my official position.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk130'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I used my official car (Dienst Pkw) for the journey to Freudenthal
-taking precautions against being observed.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By 25 August the imminence of the attack on Czechoslovakia
-compelled the issuance by the Luftwaffe of a detailed intelligence
-memorandum, entitled “Extended Case Green”; in other words, an
-estimate of possible action by the Western Powers during the attack
-on Czechoslovakia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now offer this document in evidence, Number 375-PS as Exhibit
-USA-84. This is a top-secret memorandum of the Intelligence
-Section of the Luftwaffe, General Staff, dated Berlin, 25 August
-1938. Based on the assumption that Great Britain and France would
-declare war on Germany during Case Green, this study contains
-an estimate of the strategy and air strength of the Western Powers
-as of 1 October 1938, the target date for Case Green. I quote the
-first two sentences of the document. That is under the heading
-“Initial Political Situation”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The basic assumption is that France will declare war during
-the Case Green. It is presumed that France will decide upon
-<span class='pageno' title='50' id='Page_50'></span>
-war only if active military assistance by Great Britain is
-definitely assured.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, knowledge of the pending or impending action against
-Czechoslovakia was not confined to a close circle of high officials of
-the Reich and the Nazi Party. During the summer Germany’s
-allies, Italy and Hungary, were apprised by one means or another of
-the plans of the Nazi conspirators. I offer in evidence Document
-2800-PS as Exhibit USA-85. This is a captured document from the
-German Foreign Office files, a confidential memorandum of a conversation
-with the Italian Ambassador Attolico, in Berlin on 18 July
-1938. At the bottom is a handwritten note headed “For the Reichsminister
-only”, and the Reichsminister was the Defendant Ribbentrop.
-I now read this note. I read from the note the third and
-fourth paragraphs:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Attolico added that we had made it unmistakably clear to
-the Italians what our intentions are regarding Czechoslovakia.
-He also knew the appointed time well enough so that he
-could take perhaps a 2 months’ holiday now which he could
-not do later on.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk131'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Giving an idea of the attitude of other governments, Attolico
-mentioned that the Romanian Government had refused to
-grant application for leave to its Berlin Minister.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Would this be a convenient time to break off
-for 10 minutes?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: Yes, Sir.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: May it please the Tribunal, a month later
-Mussolini sent a message to Berlin asking that he be told the date
-on which Case Green would take place. I offer in evidence Document
-Number 2791-PS as Exhibit USA-86, a German Foreign Office
-note on a conversation with Ambassador Attolico. This note is
-signed “R” for Ribbentrop and dated 23 August 1938. I now read
-two paragraphs from this memorandum:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“On the voyage of the <span class='it'>Patria</span> Ambassador Attolico explained
-to me that he had instructions to request the notification
-of a contemplated time for German action against
-Czechoslovakia from the German Government.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk132'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In case the Czechs should again cause a provocation against
-Germany, Germany would march. This would be tomorrow,
-in 6 months, or perhaps in a year. However, I could promise
-him that the German Government, in case of an increasing
-gravity of the situation or as soon as the Führer made his
-<span class='pageno' title='51' id='Page_51'></span>
-decision, would notify the Italian Chief of Government as rapidly
-as possible. In any case, the Italian Government will be
-the first one who will receive such a notification.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: You did not tell us what the initial was, did
-you?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: The initial “R” for Ribbentrop, and the date
-23 August 1938.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Four days later Attolico again asked to be notified of the date
-of the pending attack. I offer Document Number 2792-PS as Exhibit
-USA-87—another German Foreign Office memorandum, and from
-that document I read three paragraphs under the heading “R. M.
-251.”</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Ambassador Attolico paid me a visit today at 12 o’clock to
-communicate the following:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk133'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“He had received another written instruction from Mussolini
-asking that Germany communicate in time the probable date
-of action against Czechoslovakia. Mussolini asked for such
-notification, as Mr. Attolico assured me, in order ‘to be able
-to take in due time the necessary measures on the French
-frontier.’ Berlin, 27 August 1938; ‘R’ ”—for Ribbentrop, and
-then:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk134'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“N. B. I replied to Ambassador Attolico, just as on his former
-démarche, that I could not impart any date to him; that, however,
-in any case Mussolini would be the first one to be informed
-of any decision. Berlin, 2 September 1938.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hungary, which borders Czechoslovakia to the southeast, was
-from the first considered to be a possible participant in Case Green.
-You will recall that in early March 1938 Defendants Keitel and
-Ribbentrop had exchanged letters on the question of bringing
-Hungary into the Nazi plan. At that time the decision was in the
-negative, but by mid-August 1938 the Nazi conspirators were attempting
-to persuade Hungary to join in the attack.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From August 21 to 26 Admiral Horthy and some of his ministers
-visited Germany. Inevitably there were discussions of the Czechoslovak
-question. I now offer Document 2796-PS as Exhibit USA-88.
-This is a captured German Foreign Office account signed by Von
-Weizsäcker of the conversations between Hitler and Ribbentrop and
-a Hungarian Delegation consisting of Horthy, Imredy, and Kanya
-aboard the S. S. <span class='it'>Patria</span> on 23 August 1938. In this conference Ribbentrop
-inquired about the Hungarian attitude in the event of a
-German attack on Czechoslovakia and suggested that such an attack
-would prove to be a good opportunity for Hungary.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Hungarians, with the exception of Horthy, who wished to put
-the Hungarian intention to participate on record, proved reluctant
-<span class='pageno' title='52' id='Page_52'></span>
-to commit themselves. Thereupon Hitler emphasized Ribbentrop’s
-statement and said that whoever wanted to join the meal would
-have to participate in the cooking as well. I now quote from this
-document the first two paragraphs:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“While in the forenoon of the 23rd of August the Führer and
-the Regent of Hungary were engaged in a political discussion,
-the Hungarian Ministers Imredy and Kanya were in conference
-with Von Ribbentrop. Von Weizsäcker also attended the
-conference.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk135'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Von Kanya introduced two subjects for discussion: Point 1,
-the negotiations between Hungary and the Little Entente;
-and 2, the Czechoslovakian problem.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then I skip two paragraphs and read the fifth paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Von Ribbentrop inquired what Hungary’s attitude would be
-if the Führer would carry out his decision to answer a new
-Czech provocation by force. The reply of the Hungarians
-presented two kinds of obstacles: The Yugoslavian neutrality
-must be assured if Hungary marches towards the north and
-perhaps the east; moreover, the Hungarian rearmament had
-only been started and one to two more years time for its
-development should be allowed.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk136'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Von Ribbentrop then explained to the Hungarians that the
-Yugoslavs would not dare to march while they were between
-the pincers of the Axis Powers. Romania alone would therefore
-not move. England and France would also remain tranquil.
-England would not recklessly risk her empire. She
-knew our newly acquired power. In reference to time, however,
-for the above-mentioned situation, nothing definite could
-be predicted since it would depend on Czech provocation. Von
-Ribbentrop repeated that, ‘Whoever desires revision must exploit
-the good opportunity and participate.’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk137'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Hungarian reply thus remained a conditional one. Upon
-the question of Von Ribbentrop as to what purpose the desired
-General Staff conferences were to have, not much more
-was brought forward than the Hungarian desire of a mutual
-inventory of military material and preparedness for the Czech
-conflict. The clear political basis for such a conflict—the time
-of a Hungarian intervention—was not obtained.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk138'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the meantime, more positive language was used by Von
-Horthy in his talk with the Führer. He wished not to hide
-his doubts with regard to the English attitude, but he wished
-to put on record Hungary’s intention to participate. The
-Hungarian Ministers were, and remained even later, more
-skeptical since they feel more strongly about the immediate
-danger for Hungary with its unprotected flanks.
-<span class='pageno' title='53' id='Page_53'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk139'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“When Von Imredy had a discussion with the Führer in the
-afternoon he was very relieved when the Führer explained
-to him that in regard to the situation in question he demanded
-nothing of Hungary. He himself would not know the
-time. Whoever wanted to join the meal would have to participate
-in the cooking as well. Should Hungary wish conferences
-of the General Staffs he would have no objections.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I think perhaps that sentence, “Whoever wanted to join the meal
-would have to participate in the cooking as well,” is perhaps as
-cynical a statement as any statesman has ever been guilty of.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By the third day of the conference the Germans were able to
-note that, in the event of a German-Czech conflict, Hungary would
-be sufficiently armed for participation on 1 October. I now offer
-in evidence Document Number 2797-PS as Exhibit USA-89, another
-captured German Foreign Office memorandum of a conversation
-between Ribbentrop and Kanya on 25 August 1938. You will note
-that the English mimeographed translation bears the date 29 August.
-That is incorrect; it should read 25 August. I read the last paragraph
-from that document, or the last two:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Concerning Hungary’s military preparedness in case of a
-German-Czech conflict Von Kanya mentioned several days ago
-that his country would need a period of one to two years in
-order to develop adequately the armed strength of Hungary.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk140'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“During today’s conversation Von Kanya corrected this remark
-and said that Hungary’s military situation was much
-better. His country would be ready, as far as armaments
-were concerned, to take part in the conflict by October 1 of
-this year.”—Signed with an illegible signature which probably
-is that of Weizsäcker.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The account of the German-Hungarian conference again finds its
-corroboration in General Jodl’s diary, Document Number 1780-PS,
-from which I have already several times read. The entry in that
-diary for 21 to 26 August on Page 4 of the English version of the
-document reads as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Visit to Germany of the Hungarian Regent. Accompanied
-by the Prime Minister, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, and
-the War Minister Von Raatz.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk141'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“They arrived with the idea that in the course of a great war
-after a few years, and with the help of German troops, the
-old State of Hungary can be re-established. They leave with
-the understanding that we have neither demands from them
-nor claims against them, but that Germany will not stand for
-a second provocation by Czechoslovakia, even if it should be
-<span class='pageno' title='54' id='Page_54'></span>
-tomorrow. If they want to participate at that moment, it is
-up to them.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk142'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Germany, however, will never play the role of arbitrator
-between them and Poland. The Hungarians agree; but they
-believe that when the issue arises a period of 48 hours would
-be indispensable to them to find out Yugoslavia’s attitude.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The upshot of the talks with the Hungarians proved to be a staff
-conference on 6 September.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I quote again from Jodl’s diary, the entry for 6 September, beginning
-at the end of that same page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Chief of General Staff, General of Artillery Halder, has a
-conference with the Hungarian Chief of General Staff Fischer.
-Before that he is briefed by me on the political attitude of
-the Führer, especially his order not to give any hint on the
-exact moment. The same with OAI, General Von Stülpnagel.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is somewhat interesting to find a high-ranking general giving
-a briefing on such political matters.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then we come to final actual preparations for the attack. With
-a 1 October target date set for Case Green, there was a noticeable
-increase in the tempo of the military preparations in late August
-and September. Actual preparations for the attack on Czechoslovakia
-were well under way. The agenda of the Nazi conspirators
-was devoted to technical details, the timing of “X-days,” questions
-of mobilization, questions of transport and supplies.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On 26 August the Defendant Jodl initialed a memorandum entitled,
-“Timing of the X-Order and the Question of Advance Measures.”
-This is Item 17 at Pages 37 and 38 of the English translation
-of the Schmundt file on Case Green, our Number 388-PS.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I should like to invite the special attention of the Tribunal to
-this memorandum. It demonstrates beyond the slightest doubt the
-complicity of the OKW and of Defendant Keitel and Jodl in the
-shameful fabrication of an incident as an excuse for war. It reveals
-in bare outline the deceit, the barbarity, the completely criminal
-character of the attack that Germany was preparing to launch.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I ask leave to read this document in full:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Chief Section L; for chiefs only; written by General Staff
-officer; top secret; note on progress of report; Berlin, 24 August
-1938; access only through officer; 1 copy.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk143'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Timing of the X-Order and the Question of Advance
-Measures.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk144'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Luftwaffe’s endeavor to take the enemy air forces by
-surprise at their peacetime airports justifiably leads them to
-oppose measures taken in advance of the X-Order and to
-demand that the X-Order itself be given sufficiently late on
-<span class='pageno' title='55' id='Page_55'></span>
-X minus 1 to prevent the fact of Germany’s mobilization
-becoming known to Czechoslovakia on that day.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk145'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Army’s efforts are tending in the opposite direction. It
-intends to let OKW initiate all advance measures between
-X minus 3 and X minus 1 which will contribute to the smooth
-and rapid working of the mobilization. With this in mind
-OKH also demands that the X-Order be given to the Army
-not later than 1400 on X minus 1.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk146'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“To this the following must be said:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk147'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“ ‘Operation Green’ ”—or Aktion Grün—“will be set in motion
-by means of an ‘incident’ in Czechoslovakia which will give
-Germany provocation for military intervention. The fixing
-of the exact time for this incident is of the utmost importance.”—I
-call special attention to that sentence—“The fixing of the
-exact time for this incident is of the utmost importance.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk148'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It must come at a time when the over-all meteorological
-conditions are favorable for our superior air forces to go into
-action and at an hour which will enable authentic news of
-it”—news of this prepared incident—“to reach us on the afternoon
-of X minus 1.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk149'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It can then be spontaneously answered by the giving of the
-X-Order at 1400 on X minus 1.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk150'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“On X minus 2 the Navy, Army, and Air Force will merely
-receive an advance warning.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk151'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“If the Führer intends to follow this plan of action, all
-further discussion is superfluous.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk152'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“For then no advance measures may be taken before X minus
-1 for which there is not an innocent explanation as we shall
-otherwise appear to have manufactured the incident. Orders
-for absolutely essential advance measures must be given in
-good time and camouflaged with the help of numerous
-maneuvers and exercises.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk153'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Also, the question raised by the Foreign Office as to whether all
-Germans should be called back in time from prospective enemy
-territories must in no way lead to the conspicuous departure
-from Czechoslovakia of any German subjects before the incident.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk154'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Even a warning of diplomatic representatives in Prague is
-impossible before the first air attack, although the consequences
-could be very grave in the event of their becoming
-victims of such an attack (that is the death of representatives
-of friendly or confirmed neutral powers).</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk155'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“If, for technical reasons, the evening hours should be considered
-desirable for the incident, then the following day cannot
-be X-Day, but it must be the day after that.
-<span class='pageno' title='56' id='Page_56'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk156'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In any case we must act on the principle that nothing must
-be done before the incident which might point to mobilization,
-and that the swiftest possible action must be taken after
-the incident (X-Fall).</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk157'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It is the purpose of these notes to point out what a great
-interest the Wehrmacht has in the incident and that it must
-be informed of the Führer’s intentions in good time—insofar
-as the Abwehr Section is not also charged with the organization
-of the incident.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk158'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I request that the Führer’s decision be obtained on these
-points.”—Signed—“J”—(Jodl).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In handwriting, at the bottom of the page of that document, are
-the notes of the indefatigable Schmundt, Hitler’s adjutant. These
-reveal that the memorandum was submitted to Hitler on August 30;
-that Hitler agreed to act along these lines, and that Jodl was so
-notified on 31 August. There follows Jodl’s initials once more.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On 3 September Keitel and Von Brauchitsch met with Hitler
-at the Berghof. Again Schmundt kept notes of the conference. These
-will be found as Item 18 at Pages 39 and 40 of the Document
-Number 388-PS. I shall read the first three short paragraphs of
-these minutes:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Colonel General Von Brauchitsch reports on the exact time
-of the transfer of the troops to ‘exercise areas’ for ‘Grün’.
-Field units to be transferred on 28 September. From here will
-then be ready for action. When X-Day becomes known field
-units carry out exercises in opposite directions.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk159'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Führer has objection. Troops assemble field units a 2-day
-march away. Carry out camouflage exercises everywhere.”—Then
-there is a question mark.—“OKH must know when
-X-Day is by 1200 noon, 27 September.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>You will note that Von Brauchitsch reported that field troops
-would be transferred to the proper areas for Case Green on 28 September
-and would then be ready for action. You will also note that
-the OKH must know when X-Day is by 12 noon on 27 September.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>During the remainder of the conference Hitler gave his views
-on the strategy the German armies should employ and the strength
-of the Czech defenses they would encounter. He spoke of the possibility,
-and I quote, “of drawing in the Henlein people.” The
-situation in the West still troubled him. Schmundt further noted,
-and here I read the final sentence from Page 40 of the English
-transcript:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer gives orders for the development of the Western
-fortifications: Improvement of advance positions around
-Aachen and Saarbrücken; construction of 300 to 400 battery
-<span class='pageno' title='57' id='Page_57'></span>
-positions (1600 artillery pieces). He emphasizes flanking
-action.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Five days later General Stülpnagel asked Defendant Jodl for
-written assurance that the OKH would be informed 5 days in
-advance about the impending action. In the evening Jodl conferred
-with Luftwaffe generals about the co-ordination of ground and air
-operations at the start of the attack. I now read the 8 September
-entry in General Jodl’s diary, Page 5 of the English translation of
-Document 1780-PS.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“General Stülpnagel, OAI, asks for written assurance that the
-Army High Command will be informed 5 days in advance if
-the plan is to take place. I agree and add that the over-all
-meteorological situation can be estimated to some extent only
-for 2 days in advance and that therefore the plans may be
-changed up to this moment (X-Day minus 2)”—or as the German
-puts it—“X-2 Tag.”</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk160'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“General Stülpnagel mentions that for the first time he wonders
-whether the previous basis of the plan is not being
-abandoned. It presupposed that the Western Powers would
-not interfere decisively. It gradually seems as if the Führer
-would stick to his decision, even though he may no longer be
-of this opinion. It must be added that Hungary is at least
-moody and that .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Italy is reserved.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, this is Jodl talking:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I must admit that I am worrying, too, when comparing the
-change of opinion about political and military potentialities,
-according to directives of 24 June ’37, 5 November ’37,
-7 December ’37, 30 May 1938, with the last statements. In
-spite of that, one must be aware of the fact that the other
-nations will do everything they can to apply pressure on us.
-We must pass this test of nerves, but because only very few
-people know the art of withstanding this pressure successfully,
-the only possible solution is to inform only a very small
-circle of officers of news that causes us anxiety, and not to
-have it circulate through anterooms as heretofore.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk161'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1800 hours to 2100 hours: Conference with Chief of High
-Command of Armed Forces and Chief of General Staff of the
-Air Force. (Present were General Jeschonnek, Kammhuber,
-Sternburg, and myself). We agree about the promulgation of
-the X-Day order”—X-Befehl—“(X-1, 4 o’clock) and pre-announcement
-to the Air Force (X-Day minus 1”—X minus
-1 day—“7 o’clock). The ‘Y’ time has yet to be examined; some
-formations have an approach flight of one hour.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Late on the evening of the following day, 9 September, Hitler
-met with Defendant Keitel and Generals Von Brauchitsch and
-<span class='pageno' title='58' id='Page_58'></span>
-Halder at Nuremberg. Dr. Todt, the construction engineer, later
-joined this conference, which lasted from 10 in the evening until
-3:30 the following morning. Schmundt’s minutes on this conference
-are Item 19 in the large Schmundt file, on Pages 41 to 43 of Document
-388-PS.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In this meeting General Halder reviewed the missions assigned
-to four of the German armies being committed to the attack, the
-2d, the 10th, the 12th and the 14th German Armies. With his
-characteristic enthusiasm for military planning, Hitler then delivered
-a soliloquy on strategic considerations, which should be taken into
-account as the attack developed. I shall quote only four paragraphs,
-beginning with the summary of General Von Brauchitsch’s remarks,
-on the bottom of Page 42:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“General Oberst Von Brauchitsch: ‘Employment of motorized
-divisions was based on the difficult rail situation in Austria and
-the difficulties in getting other divs’ ”—that is for divisions—“ ‘ready
-to march into the area at the right time. In the
-West vehicles will have to leave on the 20th of September,
-if X-Day remains as planned. Workers leave on the 23d, by
-relays. Specialist workers remain according to decision by
-Army Command II.’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk162'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer: ‘Does not see why workers have to return home
-as early as X-11. Other workers and people are also on the
-way on mobilization day. Also the railroad cars will stand
-around unnecessarily later on.’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk163'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“General Keitel: ‘Workers are not under the jurisdiction of
-district commands in the West. Trains must be assembled.’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk164'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Von Brauchitsch: ‘235,000 men RAD (Labor Service) will be
-drafted, 96 construction battalions will be distributed (also in
-the East). 40,000 trained laborers stay in the West.’ ”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From this day forward the Nazi conspirators were occupied with
-the intricate planning which is required before such an attack. On
-11 September Defendant Jodl conferred with a representative of
-the Propaganda Ministry about methods of refuting German violations
-of international law and of exploiting those of the Czechs. I
-read the 11 September entry in the Jodl diary at Page 5 of the
-English translation of 1780-PS:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the afternoon conference with Secretary of State Hahnke,
-for the Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda on
-imminent common tasks. These joint preparations for refutation”—Widerlegung—“of
-our own violations of international
-law, and the exploitation of its violations by the enemy, were
-considered particularly important.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This discussion developed into a detailed study compiled by
-Section L, that is, Jodl’s section of the OKW.
-<span class='pageno' title='59' id='Page_59'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now offer in evidence Document C-2 as Exhibit USA-90, which
-is a carbon copy of the original, signed in pencil. Seven copies of
-this captured document, as it shows on its face, were prepared and
-distributed on 1 October 1938 to the OKH, the OKM, the Luftwaffe,
-and the Foreign Office.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In this study anticipated violations by Germany of international
-law in connection with the invasion of Czechoslovakia are listed
-and counterpropaganda suggested for the use of the propaganda
-agencies. It is a highly interesting top-secret document and with
-a glance at the original you can see the careful form in which the
-study of anticipated violations of international law and propagandists
-refutations thereof were set out.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The document is prepared in tabular form, in which the anticipated
-instances of violation of international law are listed in the
-left hand column. In the second column are given specific examples
-of the incidents. In the third and fourth column the position to be
-taken toward these incidents, in violation of international law and
-in violation of the laws of warfare, is set forth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The fifth column, which in this document unfortunately is blank,
-was reserved for the explanations to be offered by the Propaganda
-Minister. I first quote from the covering letter:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Enclosed is a list drawn up by Section L of the OKW, of the
-violations of international law which may be expected on the
-part of fighting troops.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk165'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Owing to the short time allowed for the compilation, Columns
-c-1 and c-2 had to be filled in directly therefore, for the
-time being.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk166'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The branches of the Armed Forces are requested to send in
-an opinion so that a final version may be drawn up.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk167'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The same is requested of the Foreign Office.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk168'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Chief of the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk169'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“By order”—signed—“Bürckner.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I am sorry that I perhaps cannot take the time to read extensively
-from this document. I shall confine myself to reading the
-first 10 hypothetical incidents for which justification must be found
-from the second column, Column b of the table:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“First: In an air raid on Prague the British Embassy is
-destroyed.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk170'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Second: Englishmen or Frenchmen are injured or killed.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk171'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Third: The Hradschin is destroyed in an air raid on Prague.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk172'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Fourth: On account of a report that the Czechs have used
-gas, the firing of gas projectiles is ordered.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk173'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Fifth: Czech civilians, not recognizable as soldiers, are caught
-in the act of sabotage (destruction of an important bridge,
-<span class='pageno' title='60' id='Page_60'></span>
-destruction of foodstuffs and fodder) are discovered looting
-wounded or dead soldiers and thereupon shot.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk174'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Sixth: Captured Czech soldiers or Czech civilians are detailed
-to do road work or to load munitions, and so forth.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk175'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Seventh: For military reasons it is necessary to requisition
-billets, foodstuffs, and fodder from the Czech population. As
-a result, the latter suffer from want.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk176'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Eighth: Czech population is, for military reasons, compulsorily
-evacuated to the rear area.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk177'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Ninth: Churches are used for military accommodations.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk178'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Tenth: In the course of their duty, German aircraft fly over
-Polish territory where they are involved in an air battle with
-Czech aircraft.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From Nuremberg on the 10th of September, Hitler issued an
-order bringing the Reichsarbeitsdienst (the German Labor Service)
-under the OKW. This top-secret order .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Are you passing from that document now?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Would you read the classification with
-reference to gas?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: Perhaps I should, Sir.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: It is number 4.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: Incident number 4?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: Well, number 4 was the supposed incident.
-“On account of a report that the Czechs have used gas, the firing
-of gas projectiles is ordered.” Under the column, “Attitude of International
-Law Group”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“According to the declaration agreed to in June 1925 by
-40 states, including Czechoslovakia, the employment of poison
-gases, chemical warfare agents, and bacteriological substances
-is expressly forbidden. Quite a number of states made the
-reservation to this declaration on the prohibition of gas warfare.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then, under the column headed “Justification by the Laws of
-War”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“If the assertion, that the opponent—in this case the Czechs—used
-a prohibited gas in warfare, is to be believed by the
-world, it must be possible to prove it. If that is possible, the
-firing of gas projectiles is justified, and it must be given out
-in public that it can be proved that the enemy was the
-first to violate the prohibition. It is therefore particularly
-<span class='pageno' title='61' id='Page_61'></span>
-important to furnish this proof. If the assertion is unfounded
-or only partially founded, the gas attack is to be represented
-only as the need for carrying out a justified reprisal, in the
-same way as the Italians did in the Abyssinian war. In this
-case, however, the justification for such harsh reprisals must
-also be proved.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From Nuremberg on the 10th of September, Hitler issued an
-order bringing the Reichsarbeitsdienst (the German Labor Service)
-under the OKW .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: There is another short passage which seems
-to be material.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: I was very much tempted to read the whole
-document.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The justification of number 10.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: Number 10 was, “In course of their duty,
-German aircraft fly over Polish territory where they are involved
-in an air battle with Czech aircraft.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Under the heading, “Attitude of the International Law Group”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“According to Article 1 of the Fifth Hague Convention of
-18 October 1907, the territory of neutral powers is not to be
-violated. A deliberate violation by flying over this territory
-is a breach of international law if the neutral powers have
-declared an air barrier for combat aircraft. If German planes
-fly over Polish territory this constitutes a violation of international
-law, provided that this action is not expressly permitted.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, under the heading, “Justification by the Laws of War,”
-is this:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“An attempt at denials should first be made; if this is unsuccessful
-a request for pardon should be made (on the
-grounds of miscalculation of position) to the Polish Government
-and compensation for damage guaranteed.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I had referred to an order issued by Hitler on 10 September
-1938 from Nuremberg, bringing the German Labor Service under
-the OKW. This top-secret order, of which 25 copies were made, is
-Item 20 in the Schmundt file, Page 44. I will read that order:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. The whole RAD organization comes under the command
-of the Supreme Command of the Army effective 15 September.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk179'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. The Chief of OKW decides on the first commitments of
-this organization in conjunction with the Reich Labor Leader
-(Reichsarbeitsführer) and on assignments from time to time to
-the Supreme Commands of the Navy, Army, and Air Force.
-Where questions arise with regard to competency he will
-make a final decision in accordance with my instructions.
-<span class='pageno' title='62' id='Page_62'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk180'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3. For the time being this order is to be made known only
-to the departments and personnel immediately concerned.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk181'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Signed, Adolf Hitler.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Four days later, on 14 September, Defendant Keitel issued
-detailed instructions for the employment of specific RAD units.
-This order is Item 21 in the Schmundt file, at Page 45 in the English
-translation. I do not think I need read the order.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There is another order issued by the Defendant Jodl on 16 September,
-Item 24, at Page 48 in the Schmundt file. I think I need
-only read the heading or title of that:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Subject: Employment of Reich Labor Service for maneuvers
-with Wehrmacht. Effective 15 September the following units
-will be trained militarily under direction of the Commander-in-Chief
-of the Army.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Two further entries in the Defendant Jodl’s diary give further
-indications of the problems of the OKW in this period of mid-September,
-just 2 weeks before the anticipated X-Day.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now read the answers for the 15th and 16th September, at
-Pages 5 and 6 of the English translation of the Jodl diary.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“15 September: In the morning, conference with Chief of
-Army High Command and Chief of General Staffs of Army
-and Air Force, the question was discussed as to what could
-be done if the Führer insists on advancement of the date, due
-to the rapid development of the situation.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk182'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“16 September: General Keitel returns from the Berghof at
-1700 hours. He graphically describes the results of the conference
-between Chamberlain and the Führer. The next conference
-will take place on the 20th or 21st in Godesberg.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk183'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“With consent of the Führer, the order is given in the evening
-by the Armed Forces High Command, to the Army High
-Command, and to the Ministry of Finance, to line up the
-v.G.a.D. along the Czech border.”—That I understand to
-have reference to the reinforced border guard.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk184'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the same way, an order is issued to the railways to have
-empty rolling stock kept in readiness, clandestinely; for the
-strategic concentrations of the Army, so that it can be transported
-starting 28 September.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The order to the railroads to make rolling stock available, to
-which General Jodl referred, appears as Item 22, at Page 47 of the
-Schmundt file. In this order the Defendant Keitel told the railroads
-to be ready by 28 September but to continue work on the Western
-fortifications even after 20 September in the interest of camouflage.
-I quote the first four paragraphs of this order:
-<span class='pageno' title='63' id='Page_63'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Reichsbahn (the railroads) must provide trains of empty
-trucks in great numbers by September 28 for the carrying
-out of mobilization exercises. This task now takes precedence
-over all others.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk185'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Therefore the trainloads for the limes job”—I understand the
-“limes job” to have reference to defense fortification in the
-West—“will have to be cut down after September 17 and
-those goods loaded previous to this date unloaded by September
-20.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk186'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Supreme Command of the Army (Fifth Division of the
-Army General Staff) must issue further orders after consultation
-with the authorities concerned.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk187'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“However, in accordance with the Führer’s directive, every
-effort should be made to continue to supply the materials in
-as large quantities as feasible, even after 20 September 1938,
-and this for reasons of camouflage as well as in order to continue
-the important work on the limes.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The penultimate stage of the aggression begins on 18 September.
-From that date until the 28th a series of orders was issued advancing
-preparations for the attack. These orders are included in the
-Schmundt file and I shall not take the time of the Tribunal by
-attempting to read all of it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 18th the commitment scheduled for the five participating
-Armies, the 2d, 8th, 10th, 12th, and 14th, was set forth. That is
-Item 26 in the Schmundt file at Page 50 of the English translation.
-Hitler approved the secret mobilization of five divisions in the West
-to protect the German rear during Case Green, and I refer to Item
-31 in the Schmundt file at Page 13—I beg your pardon, it is Page 55,
-I had a misprint. I might refer to that. It is a “most-secret” order,
-Berlin, 27 September 1938, 1920 hours; 45 copies of which this is
-the 16th:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer has approved the mobilization, without warning,
-of the five regular West divisions (26th, 34th, 36th, 33d, and
-35th). The Führer and Supreme Commander of the Armed
-Forces has expressly reserved the right to issue the order
-for employment in the fortification zone and the evacuation
-of this zone by the workers of the Todt organization.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk188'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It is left to the OKH to assemble as far as possible, first of
-all the sections ready to march and, subsequently, the remaining
-sections of the divisions in marshalling areas behind the
-Western fortifications.”—Signed—“Jodl.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I think this would be a good time to adjourn.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We will meet again at 2 o’clock.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken until 1400 hours.</span>]</h3>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<h2><span class='pageno' title='64' id='Page_64'></span><span class='it'>Afternoon Session</span></h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: May it please the Tribunal, my attention has
-been called to the fact that I misread a signature on one of the
-documents to which I adverted this morning. It is Item 31 of the
-Schmundt minutes. I read the name “Jodl” as being the signature
-on that item. I should have read Keitel.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the course of presenting details of the documents which are
-being offered in evidence, I think it would be well to pause for a
-moment, and recall the setting in which these facts took place. The
-world will never forget the Munich Pact, and the international
-crisis which led to it. As this crisis was developing in August and
-September of 1938, and frantic efforts were being made by the
-statesmen of the world to preserve the peace of the world, little
-did they know of the evil plans and designs in the hearts and the
-minds of these conspirators.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What is being presented to the Tribunal today is the inside story,
-in their own words, underlying the Pact of Munich. We are now
-able to spread upon the pages of history the truth concerning the
-fraud and deceit practiced by the Nazi conspirators in achieving
-for their own ends, the Pact of Munich as a stepping stone towards
-further aggression. One cannot think back without living again
-through the dread of war, the fear of war, the fear of world
-disaster, which seized all peace-loving persons. The hope for peace
-which came with the Munich Pact was, we now see, a snare and a
-deceit—a trap, carefully set by the defendants on trial. The evil
-character of these men who were fabricating this scheme for aggression
-and war is demonstrated by their own documents.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Further discussions were held between the Army and the Luftwaffe
-about the time of day at which the attack should be launched.
-Conference notes initialed by the Defendant Jodl, dated 27 September,
-reveal the difference in views. These notes are Item 54,
-at Page 90 in the translation of Document 388-PS. I shall read these
-first three paragraphs as follows: The heading is:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Most secret; for chiefs only; only through officers.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk189'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Conference notes; Berlin, 27 September 1938; 4 copies, first
-copy. To be filed Grün.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk190'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Co-ordinated Time of Attack by Army and Air Force on
-X-Day.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk191'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“As a matter of principle, every effort should be made for a
-co-ordinated attack by Army and Air Forces on 1 X-Day.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk192'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Army wishes to attack at dawn, that is, about 0615. It
-also wishes to conduct some limited operations in the previous
-night, which however, would not alarm the entire Czech
-front.
-<span class='pageno' title='65' id='Page_65'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk193'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Air Force’s time of attack depends on weather conditions.
-These could change the time of attack and also limit the area
-of operations. The weather of the last few days, for instance,
-would have delayed the start until between 0800 and 1100
-due to low ceiling in Bavaria.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then I’ll skip to the last two paragraphs on Page 91:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Thus it is proposed:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk194'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Attack by the Army—independent of the attack by the Air
-Force—at the time desired by the Army (0615), and permission
-for limited operations to take place before then;
-however, only to an extent that will not alarm the entire
-Czech front.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk195'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Luftwaffe will attack at a time most suitable to them.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The initial at the end of that order is “J” meaning, I think
-clearly, Jodl.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the same date, 27 September, the Defendant Keitel sent
-a most-secret memorandum to the Defendant Hess, and the Reichsführer
-SS, Himmler, for the guidance of Nazi Party officials. This
-memorandum is Item 32 in the Schmundt files at Page 56 of the
-English translation. I read the first four paragraphs of this message.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“As a result of the political situation the Führer and Chancellor
-has ordered mobilization measures for the Armed
-Forces, without the political situation being aggravated by
-issuing the mobilization (X) order, or corresponding code
-words.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk196'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Within the framework of these mobilization measures it is
-necessary for the Armed Forces authorities to issue demands
-to the various Party authorities and their organizations, which
-are connected with the previous issuing of the mobilization
-order, the advance measures or special code names.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk197'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The special situation makes it necessary that these demands
-be met (even if the code word has not been previously issued)
-immediately and without being referred to higher authority.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk198'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“OKW requests that subordinate offices be given immediate
-instructions to this effect, so that the mobilization of the
-Armed Forces can be carried out according to plan.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then I skip to the last paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Supreme Command of the Armed Forces further
-requests that all measures not provided for in the plans which
-are undertaken by Party organizations or Police units, as a
-result of the political situation, be reported in every case and
-in plenty of time to the Supreme Command of the Armed
-Forces. Only then can it be guaranteed that these measures
-can be carried out in practice.
-<span class='pageno' title='66' id='Page_66'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk199'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Chief of the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces,
-Keitel.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Two additional entries from the Defendant Jodl’s diary reveal
-the extent to which the Nazi conspirators carried out all of their
-preparations for an attack, even during the period of negotiations
-which culminated in the Munich Agreement. I quote the answers
-in the Jodl diary for 26 and 27 September, from Page 7 of the
-translation of Document 1780-PS. 26 September .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Have you got in mind the dates of the visits
-of Mr. Chamberlain to Germany, and of the actual agreement? Perhaps
-you can give it later on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: I think it will be covered later, yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Very well.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: The agreement of the Munich Pact was the
-29th of September, and this answer then was 3 days before the
-Pact, the 26th of September:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Chief of the Armed Forces High Command, acting through
-the Army High Command, has stopped the intended approach
-march of the advance units to the Czech border, because it is
-not yet necessary and because the Führer does not intend to
-march in before the 30th in any case. Order to approach towards
-the Czech frontier need be given on the 27th only.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk200'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Fixed radio stations of Breslau, Dresden and Vienna are put
-at the disposal of the Reich Ministry for Popular Enlightenment
-and Propaganda for interference with possible Czech
-propaganda transmissions.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk201'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Question by Ausland whether Czechs are to be allowed to
-leave and cross Germany. Decision from Chief of the Armed
-Forces High Command: ‘Yes.’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk202'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1515 hours: The Chief of the Armed Forces High Command
-informs General Stumpf about the result of the Godesberg
-conversations and about the Führer’s opinion. In no case will
-X-Day be before the 30th.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk203'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It is important that we do not permit ourselves to be drawn
-into military engagements because of false reports, before
-Prague replies.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk204'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A question of Stumpf about Y-Hour results in the reply that
-on account of the weather situation, a simultaneous intervention
-of the Air Force and Army cannot be expected. The
-Army needs the dawn, the Air Force can only start later on
-account of frequent early fogs.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk205'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer has to make a decision as to which of the Commanders-in-Chief
-is to have priority.
-<span class='pageno' title='67' id='Page_67'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk206'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The opinion of Stumpf is also that the attack of the Army
-has to proceed. The Führer has not made any decision as yet
-about commitment against Prague.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk207'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2000 hours: The Führer addresses the people and the world
-in an important speech at the Sportpalast.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then the entry on 27 September:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1320 hours: The Führer consents to the first wave of attack
-being advanced to a line from where they can arrive in the
-assembly area by 30 September.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The order referred to by General Jodl was also recorded by the
-faithful Schmundt, which appears as Item 33 at Page 57 of the file.
-I’ll read it in its entirety. It is the order which brought the Nazi
-Army to a jumping-off point for the unprovoked and brutal aggression:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“28.9.38.; most secret; memorandum.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk208'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“At 1300 hours 27 September the Führer and Supreme Commander
-of the Armed Forces ordered the movement of the
-assault units from their exercise areas to their jumping-off
-points.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk209'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The assault units (about 21 reinforced regiments, or seven
-divisions) must be ready to begin the action against Grün on
-30 September, the decision having been made 1 day previously
-by 1200 noon.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk210'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“This order was conveyed to General Keitel at 1320 through
-Major Schmundt”—pencil note by Schmundt.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At this point, with the Nazi Army poised in a strategic position
-around the borders of Czechoslovakia, we shall turn back for a moment
-to examine another phase of the Czech aggression. The military
-preparations for action against Czechoslovakia had not been
-carried out <span class='it'>in vacuo</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They had been preceded by a skillfully conceived campaign designed
-to promote civil disobedience in the Czechoslovak State. Using
-the techniques they had already developed in other uncontested ventures
-underhandedly, the Nazi conspirators over a period of years
-used money, propaganda, and force to undermine Czechoslovakia.
-In this program the Nazis focused their attention on the persons of
-German descent living in the Sudetenland, a mountainous area
-bounding Bohemia and Moravia on the northwest and south. I now
-invite the attention of the Tribunal to Document Number 998-PS
-and offer it in evidence as an exhibit.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This exhibit is entitled, “German Crimes Against Czechoslovakia”
-and is the Czechoslovak Government’s official report for the prosecution
-and trial of the German major war criminals. I believe that
-this report is clearly included within the provisions of Article 21,
-<span class='pageno' title='68' id='Page_68'></span>
-of the Charter, as a document of which the Court will take judicial
-notice. Article 21 provides:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Tribunal shall not require proof of facts of common
-knowledge but shall take judicial notice thereof. It shall also
-take judicial notice of official governmental documents and
-reports of the United Nations, including the accounts and
-documents of the committees set up in the various Allied
-countries for the investigation of war crimes and the records
-and findings of military or other tribunals of any of the United
-Nations.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Since, under that provision, the Court will take judicial notice
-of this governmental report by the Czech Government, I shall, with
-the leave of the Tribunal, merely summarize Pages 9 to 12 of this
-report to show the background of the subsequent Nazi intrigue
-within Czechoslovakia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nazi agitation in Czechoslovakia dated from the earliest days of
-the Nazi Party. In the years following the first World War, a German
-National Socialist Workers Party (DNSAP), which maintained
-close contact with Hitler’s NSDAP, was activated in the Sudetenland.
-In 1932, ringleaders of the Sudeten Volkssport, an organization
-corresponding to the Nazi SA or Sturmabteilung, openly
-endorsed the 21 points of Hitler’s program, the first of which demanded
-the union of all Germans in a greater Germany. Soon
-thereafter, they were charged with planning armed rebellion on
-behalf of a foreign power and were sentenced for conspiracy against
-the Czech Republic.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Late in 1933, the National Socialist Party of Czechoslovakia
-forestalled its dissolution by voluntary liquidation and several of
-its chiefs escaped across the border into Germany. For a year thereafter,
-Nazi activity in Czechoslovakia continued underground.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On 1 October 1934, with the approval and at the urging of the
-Nazi conspirators, an instructor of gymnastics, Konrad Henlein,
-established the German Home Front or Deutsche Heimatfront,
-which, the following spring became the Sudeten German Party
-(SDP). Profiting from the experiences of the Czech National Socialist
-Party, Henlein denied any connection with the German Nazis.
-He rejected pan-Germanism and professed his respect for individual
-liberties and his loyalty to honest democracy and to the Czech State.
-His party, nonetheless, was built on the basis of the Nazi Führerprinzip,
-and he became its Führer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By 1937, when the powers of Hitler’s Germany had become
-manifest, Henlein and his followers were striking a more aggressive
-note, demanding without definition, “complete Sudeten autonomy”.
-The SDP laid proposals before the Czech Parliament which would
-in substance, have created a state within a state.
-<span class='pageno' title='69' id='Page_69'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After the annexation of Austria by Germany in March 1938, the
-Henleinists, who were now openly organized after the Nazi model,
-intensified their activities. Undisguised anti-Semitic propaganda
-started in the Henlein press.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The campaign against Bolshevism was intensified. Terrorism in
-the Henlein-dominated communities increased. A storm-troop organization,
-patterned and trained on the principles of the Nazi SS
-was established, known as the FS, Freiwilliger Selbstschutz (or
-Voluntary Vigilantes).</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On 24 April 1938, in a speech to the Party Congress in Karlovy
-Vary, Henlein came into the open with what he called his Karlsbad
-Program. In this speech, which echoed Hitler in tone and substance,
-Henlein asserted the right of the Sudeten Germans to profess German
-political philosophy which, it was clear, meant National Socialism.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As the summer of 1938 wore on, the Henleinists used every technique
-of the Nazi Fifth Column. As summarized in Pages 12 to 16
-of the Czech Government official report, these techniques included:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>(a) Espionage. Military espionage was conducted by the SDP,
-the FS, and by other members of the German minority on behalf
-of Germany. Czech defenses were mapped and information on Czech
-troop movements was furnished to the German authorities.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>(b) Nazification of German organizations in Czechoslovakia. The
-Henleinists systematically penetrated the whole life of the German
-population of Czechoslovakia. Associations and social cultural centers
-regularly underwent “Gleichschaltung”, that is purification, by
-the SDP. Among the organizations conquered by the Henleinists
-were sports societies, rowing clubs, associations of ex-service men,
-and choral societies. The Henleinists were particularly interested
-in penetrating as many business institutions as possible and bringing
-over to their side the directors of banks, the owners or directors
-of factories, and the managers of commercial firms. In the case
-of Jewish ownership or direction, they attempted to secure the cooperation
-of the clerical and technical staffs of the institutions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>(c) German direction and leadership. The Henleinists maintained
-permanent contact with the Nazi officials designated to direct
-operations within Czechoslovakia. Meetings in Germany, at which
-Henleinists were exhorted and instructed in Fifth Column activity,
-were camouflaged by being held in conjunction with “Sänger Feste”
-(or choral festivals), gymnastic shows, and assemblies, and commercial
-gatherings such as the Leipzig Fair. Whenever the Nazi conspirators
-needed incidents for their war of nerves, it was the duty
-of the Henleinists to supply them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>(d) Propaganda. Disruptive and subversive propaganda was
-beamed at Czechoslovakia in German broadcasts and was echoed
-<span class='pageno' title='70' id='Page_70'></span>
-in the German press. Goebbels called Czechoslovakia a “nest of
-Bolshevism” and spread the false report of Russian troops and airplanes
-centered in Prague. Under direction from the Reich, the
-Henleinists maintained whispering propaganda in the Sudetenland
-which contributed to the mounting tension and to the creation of
-incidents. Illegal Nazi literature was smuggled from Germany and
-widely distributed in the border regions. The Henlein press, more
-or less openly, espoused Nazi ideology before the German population
-in the Sudetenland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>(e) Murder and terrorism. Nazi conspirators provided the Henleinists,
-and particularly the FS, with money and arms with which
-to provoke incidents and to maintain a state of permanent unrest.
-Gendarmes, customs officers, and other Czech officials were attacked.
-A boycott was established against Jewish lawyers, doctors, and
-tradesmen.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Henleinists terrorized the non-Henlein population and the
-Nazi Gestapo crossed into the border districts to carry Czechoslovak
-citizens across the border into Germany. In several cases, political
-foes of the Nazis were murdered on Czech soil. Nazi agents murdered
-Professor Theodor Lessing in 1933, and engineer Formis in
-1935. Both men were anti-Nazis who had escaped from Germany
-after Hitler came to power and had sought refuge in Czechoslovakia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sometime afterwards, when there was no longer need for pretense
-and deception, Konrad Henlein made a clear and frank statement
-of the mission assigned to him by the Nazi conspirators. I
-offer in evidence Document Number 2863-PS, an excerpt from a lecture
-by Konrad Henlein quoted in the book <span class='it'>Four Fighting Years</span>,
-a publication of the Czechoslovak Ministry of Foreign Affairs; and
-I quote from Page 29. This book has been marked for identification
-Exhibit USA-92, but without offering it in evidence, I ask the
-Tribunal to take judicial notice of it. I shall read from Page 29.
-This lecture was delivered by Henlein on 4 March 1941, in the auditorium
-of the University of Vienna, under the auspices of the Wiener
-Verwaltungsakademie. During a thorough search of libraries
-in Vienna and elsewhere, we have been unable to find a copy of the
-German text. This text, this volume that I have here, is an English
-version. The Vienna newspapers the following day carried only
-summaries of the lecture. This English version, however, is an official
-publication of the Czech Government and is, under the circumstances,
-the best evidence that we can produce of the Henlein
-speech.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In this lecture on “The Fight for the Liberation of the Sudetens”
-Henlein said:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“National Socialism soon swept over us Sudeten Germans.
-Our struggle was of a different character from that in
-<span class='pageno' title='71' id='Page_71'></span>
-Germany. Although we had to behave differently in public we
-were, of course, secretly in touch with the National Socialist
-revolution in Germany so that we might be a part of it. The
-struggle for Greater Germany was waged on Sudeten soil,
-too. This struggle could be waged only by those inspired by
-the spirit of National Socialism, persons who were true followers
-of our Führer, whatever their outward appearance.
-Fate sought me out to be the leader of the national group in
-its final struggle. When in the autumn of 1933, the leader of
-the NSDAP asked me to take over the political leadership of
-the Sudeten Germans, I had a difficult problem to solve.
-Should the National Socialist Party continue to be carried on
-illegally or should the movement, in the interest of the self-preservation
-of the Sudeten Germans and in order to prepare
-their return to the Reich, wage its struggle under camouflage
-and by methods which appeared quite legal to the outside
-world? For us Sudeten Germans only the second alternative
-seemed possible, for the preservation of our national group
-was at stake. It would certainly have been easier to exchange
-this hard and mentally exhausting struggle for the heroic
-gesture of confessing allegiance to National Socialism and
-entering a Czechoslovak prison. But it seemed more than
-doubtful whether, by this means, we could have fulfilled the
-political task of destroying Czechoslovakia as a bastion in the
-alliance against the German Reich.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The account of Nazi intrigue in Czechoslovakia which I have just
-presented to the Tribunal is the outline of this conspiracy as it had
-been pieced together by the Czechoslovak Government early this
-summer. Since then, captured documents and other information
-made available to us since the defeat of Germany have clearly and
-conclusively demonstrated the implication, which hitherto could
-only be deduced, of the Nazi conspirators in the agitation in the
-Sudetenland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I offer in evidence Document Number 3060-PS, Exhibit USA-93.
-This is the original, handwritten draft of a telegram sent from the
-German Legation in Prague on 16 March 1938 to the Foreign Minister
-in Berlin. It is presumably written by the German Minister
-Eisenlohr. It proves conclusively that the Henlein movement was
-an instrument, a puppet of the Nazi conspirators. The Henlein
-party, it appears from this document, was directed from Berlin and
-from the German Legation in Prague. It could have no policy of
-its own. Even the speeches of its leaders had to be co-ordinated
-with the German authorities.
-<span class='pageno' title='72' id='Page_72'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I will read this telegram:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Prague, 16 March 1938.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk211'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Foreign (Office), Berlin; (cipher cable—secret); No. 57 of
-16 March.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk212'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“With reference to cable order No. 30 of 14 March.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk213'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Rebuff to Frank has had a salutary effect. Have thrashed out
-matters with Henlein, who recently had shunned me, and
-with Frank separately and received following promises:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk214'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. The line of German foreign policy as transmitted by the
-German Legation is exclusively decisive for policy and tactics
-of the Sudeten German Party. My directives are to be
-complied with implicitly.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk215'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. Public speeches and the press will be co-ordinated uniformly
-with my approval. The editorial staff of <span class='it'>Zeit</span>”—<span class='it'>Time</span>—“is
-to be improved.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk216'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3. Party leadership abandons the former intransigent line,
-which in the end might lead to political complications, and
-adopts a line of gradual promotion of Sudeten German interests.
-The objectives are to be set in every case with my participation
-and to be promoted by parallel diplomatic action.
-Laws for the protection of nationalities (Volksschutzgesetze)
-and territorial autonomy are no longer to be stressed.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk217'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“4. If consultations with Berlin agencies are required or
-desired before Henlein issues important statements on his
-program, they are to be applied for and prepared through
-the Legation.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk218'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“5. All information of the Sudeten German Party for German
-agencies is to be transmitted through the Legation.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk219'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“6. Henlein will establish contact with me every week, and
-will come to Prague at any time if requested.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk220'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I now hope to have the Sudeten German Party under firm
-control, as this is more than ever necessary for coming developments
-in the interest of foreign policy. Please inform
-Ministries concerned and Mittelstelle (Central Office for Racial
-Germans) and request them to support this uniform direction
-of the Sudeten German Party.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The initials are illegible.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The dressing down administered by Eisenlohr to Henlein had
-the desired effect. The day after the telegram was dispatched from
-Prague, Henlein addressed a humble letter to Ribbentrop, asking
-an early personal conversation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I offer in evidence Document Number 2789-PS as Exhibit USA-94.
-This is the letter from Konrad Henlein to Defendant Ribbentrop,
-captured in the German Foreign Office files, dated 17 March 1938.
-<span class='pageno' title='73' id='Page_73'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:left;margin-left:0em;margin-bottom:.5em;'>“Most honored Minister of Foreign Affairs:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk221'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In our deeply felt joy over the fortunate turn of events in
-Austria we feel it our duty to express our gratitude to all
-those who had a share in this new grand achievement of our
-Führer.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk222'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I beg you, most honored Minister, to accept accordingly the
-sincere thanks of the Sudeten Germans herewith.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk223'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“We shall show our appreciation to the Führer by doubled
-efforts in the service of the Greater German policy.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk224'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The new situation requires a re-examination of the Sudeten
-German policy. For this purpose I beg to ask you for the
-opportunity of a very early personal talk.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk225'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In view of the necessity of such a clarification I have postponed
-the nation-wide Party Congress, originally scheduled
-for 26th and 27th of March 1938, for 4 weeks.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk226'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I would appreciate it if the Ambassador, Dr. Eisenlohr, and
-two of my closest associates would be allowed to participate
-in the requested talks.</p>
-
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:left;margin-left:0em;margin-top:.5em;'>“Heil Hitler. Loyally yours”—signed—“Konrad Henlein.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>You will note that Henlein was quite aware that the seizure of
-Austria made possible the adoption of a new policy towards Czechoslovakia.
-You will also note that he was already in close enough
-contact with Ribbentrop and the German Minister in Prague to feel
-free to suggest early personal talks.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Ribbentrop was not unreceptive to Henlein’s suggestion. The
-conversations Henlein had proposed took place in the Foreign Office
-in Berlin on the 29th of March 1938. The previous day Henlein had
-conferred with Hitler himself.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I offer in evidence Document Number 2788-PS as Exhibit USA-95,
-captured German Foreign Office notes of the conference on the
-29th of March. I read the first two paragraphs:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In this conference the gentlemen enumerated in the enclosed
-list participated.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk227'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Reich Minister started out by emphasizing the necessity
-to keep the conference which had been scheduled strictly a
-secret. He then explained, in view of the directives which
-the Führer himself had given to Konrad Henlein personally
-yesterday afternoon, that there were two questions which
-were of outstanding importance for the conduct of policy of
-the Sudeten German Party.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I will omit the discussion of the claims of the Sudeten Germans
-and resume the minutes of this meeting in the middle of the last
-paragraph of the first page of the English translation, with the
-sentence beginning, “The aim of the negotiations.”
-<span class='pageno' title='74' id='Page_74'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The aim of the negotiations to be carried out by the Sudeten
-German Party with the Czechoslovakian Government is finally
-this: To avoid entry into the Government by the extension
-and gradual specification of the demands to be made. It
-must be emphasized clearly in the negotiations that the
-Sudeten German Party alone is the party to the negotiations
-with the Czechoslovakian Government, not the Reich Cabinet.
-The Reich Cabinet itself must refuse to appear toward the
-government in Prague or toward London and Paris as the
-advocate or pacemaker of the Sudeten German demands. It
-is a self-evident prerequisite that during the impending discussion
-with the Czechoslovak Government the Sudeten Germans
-should be firmly controlled by Konrad Henlein, should
-maintain quiet and discipline, and should avoid indiscretions.
-The assurances already given by Konrad Henlein in this connection
-were satisfactory.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk228'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Following these general explanations of the Reichsminister,
-the demands of the Sudeten German Party from the Czechoslovak
-Government, as contained in the enclosure, were discussed
-and approved in principle. For further co-operation,
-Konrad Henlein was instructed to keep in the closest possible
-touch with the Reichsminister and the head of the Central
-Office for Racial Germans, as well as the German Minister in
-Prague, as the local representative of the Foreign Minister.
-The task of the German Minister in Prague would be to
-support the demand of the Sudeten German Party as reasonable—not
-officially, but in more private talks with the Czechoslovak
-politicians, without exerting any direct influence on
-the extent of the demands of the Party.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk229'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In conclusion, there was a discussion whether it would be
-useful if the Sudeten German Party would co-operate with
-other minorities in Czechoslovakia, especially with the Slovaks.
-The Foreign Minister decided that the Party should
-have the discretion to keep a loose contact with other minority
-groups if the adoption of a parallel course by them might
-appear appropriate.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk230'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Berlin, 29 March 1938,</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk231'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“R”—for Ribbentrop.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Not the least interesting aspect of this secret meeting is the list
-of those who attended: Konrad Henlein; his principal deputy, Karl
-Hermann Frank; and two others represented the Sudeten German
-Party. Professor Haushofer, the geopolitician, and SS Obergruppenführer
-Lorenz represented the Volksdeutsche Mittelstelle (the Central
-Office for Racial Germans). The Foreign Office was represented
-by a delegation of eight. These eight included Ribbentrop,
-<span class='pageno' title='75' id='Page_75'></span>
-who presided at the meeting and did most of the talking; Von
-Mackensen; Weizsäcker and Minister Eisenlohr from the German
-Legation at Prague.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In May, Henlein came to Berlin for more conversations with the
-Nazi conspirators. At this time the plans for Case Green, for the
-attack on the Czechs, were already on paper, and it may be assumed
-that Henlein was briefed on the role he was to play during the
-summer months.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I again quote from General Jodl’s diary, Document 1780-PS, the
-entry for 22 May 1938: “Fundamental conference between the Führer
-and K. Henlein (see enclosure).” The enclosure unfortunately is
-missing from Jodl’s diary.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal will recall that in his speech in Vienna Henlein
-had admitted that he had been selected by the Nazi conspirators in
-the fall of 1933 to take over the political leadership of the Sudeten
-Germans. The documents I have just read show conclusively the
-nature of Henlein’s mission. They demonstrate that Henlein’s policy,
-his propaganda, even his speeches, were controlled by Berlin.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I will now show that from the year 1935 the Sudeten German
-Party was secretly subsidized by the German Foreign Office. I offer
-in evidence Document 3059-PS as Exhibit USA-96, another secret
-memorandum captured in the German Foreign Office file.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This memorandum, signed by Woermann and dated Berlin,
-19 August 1938, was occasioned by the request of the Henlein Party
-for additional funds. I read from that document:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Sudeten German Party has been subsidized by the Foreign
-Office regularly since 1935 with certain amounts, consisting
-of a monthly payment of 15,000 marks; 12,000 marks
-of this are transmitted to the Prague Legation for disbursement
-and 3,000 marks are paid out to the Berlin representation
-of the Party (Bureau Bürger). In the course of the
-last few months the tasks assigned to the Bureau Bürger have
-increased considerably due to the current negotiations with
-the Czech Government. The number of pamphlets and maps
-which are produced and disseminated has risen; the propaganda
-activity in the press has grown immensely; the expense
-accounts have increased especially because due to the necessity
-for continuous good information, the expenses for trips to
-Prague, London, and Paris (including the financing of travels
-of Sudeten German deputies and agents) have grown considerably
-heavier. Under these conditions the Bureau Bürger
-is no longer able to get along with the monthly allowance
-of 3,000 marks if it is to do everything required. Therefore
-Herr Bürger has applied to this office for an increase of this
-amount from 3,000 marks to 5,500 marks monthly. In view
-<span class='pageno' title='76' id='Page_76'></span>
-of the considerable increase in the business transacted by the
-bureau, and of the importance which marks the activity of
-the bureau in regard to the co-operation with the Foreign
-Office, this desire deserves the strongest support.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk232'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Herewith submitted to the personnel department with a request
-for approval. Increase of payments with retroactive
-effect from 1 August is requested.”—signed—“Woermann.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Under this signature is a footnote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Volksdeutsche Mittelstelle”—Central Office for Racial Germans—“will
-be informed by the Political Department”—handwritten
-marginal note.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We may only conjecture what financial support the Henlein
-movement received from other agencies of the German Government.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As the military preparations to attack Czechoslovakia moved
-forward in the late summer and early fall, the Nazi command made
-good use of Henlein and his followers. About the 1st of August,
-the Air Attaché in the German Legation in Prague, Major Moericke,
-acting on instructions from Luftwaffe headquarters in Berlin, visited
-the Sudeten German leader in Freudenthal. With his assistance
-and in the company of the local leader of the FS, the Henlein
-equivalent of the SS, he reconnoitered the surrounding countryside
-to select possible airfield sites for German use. The FS leader, a
-Czech reservist then on leave, was in the uniform of the Czech
-Army, a fact which, as the Attaché noted, served as excellent
-camouflage.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now read from the enclosure to Document 1536-PS, which I
-offered in evidence earlier and which bears United States Exhibit
-Number 83. I have already read the first four paragraphs of the
-enclosure:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The manufacturer M. is the head of the Sudeten German
-Glider Pilots in Fr.”—that’s Freudenthal—“and said to be
-absolutely reliable by my trusted man. My personal impression
-fully confirmed this judgment. No hint of my identity
-was made to him, although I had the impression that M.
-knew who I was.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk233'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“At my request, with which he complied without any question,
-M. travelled with me over the country in question. We used
-M.’s private car for the trip.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk234'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“As M. did not know the country around Beneschau sufficiently
-well, he took with him the local leader of the FS, a
-Czech reservist of the Sudeten German Racial Group, at the
-time on leave. He was in uniform. For reasons of camouflage,
-I was entirely in agreement with this—without actually
-saying so.
-<span class='pageno' title='77' id='Page_77'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk235'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“As M., during the course of the drive, observed that I photographed
-large open spaces out of the car, he said. ‘Aha, so
-you’re looking for airfields!’ I answered that we supposed
-that in the case of any serious trouble, the Czechs would put
-their airfields immediately behind the line of fortifications.
-I had the intention of looking over the country from that
-point of view.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the latter part of the Air Attaché’s report, reference is made
-to the presence of reliable agents and informers, which he called
-“V-Leute” (V-people), apparently drawn from the ranks of the
-Henlein party in this area. It was indicated that these agents were
-in touch with the “Abwehr Stelle” (the Intelligence Office) in
-Breslau.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In September, when the Nazi propaganda campaign was reaching
-its height, the Nazis were not satisfied with playing merely on
-the Sudeten demands for autonomy. They attempted to use the
-Slovaks as well. On the 19th of September the Foreign Office in
-Berlin sent a telegram to the German Legation in Prague. I offer
-the document in evidence, Number 2858-PS, Exhibit USA-97,
-another captured German Foreign Office document—a telegram:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Please inform Deputy Kundt that Konrad Henlein requests
-to get in touch with the Slovaks at once and induce them to
-start their demands for autonomy tomorrow.”—signed—“Altenburg.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Kundt was Henlein’s representative in Prague.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As the harassed Czech Government sought to stem the disorders
-in the Sudetenland, the German Foreign Office turned to threatening
-diplomatic tactics in a deliberate effort to increase the tension
-between the two countries. I offer in evidence Documents 2855-PS,
-2854-PS, 2853-PS, and 2856-PS, as United States Exhibits respectively
-98, 99, 100, and 101. Four telegrams from the Foreign Office in
-Berlin to the Legation in Prague were dispatched between the 16th
-and 24th of September 1938. They are self-explanatory. The first
-is dated 16 September.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Tonight 150 subjects of Czechoslovakia of Czech blood were
-arrested in Germany. This measure is an answer to the arrest
-of Sudeten Germans since the Führer’s speech of 12 September.
-I request you to ascertain as soon as possible the number of
-Sudeten Germans arrested since 12 September as far as
-possible. The number of those arrested there is estimated
-conservatively at 400 by the Gestapo. Cable report.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>A handwritten note follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Impossible for me to ascertain these facts as already communicated
-to the chargé d’affaires.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='78' id='Page_78'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The second telegram is dated September 17:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Most urgent.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk236'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I. Request to inform the local government immediately of
-the following:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk237'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Reich Government has decided that:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk238'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(a) Immediately as many Czech subjects of Czech descent,
-Czech-speaking Jews included, will be arrested in Germany
-as Sudeten Germans have been in Czechoslovakia since the
-beginning of the week; (b) If any Sudeten Germans should
-be executed pursuant to a death sentence on the basis of
-martial law, an equal number of Czechs will be shot in Germany.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The third telegram was sent on 24 September. I read it:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“According to information received here, Czechs have arrested
-two German frontier policemen, seven customs officials, and
-30 railway officials. As counter measure all the Czech staff
-in Marschegg were arrested. We are prepared to exchange
-the arrested Czech officials for the German officials. Please
-approach Government there and wire result.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the same day the fourth telegram was dispatched, and I read
-the last paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“ ‘Confidential’. Yielding of Czech hostages arrested here for
-the prevention of the execution of any sentences passed by
-military courts against Sudeten Germans is, of course, out
-of question.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the latter half of September, Henlein devoted himself and
-his followers wholeheartedly to the preparations for the coming
-German attack. About 15 September, after Hitler’s provocative
-Nuremberg speech in which he accused Beneš of torturing and
-planning the extermination of the Sudeten Germans, Henlein and
-Karl Hermann Frank, one of his principal deputies, fled to Germany
-to avoid arrest by the Czech Government. In Germany
-Henlein broadcast over the powerful Reichsender radio station his
-determination to lead the Sudeten Germans home to the Reich and
-denounced what he called the Hussites-Bolshevist criminals of
-Prague. From his headquarters in a castle at Donndorf, outside
-Bayreuth, he kept in close touch with the leading Nazi conspirators,
-including Hitler and Himmler. He directed activities along the
-border and began the organization of the Sudeten German Free
-Corps, an auxiliary military organization. You will find these events
-set forth in the Czechoslovak official government report, 998-PS,
-which has already been offered as Exhibit USA-91.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Henlein’s activities were carried on with the advice and assistance
-of the German Nazi leaders. Lieutenant Colonel Köchling was
-<span class='pageno' title='79' id='Page_79'></span>
-assigned to Henlein in an advisory capacity to assist with the
-Sudeten German Free Corps. In a conference with Hitler on the
-night of September 17, Köchling received far-reaching military
-powers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At this conference, the purpose of the Free Corps was frankly
-stated—the maintenance of disorder and clashes. I read from Item 25,
-a handwritten note labelled “most secret,” on Page 49 of the
-Schmundt file, Document 388-PS:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Most secret. Last night conference took place between
-Führer and Lieutenant Colonel Köchling. Duration of conference
-7 minutes. Lieutenant Colonel Köchling remains
-directly responsible to OKW. He will be assigned to Konrad
-Henlein in an advisory capacity. He received far-reaching
-military plenary powers from the Führer. The Sudeten German
-Free Corps remains responsible to Konrad Henlein alone.
-Purpose: Protection of the Sudeten Germans and maintenance
-of disturbances and clashes. The Free Corps will be established
-in Germany. Armament only with Austrian weapons. Activities
-of Free Corps to begin as soon as possible.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Would that be a good place to break off for
-10 minutes?</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: May it please the Tribunal, General Jodl’s
-diary again gives a further insight into the position of the Henlein
-Free Corps. At this time, the Free Corps was engaged in active
-skirmishing along the Czech border, furnishing incidents and provocation
-in the desired manner. I quote from the entries in the
-Jodl diary, for the 19th and 20th September 1938, at Page 6 of the
-Document 1780-PS, which is Exhibit USA-72.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“19 September: Order is given to the Army High Command
-to take care of the Sudeten German Free Corps.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk239'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“20 September: England and France have handed over their
-demands in Prague, the contents of which are still unknown.
-The activities of the Free Corps start assuming such an extent
-that they may bring about, and already have brought about,
-consequences harmful to the plans of the Army. (Transferring
-rather strong units of the Czech Army to the proximity
-of the border.) By checking with Lieutenant Colonel Köchling,
-I attempt to lead these activities into normal channels.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk240'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Toward the evening the Führer also takes a hand and gives
-permission to act only with groups up to 12 men each, after
-the approval of the corps headquarters.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='80' id='Page_80'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A report from Henlein’s staff, which was found in Hitler’s headquarters,
-boasted of the offensive operations of the Free Corps. It
-is Item 30 of the Schmundt file, Page 54 of Document 388-PS. I read
-the last two paragraphs:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Since 19 September, in more than 300 missions, the Free
-Corps has executed its task with an amazing spirit of attack,”—now,
-that word “attack” was changed by superimposition
-to “defense”—“and with a willingness often reaching a degree
-of unqualified self-sacrifice. The result of the first phase of
-its activities: More than 1500 prisoners, 25 MG’s”—which I
-suppose means machine guns—“and a large amount of other
-weapons and equipment, aside from serious losses in dead
-and wounded suffered by the enemy.”—And there was superimposed
-in place of “enemy”, “the Czech terrorists.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In his headquarters in the castle at Donndorf, Henlein was in
-close touch with Admiral Canaris of the Intelligence Division of
-the OKW and with the SS and the SA. The liaison officer between
-the SS and Henlein was Oberführer Gottlob Berger (SS).</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now offer in evidence Document 3036-PS as Exhibit USA-102,
-which is an affidavit executed by Gottlob Berger; and in connection
-with that affidavit, I wish to submit to the Tribunal that it presents,
-we think, quite a different question of proof from the Schuschnigg
-affidavits which were not admitted in evidence by the Court.
-Schuschnigg, of course, was a neutral and non-Nazi Austrian. He
-was not a member of this conspiracy, and I can well understand
-that the Court rejected his affidavit for these reasons.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This man was a Nazi. He was serving in this conspiracy. He
-has made this affidavit. We think the affidavit has probative value
-and should be admitted by the Tribunal under the pertinent provision
-of the Charter, which says that you will accept in evidence
-any evidence having probative value. We think it would be unfair
-to require us to bring here as a witness a man who would certainly
-be a hostile witness, who is to us a member of this conspiracy, and
-it seems to us that the affidavit should be admitted with leave to
-the defendants, if they wish, to call the author of the affidavit as
-their witness. I should have added that this man was a prominent
-member of the SS which is charged before you as being a criminal
-organization, and we think the document is perfectly competent in
-evidence as an admission against interest by a prominent member
-of the SS organization.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: Mr. President, the Defense objects to the
-use of this document. This document was drawn up as late as
-22 November 1945, here in Nuremberg, and the witness Berger
-could, therefore, be brought to Court without any difficulty. We
-must insist that he be heard here on the subjects on which the
-<span class='pageno' title='81' id='Page_81'></span>
-Prosecution wishes to introduce his testimony. That would be the
-only way in which the Defense could have an opportunity of cross-examining
-the witness and thereby contribute to obtaining objective
-truth.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>Pause in the proceedings while the Tribunal consulted.</span>]</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal upholds the objection and will
-not hear this affidavit. It is open to either the Prosecution or the
-defendants, of course, to call the man who made the affidavit. That
-is all I have to say. We have upheld your objection.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: If the Tribunal please, I had another affidavit
-by one Alfred Helmut Naujocks which, I take it, will be excluded
-under this same ruling, and which, therefore, I shall not offer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: If the circumstances are the same.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: Yes, I might merely refer to it for identification
-because it is in your document books.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Very well.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: It is Document 3029-PS.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Very well. That also will be rejected as
-evidence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: Yes. Offensive operations along the Czechoslovakian
-border were not confined to skirmishes carried out by the
-Free Corps. Two SS-Totenkopf (Deathhead) battalions were operating
-across the border in Czech territory near Asch.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I quote now from Item 36 in the Schmundt file, an OKW most-secret
-order, signed by Jodl, and dated 28 September. This appears
-at Page 61 Of the Schmundt file:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Supreme Command of the Armed Forces, Berlin, 28 September
-1938; 45 copies, 16th copy; most secret.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk241'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Subject: Four SS-Totenkopf battalions subordinate to the
-Commander-in-Chief Army.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk242'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“To: Reichsführer SS and Chief of the German Police (SS
-Central Office) (36th copy).</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk243'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“By order of the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces
-the following battalions of the SS Deathhead organization
-will be under the command of the Commander-in-Chief of
-the Army with immediate effect.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk244'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Second and Third Battalions of the 2d SS-Totenkopf Regiment
-Brandenburg at present in Brieg (Upper Silesia).</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk245'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“First and Second Battalions of the 3d SS-Totenkopf Regiment
-Thuringia, at present in Radebeul and Kötzschenbroda
-near Dresden.
-<span class='pageno' title='82' id='Page_82'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk246'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Commander-in-Chief of the Army is requested to deploy
-these battalions for the West, (Upper Rhine) according to the
-Führer’s instructions.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk247'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“These SS-Totenkopf units now operating in the Asch promontory
-(I and II Battalions of the SS-Totenkopf Regiment
-Oberbayern) will come under the Commander-in-Chief of the
-Army only when they return to German Reich territory, or
-when the Army crosses the German-Czech frontier.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk248'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It is requested that all further arrangements be made between
-Commander-in-Chief of the Army and Reichsführer SS
-(SS Central Office).</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk249'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“For the Chief of the Supreme Command of the Armed
-Forces, Jodl.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>According to the 25 September entry in General Jodl’s diary,
-these SS-Totenkopf battalions were operating in this area on direct
-orders from Hitler. As the time X-Day approached, the disposition
-of the Free Corps became a matter of dispute.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On 26 September Himmler issued an order to the Chief of Staff
-of the Sudeten German Free Corps, directing that the Free Corps
-come under control of the Reichsführer SS in the event of German
-invasion of Czechoslovakia. This document is Item 37 in the
-Schmundt file, on Page 62.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On 28 September Defendant Keitel directed that as soon as the
-German Army crosses the Czech border, the Free Corps will take
-orders from the OKH. In this most-secret order of the OKW, Keitel
-discloses that Henlein’s men are already operating in Czechoslovak
-territory.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I read now from Item 34 of the Schmundt file on Page 58, the
-last three paragraphs of this most-secret order:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“For the Henlein Free Corps and units subordinate to it the
-principle remains valid, that they receive instructions direct
-from the Führer and that they carry out their operations
-only in conjunction with the competent corps headquarters.
-The advance units of the Free Corps will have to report to
-the local commander of the frontier guard immediately before
-crossing the frontier.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk250'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Those units remaining forward of the frontier should, in
-their own interests, get into communication with the frontier
-guard as often as possible.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk251'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“As soon as the Army crosses the Czechoslovak border the
-Henlein Free Corps will be subordinate to the OKH. Thus
-it will be expedient to assign a sector to the Free Corps, even
-now, which can be fitted into the scheme of army boundaries
-later.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='83' id='Page_83'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On 30 September, when it became clear that the Munich Settlement
-would result in a peaceful occupation of the Sudetenland,
-the Defendant Keitel ordered that the Free Corps Henlein, in its
-present composition, be placed under the command of Himmler.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I read from Item 38, at Page 63, of the Schmundt file:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. Attachment of the Henlein Free Corps. The Supreme
-Commander of the Armed Forces has just ordered that the
-Henlein Free Corps in its present composition be placed under
-command of Reichsführer SS and the Chief of German Police.
-It is therefore not at the immediate disposal of OKH as field
-unit for the invasion, but is to be later drawn in, like the
-rest of the police forces, for police duties in agreement with
-the Reichsführer SS.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I have been able, if the Tribunal please, to ascertain the dates
-the Tribunal asked about before the recess.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The first visit of Chamberlain to Germany in connection with
-this matter was 15 September 1938. Chamberlain flew to Munich
-and arrived at 12:30 o’clock on 15 September. He went by train
-from Munich to Berchtesgaden, arriving at 1600 hours, by car to
-Berghof, arriving about at 1650, for three talks with Hitler. On
-16 September Chamberlain returned by air to London.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The second visit was on 22 September. Chamberlain met with
-Hitler at Bad Godesberg at 1700 hours for a 3-hour discussion, and
-it was a deadlock. On 23 September discussions were resumed at
-2230 hours. On 24 September Chamberlain returned to London.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The third visit was on 29 September. Chamberlain flew to
-Munich and the meeting of Chamberlain, Mussolini, Daladier, and
-Hitler took place at the Brown House at 1330 and continued until
-0230 hours on 30 September 1938, a Friday, when the Munich Agreement
-was signed. Under the threat of war by the Nazi conspirators,
-and with war in fact about to be launched, the United Kingdom
-and France concluded the Munich Pact with Germany and Italy at
-that early morning hour of 30 September 1938. This Treaty will
-be presented by the British prosecutor. It is sufficient for me to
-say of it at this point that it was the cession of the Sudetenland
-by Czechoslovakia to Germany. Czechoslovakia was required to
-acquiesce.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Munich Pact will be TC-23 of the British documents.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On 1 October 1938 German troops began the occupation of the
-Sudetenland. During the conclusion of the Munich Pact the Wehrmacht
-had been fully deployed for the attack, awaiting only the
-word of Hitler to begin the assault.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With the cession of the Sudetenland new orders were issued.
-On 30 September the Defendant Keitel promulgated Directive
-<span class='pageno' title='84' id='Page_84'></span>
-Number 1 on occupation of territory separated from Czechoslovakia.
-This is Item 39 at Page 64 of the Schmundt file. This directive
-contained a timetable for the occupation of sectors of former Czech
-territory between 1 and 10 October and specified the tasks of the
-German Armed Forces.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I read now the fourth and fifth paragraphs of that document:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. The present degree of mobilized preparedness is to be
-maintained completely, for the present also in the West.
-Order for the rescinding of measures taken, is held over.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk252'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The entry is to be planned in such a way that it can easily
-be converted into operation Grün.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It contains one other important provision about the Henlein
-forces, and I quote from the list under the heading “a. Army”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Henlein Free Corps. All combat action on the part of the
-Volunteer Corps must cease as from 1st October.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Schmundt file contains a number of additional secret OKW
-directives giving instructions for the occupation of the Sudetenland.
-I think I need not read them, as they are not essential to the
-proof of our case. They merely indicate the scope of the preparations
-of the OKW.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Directives specifying the occupational area of the Army, the
-units under its command, arranging for communication facilities,
-supply, and propaganda, and giving instructions to the various
-departments of the Government were issued over Defendant Keitel’s
-signature on 30 September. These are Items 40, 41, and 42 in the
-Schmundt file. I think it is sufficient to read the caption and the
-signature.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: What page?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: Page 66 of the English version. This is the
-Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, most secret:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Special Orders Number 1 to Directive Number 1. Subject:
-Occupation of Territory Ceded by Czechoslovakia.”—Signature—“Keitel.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Item 41 is on Page 70 of the Schmundt file.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Supreme Command of the Armed Forces; most secret IV a.
-Most secret; subject: Occupation of Sudeten-German Territory.”—Signed—“Keitel.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Item 42 in the Schmundt file is on Page 75, again most secret.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Subject: Occupation of the Sudeten-German Area.”—Signed—“Keitel.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By 10 October Von Brauchitsch was able to report to Hitler that
-German troops had reached the demarcation line and that the order
-for the occupation of the Sudetenland had been fulfilled. The
-<span class='pageno' title='85' id='Page_85'></span>
-OKW requested Hitler’s permission to rescind Case Green, to withdraw
-troops from the occupied area, and to relieve the OKH of
-executive powers in the Sudeten-German area as of 15 October.
-These are Items 46, 47, and 48 in the Schmundt file.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Item 46, which appears at Page 77, is a letter from Berlin, dated
-October 10, 1938, signed by Von Brauchitsch:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“My Führer:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk253'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I have to report that the troops will reach the demarcation
-line as ordered, by this evening. Insofar as further military
-operations are not required, the order for the occupation of
-the country which was given to me will thus have been fulfilled.
-The guarding of the new frontier line will be taken
-over by the reinforced frontier supervision service in the
-next few days.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk254'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It is thus no longer a military necessity to combine the
-administration of the Sudetenland with the command of the
-troops of the Army under the control of one person.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk255'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I therefore ask you, my Führer, to relieve me, with effect
-from 15 October 1938, of the charge assigned to me: That of
-exercising executive powers in Sudeten-German Territory.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk256'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Heil, my Führer, Von Brauchitsch.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Item 47 of the Schmundt file, appearing on Page 78, is a secret
-telegram from the OKW to the Führer’s train, Lieutenant Colonel
-Schmundt:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“If evening report shows that occupation of Zone 5 has been
-completed without incident, OKW intends to order further
-demobilization.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk257'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Principle: 1) To suspend operation Grün but maintain a
-sufficient state of preparedness on part of Army and Luftwaffe
-to make intervention possible if necessary. 2) All units
-not needed to be withdrawn from the occupied area and
-reduced to peacetime status, as population of occupied area is
-heavily burdened by the massing of troops.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Skipping to below the OKW signature, this appears, at the left:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Führer’s decision:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk258'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. Agreed.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk259'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. Suggestion to be made on the 13 October in Essen by
-General Keitel. Decision will then be reached.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the same date additional demobilization of the forces in the
-Sudetenland was ordered by Hitler and Defendant Keitel. Three
-days later the OKW requested Hitler’s consent to the reversion of
-the RAD (Labor Corps) from the control of the Armed Forces. These
-are Items 52 and 53 in the Schmundt file.
-<span class='pageno' title='86' id='Page_86'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As the German forces entered the Sudetenland, Henlein’s
-Sudetendeutsche Partei was merged with the NSDAP of Hitler. The
-two men who had fled to Hitler’s protection in mid-September, Henlein
-and Karl Hermann Frank, were appointed Gauleiter and
-Deputy Gauleiter, respectively, of the Sudetengau. In the parts of
-the Czechoslovak Republic that were still free the Sudetendeutsche
-Partei constituted itself as the National Socialistic German Worker
-Party in Czechoslovakia, NSDAP in Czechoslovakia, under the
-direction of Kundt, another of Henlein’s deputies.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal will find these events set forth in the Czechoslovak
-official report, Document 998-PS.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The stage was now prepared for the next move of the Nazi conspirators,
-the plan for the conquest of the remainder of Czechoslovakia.
-With the occupation of the Sudetenland and the inclusion
-of German-speaking Czechs within the Greater Reich, it might have
-been expected that the Nazi conspirators would be satisfied. Thus
-far in their program of aggression the defendants had used as a
-pretext for their conquests the union of the Volksdeutsche, the
-people of German descent, with the Reich. Now, after Munich, the
-Volksdeutsche in Czechoslovakia have been substantially all
-returned to German rule.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On 26 September, at the Sportpalast in Berlin, Hitler spoke to
-the world. I now refer and invite the notice of the Tribunal to the
-<span class='it'>Völkischer Beobachter</span>, Munich edition, special edition for 27 September
-1938, in which this speech is quoted. I read from Page 2,
-Column 1, quoting from Hitler:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“And now we are confronted with the last problem which
-must be solved and will be solved. It is the last territorial
-claim” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Is this document in our documents?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: No. I am asking the Court to take judicial
-notice of that.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Very well.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: It is a well-known German publication.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It is the last territorial claim which I have to make in
-Europe, but it is a claim from which I will not swerve and
-which I will satisfy, God willing.” (Document Number 2358-PS.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And further:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I have little to explain. I am grateful to Mr. Chamberlain
-for all his efforts, and I have assured him that the German
-people want nothing but peace; but I have also told him that
-I cannot go back beyond the limits of our patience.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='87' id='Page_87'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This is Page 2, Column 1.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I assured him, moreover, and I repeat it here, that when this
-problem is solved there will be no more territorial problems
-for Germany in Europe. And I further assured him that from
-the moment, when Czechoslovakia solves its other problems—that
-is to say, when the Czechs have come to an arrangement
-with their other minorities peacefully and without oppression—I
-will no longer be interested in the Czech State. And
-that, as far as I am concerned, I will guarantee it. We don’t
-want any Czechs!”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The major portion of the passage I have quoted will be contained
-in Document TC-28, which I think, will be offered by the
-British prosecutor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Yet two weeks later Hitler and Defendant Keitel were preparing
-estimates of the military forces required to break Czechoslovak
-resistance in Bohemia and Moravia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now read from Item 48, at Page 82, of the Schmundt file. This
-is a top-secret telegram sent by Keitel to Hitler’s headquarters on
-11 October 1938 in answer to four questions which Hitler had
-propounded to the OKW. I think it is sufficient merely to read the
-questions which Hitler had propounded:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Question 1. What reinforcements are necessary in the
-situation to break all Czech resistance in Bohemia and
-Moravia?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk260'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Question 2. How much time is requested for the regrouping
-or moving up of new forces?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk261'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Question 3. How much time will be required for the same
-purpose if it is executed after the intended demobilization
-and return measures?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk262'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Question 4. How much time would be required to achieve
-the state of readiness of 1 October?”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On 21 October, the same day on which the administration of the
-Sudetenland was handed over to the civilian authorities, a directive
-outlining plans for the conquest of the remainder of Czechoslovakia
-was signed by Hitler and initialed by the Defendant Keitel.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now offer in evidence Document C-136 as Exhibit USA-104,
-a top-secret order of which 10 copies were made, this being the first
-copy, signed in ink by Keitel.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In this order, issued only 3 weeks after the winning of the
-Sudetenland, the Nazi conspirators are already looking forward to
-new conquests. I quote the first part of the body of the document:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The future tasks for the Armed Forces and the preparations
-for the conduct of war resulting from these tasks will be laid
-down by me in a later directive. Until this directive comes
-<span class='pageno' title='88' id='Page_88'></span>
-into force the Armed Forces must be prepared at all times
-for the following eventualities:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk263'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1) The securing of the frontiers of Germany and the protection
-against surprise air attacks.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk264'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2) The liquidation of the remainder of Czechoslovakia.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk265'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3) The occupation of the Memel.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then proceeding, the statement following Number 2:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Liquidation of the remainder of Czechoslovakia: It must be
-possible to smash at any time the remainder of Czechoslovakia
-if her policy should become hostile towards Germany.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk266'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The preparations to be made by the Armed Forces for this
-contingency will be considerably smaller in extent than those
-for Grün; they must, however, guarantee a continuous and
-considerably higher state of preparedness, since planned
-mobilization measures have been dispensed with. The organization,
-order of battle, and state of readiness of the units
-earmarked for that purpose are in peacetime to be so arranged
-for a surprise assault that Czechoslovakia herself will
-be deprived of all possibility of organized resistance. The
-object is the swift occupation of Bohemia and Moravia and
-the cutting off of Slovakia. The preparations should be such
-that at the same time ‘Grenzsicherung West’ ”—the measures
-of frontier defense in the West—“can be carried out.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk267'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The detailed mission of Army and Air Force is as follows:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk268'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“a. Army: The units stationed in the vicinity of Bohemia-Moravia
-and several motorized divisions are to be earmarked
-for a surprise type of attack. Their number will be determined
-by the forces remaining in Czechoslovakia; a quick and
-decisive success must be assured. The assembly and preparations
-for the attack must be worked out. Forces not needed
-will be kept in readiness in such a manner that they may be
-either committed in securing the frontiers or sent after the
-attack army.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk269'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“b. Air Force: The quick advance of the German Army is to
-be assured by early elimination of the Czech Air Force. For
-this purpose the commitment in a surprise attack from peacetime
-bases has to be prepared. Whether for this purpose still
-stronger forces may be required can be determined from the
-development of the military-political situation in Czechoslovakia
-only. At the same time a simultaneous assembly of
-the remainder of the offensive forces against the West must
-be prepared.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then Part 3 goes on under the heading, “Annexation of the
-Memel District.”
-<span class='pageno' title='89' id='Page_89'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is signed by Adolf Hitler and authenticated by Defendant
-Keitel. It was distributed to the OKH, to Defendant Göring’s Luftwaffe,
-and to Defendant Raeder at Navy headquarters.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Two months later, on 17 December 1938, Defendant Keitel issued
-an appendix to the original order, stating that by command of the
-Führer preparations for the liquidation of Czechoslovakia are to
-continue.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I offer in evidence Document C-138 as Exhibit USA-105, and
-other captured OKW documents classified top secret.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Distribution of this order was the same as for the 21 October
-order. I shall read the body of this order.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Corollary to Directive of 21. 10. 38.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk270'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Reference: ‘Liquidation of the Rest of Czechoslovakia.’ The
-Führer has given the following additional order:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk271'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The preparations for this eventuality are to continue on the
-assumption that no resistance worth mentioning is to be expected.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk272'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“To the outside world too it must clearly appear that it is
-merely an action of pacification, and not a warlike undertaking.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk273'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The action must therefore be carried out by the peacetime
-Armed Forces only, without reinforcements from mobilization.
-The necessary readiness for action, especially the ensuring
-that the most necessary supplies are brought up, must be
-effected by adjustment within the units.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk274'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Similarly the units of the Army detailed for the march in
-must, as a general rule, leave their stations only during the
-night prior to the crossing of the frontier, and will not previously
-form up systematically on the frontier. The transport
-necessary for previous organization should be limited to the
-minimum and will be camouflaged as much as possible. Necessary
-movements, if any, of single units and particularly of
-motorized forces, to the troop training areas situated near the
-frontier, must have the approval of the Führer.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk275'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Air Force should take action in accordance with the
-similar general directives.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk276'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“For the same reasons the exercise of executive power by
-the Supreme Command of the Army is laid down only for
-the newly occupied territory and only for a short period.”—Signed—“Keitel.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I invite the attention of the Tribunal to the fact that this particular
-copy of this order, an original carbon signed in ink by Keitel,
-was the one sent to the OKM, the German Naval headquarters. It
-<span class='pageno' title='90' id='Page_90'></span>
-bears the initials of Fricke, head of the Operation Division of the
-naval war staff; Schniewind, Chief of Staff; and of Defendant Raeder.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As the Wehrmacht moved forward, with plans for what it clearly
-considered would be an easy victory, the Foreign Office played its
-part. In a discussion of means of improving German-Czech relations
-with the Czech Foreign Minister Chvalkovsky in Berlin on 31 January
-1939, Defendant Ribbentrop urged upon the Czech Government
-a quick reduction in the size of the Czech Army. I offer in evidence
-Document 2795-PS as Exhibit USA-106, captured German Foreign
-Office notes of this discussion. I will read only the footnote, which
-is in Ribbentrop’s handwriting:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I mentioned to Chvalkovsky especially that a quick reduction
-in the Czech Army would be decisive in our judgment.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Does the Court propose sitting beyond 4:30?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: No, I think not. The Tribunal will adjourn.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>The Tribunal adjourned until 4 December 1945 at 1000 hours.</span>]</h3>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='91' id='Page_91'></span><h1>TWELFTH DAY<br/> <span style='font-size:smaller'>Tuesday, 4 December 1945</span></h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'><span class='it'>Morning Session</span></h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I will call on the Chief Prosecutor for Great
-Britain and Northern Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>SIR HARTLEY SHAWCROSS (Chief Prosecutor for the United
-Kingdom): May it please the Tribunal, on an occasion to which
-reference has and will be made, Hitler, the leader of the Nazi conspirators
-who are now on trial before you, is reported as having
-said, in reference to their warlike plans:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I shall give a propagandist cause for starting the war, never
-mind whether it be true or not. The victor shall not be asked
-later on whether he told the truth or not. In starting and
-making a war, not the right is what matters, but victory—the
-strongest has the right.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The British Empire with its Allies has twice, within the space
-of 25 years, been victorious in wars which have been forced upon
-it, but it is precisely because we realize that victory is not enough,
-that might is not necessarily right, that lasting peace and the rule
-of international law is not to be secured by the strong arm alone,
-that the British nation is taking part in this Trial. There are those
-who would perhaps say that these wretched men should have been
-dealt with summarily without trial by “executive action”; that their
-power for evil broken, they should have been swept aside into
-oblivion without this elaborate and careful investigation into the
-part which they played in bringing this war about: <span class='it'>Vae Victis!</span> Let
-them pay the penalty of defeat. But that was not the view of the
-British Government. Not so would the rule of law be raised and
-strengthened on the international as well as upon the municipal
-plane; not so would future generations realize that right is not
-always on the side of the big battalions; not so would the world
-be made aware that the waging of aggressive war is not only a
-dangerous venture but a criminal one.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Human memory is very short. Apologists for defeated nations
-are sometimes able to play upon the sympathy and magnanimity of
-their victors, so that the true facts, never authoritatively recorded,
-become obscured and forgotten. One has only to recall the circumstances
-following upon the last World War to see the dangers to
-<span class='pageno' title='92' id='Page_92'></span>
-which, in the absence of any authoritative judicial pronouncement,
-a tolerant or a credulous people is exposed. With the passage of
-time the former tend to discount, perhaps because of their very
-horror, the stories of aggression and atrocity that may be handed
-down; and the latter, the credulous, misled by perhaps fanatical
-and perhaps dishonest propagandists, come to believe that it was
-not they but their opponents who were guilty of that which they
-would themselves condemn. And so we believe that this Tribunal,
-acting, as we know it will act notwithstanding its appointment
-by the victorious powers, with complete and judicial objectivity,
-will provide a contemporary touchstone and an authoritative and
-impartial record to which future historians may turn for truth, and
-future politicians for warning. From this record shall future
-generations know not only what our generation suffered, but also
-that our suffering was the result of crimes, crimes against the laws
-of peoples which the peoples of the world upheld and will continue
-in the future to uphold—to uphold by international co-operation, not
-based merely on military alliances, but grounded, and firmly
-grounded, in the rule of law.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nor, though this procedure and this Indictment of individuals
-may be novel, is there anything new in the principles which by this
-prosecution we seek to enforce. Ineffective though, alas, the sanctions
-proved and showed to be, the nations of the world had, as it
-will be my purpose in addressing the Tribunal to show, sought
-to make aggressive war an international crime, and although
-previous tradition has sought to punish states rather than individuals,
-it is both logical and right that, if the act of waging war
-is itself an offense against international law, those individuals who
-shared personal responsibility for bringing such wars about should
-answer personally for the course into which they led their states.
-Again, individual war crimes have long been recognized by international
-law as triable by the courts of those states whose nationals
-have been outraged, at least so long as a state of war persists. It
-would be illogical in the extreme if those who, although they may
-not with their own hands have committed individual crimes, were
-responsible for systematic breaches of the laws of war affecting
-the nationals of many states should escape for that reason. So also
-in regard to Crimes against Humanity. The rights of humanitarian
-intervention on behalf of the rights of man, trampled upon by a
-state in a manner shocking the sense of mankind, has long been
-considered to form part of the recognized law of nations. Here too,
-the Charter merely develops a pre-existing principle. If murder,
-rapine, and robbery are indictable under the ordinary municipal
-laws of our countries, shall those who differ from the common
-criminal only by the extent and systematic nature of their offenses
-escape accusation?
-<span class='pageno' title='93' id='Page_93'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is, as I shall show, the view of the British Government that
-in these matters, this Tribunal will be applying to individuals, not
-the law of the victor, but the accepted principles of international
-usage in a way which will, if anything can, promote and fortify the
-rule of international law and safeguard the future peace and security
-of this war-stricken world.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By agreement between the chief prosecutors, it is my task, on
-behalf of the British Government and of the other states associated
-in this Prosecution, to present the case on Count Two of the Indictment
-and to show how these defendants, in conspiracy with
-each other, and with persons not now before this Tribunal, planned
-and waged a war of aggression in breach of the treaty obligations
-by which, under international law, Germany, as other states, has
-thought to make such wars impossible.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The task falls into two parts. The first is to demonstrate the
-nature and the basis of the Crime against Peace, which is constituted
-under the Charter of this Tribunal, by waging wars of aggression
-and in violation of treaties; and the second is to establish beyond all
-possibility of doubt that such wars were waged by these defendants.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As to the first, it would no doubt be sufficient just to say this.
-It is not incumbent upon the Prosecution to prove that wars of
-aggression and wars in violation of international treaties are, or
-ought to be, international crimes. The Charter of this Tribunal has
-prescribed that they are crimes and that the Charter is the statute
-and the law of this Court. Yet, though that is the clear and mandatory
-law governing the jurisdiction of this Tribunal, we feel that
-we should not be discharging our task in the abiding interest of
-international justice and morality unless we showed to the Tribunal,
-and indeed to the world, the position of this provision of the
-Charter against the general perspective of international law. For,
-just as in the experience of our country, some old English statutes
-were merely declaratory of the common law, so today this Charter
-merely declares and creates a jurisdiction in respect of what was
-already the law of nations.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nor is it unimportant to emphasize that aspect of the matter,
-lest there may be some, now or hereafter, who might allow their
-judgment to be warped by plausible catchwords or by an uninformed
-and distorted sense of justice towards these defendants. It is not
-difficult to be misled by such criticisms as that resort to war in the
-past has not been a crime; that the power to resort to war is one
-of the prerogatives of the sovereign state; even that this Charter,
-in constituting wars of aggression a crime, has imitated one of the
-most obnoxious, doctrines of National Socialist jurisprudence,
-namely <span class='it'>post factum</span> legislation—that the Charter is in this respect
-reminiscent of bills of attainder—and that these proceedings are no
-<span class='pageno' title='94' id='Page_94'></span>
-more than a measure of vengeance, subtly concealed in the garb of
-judicial proceedings which the victor wreaks upon the vanquished.
-These things may sound plausible—yet they are not true. It is,
-indeed, not necessary to doubt that some aspects of the Charter bear
-upon them the imprint of significant and salutary novelty. But it is
-our submission and our conviction, which we affirm before this
-Tribunal and the world, that fundamentally the provision of the
-Charter which constitutes wars, such wars as these defendants
-joined in waging and in planning a crime, is not in any way an
-innovation. This provision of the Charter does no more than constitute
-a competent jurisdiction for the punishment of what not only
-the enlightened conscience of mankind but the law of nations itself
-had constituted an international crime before this Tribunal was
-established and this Charter became part of the public law of the
-world.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So first let this be said:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Whilst it may be quite true that there is no body of international
-rules amounting to law in the Austinian sense of a rule imposed
-by a sovereign upon a subject obliged to obey it under some definite
-sanction; yet for 50 years or more the people of the world, striving
-perhaps after that ideal of which the poet speaks:</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“When the war drums throb no longer</p>
-<p class='line0'>And the battle flags are furled,</p>
-<p class='line0'>In the parliament of man,</p>
-<p class='line0'>The federation of the world”—</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'>sought to create an operative system of rules based upon the consent
-of nations to stabilize international relations, to avoid war
-taking place at all and to mitigate the results of such wars as took
-place. The first treaty was of course the Hague Convention of 1899
-for the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes. That Convention
-was, indeed, of no more than precatory effect, and we attach
-no weight to it for the purposes of this case, but it did establish
-agreement that, in the event of serious disputes arising between
-the signatory powers, they would as far as possible submit to
-mediation. That Convention was followed in 1907 by another convention
-reaffirming and slightly strengthening what had previously
-been agreed. These early conventions fell, indeed, very far short
-of outlawing war, or of creating any binding obligation to arbitrate.
-I shall certainly not ask the Tribunal to say any crime was committed
-by disregarding those conventions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But at least they established that the contracting powers accepted
-the general principle that, if at all possible, war should be resorted
-to only if mediation failed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Although these conventions are mentioned in this Indictment,
-I am not relying on them save to show the historical development
-<span class='pageno' title='95' id='Page_95'></span>
-of the law, and it is unnecessary, therefore, to argue about their
-precise effect, for the place which they once occupied has been taken
-by far more effective instruments. I mention them now merely for
-this, that they were the first steps towards that body of rules of law
-which we are seeking here to enforce.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There were, of course, other individual agreements between
-particular states, agreements which sought to preserve the neutrality
-of individual countries, as, for instance, that of Belgium, but those
-agreements were inadequate, in the absence of any real will to
-comply with them, to prevent the first World War in 1914.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Shocked by the occurrence of that catastrophe, the nations of
-Europe, not excluding Germany, and of other parts of the world,
-came to the conclusion that, in the interests of all alike, a permanent
-organization of the nations should be established to maintain
-the peace. And so the Treaty of Versailles was prefaced by the
-Covenant of the League of Nations.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, I say nothing at this moment of the general merits of the
-various provisions of the Treaty of Versailles. They have been
-criticized, some of them perhaps justly criticized, and they were
-certainly made the subject of much bellicose propaganda in Germany.
-But it is unnecessary to inquire into the merits of the matter,
-for, however unjust one might for this purpose assume the provisions
-of the Treaty of Versailles to have been, they contained no
-kind of excuse for the waging of war to secure an alteration in
-their terms. Not only was that treaty a settlement, by agreement,
-of all the difficult territorial questions which had been left outstanding
-by the war itself, but it established the League of Nations
-which, if it had been loyally supported, could so well have resolved
-those international differences which might otherwise have led, as
-indeed they eventually did lead, to war. It set up in the Council
-of the League, in the Assembly and in the Permanent Court of
-International Justice, a machine not only for the peaceful settlement
-of international disputes, but also for the frank ventilation of all
-international questions by open and free discussion. At that time,
-in those years after the last war, the hopes of the world stood high.
-Millions of men in all countries—perhaps even in Germany itself—had
-laid down their lives in what they hoped and believed was a
-war to end war. Germany herself entered the League of Nations
-and was given a permanent seat on the Council; and on that
-Council, as in the assembly of the League, German governments
-which preceded that of the Defendant Von Papen in 1932 played
-their full part. In the years from 1919 to that time in 1932, despite
-some comparatively minor incidents in the heated atmosphere which
-followed the end of the war, the peaceful operation of the League
-<span class='pageno' title='96' id='Page_96'></span>
-continued. Nor was it only the operation of the League which gave
-ground, and good ground, for hope that at long last the rule of law
-would replace anarchy in the international field.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The statesmen of the world deliberately set out to make wars
-of aggression an international crime. These are no new terms
-invented by the victors to embody in this Charter. They have
-figured, and they have figured prominently, in numerous treaties,
-in governmental pronouncements, and in the declarations of statesmen
-in the period preceding the second World War. In treaties
-concluded between the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and other
-states, such as Persia in 1927, France in 1935, China in 1937, the
-contracting parties undertook to refrain from any act of aggression
-whatever against the other party. In 1933 the Soviet Union became
-a party to a large number of treaties containing a detailed definition
-of aggression, and the same definition appeared in the same year in
-the authoritative report of the Committee on Questions of Security
-set up in connection with the Conference for the Reduction and
-Limitation of Armaments. But at this time states were going beyond
-commitments to refrain from wars of aggression and to assist states
-which were victims of aggression. They were condemning aggression
-in unmistakable terms. Thus in the Anti-War Treaty of Non-Aggression
-and Conciliation, which was signed on the 10th of
-October 1933, by a number of American states, subsequently joined
-by practically all the states of the American continents and a
-number of European countries as well, the contracting parties
-solemnly declared that “they condemn wars of aggression in their
-mutual relations or in those of other states.” And that treaty was
-fully incorporated into the Buenos Aires convention of December
-1936, signed and ratified by a large number of American countries,
-including, of course, the United States. And previously, in 1928, the
-6th Pan-American Conference had adopted a resolution declaring
-that, as “war of aggression constitutes a crime against the human
-species .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. all aggression is illicit and as such is declared prohibited.”
-A year earlier, as long ago as September 1927, the Assembly of
-the League of Nations adopted a resolution affirming the conviction
-that “a war of aggression can never serve as a means of settling
-international disputes and is, in consequence, an international crime”
-and going on to declare that “all wars of aggression are, and shall
-always be prohibited.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The first article of the draft Treaty for Mutual Assistance of
-1923 read in these terms:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The High Contracting Parties, affirming that aggressive war
-is an international crime, undertake the solemn engagement
-not to make themselves guilty of this crime against any other
-nation.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='97' id='Page_97'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the Preamble to the Geneva Protocol of 1924, it was stated
-that “offensive warfare constitutes an infraction of solidarity and
-an international crime.” These instruments that I have just last
-mentioned remained, it is true, unratified for various reasons, but
-they are not without significance or value.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>These repeated declarations, these repeated condemnations of
-wars of aggression testified to the fact that with the establishment
-of the League of Nations, with the legal developments which followed
-it, the place of war in international law had undergone a
-profound change. War was ceasing to be the unrestricted prerogative
-of sovereign states. The Covenant of the League of Nations
-did not totally abolish the right of war. It left, perhaps, certain
-gaps which were possibly larger in theory than in practice. But in
-effect it surrounded the right of war by procedural and substantive
-checks and delays, which, if the Covenant had been faithfully observed,
-would have amounted to an elimination of war, not only
-between members of the League, but also, by reason of certain
-provisions of the Covenant, in the relations of non-members as well.
-And thus the Covenant of the League restored the position as it
-existed at the dawn of international law, at the time when Grotius
-was laying down the foundations of the modern law of nations and
-established the distinction, a distinction accompanied by profound
-legal consequences in the sphere, for instance, of neutrality, between
-a just war and an unjust war.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nor was that development arrested with the adoption of the
-Covenant of the League. The right of war was further circumscribed
-by a series of treaties, numbering—it is an astonishing
-figure but it is right—nearly a thousand, of arbitration and conciliation
-embracing practically all the nations of the world. The
-so-called Optional Clause of Article 36 of the Statute of the Permanent
-Court of International Justice, the clause which conferred upon
-the Court compulsory jurisdiction in regard to the most comprehensive
-categories of disputes, and which constituted in effect by far
-the most important compulsory treaty of arbitration in the postwar
-period, was widely signed and ratified. Germany herself signed it
-in 1927 and her signature was renewed, and renewed for a period
-of 5 years by the Nazi government in July of 1933. (Significantly,
-that ratification was not again renewed on the expiration of its
-5 years’ validity in March of 1938 by Germany). Since 1928 a considerable
-number of states signed and ratified the General Act for
-the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes which was designed
-to fill the gaps left by the Optional Clause and by the existing
-treaties of arbitration and conciliation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And all this vast network of instruments of pacific settlement
-testified to the growing conviction throughout the civilized world
-<span class='pageno' title='98' id='Page_98'></span>
-that war was ceasing to be the normal or the legitimate means of
-settling international disputes. The express condemnation of wars
-of aggression, which I have already mentioned, supplies the same
-testimony. But there was, of course, more direct evidence pointing
-in the same direction. The Treaty of Locarno of the 16th October
-1925, to which I shall have occasion to refer presently, and to which
-Germany was a party, was more than a treaty of arbitration and
-conciliation in which the parties undertook definite obligations with
-regard to the pacific settlement of disputes which might arise between
-them. It was, subject to clearly specified exceptions of self-defense
-in certain contingencies, a more general undertaking in
-which the parties to it agreed that “they would in no case attack
-or invade each other or resort to war against each other.” And that
-constituted a general renunciation of war, and it was so considered
-to be in the eyes of international jurists and in the public opinion
-of the world. The Locarno Treaty was not just another of the great
-number of arbitration treaties which were being concluded at this
-time. It was regarded as a kind of cornerstone in the European
-settlement and in the new legal order in Europe in partial, just, and
-indeed, generous substitution for the rigors of the Treaty of Versailles.
-And with that treaty, the term “outlawry of war” left the
-province of mere pacifist propaganda. It became current in the
-writings on international law and in the official pronouncements of
-governments. No one could any longer say, after the Locarno Treaty—no
-one could any longer associate himself with the plausible assertion
-that at all events, as between the parties to that treaty, war
-remained an unrestricted right of sovereign states.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But, although the effect of the Locarno Treaty was limited to the
-parties to it, it had wider influence in paving the way towards that
-most fundamental, that truly revolutionary enactment in modern
-international law, namely, the General Treaty for the Renunciation
-of War of 27 August 1928, the Pact of Paris, the Kellogg-Briand
-Pact. That treaty, a most deliberate and carefully prepared piece
-of international legislation, was binding in 1939 on more than
-60 nations, including Germany. It was, and it has remained, the
-most widely signed and ratified international instrument. It contained
-no provision for its termination, and it was conceived, as
-I said, as the cornerstone of any future international order worthy
-of the name. It is fully part of international law as it stands today,
-and it has in no way been modified or replaced by the Charter of
-the United Nations. It is right, in this solemn hour in the history
-of the world, when the responsible leaders of a state stand accused
-of a premeditated breach of this great treaty which was, which
-remains, a source of hope and of faith for mankind, to set out in
-detail its two operative articles and its Preamble. Let me read them
-to the Tribunal—first the Preamble, and it starts like this:
-<span class='pageno' title='99' id='Page_99'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The President of the German Reich”—and the other states
-associated .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Shall we find it among the documents?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>SIR HARTLEY SHAWCROSS: It will be put in. I don’t think
-you have it at the moment.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The President of the German Reich .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. deeply sensitive of
-their solemn duty to promote the welfare of mankind; persuaded
-that the time has come when a frank renunciation of
-war as an instrument of international policy should be made
-to the end that the peaceful and friendly relations now
-existing between their peoples may be perpetuated; convinced
-that all changes in their relations with one another should be
-sought only by pacific means and be the result of a peaceful
-and orderly progress, and that any signatory power which
-shall hereafter seek to promote its national interests by resort
-to war, should be denied the benefits furnished by this Treaty;
-hopeful that, encouraged by their example, all the other
-nations of the world will join in this humane endeavor and
-by adhering to the present treaty as soon as it comes into
-force bring their peoples within the scope of its beneficent
-provisions, thus uniting civilized nations of the world in a
-common renunciation of war as an instrument of their national
-policy .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then, Article I:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The High Contracting Parties solemnly declare in the names
-of their respective peoples that they condemn recourse to war
-for the solution of international controversies and renounce
-it as an instrument of national policy in their relations with
-one another.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And Article II:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The High Contracting Parties agree that the settlement or
-solution of all disputes or conflicts of whatever nature or of
-whatever origin they may be, which may arise among them,
-shall never be sought except by pacific means.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In that treaty, that General Treaty for the Renunciation of War,
-practically the whole civilized world abolished war as a legally permissible
-means of enforcing the law or of changing it. The right
-of war was no longer of the essence of sovereignty. Whatever the
-position may have been at the time of the Hague Convention, whatever
-the position may have been in 1914, whatever it may have
-been in 1918—and it is not necessary to discuss it—no international
-lawyer of repute, no responsible statesman, no soldier concerned
-with the legal use of armed forces, no economist or industrialist
-concerned in his country’s war economy could doubt that with the
-<span class='pageno' title='100' id='Page_100'></span>
-Pact of Paris on the statute book a war of aggression was contrary
-to international law. Nor have the repeated violations of the Pact
-by the Axis Powers in any way affected its validity. Let this be
-firmly and clearly stated. Those very breaches, except perhaps to
-the cynic and the malevolent, have added to the strength of the
-treaty; they provoked the sustained wrath of peoples angered by the
-contemptuous disregard of this great statute and determined to vindicate
-its provisions. The Pact of Paris is the law of nations. This
-Tribunal will declare it. The world must enforce it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Let this also be said, that the Pact of Paris was not a clumsy
-instrument likely to become a kind of signpost for the guilty. It
-did not enable Germany to go to war against Poland and yet rely,
-as against Great Britain and France, on any immunity from warlike
-action because of the very provisions of the pact. For the pact laid
-down expressly in its preamble that no state guilty of a violation
-of its provisions might invoke its benefits. And when, on the outbreak
-of the second World War, Great Britain and France communicated
-to the League of Nations that a state of war existed
-between them and Germany as from the 3rd of September 1939,
-they declared that by committing an act of aggression against Poland,
-Germany had violated her obligations assumed not only towards
-Poland but also towards the other signatories of the pact. A violation
-of the pact in relation to one signatory was an attack upon
-all the other signatories and they were entitled to treat it as such.
-I emphasize that point lest any of these defendants should seize
-upon the letter of the particulars of Count Two of the Indictment
-and seek to suggest that it was not Germany who initiated war
-with the United Kingdom and France on 3 September 1939. The
-declaration of war came from the United Kingdom and from France;
-the act of war and its commencement came from Germany in violation
-of the fundamental enactment to which she was a party.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The General Treaty for the Renunciation of War, this great constitutional
-instrument of an international society awakened to the
-deadly dangers of another Armageddon, did not remain an isolated
-effort soon to be forgotten in the turmoil of recurrent international
-crises. It became, in conjunction with the Covenant of the League
-of Nations or independently of it, the starting point for a new orientation
-of governments in matters of peace, war, and neutrality. It
-is of importance, I think, to quote just one or two of the statements
-which were being made by governments at that time in relation
-to the effect of the pact. In 1929 His Majesty’s Government in the
-United Kingdom said, in connection with the question of conferring
-upon the Permanent Court of International Justice jurisdiction with
-regard to the exercise of belligerent rights in relation to neutral
-states—and it illustrates the profound change which was being
-<span class='pageno' title='101' id='Page_101'></span>
-accepted as having taken place as a result of the Pact of Paris in
-international law:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“But the whole situation .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. rests, and international law on
-the subject has been entirely built up, on the assumption that
-there is nothing illegitimate in the use of war as an instrument
-of national policy, and, as a necessary corollary, that
-the position and rights of neutrals are entirely independent
-of the circumstances of any war which may be in progress.
-Before the acceptance of the Covenant, the basis of the law
-of neutrality was that the rights and obligations of neutrals
-were identical as regards both belligerents, and were entirely
-independent of the rights and wrongs of the dispute which
-had led to the war, or the respective position of the belligerents
-at the bar of world opinion.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then the Government went on:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Now it is precisely this assumption which is no longer valid
-as regards states which are members of the League of Nations
-and parties to the Peace Pact. The effect of those instruments,
-taken together, is to deprive nations of the right to employ
-war as an instrument of national policy, and to forbid the
-states which have signed them to give aid or comfort to an
-offender.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This was being said in 1929, when there was no war upon the
-horizon.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“As between such states, there has been in consequence a
-fundamental change in the whole question of belligerent and
-neutral rights. The whole policy of His Majesty’s present
-Government (and, it would appear, of any alternative government)
-is based upon a determination to comply with their
-obligations under the Covenant of the League and the Peace
-Pact. This being so, the situation which we have to envisage
-in the event of a war in which we were engaged is not one in
-which the rights and duties of belligerents and neutrals will
-depend upon the old rules of war and neutrality, but one in
-which the position of the members of the League will be
-determined by the Covenant and by the Pact.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Chief Prosecutor for the United States of America referred
-in his opening speech before this Tribunal to the weighty pronouncement
-of Mr. Stimson, the Secretary of War, in which, in 1932,
-he gave expression to the drastic change brought about in international
-law by the Pact of Paris, and it is perhaps convenient
-to quote the relevant passage in full:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“War between nations was renounced by the signatories of
-the Kellogg-Briand Pact. This means that it has become
-illegal throughout practically the entire world. It is no
-<span class='pageno' title='102' id='Page_102'></span>
-longer to be the source and subject of rights. It is no longer to
-be the principle around which the duties, the conduct, and
-the rights of nations revolve. It is an illegal thing. Hereafter,
-when two nations engage in armed conflict, either one or
-both of them must be wrongdoers—violators of this general
-treaty law. We no longer draw a circle about them and treat
-them with the punctilios of the duelist’s code. Instead we
-denounce them as law-breakers.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And nearly 10 years later, when numerous independent states
-lay prostrate, shattered or menaced in their very existence before
-the impact of the war machine of the Nazi State, the Attorney General
-of the United States, subsequently a distinguished member of
-the highest Tribunal of that great country, gave significant expression
-to the change which had been effected in the law as the result
-of the Pact of Paris in a speech for which the freedom-loving peoples
-of the world will always be grateful. On the 27th of March 1941—and
-I mention it now not as merely being the speech of a statesman,
-although it was certainly that, but as being the considered
-opinion of a distinguished lawyer,—he said this:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928, in which Germany, Italy
-and Japan covenanted with us, as well as with other nations,
-to renounce war as an instrument of policy, made definite the
-outlawry of war and of necessity altered the dependent concept
-of neutral obligations.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk277'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Treaty for the Renunciation of War and the Argentine
-Anti-War Treaty deprived their signatories of the right of
-war as an instrument of national policy or aggression and
-rendered unlawful wars undertaken in violation of these provisions.
-In consequence these treaties destroyed the historical
-and juridical foundations of the doctrine of neutrality conceived
-as an attitude of absolute impartiality in relation to
-aggressive wars .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk278'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It follows that the state which has gone to war in violation
-of its obligations acquires no right to equality of treatment
-from other states, unless treaty obligations require different
-handling of affairs. It derives no rights from its illegality.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk279'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In flagrant cases of aggression where the facts speak so unambiguously
-that world opinion takes what may be the equivalent
-of judicial notice, we may not stymie international law
-and allow these great treaties to become dead letters. The
-intelligent public opinion of the world which is not afraid to
-be vocal, and the action of the American States, has made
-a determination that the Axis Powers are the aggressors in
-the wars today, which is an appropriate basis in the present
-state of international organizations for our policy.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='103' id='Page_103'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thus, there is no doubt that by the time the National Socialist
-State of Germany had embarked upon the preparation of the war
-of aggression against the civilized world and by the time it had
-accomplished that design, aggressive war had become, in virtue of
-the Pact of Paris and the other treaties and declarations to which
-I have referred, illegal and a crime beyond all uncertainty and
-doubt. And it is on that proposition, and fundamentally on that
-universal treaty, the Kellogg-Briand Pact, that Count Two of this
-Indictment is principally based.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution has deemed it necessary—indeed, imperative—to
-establish beyond all possibility of question, at what I am afraid may
-appear to be excessive length, that only superficial learning or culpable
-sentimentality can assert that there is any significant element
-of retroactivity in the determination of the authors of this Charter
-to treat aggressive war as conduct which international law has prohibited
-and stigmatized as criminal. We have traced the progressive
-limitation of the rights of war, the renunciation and condemnation
-of wars of aggression, and above all, the total prohibition and condemnation
-of all wars conceived as an instrument of national policy.
-What statesman or politician in charge of the affairs of nations could
-doubt, from 1928 onwards, that aggressive war, or that all war,
-except in self-defense or for the collective enforcement of the law,
-or against a state which had itself violated the Pact of Paris, was
-unlawful and outlawed? What statesman or politician embarking
-upon such a war could reasonably and justifiably count upon an
-immunity other than that of a successful outcome of the criminal
-venture? What more decisive evidence of a prohibition laid down
-by positive international law could any lawyer desire than that
-which has been adduced before this Tribunal?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There are, it is true, some small town lawyers who deny the
-very existence of any international law; and indeed, as I have said,
-the rules of the law of nations may not satisfy the Austinian test
-of being imposed by a sovereign. But the legal regulation of international
-relations rests upon quite different juridical foundations. It
-depends upon consent, but upon a consent which, once given, cannot
-be withdrawn by unilateral action. In the international field the
-source of law is not the command of a sovereign but the treaty
-agreement binding upon every state which has adhered to it. And
-it is indeed true, and the recognition of its truth today by all the
-great powers of the world is vital to our future peace—it is indeed
-true that, as M. Litvinov once said, and as Great Britain fully
-accepts:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Absolute sovereignty and entire liberty of action only belong
-to such states as have not undertaken international obligations.
-Immediately a state accepts international obligations
-it limits its sovereignty.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='104' id='Page_104'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In that way and that way alone lies the future peace of the
-world. Yet it may be argued that although war itself was outlawed
-and forbidden, it was not criminally outlawed and criminally forbidden.
-International law, it may be said, does not attribute criminality
-to states and still less to individuals. But can it really be said
-on behalf of these defendants that the offense of these aggressive
-wars, which plunged millions of people to their death, which by dint
-of War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity brought about the
-torture and extermination of countless thousands of innocent civilians,
-which devastated cities, which destroyed the amenities—nay,
-the most rudimentary necessities of civilization in many countries—which
-has brought the world to the brink of ruin from which it
-will take generations to recover—will it seriously be said by these
-defendants that such a war is only an offense, only an illegality,
-only a matter of condemnation perhaps sounding in damages, but
-not a crime justiciable by any Tribunal? No law worthy of the
-name can allow itself to be reduced to an absurdity in that way,
-and certainly the great powers responsible for this Charter were
-not prepared to admit it. They draw the inescapable conclusion
-from the renunciation, the prohibition, the condemnation of war
-which had become part of the law of nations, and they refuse to
-reduce justice to impotence by subscribing to the outworn doctrines
-that a sovereign state can commit no crime and that no crime can
-be committed on behalf of the sovereign state by individuals acting
-in its behalf. They refuse to stultify themselves, and their refusal
-and their decision has decisively shaped the law for this Tribunal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If this be an innovation, it is an innovation long overdue—a
-desirable and beneficent innovation fully consistent with justice,
-fully consistent with common sense and with the abiding purposes
-of the law of nations. But is it indeed an innovation? Or is it no
-more than the logical development of the law? There was indeed
-a time when international lawyers used to maintain that the liability
-of the state, because of its sovereignty, was limited to a contractual
-responsibility. International tribunals have not accepted
-that view. They have repeatedly affirmed that a state can commit
-a tort; that it may be guilty of trespass, of nuisance, and of negligence.
-And they have gone further. They have held that a state
-may be bound to pay what are in effect penal damages. In a recent
-case decided in 1935 between the United States and Canada, an
-arbitral tribunal, with the concurrence of its American member,
-decided that the United States were bound to pay what amounted
-to penal damages for an affront to Canadian sovereignty. And on
-a wider plane, the Covenant of the League of Nations, in providing
-for sanctions, recognized the principle of enforcement of the law
-against collective units, such enforcement to be, if necessary, of a
-penal character. And so there is not anything startlingly new in the
-<span class='pageno' title='105' id='Page_105'></span>
-adoption of the principle that the state as such is responsible for
-its criminal acts. In fact, save for reliance on the unconvincing
-argument of sovereignty, there is in law no reason why a state
-should not be answerable for crimes committed on its behalf. A
-hundred years ago Dr. Lushington, a great English Admiralty judge,
-refused to admit that a state could not be a pirate. History—very
-recent history—does not warrant the view that a state cannot be
-a criminal. On the other hand, the immeasurable potentialities for
-evil, inherent in the state in this age of science and organization
-would seem to demand, quite imperatively, means of repression of
-criminal conduct even more drastic and more effective than in the
-case of individuals. And insofar, therefore, as this Charter has put
-on record the principle of the criminal responsibility of the state,
-it must be applauded as a wise and far-seeing measure of international
-legislation.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>SIR HARTLEY SHAWCROSS: [<span class='it'>Continuing.</span>] I was saying before
-the recess that there could be no doubt about the principle of
-criminal responsibility on the part of the state which engaged in
-aggressive war.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Admittedly, the conscience shrinks from the rigors of collective
-punishment, which may fall upon the guilty and the innocent alike,
-although, it may be noted, most of these innocent victims would
-not have hesitated to reap the fruits of the criminal act if it had
-been successful. Humanity and justice will find means of mitigating
-any injustice in collective punishment. Above all, much hardship
-can be obviated by making the punishment fall upon the individuals
-who were themselves directly responsible for the criminal conduct
-of their state. It is here that the powers who framed this
-Charter took a step which justice, sound legal sense, and an enlightened
-appreciation of the good of mankind must acclaim without
-cavil or reserve. The Charter lays down expressly that there shall
-be individual responsibility for the crimes, including the crimes
-against the peace, committed on behalf of the state. The state is
-not an abstract entity. Its rights and duties are the rights and
-duties of men. Its actions are the actions of men. It is a salutary
-principle, a principle of law, that politicians who embark upon a
-particular policy—as here—of aggressive war should not be able to
-seek immunity behind the intangible personality of the state. It is
-a salutary legal rule that persons who, in violation of the law,
-plunge their own and other countries into an aggressive war should
-do so with a halter around their necks.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To say that those who aid and abet, who counsel and procure
-a crime are themselves criminals, is a commonplace in our own
-<span class='pageno' title='106' id='Page_106'></span>
-municipal law. Nor is the principle of individual international
-responsibility for offenses against the law of nations altogether new.
-It has been applied not only to pirates. The entire law relating to
-war crimes, as distinct from the crime of war, is based upon the
-principle of individual responsibility. The future of international
-law, and indeed, of the world itself, depends on its application in
-a much wider sphere, in particular, in that of safeguarding the
-peace of the world. There must be acknowledged not only, as in
-the Charter of the United Nations, fundamental human rights, but
-also, as in the Charter of this Tribunal, fundamental human duties,
-and of these none is more vital, none is more fundamental, than the
-duty not to vex the peace of nations in violation of the clearest legal
-prohibitions and undertakings. If this be an innovation, it is an
-innovation which we are prepared to defend and to justify, but it
-is not an innovation which creates a new crime. International law
-had already, before the Charter was adopted, constituted aggressive
-war a criminal act.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There is thus no substantial retroactivity in the provisions of
-the Charter. It merely fixes the responsibility for a crime already
-clearly established as such by positive law upon its actual perpetrators.
-It fills a gap in international criminal procedure. There is all
-the difference between saying to a man, “You will now be punished
-for what was not a crime at all at the time you committed it,” and
-in saying to him, “You will now pay the penalty for conduct which
-was contrary to law and a crime when you executed it, although,
-owing to the imperfection of the international machinery, there was
-at that time no court competent to pronounce judgment against you.”
-It is that latter course which we adopt, and if that be retroactivity, we
-proclaim it to be most fully consistent with that higher justice which,
-in the practice of civilized states, has set a definite limit to the retroactive
-operation of laws. Let the defendants and their protagonists
-complain that the Charter is in this matter an <span class='it'>ex parte fiat</span> of the victors.
-These victors, composing, as they do, the overwhelming majority
-of the nations of the world, represent also the world’s sense of
-justice, which would be outraged if the crime of war, after this
-second world conflict, were to remain unpunished. In thus interpreting,
-declaring, and supplementing the existing law, these states
-are content to be judged by the verdict of history. <span class='it'>Securus judicat
-orbis terrarum.</span> Insofar as the Charter of this Tribunal introduces
-new law, its authors have established a precedent for the future—a
-precedent operative against all, including themselves, but in essence
-that law, rendering recourse to aggressive war an international
-crime, had been well established when the Charter was adopted.
-It is only by way of corruption of language that it can be described
-as a retroactive law.
-<span class='pageno' title='107' id='Page_107'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There remains the question, with which I shall not detain the
-Tribunal for long, whether these wars which were launched by Germany
-and her leaders in violation of treaties or agreements or
-assurances were also wars of aggression. A war of aggression is a
-war which is resorted to in violation of the international obligation
-not to have recourse to war, or, in cases in which war is not totally
-renounced, which is resorted to in disregard of the duty to utilize
-the procedure of pacific settlement which a state has bound itself
-to observe. There was, as a matter of fact, in the period between
-the two world wars, a divergence of opinion among jurists and
-statesmen whether it was preferable to attempt in advance a legal
-definition of aggression, or to leave to the states concerned and to
-the collective organs of the international community freedom of
-appreciation of the facts in any particular situation that might arise.
-Those holding the latter view argued that a rigid definition might
-be abused by an unscrupulous state to fit in with its aggressive
-design; they feared, and the British Government was for a time
-among those who took this view, that an automatic definition of
-aggression might become “a trap for the innocent and a signpost
-for the guilty.” Others held that in the interest of certainty and
-security a definition of aggression, like a definition of any crime in
-municipal law, was proper and useful. They urged that the competent
-international organs, political and judicial, could be trusted to
-avoid in any particular case a definition of aggression which might
-lead to obstruction or to an absurdity. In May of 1933 the Committee
-on Security Questions of the Disarmament Conference proposed
-a definition of aggression on these lines:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The aggressor in an international conflict shall, subject to
-the agreements in force between the parties to the dispute,
-be considered to be that state which is the first to commit
-any of the following actions:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk280'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(1) Declaration of war upon another state;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk281'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(2) Invasion by its armed forces, with or without a declaration
-of war, of the territory of another state;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk282'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(3) Attack by its land, naval, or air forces, with or without
-a declaration of war, on the territory, vessels, or aircraft of
-another state;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk283'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(4) Naval blockade of the coasts or ports of another state;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk284'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(5) Provision of support to armed bands formed in its territory
-which have invaded the territory of another state, or
-refusal; notwithstanding the request of the invaded state, to
-take in its own territory all the measures in its power to
-deprive those bands of all assistance or protection.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The various treaties concluded in 1933 by the Union of Soviet
-Socialist Republics and other states followed closely that definition.
-<span class='pageno' title='108' id='Page_108'></span>
-So did the draft convention submitted in 1933 by His Majesty’s
-Government to the Disarmament Conference.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>However, it is unprofitable to elaborate here the details of the
-problem or of the definition of aggression. This Tribunal will not
-allow itself to be deflected from its purpose by attempts to ventilate
-in this Court what is an academic and, in the circumstances,
-an utterly unreal controversy as to what is the nature of a war of
-aggression, for there is no definition of aggression, general or particular,
-which does not cover and cover abundantly and irresistibly
-in every detail, the premeditated onslaught by Germany on the
-territorial integrity and political independence of so many sovereign
-states.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This, then, being the law as we submit it to be to this Tribunal—that
-the peoples of the world by the Pact of Paris had finally outlawed
-war and made it criminal—I turn now to the facts to see how
-these defendants under their leader and with their associates
-destroyed the high hopes of mankind and sought to revert to international
-anarchy. First, let this be said, for it will be established
-beyond doubt by the documents which you will see, from the moment
-Hitler became Chancellor in 1933, with the Defendant Von
-Papen as Reich Chancellor, and with the Defendant Von Neurath as
-his Foreign Minister, the whole atmosphere of the world darkened.
-The hopes of the people began to recede. Treaties seemed no longer
-matters of solemn obligation but were entered into with complete
-cynicism as a means for deceiving other states of Germany’s warlike
-intentions. International conferences were no longer to be used
-as a means for securing pacific settlements but as occasions for
-obtaining by blackmail demands which were eventually to be
-enlarged by war. The world came to know the “war of nerves”,
-the diplomacy of the <span class='it'>fait accompli</span>, of blackmail and bullying.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In October 1933 Hitler told his Cabinet that as the proposed
-Disarmament Convention did not concede full equality to Germany,
-“It would be necessary to torpedo the Disarmament Conference. It
-was out of the question to negotiate: Germany would leave the
-Conference and the League”. On the 21st of October 1933 Germany
-did so, and by so doing struck a deadly blow at the fabric of security
-which had been built up on the basis of the League Covenant. From
-that time on the record of their foreign policy became one of complete
-disregard of international obligations, and indeed not least of
-those solemnly concluded by themselves. Hitler himself expressly
-avowed to his confederates, “Agreements are kept only so long as
-they serve a certain purpose.” He might have added that again and
-again that purpose was only to lull an intended victim into a false
-sense of security. So patent, indeed, did this eventually become
-that to be invited by the Defendant Ribbentrop to enter a non-aggression
-pact with Germany was almost a sign that Germany
-<span class='pageno' title='109' id='Page_109'></span>
-intended to attack the state concerned. Nor was it only the formal
-treaty which they used and violated as circumstances seemed to
-make expedient. These defendants are charged, too, with breaches
-of the less formal assurances which, in accordance with diplomatic
-usage, Germany gave to neighboring states. You will hear the importance
-which Hitler himself publicly attached to assurances of that
-kind. Today, with the advance of science, the world has been
-afforded means of communication and intercourse hitherto unknown,
-and as Hitler himself expressly recognized in his public
-utterances, international relations no longer depend upon treaties
-alone. The methods of diplomacy change. The leader of one nation
-can speak directly to the government and peoples of another, and
-that course was not infrequently adopted by the Nazi conspirators.
-But, although the methods change, the principles of good faith and
-honesty, established as the fundamentals of civilized society, both
-in the national and international spheres, remain unaltered. It is
-a long time since it was said that we are part one of another, and
-if today the different states are more closely connected and thus
-form part of a world society more than ever before, so also, more
-than before, is there that need for good faith and honesty between
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Let us see how these defendants, ministers and high officers
-of the Nazi Government, individually and collectively comported
-themselves in these matters.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 1st of September 1939 in the early hours of the morning
-under manufactured and, in any event, inadequate pretexts, the
-Armed Forces of the German Reich invaded Poland along the whole
-length of her frontiers and thus launched the war which was to
-bring down so many of the pillars of our civilization.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was a breach of the Hague Conventions. It was a breach of
-the Treaty of Versailles which had established the frontiers between
-Germany and Poland. And however much Germany disliked that
-treaty—although Hitler had expressly stated that he would respect
-its territorial provisions—however much she disliked it, she was not
-free to break it by unilateral action. It was a breach of the Arbitration
-Treaty between Germany and Poland concluded at Locarno on
-the 16th of October 1925. By that treaty Germany and Poland expressly
-agreed to refer any matters of dispute not capable of settlement
-by ordinary diplomatic machinery to the decision of an
-arbitral tribunal or of the Permanent Court of International Justice.
-It was a breach of the Pact of Paris. But that is not all. It was also
-a breach of a more recent and, in view of the repeated emphasis laid
-upon it by Hitler himself, in some ways a more important engagement
-into which Nazi Germany had entered with Poland. After
-the Nazi Government came into power, on the 26th of January 1934
-<span class='pageno' title='110' id='Page_110'></span>
-the German and Polish Governments had signed a 10 year pact of
-non-aggression. It was, as the signatories themselves stated, to
-introduce a new era into the political relations between Poland and
-Germany. It was said in the text of the pact itself that “the
-maintenance and guarantee of lasting peace between the two
-countries is an essential prerequisite for the general peace of
-Europe.” The two governments therefore agreed to base their
-mutual relations on the principles laid down in the Pact of Paris,
-and they solemnly declared that:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In no circumstances .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. will they proceed to the application
-of force for the purpose of reaching a decision in such
-disputes.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That declaration and agreement was to remain in force for at
-least 10 years and thereafter it was to remain valid unless it was
-denounced by either Government 6 months before the expiration of
-the 10 years, or subsequently by 6 months’ notice. Both at the time
-of its signature and during the following 4 years Hitler spoke of
-the German-Polish agreement publicly as though it were a cornerstone
-of his foreign policy. By entering into it, he persuaded many
-people that his intentions were genuinely pacific, for the re-emergence
-of a new Poland and an independent Poland after the war
-had cost Germany much territory and had separated East Prussia
-from the Reich. And that Hitler should, of his own accord, enter
-into friendly relations with Poland—that in his speeches on foreign
-policy he should proclaim his recognition of Poland and of her right
-to an exit to the sea, and the necessity for Germans and Poles to
-live side by side in amity—these facts seemed to the world to be
-convincing proof that Hitler had no “revisionist” aims which would
-threaten the peace of Europe; that he was even genuinely anxious
-to put an end to the age-old hostility between the Teuton and the
-Slav. If his professions were, as embodied in the treaty and as contained
-in these declarations, genuine, his policy excluded a renewal
-of the “Drang nach Osten”, as it had been called, and was thereby
-going to contribute to the peace and stability of Europe. That was
-what the people were led to think. We shall have occasion enough
-to see how little truth these pacific professions in fact contained.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The history of the fateful years from 1934 to 1939 shows quite
-clearly that the Germans used this treaty, as they used other
-treaties, merely as an instrument of policy for furthering their
-aggressive aims. It is clear from the documents which will be
-presented to the Tribunal that these 5 years fall into two distinct
-phases in the realization of the aggressive aims which always underlay
-the Nazi policy. There was first the period from the Nazi
-assumption of power in 1933 until the autumn of 1937. That was the
-preparatory period. During that time there occurred the breaches
-<span class='pageno' title='111' id='Page_111'></span>
-of the Versailles and Locarno Treaties, the feverish rearmament of
-Germany, the reintroduction of conscription, the reoccupation and
-remilitarization of the Rhineland, and all those other necessary
-preparatory measures for future aggression which my American
-colleagues have already so admirably put before the Tribunal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>During that period—the preparatory period—Germany was
-lulling Poland into a false sense of security. Not only Hitler, but
-the Defendant Göring and the Defendant Ribbentrop made statements
-approbating the non-aggression pact. In 1935 Göring was
-saying that, “The pact was not planned for a period of 10 years
-but forever; there need not be the slightest fear that it would not
-be continued.” Even though Germany was steadily building up the
-greatest war machine that Europe had ever known, and although,
-by January 1937, the German military position was so strong and
-so secure that, in spite of the treaty breaches which it involved,
-Hitler could openly refer to his strong Army, he took pains, at the
-same time, to say—and again I quote—that:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“By a series of agreements we have eliminated existing tensions
-and thereby contributed considerably to an improvement
-in the European atmosphere. I merely recall the agreement
-with Poland which has worked out to the advantage
-of both sides.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And so it went on: abroad, protestations of pacific intentions;
-at home, “guns before butter.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In 1937 this preparatory period drew to a close and Nazi policy
-moved from general preparation for future aggression to specific
-planning for the attainment of certain specific aggressive aims. And
-there are two documents in particular which mark that change.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The first of these was called “Directive for Unified Preparation
-for War”; issued in June 1937—June 29, 1937—by the Reich Minister
-for War, who was then Von Blomberg, Commander-in-Chief of the
-Armed Forces. That document is important, not only for its military
-directions, but for the appreciation it contained of the European
-situation and for the revelation of the Nazi attitude towards it.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The general political position”—Von Blomberg stated, and I
-am quoting from the document—“justifies the supposition that
-Germany need not consider an attack from any side. Grounds
-for this are, in addition to the lack of desire for war in almost
-all nations, particularly the Western Powers, the deficiencies
-in the preparedness for war of a number of states, and of
-Russia in particular.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is true, he added, “The intention of unleashing a European
-war is held just as little by Germany.” And it may be that that
-phrase was carefully chosen because, as the documents will show,
-<span class='pageno' title='112' id='Page_112'></span>
-Germany hoped to conquer Europe, perhaps to conquer the world
-in detail; to fight on one front at a time, against one power at a
-time, and not to unleash a general European conflict.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But Von Blomberg went on:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The politically fluid world situation, which does not preclude
-surprising incidents, demands a continuous preparedness for
-war of the German Armed Forces (a) to counter attack at any
-time”—yet he had just said that there was no fear of any
-attack—and “(b)”—and I invite the Tribunal again to notice
-this phrase—“to enable the military exploitation of politically
-favorable opportunities, should they occur.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That phrase is no more than a euphemistic description of aggressive
-war. It reveals the continued adherence of the German military
-leaders to the doctrine that military might, and if necessary
-war, should be an instrument of policy—the doctrine which had
-been explicitly condemned by the Kellogg Pact, which was renounced
-by the pact with Poland, and by innumerable other
-treaties.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The document goes on to set out the general preparations
-necessary for a possible war in the mobilization period of 1937-1938.
-It is evidence at least for this, that the leaders of the German
-Armed Forces had it in mind to use the military strength which
-they were building up for aggressive purposes. No reason, they
-say, to anticipate attack from any side—there is a lack of desire
-for war. Yet they prepare to exploit militarily favorable opportunities.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Still more important as evidence of the transition to planned
-aggression is the record of the important conference which Hitler
-held at the Reich Chancellery on the 5th of November 1937, at
-which Von Blomberg, Reich Minister for War; Von Fritsch, the Commander-in-Chief
-of the Army; Göring, Commander-in-Chief of the
-Luftwaffe; Raeder, the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy; and Von
-Neurath, then the Foreign Minister, were present. The minutes of
-that conference have already been put in evidence. I refer to them
-now only to emphasize those passages which make apparent the
-ultimate intention to wage an aggressive war. You will remember
-that the burden of Hitler’s argument at that conference was that
-Germany required more territory in Europe. Austria and Czechoslovakia
-were specifically envisaged. But Hitler realized that the
-process of conquering those two countries might well bring into
-operation the treaty obligations of Great Britain and of France. He
-was prepared to take the risk. You remember the passage:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The history of all times: Roman Empire, British Empire has
-proved that every space expansion can be effected only by
-<span class='pageno' title='113' id='Page_113'></span>
-breaking resistance and taking risks. Even setbacks are unavoidable:
-Neither formerly nor today has space been found
-without an owner. The attacker always comes up against
-the proprietor. The question for Germany is where the greatest
-possible conquest can be made at the lowest possible cost.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the course of that conference Hitler had foreseen and discussed
-the likelihood that Poland would be involved if the aggressive
-expansionist aims which he put forward brought about a general
-European war in the course of their realization by the Nazi State.
-And when, therefore, on that very day on which that conference was
-taking place, Hitler assured the Polish Ambassador of the great
-value of the 1934 Pact with Poland, it can only be concluded that
-its real value in Hitler’s eyes was that of keeping Poland quiet until
-Germany had acquired such a territorial and strategic position
-that Poland was no longer a danger.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That view is confirmed by the events which followed. At the
-beginning of February of 1938 the change from Nazi preparation
-for aggression to active aggression itself took place. It was marked
-by the substitution of Ribbentrop for Neurath as Foreign Minister,
-and of Keitel for Blomberg as head of the OKW. Its first fruits
-were the bullying of Schuschnigg at Berchtesgaden on February 12,
-1938 and the forcible absorption of Austria in March. Thereafter
-the Green Plan for the destruction of Czechoslovakia was steadily
-developed in the way which you heard yesterday—the plan partially
-foiled, or final consummation at least delayed, by the Munich Agreement.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With those aspects, those developments of Nazi aggression, my
-American colleagues have already dealt. But it is obvious that
-the acquisition of these two countries, their resources in manpower,
-their resources in the production of munitions of war, immensely
-strengthened the position of Germany as against Poland.
-And it is, therefore, perhaps not surprising that, just as the Defendant
-Göring assured the Czechoslovak Minister in Berlin, at the
-time of the Nazi invasion of Austria, that Hitler recognized the
-validity of the German-Czechoslovak Arbitration Treaty of 1925,
-and that Germany had no designs against Czechoslovakia herself—you
-remember, “I give you my word of honor,” the Defendant
-Göring said—just as that is not surprising, so also it is not perhaps
-surprising that continued assurances should have been given during
-1938 to Poland in order to keep that country from interfering with
-the Nazi aggression on Poland’s neighbors.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thus, on the 20th of February of 1938, on the eve of his invasion
-of Austria, Hitler, referring to the fourth anniversary of the Polish
-Pact, permitted himself to say this to the Reichstag—and I quote:
-<span class='pageno' title='114' id='Page_114'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and so a way to a friendly understanding has been successfully
-paved, an understanding which, beginning with Danzig,
-has today in spite of the attempt of some mischief makers,
-succeeded in finally taking the poison out of the relations
-between Germany and Poland and transforming them into a
-sincere friendly co-operation .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Relying on her friendships,
-Germany will not leave a stone unturned to save that ideal
-which provides the foundation for the task ahead of us—peace.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Still more striking, perhaps, are the cordial references to Poland
-in Hitler’s speech in the Sportpalast at Berlin on the 26th of September
-1938. He then said:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The most difficult problem with which I was confronted was
-that of our relations with Poland. There was a danger that
-Poles and Germans would regard each other as hereditary
-enemies. I wanted to prevent this. I know well enough that I
-should not have been successful if Poland had had a democratic
-constitution. For these democracies which indulge in phrases
-about peace are the most bloodthirsty war agitators. In Poland
-there ruled no democracy, but a man. And with him I
-succeeded, in precisely 12 months, in coming to an agreement
-which, for 10 years in the first instance, removed in principle
-the danger of a conflict. We are all convinced that this agreement
-will bring lasting pacification. We realize that here are
-two peoples which must live together and neither of which
-can do away with the other. A people of 33 millions will
-always strive for an outlet to the sea. A way for understanding,
-then, had to be found, and it will be further extended.
-But the main fact is that the two governments, and all reasonable
-and clear-sighted persons among the two peoples within
-the two countries, possess the firm will and determination to
-improve their relations. It was a real work of peace, of more
-worth than all the chattering in the League of Nations palace
-at Geneva.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And so flattery of Poland preceded the annexation of Austria and
-renewed flattery of Poland preceded the projected annexation
-of Czechoslovakia. The realities behind these outward expressions
-of good will are clearly revealed in the documents relating
-to the Fall Grün, which are already before the Tribunal. They show
-Hitler as fully aware that there was a risk of Poland, England, and
-France being involved in war to prevent the German annexation of
-Czechoslovakia and that this risk, although it was realized, was also
-accepted. On 25 August of 1938 top-secret orders to the German
-Air Force in regard to the operations to be conducted against
-England and France, if they intervened, pointed out that, as the
-<span class='pageno' title='115' id='Page_115'></span>
-French-Czechoslovak Treaty provided for assistance only in the
-event of an “unprovoked” attack, it would take a day or two for
-France and England, and I suppose for their legal advisors to decide
-whether legally the attack had been unprovoked or not, and consequently
-a Blitzkrieg, accomplishing its aims before there could be
-any effective intervention by France or England, was the object
-to be aimed at.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the same day an Air Force memorandum on future organization
-was issued, and to it there was attached a map on which the
-Baltic States, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, and Poland were all shown
-as part of Germany, and preparations for expanding the Air Force,
-and I quote, “as the Reich grows in area,” as well as dispositions for
-a two-front war against France and Russia, were discussed. And
-on the following day Von Ribbentrop was being minuted about the
-reaction of Poland towards the Czechoslovak problem. I quote: “The
-fact that after the liquidation of the Czechoslovakian question it will
-be generally assumed that Poland will be next in turn is not to be
-denied,” is recognized, but it is stated, “The later this assumption
-sinks in, the better.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I will pause for a moment at the date of the Munich Agreement
-and ask the Tribunal to remind itself of what the evidence of documents
-and historical facts shows up to that day. It has made undeniable
-both the fact of Nazi aggressiveness and of active and
-actual aggression. Not only does that conference of 1937 show
-Hitler and his associates deliberately considering the acquisition of
-Austria and Czechoslovakia, if necessary by war, but the first of the
-operations had been carried through in March of 1938; and a large
-part of the second, under threat of war—a threat which as we now
-see was much more than a bluff—a threat of actual and real war,
-although without the actual need for its initiation, secured, as I
-said, a large part of the second objective in September of 1938.
-And, more ominous still, Hitler had revealed his adherence to the
-old doctrines of <span class='it'>Mein Kampf</span>—those essentially aggressive doctrines
-to the exposition of which in <span class='it'>Mein Kampf</span>, long regarded as the
-Bible of the Nazi Party, we shall draw attention in certain particular
-passages. Hitler is indicating quite clearly not only to his
-associates, but indeed to the world at this time, that he is in pursuit
-of Lebensraum and that he means to secure it by threat of force, or
-if threat of force fails, by actual force—by aggressive war.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So far actual warfare had been avoided because of the love of
-peace, the lack of preparedness, the patience, the cowardice—call it
-what you will—of the democratic powers; but after Munich the
-question which filled the minds of all thinking people with acute
-anxiety was “where will this thing end? Is Hitler now satisfied as
-he declared himself to be? Or is his pursuit of Lebensraum going
-<span class='pageno' title='116' id='Page_116'></span>
-to lead to future aggressions, even if he has to embark on open,
-aggressive war to secure it?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was in relation to the remainder of Czechoslovakia and to
-Poland that the answer to these questions was to be given. So far,
-up to the time of the Munich Agreement, no direct and immediate
-threat to Poland had been made. The two documents from which
-I have just quoted, show of course, that high officers of the Defendant
-Göring’s air staff already regarded the expansion of the Reich
-and, it would seem, the destruction and absorption of Poland, as
-a foregone conclusion. They were already anticipating, indeed, the
-last stage of Hitler’s policy as expounded in <span class='it'>Mein Kampf</span>—war to
-destroy France and to secure Lebensraum in Russia. And the writer
-of the minute to Ribbentrop already took it for granted that, after
-Czechoslovakia, Poland would be attacked. But more impressive
-than those two documents is the fact that, as I have said, at the
-conference of 5 November 1937, war with Poland, if she should
-dare to prevent German aggression against Czechoslovakia, had
-been quite coolly and calmly contemplated, and the Nazi leaders
-were ready to take the risk. So also had the risk of war with England
-and France under the same circumstances been considered and
-accepted. As I indicated, such a war would, of course, have been
-aggressive war on Germany’s part, and they were contemplating
-aggressive warfare. For to force one state to take up arms to defend
-another state against aggression, in other words, to fulfill its treaty
-obligations is undoubtedly to initiate aggressive warfare against the
-first state. But in spite of those plans, in spite of these intentions
-behind the scenes, it remains true that until Munich the decision for
-direct attack upon Poland and her destruction by aggressive war
-had apparently not as yet been taken by Hitler and his associates.
-It is to the transition from the intention and preparation of initiating
-aggressive war, evident in regard to Czechoslovakia, to the
-actual initiation and waging of aggressive war against Poland that
-I now pass. That transition occupies the 11 months from the 1st of
-October 1938 to the actual attack on Poland on the 1st of September
-1939.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Within 6 months of the signature of the Munich Agreement the
-Nazi leaders had occupied the remainder of Czechoslovakia, which by
-that Agreement they had indicated their willingness to guarantee.
-On the 14th of March 1939 the aged and infirm president of the
-“rump” of Czechoslovakia, Hacha and his Foreign Minister were
-summoned to Berlin. At a meeting held between 1 o’clock and 2:15
-in the small hours of the 15th of March in the presence of Hitler,
-of the Defendants Ribbentrop, Göring, and Keitel, they were bullied
-and threatened and even bluntly told that Hitler “had issued the
-orders for the German troops to move into Czechoslovakia and
-for the incorporation of Czechoslovakia into the German Reich.”
-<span class='pageno' title='117' id='Page_117'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was made quite clear to them that resistance would be useless
-and would be crushed “by force of arms with all available means,”
-and it was thus that the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia was
-set up and that Slovakia was turned into a German satellite, though
-nominally independent state. By their own unilateral action, on
-pretexts which had no shadow of validity, without discussion with
-the governments of any other country, without mediation, and in
-direct contradiction of the sense and spirit of the Munich Agreement,
-the Germans acquired for themselves that for which they had been
-planning in September of the previous year, and indeed much
-earlier, but which at that time they had felt themselves unable
-completely to secure without too patent an exhibition of their aggressive
-intentions. Aggression achieved whetted the appetite for
-aggression to come. There were protests. England and France sent
-diplomatic notes. Of course, there were protests. The Nazis had
-clearly shown their hand. Hitherto they had concealed from the
-outside world that their claims went beyond incorporating into
-the Reich persons of German race living in bordering territory. Now
-for the first time, in defiance of their solemn assurances to the contrary,
-non-German territory and non-German people had been seized.
-This acquisition of the whole of Czechoslovakia, together with the
-equally illegal occupation of Memel on the 22d of March 1939,
-resulted in an immense strengthening of the German positions, both
-politically and strategically, as Hitler had anticipated it would,
-when he discussed the matter at that conference in November of
-1937.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But long before the consummation by the Nazi leaders of their
-aggression against Czechoslovakia, they had begun to make
-demands upon Poland. The Munich settlement achieved on the
-25th of October 1938, that is to say within less than a month of
-Hitler’s reassuring speech about Poland to which I have already
-referred, and within, of course, a month of the Munich Agreement,
-M. Lipski, the Polish Ambassador in Berlin, reported to M. Beck,
-the Polish Foreign Minister, that at a luncheon at Berchtesgaden the
-day before, namely, on the 24th of October 1938, the Defendant
-Ribbentrop had put forward demands for the reunion of Danzig
-with the Reich and for the building of an extra-territorial motor
-road and railway line across Pomorze, the province which the Germans
-called “The Corridor”. From that moment onwards until the
-Polish Government had made it plain, as they did during a visit of
-the Defendant Ribbentrop to Warsaw in January 1939, that they
-would not consent to hand over Danzig to German sovereignty,
-negotiations on these German demands continued. And even after
-Ribbentrop’s return from the visit to Warsaw, Hitler thought it
-worthwhile, in his Reichstag speech on the 30th of January 1939,
-to say:
-<span class='pageno' title='118' id='Page_118'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“We have just celebrated the fifth anniversary of the conclusion
-of our non-aggression pact with Poland. There can
-scarcely be any difference of opinion today among the true
-friends of peace as to the value of this agreement. One only
-needs to ask oneself what might have happened to Europe if
-this agreement, which brought such relief, had not been
-entered into 5 years ago. In signing it, the great Polish
-marshal and patriot rendered his people just as great a service
-as the leaders of the National Socialist State rendered
-the German people. During the troubled months of the past
-year, the friendship between Germany and Poland has been
-one of the reassuring factors in the political life of Europe.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But that utterance was the last friendly word from Germany
-to Poland, and the last occasion on which the Nazi Leaders
-mentioned the German-Polish Agreement with approbation. During
-February 1939 silence fell upon German demands in relation to
-Poland. But as soon as the final absorption of Czechoslovakia had
-taken place and Germany had also occupied Memel, Nazi pressure
-upon Poland was at once renewed. In two conversations which he
-and the Defendant Ribbentrop held on the 21st of March and the
-26th of March, respectively, with the Polish Ambassador, German
-demands upon Poland were renewed and were further pressed. And
-in view of the fate which had overtaken Czechoslovakia, in view of
-the grave deterioration in her strategical position towards Germany,
-it is not surprising that the Polish Government took alarm at the
-developments. Nor were they alone. The events of March 1939 had
-at last convinced both the English and the French Governments that
-the Nazi designs of aggression were not limited to men of German
-race, and that the specter of European war resulting from further
-aggressions by Nazi Germany had not, after all, been exorcised by
-the Munich Agreement.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As a result, therefore, of the concern of Poland and of England
-and of France at the events in Czechoslovakia, and at the newly
-applied pressure on Poland, conversations between the English and
-Polish Governments had been taking place, and, on the 31st of
-March 1939, Mr. Neville Chamberlain, speaking in the House of
-Commons, stated that His Majesty’s Government had given an
-assurance to help Poland in the event of any action which clearly
-threatened Polish independence and which the Polish Government
-accordingly considered it vital to resist. On the 6th of April 1939 an
-Anglo-Polish communiqué stated that the two countries were
-prepared to enter into an agreement of a permanent and reciprocal
-character to replace the present temporary and unilateral assurance
-given by His Majesty’s Government.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The justification for that concern on the part of the democratic
-powers is not difficult to find. With the evidence which we now
-<span class='pageno' title='119' id='Page_119'></span>
-have of what was happening within the councils of the German
-Reich and its Armed Forces during these months, it is manifest that
-the German Government were intent on seizing Poland as a whole,
-that Danzig—as Hitler himself was to say in time, a month later—“was
-not the subject of the dispute at all.” The Nazi Government
-was intent upon aggression and the demands and negotiations in
-respect to Danzig were merely a cover and excuse for further
-domination.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Would that be a convenient point to stop?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn now until 2 o’clock.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken until 1400 hours.</span>]</h3>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<h2><span class='pageno' title='120' id='Page_120'></span><span class='it'>Afternoon Session</span></h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Before the Attorney General continues his
-opening statement, the Tribunal wishes me to state what they
-propose to do as to time of sitting for the immediate future. We
-think it will be more convenient that the Tribunal shall sit from
-10:00 o’clock in the morning until 1:00 o’clock, with a break for
-10 minutes in the middle of the morning; and that the Tribunal
-shall sit in the afternoon from 2:00 o’clock until 5:00 o’clock with a
-break for 10 minutes in the middle of the afternoon; and that there
-shall be no open sitting of the Tribunal on Saturday morning, as
-the Tribunal has a very large number of applications by the
-defendants’ counsel for witnesses and documents and other matters
-of that sort which it has to consider.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>SIR HARTLEY SHAWCROSS: May it please the Tribunal, when
-we broke off I had been saying that the Nazi Government was
-intent upon aggression, and all that had been taking place in regard
-to Danzig—the negotiations, the demands that were being made—were
-really no more than a cover, a pretext and excuse for further
-domination.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As far back as September 1938 plans for aggressive war against
-Poland, England, and France were well in hand. While Hitler, at
-Munich, was telling the world that the German people wanted
-peace, and that having solved the Czechoslovakian problem, Germany
-had no more territorial problems in Europe, the staffs of his
-Armed Forces were already preparing their plans. On the 26th of
-September 1938 he had stated:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“We have given guarantees to the states in the West. We
-have assured all our immediate neighbors of the integrity of
-their territory as far as Germany is concerned. That is no
-mere phrase. It is our sacred will. We have no interest
-whatever in a breach of the peace. We want nothing from
-these peoples.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And the world was entitled to rely on those assurances. International
-co-operation is utterly impossible unless one can assume
-good faith in the leaders of the various states and honesty in the
-public utterances that they make. But, in fact, within 2 months
-of that solemn and apparently considered undertaking, Hitler and
-his confederates were preparing for the seizure of Danzig. To
-recognize those assurances, those pledges, those diplomatic moves
-as the empty frauds that they were, one must go back to inquire
-what was happening within the inner councils of the Reich from
-the time of the Munich Agreement.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Written some time in September 1938 is an extract from a file
-on the reconstruction of the German Navy. Under the heading
-<span class='pageno' title='121' id='Page_121'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Opinion on the Draft Study of Naval Warfare against England,”
-this is stated:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. If, according to the Führer’s decision, Germany is to
-acquire a position as a world power, she needs not only
-sufficient colonial possessions but also secure naval communications
-and secure access to the ocean.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk285'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. Both requirements can be fulfilled only in opposition to
-Anglo-French interests and would limit their position as
-world powers. It is unlikely that they can be achieved by
-peaceful means. The decision to make Germany a world power,
-therefore, forces upon us the necessity of making the corresponding
-preparations for war.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk286'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3. War against England means at the same time war against
-the Empire, against France, probably against Russia as well,
-and a large number of countries overseas, in fact, against
-one-third to one-half of the world.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk287'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It can only be justified and have a chance of success”—and
-it was not moral justification which was being looked for in
-this document—“It can only be justified and have a chance
-of success if it is prepared economically as well as politically
-and militarily, and waged with the aim of conquering for
-Germany an outlet to the ocean.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I think the Tribunal would like to know at
-what stage you propose to put the documents, which you are citing,
-in evidence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>SIR HARTLEY SHAWCROSS: Well, Sir, my colleagues, my
-American and my British colleagues, were proposing to follow up
-my own address by putting these documents in. The first series of
-documents, which will be put in by my noted colleague, Sir David
-Maxwell-Fyfe, will be the treaties.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I suppose that what you quote will have to
-be read again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>SIR HARTLEY SHAWCROSS: Well, I am limiting my quotations
-as far as I possibly can. I apprehend that technically you may wish
-it to be quoted again, so as to get it on the record when the document
-is actually put into evidence. But I think it will appear, when
-the documents themselves are produced, that there will be a good
-deal more in most of them than I am actually citing now.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes. Very well.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>SIR HARTLEY SHAWCROSS: This document on naval warfare
-against England is something which is both significant and new.
-Until this date the documents in our possession disclose preparations
-for war against Poland, England, and France, purporting on the
-<span class='pageno' title='122' id='Page_122'></span>
-face of them at least to be defensive measures to ward off attacks
-which might result from the intervention of those states in the
-preparatory German aggressions in Central Europe. Hitherto
-aggressive war against Poland, England, and France has been contemplated
-only as a distant objective. Now, in this document for
-the first time, we find a war of conquest by Germany against France
-and England openly recognized as the future aim, at least of the
-German Navy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On 24 November 1938 an appendix was issued by Keitel to a
-previous order of the Führer. In that appendix were set out the
-future tasks for the Armed Forces and the preparation for the
-conduct of the war which would result from those tasks.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer has ordered”—I quote—“that besides the three
-eventualities mentioned in the previous directive .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. preparations
-are also to be made for the surprise occupation by German
-troops of the Free State of Danzig.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk288'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“For the preparation the following principles are to be borne
-in mind.”—This is the common pattern of aggression—“The
-primary assumption is the lightning seizure of Danzig by
-exploiting a favorable political situation, and not war with
-Poland. Troops which are going to be used for this purpose
-must not be held at the same time for the seizure of Memel,
-so that both operations can take place simultaneously, should
-such necessity arise.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thereafter, as the evidence which is already before the Tribunal
-has shown, final preparations were taking place for the invasion of
-Poland. On the 3rd of April 1939, 3 days before the issue of the
-Anglo-Polish communiqué, the Defendant Keitel issued to the High
-Command of the Armed Forces a directive in which it was stated
-that the directive for the uniform preparation of war by the Armed
-Forces in 1939-40, was being re-issued and that part relating to
-Danzig would be out in April. The basic principles were to remain
-the same as in the previous directive. Attached to this document
-were the orders Fall Weiss, the code name for the proposed invasion
-of Poland. Preparation for that invasion was to be made, it was
-stated, so that the operation could be carried out at any time from
-the 1st of September 1939 onwards.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 11th of April Hitler issued his directive for the uniform
-preparation of the war by the Armed Forces, 1939-40, and in it
-he said:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I shall lay down in a later directive future tasks of the
-Armed Forces and the preparations to be made in accordance
-with these for the conduct of war. Until that directive comes
-into force the Armed Forces must be prepared for the following
-eventualities:
-<span class='pageno' title='123' id='Page_123'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk289'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. Safeguarding of the frontiers .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk290'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. Fall Weiss,</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk291'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3. The annexation of Danzig.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Then, in an annex to that document which bore the heading
-“Political Hypotheses and Aims,” it was stated that quarrels with
-Poland should be avoided. But should Poland change her policy
-and adopt a threatening attitude towards Germany, a final settlement
-would be necessary, notwithstanding the Polish Pact. The
-Free City of Danzig was to be incorporated in the Reich at the
-outbreak of the conflict at the latest. The policy aimed at limiting
-the war to Poland, and this was considered possible at that time
-with the internal crises in France and resulting British restraint.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The wording of that document—and the Tribunal will study the
-whole of it—does not directly involve the intention of immediate
-aggression. It is a plan of attack “if Poland changes her policy and
-adopts a threatening attitude.” But the picture of Poland, with
-her wholly inadequate armaments, threatening Germany, now armed
-to the teeth, is ludicrous enough, and the real aim of the document
-emerges in the sentence—and I quote: “The aim is then to destroy
-Polish military strength and to create, in the East, a situation which
-satisfies the requirements of defense”—a sufficiently vague phrase
-to cover designs of any magnitude. But even at that stage, the
-evidence does not suffice to prove that the actual decision to attack
-Poland on any given date had yet been taken. All the preparations
-were being set in train. All the necessary action was being proceeded
-with, in case that decision should be reached.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was within 3 weeks of the issue of that last document that
-Hitler addressed the Reichstag on the 28th of April 1939. In that
-speech he repeated the demands which had already been made
-upon Poland, and proceeded to denounce the German-Polish Agreement
-of 1934. Leaving aside, for the moment, the warlike preparations
-for aggression, which Hitler had set in motion behind the
-scenes, I will ask the Tribunal to consider the nature of this
-denunciation of an agreement to which, in the past, Hitler had
-attached such importance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the first place, of course, Hitler’s denunciation was <span class='it'>per se</span>
-ineffectual. The text of the agreement made no provision for its
-denunciation by either party until a period of 10 years had come
-to an end. No denunciation could be legally effective until June or
-July of 1943, and here was Hitler speaking in April of 1939, rather
-more than 5 years too soon.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the second place, Hitler’s actual attack upon Poland, when it
-came on 1 September was made before the expiration of the
-6 months’ period after denunciation required by the agreement
-before any denunciation could be operative. And in the third place,
-<span class='pageno' title='124' id='Page_124'></span>
-the grounds for the denunciation stated by Hitler in his speech to
-the Reichstag were entirely specious. However one reads its terms,
-it is impossible to take the view that the Anglo-Polish guarantee
-of mutual assistance against aggression could render the German-Polish
-Pact null and void, as Hitler sought to suggest. If that had
-been the effect of the Anglo-Polish assurances, then certainly the
-pacts which had already been entered into by Hitler himself with
-Italy and with Japan had already invalidated the treaty with
-Poland. Hitler might have spared his breath. The truth is, of
-course, that the text of the English-Polish communiqué, the text of
-the assurances, contains nothing whatever to support the contention
-that the German-Polish Pact was in any way interfered with.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>One asks: Why then did Hitler make this trebly invalid attempt
-to denounce his own pet diplomatic child? Is there any other
-possible answer but this:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That the agreement having served its purpose, the grounds which
-he chose for its denunciation were chosen merely in an effort to
-provide Germany with some kind of justification—at least for the
-German people—for the aggression on which the German leaders
-were intent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And, of course, Hitler sorely needed some kind of justification,
-some apparently decent excuse, since nothing had happened, and
-nothing seemed likely to happen, from the Polish side, to provide
-him with any kind of pretext for invading Poland. So far he had
-made demands upon his treaty partner which Poland, as a sovereign
-state, had every right to refuse. If dissatisfied with that refusal,
-Hitler was bound, under the terms of the agreement itself, “To seek
-a settlement”—I am reading the words of the pact:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“To seek a settlement through other peaceful means, without
-prejudice to the possibility of applying those methods of
-procedure, in case of necessity, which are provided for such
-a case in the other agreements between them that are in
-force.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>And that presumably was a reference to the German-Polish
-Arbitration Treaty, signed at Locarno in 1925.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The very facts, therefore, that as soon as the Nazi leaders cannot
-get what they want but are not entitled to from Poland by merely
-asking for it and that, on their side, they made no further attempt
-to settle the dispute “by peaceful means”—in accordance with the
-terms of the agreement and of the Kellogg Pact, to which the
-agreement pledged both parties—in themselves constitute a strong
-presumption of aggressive intentions against Hitler and his
-associates. That presumption becomes a certainty when the documents
-to which I am about to call the attention of the Tribunal
-are studied.
-<span class='pageno' title='125' id='Page_125'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 10th of May Hitler issued an order for the capture of
-economic installations in Poland. On the 16th of May the Defendant
-Raeder, as Commander-in-Chief of the Navy, issued a memorandum
-setting out the Führer’s instructions to prepare for the operation
-Fall Weiss at any time from the 1st of September.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But the decisive document is the record of the conference held
-by Hitler on the 23rd of May 1939, in conference with many high-ranking
-officers, including the Defendants Göring, Raeder, and
-Keitel. The details of the whole document will have to be read to
-the Tribunal later and I am merely summarizing the substantial
-effect of this part of it now. Hitler stated that the solution of the
-economic problems with which Germany was beset at first, could
-not be found without invasion of foreign states and attacks on
-foreign property. “Danzig”—and I am quoting:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Danzig is not the subject of the dispute at all. It is a question
-of expanding our living space in the East. There is, therefore,
-no question of sparing Poland, and we are left with the
-decision to attack Poland at the earliest opportunity. We
-cannot expect a repetition of the Czech affair. There will be
-fighting. Our task is to isolate Poland. The success of this
-isolation will be decisive. The isolation of Poland is a matter
-of skillful politics.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So he explained to his confederates. He anticipated the possibility
-that war with England and France might result, but a two-front
-war was to be avoided if possible. Yet England was recognized—and
-I say it with pride—as the most dangerous enemy which
-Germany had. “England,” he said, I quote, “England is the driving
-force against Germany .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. the aim will always be to force England
-to her knees.” More than once he repeated that the war with England
-and France would be a life and death struggle. “But all the
-same,” he concluded, “Germany will not be forced into war but she
-would not be able to avoid it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 14th of June 1939 General Blaskowitz, then Commander-in-Chief
-of the 3rd Army group, issued a detailed battle plan for
-the Fall Weiss. The following day Von Brauchitsch issued a memorandum
-in which it was stated that the object of the impending
-operation was to destroy the Polish Armed Forces. “High policy
-demands,” he said, “High policy demands that the war should be
-begun by heavy surprise blows in order to achieve quick results.”
-The preparations proceeded apace. On the 22d of June the Defendant
-Keitel submitted a preliminary timetable for the operation,
-which Hitler seems to have approved, and suggested that the
-scheduled maneuver must be camouflaged, “in order not to disquiet
-the population.” On the 3rd of July, Brauchitsch wrote to the
-Defendant Raeder urging that certain preliminary naval moves
-<span class='pageno' title='126' id='Page_126'></span>
-should be abandoned, in order not to prejudice the surprise of the
-attack. On the 12th and 13th of August Hitler and Ribbentrop had
-a conference with Ciano, the Italian Foreign Minister.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was a conference to which the Tribunal will have to have
-regard from several points of view. I summarize now only one
-aspect of the matter: At the beginning of the conversation Hitler
-emphasized the strength of the German position, of Germany’s
-Western and Eastern Fortifications, and of the strategic and other
-advantages they held in comparison with those of England, France,
-and Poland. Now I quote from the captured document itself. Hitler
-said this:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Since the Poles through their whole attitude had made it
-clear that, in any case, in the event of a conflict, they would
-stand on the side of the enemies of Germany and Italy,
-a quick liquidation at the present moment could only be of
-advantage for the unavoidable conflict with the Western
-Democracies. If a hostile Poland remained on Germany’s
-eastern frontier, not only would the 11 East Prussian
-divisions be tied down, but also further contingents would
-be kept in Pomerania and Silesia. This would not be necessary
-in the event of a previous liquidation.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Then this:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Generally speaking, the best thing to happen would be to
-liquidate the false neutrals one after the other. This process
-could be carried out more easily if on every occasion one
-partner of the Axis covered the other while it was dealing
-with an uncertain neutral. Italy might well regard Yugoslavia
-as a neutral of that kind.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Ciano was for postponing the operation. Italy was not ready.
-She believed that a conflict with Poland would develop into a
-general European war. Mussolini was convinced that conflict with
-the Western Democracies was inevitable, but he was making plans
-for a period 2 or 3 years ahead. But the Führer said that the
-Danzig question must be disposed of, one way or the other, by the
-end of August. I quote: “He had, therefore, decided to use the
-occasion of the next political provocation which has the form of an
-ultimatum .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 22d of August Hitler called his Supreme Commanders
-together and gave the order for the attack. In the course of what
-he said he made it clear that the decision to attack had, in fact, been
-made not later than the previous spring. He would give a spurious
-cause for starting the war. And at that time the attack was timed
-to take place in the early hours of the 26th of August. On the day
-before, on the 25th of August, the British Government, in the hope
-that Hitler might still be reluctant to plunge the world into war,
-<span class='pageno' title='127' id='Page_127'></span>
-and in the belief that a formal treaty would impress him more than
-the informal assurances which had been given previously, entered
-into an agreement, an express agreement for mutual assistance with
-Poland, embodying the previous assurances that had been given
-earlier in the year. It was known to Hitler that France was bound
-by the Franco-Polish Treaty of 1921, and by the Guarantee Pact
-signed at Locarno in 1925 to intervene in Poland’s favor in case
-of aggression. And for a moment Hitler hesitated. The Defendants
-Göring and Ribbentrop, in the interrogations which you will see,
-have agreed that it was the Anglo-Polish Treaty which led him to
-call off, or rather postpone, the attack which was timed for the
-26th. Perhaps he hoped that after all there was still some chance of
-repeating what he had called the Czech affair. If so, his hopes were
-short-lived. On the 27th of August Hitler accepted Mussolini’s
-decision not at once to come into the war; but he asked for propaganda
-support and for a display of military activity on the part of
-Italy, so as to create uncertainty in the minds of the Allies. Ribbentrop
-on the same day said that the armies were marching.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the meantime, and, of course, particularly during the last
-month, desperate attempts were being made by the Western Powers
-to avert war. You will have details of them in evidence, of the
-intervention of the Pope, of President Roosevelt’s message, of the
-offer by the British Prime Minister to do our utmost to create the
-conditions in which all matters in issue could be the subject of free
-negotiations, and to guarantee the resultant decisions. But this and
-all the other efforts of honest men to avoid the horror of a European
-conflict were predestined to failure. The Germans were determined
-that the day for war had come. On the 31st of August Hitler issued
-a top-secret order for the attack to commence in the early hours of
-the 1st of September.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The necessary frontier incidents duly occurred. Was it, perhaps,
-for that, that the Defendant Keitel had been instructed by Hitler
-to supply Heydrich with Polish uniforms? And so without a declaration
-of war, without even giving the Polish Government an
-opportunity of seeing Germany’s final demands—and you will hear
-the evidence of the extraordinary diplomatic negotiations, if one
-can call them such, that took place in Berlin—without giving the
-Poles any opportunity at all of negotiating or arbitrating on the
-demands which Nazi Germany was making, the Nazi troops invaded
-Poland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 3rd of September Hitler sent a telegram to Mussolini
-thanking him for his intervention but pointing out that the war
-was inevitable and that the most promising moment had to be
-picked after cold deliberation. And so Hitler and his confederates
-now before this Tribunal began the first of their wars of aggression
-<span class='pageno' title='128' id='Page_128'></span>
-for which they had prepared so long and so thoroughly. They waged
-it so fiercely that within a few weeks Poland was overrun.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 23rd of November 1939 Hitler reviewed the situation to
-his military commanders and in the course of what he said he made
-this observation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“One year later Austria came; this step was also considered
-doubtful. It brought about an essential reinforcement of the
-Reich. The next step was Bohemia, Moravia, and Poland.
-This step also was not possible to accomplish in one move.
-First of all the Western Fortifications had to be finished .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-Then followed the creation of the Protectorate, and with that
-the basis for action against Poland was laid. But I was not
-quite clear at the time whether I should start first against the
-East and then in the West, or vice versa .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. The compulsion
-to fight with Poland came first. One might accuse me of
-wanting to fight again and again. In struggle, I see the fate
-of all beings.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He was not sure where to attack first. But that sooner or later
-he would attack, whether it were in the East or in the West, was
-never in doubt. And he had been warned, not only by the British
-and French Prime Ministers but even by his confederate Mussolini,
-that an attack on Poland would bring England and France into the
-war. He chose what he thought was the opportune moment, and he
-struck.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Under these circumstances the intent to wage war against England
-and France, and to precipitate it by an attack on Poland, is not
-to be denied. Here was defiance of the most solemn treaty obligations.
-Here was neglect of the most pacific assurances. Here was
-aggression, naked and unashamed, which was indeed to arouse the
-horrified and heroic resistance of all civilized peoples, but which,
-before it was finished, was to tear down much of the structure of
-our civilization.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Once started upon the active achievement of their plan to secure
-the domination of Europe, if not of the world, the Nazi Government
-proceeded to attack other countries, as occasion offered. The first
-actually to be attacked, actually to be invaded, after the attack upon
-Poland, were Denmark and Norway.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 9th of April 1940 the German Armed Forces invaded
-Norway and Denmark without any warning, without any declaration
-of war. It was a breach of the Hague Convention of 1907. It
-was a breach of the Convention of Arbitration and Conciliation
-signed between Germany and Denmark on 2 June 1926. It was, of
-course, a breach of the Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928. It was a
-violation of the Non-Aggression Treaty between Germany and
-<span class='pageno' title='129' id='Page_129'></span>
-Denmark made on the 31st of May 1939. And it was a breach of the
-most explicit assurances which had been given. After his annexation
-of Czechoslovakia had shaken the confidence of the world, Hitler
-attempted to reassure the Scandinavian states. On the 28th of April
-1939 he affirmed that he had never made any request to any of
-them which was incompatible with their sovereignty and independence.
-On the 31st of May 1939 he signed a non-aggression pact with
-Denmark.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 2d of September 1939, the day after he had invaded
-Poland and occupied Danzig, he again expressed his determination,
-so he said, to observe the inviolability and integrity of Norway
-in an <span class='it'>aide-mémoire</span>, which was handed to the Norwegian Foreign
-Minister by the German Minister in Oslo on that day.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A month later, in a public speech on the 6th of October 1939,
-he said:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Germany has never had any conflicts of interest or even
-points of controversy with the northern states, neither has
-she any today. Sweden and Norway have both been offered
-non-aggression pacts by Germany, and have both refused
-them, solely because they do not feel themselves threatened
-in any way.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When the invasion of Denmark and Norway was already begun
-in the early morning of 9 April 1940, a German memorandum was
-handed to the governments of those countries attempting to justify
-the German action. Various allegations against the governments of
-the invaded countries were made. It was said that Norway had
-been guilty of breaches of neutrality. It was said that she had
-allowed and tolerated the use of her territorial waters by Great
-Britain. It was said that Britain and France were themselves
-making plans to invade and occupy Norway and that the Government
-of Norway was prepared to acquiesce in such an event.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I do not propose to argue the question whether or not these
-allegations were true or false. That question is irrelevant to the
-issues before this Court. Even if the allegations were true—and
-they were patently false—they would afford no conceivable justification
-for the action of invading without warning, without declaration
-of war, without any attempt at mediation or conciliation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Aggressive war is none the less aggressive war because the
-state which wages it believes that other states might, in the future,
-take similar action. The rape of a nation is not justified because
-it is thought she may be raped by another. Nor even in self-defense
-are warlike measures justified except after all means of mediation
-have been tried and failed and force is actually being exercised
-against the state concerned.
-<span class='pageno' title='130' id='Page_130'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But the matter is irrelevant because, in actual fact, with the
-evidence which we now possess, it is abundantly clear that the
-invasion of these two countries was undertaken for quite different
-purposes. It had been planned long before any question of breach
-of neutrality or occupation of Norway by England could ever have
-occurred. And it is equally clear that the assurances repeated again
-and again throughout 1939 were made for no other purpose than
-to lull suspicion in these countries, and to prevent them taking steps
-to resist the attack against them which was all along in active
-preparation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For some years the Defendant Rosenberg, in his capacity as
-Chief of the Foreign Affairs Bureau—APA—of the NSDAP, had
-interested himself in the promotion of Fifth Column activities in
-Norway and he had established close relationship with the Nasjonal
-Samling, a political group headed by the now notorious traitor,
-Vidkun Quisling. During the winter of 1938-39, APA was in contact
-with Quisling, and later Quisling conferred with Hitler and with
-the Defendants Raeder and Rosenberg. In August 1939 a special
-14-day course was held at the school of the Office of Foreign Relations
-in Berlin for 25 followers whom Quisling had selected to attend.
-The plan was to send a number of selected and “reliable” men to
-Germany for a brief military training in an isolated camp. These
-“reliable men” were to be the area and language specialists to German
-special troops who were taken to Oslo on coal barges to undertake
-political action in Norway. The object was a <span class='it'>coup</span> in which
-Quisling would seize his leading opponents in Norway, including
-the King, and prevent all military resistance from the beginning.
-Simultaneously with those Fifth Column activities Germany was
-making her military preparations. On the 2d of September 1939,
-as I said, Hitler had assured Norway of his intention to respect her
-neutrality. On 6 October he said that the Scandinavian states were
-not menaced in any way. Yet on the 3rd October the Defendant
-Raeder was pointing out that the occupation of bases, if necessary
-by force, would greatly improve the German strategic position. On
-the 9th of October Dönitz was recommending Trondheim as the
-main base, with Narvik as an alternative base for fuel supplies. The
-Defendant Rosenberg was reporting shortly afterwards on the
-possibility of a <span class='it'>coup d’état</span> by Quisling, immediately supported by
-German military and naval forces. On the 12th of December 1939
-the Defendant Raeder advised Hitler, in the presence of the
-Defendants Keitel and Jodl, that if Hitler was favorably impressed
-by Quisling, the OKW should prepare for the occupation of Norway,
-if possible with Quisling’s assistance, but if necessary, entirely by
-force. Hitler agreed, but there was a doubt whether action should
-be taken against the Low Countries or against Scandinavia first.
-<span class='pageno' title='131' id='Page_131'></span>
-Weather conditions delayed the march on the Low Countries. In
-January 1940 instructions were given to the German Navy for the
-attack on Norway. On the 1st of March a directive for the occupation
-was issued by Hitler. The general object was not said to be to
-prevent occupation by English forces but, in vague and general
-terms, to prevent British encroachment in Scandinavia and the
-Baltic and “to guarantee our ore bases in Sweden and to give our
-Navy and Air Force a wider start line against Britain.” But the
-directive went on (and here is the common pattern):</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. on principle we will do our utmost to make the operation
-appear as a peaceful occupation, the object of which is the
-military protection of the Scandinavian states .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. It is
-important that the Scandinavian states as well as the western
-opponents should be taken by surprise by our measures .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-In case the preparations for embarkation can no longer be
-kept secret, the leaders and the troops will be deceived with
-fictitious objectives.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The form and success of the invasion are well known. In the
-early hours of the 9th of April, seven cruisers, 14 destroyers, and
-a number of torpedo boats and other small craft carried advance
-elements of six divisions, totalling about 10,000 men, forced an
-entry and landed troops in the outer Oslo Fjord, Kristiansand,
-Stavanger, Bergen, Trondheim, and Narvik. A small force of
-troops was also landed at Arendal and Egersund on the southern
-coast. In addition, airborne troops were landed near Oslo and
-Stavanger in airplanes. The German attack came as a complete
-surprise. All the invaded towns along the coast were captured
-according to plan and with only slight losses. Only the plan to
-capture the King and Parliament failed. But brave as was the
-resistance, which was hurriedly organized throughout the country—nothing
-could be done in the face of the long-planned surprise
-attack—and on the 10th of June military resistance ceased. So
-another act of aggression was brought to completion.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Almost exactly a month after the attack, on Norway, on the
-10th of May 1940, the German Armed Forces, repeating what had
-been done 25 years before, streamed into Belgium, the Netherlands,
-and Luxembourg according to plan—a plan that is, of invading
-without warning and without any declaration of war.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What was done was, of course, a breach of the Hague Convention,
-and is so charged. It was a violation of the Locarno Agreement of
-1925, which the Nazi Government affirmed in 1935, only illegally to
-repudiate it a couple of years later. By that agreement all questions
-incapable of settlement by ordinary diplomatic means were to be
-referred to arbitration. You will see the comprehensive terms of all
-those treaties. It was a breach of the Treaty of Arbitration and
-<span class='pageno' title='132' id='Page_132'></span>
-Conciliation signed between Germany and the Netherlands on the
-20th of May 1926. It was a breach of a similar treaty with Luxembourg
-of 11 September 1929. It was a breach of the Kellogg-Briand
-Pact. But those treaties, perhaps, had not derived in the minds of
-the Nazi rulers of Germany any added sanctity from the fact that
-they had been solemnly concluded by the governments of pre-Nazi
-Germany. Let us then consider the specific assurances and undertakings
-which the Nazi rulers themselves gave to these states which
-lay in the way of their plans against France and England and
-which they had always intended to attack. Not once, not twice, but
-11 times the clearest possible assurances were given to Belgium,
-the Netherlands, and Luxembourg. On those assurances, solemnly
-given and formally expressed, these countries were entitled to rely
-and did rely. In respect of the breach of those assurances these
-defendants are charged. On the 30th of January 1937, for instance,
-Hitler had said:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“As for the rest, I have more than once expressed the desire
-and the hope of entering into similar good and cordial
-relations with our neighbors. Germany has, and here I repeat
-this solemnly, given the assurance time and time again that,
-for instance, between her and France there cannot be any
-humanly conceivable points of controversy. The German
-Government has further given the assurance to Belgium and
-Holland that it is prepared to recognize and to guarantee the
-inviolability and neutrality of these territories.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After Hitler had remilitarized the Rhineland and had repudiated
-the Locarno Pact, England and France sought to re-establish the
-position of security for Belgium which Hitler’s action had threatened.
-And they, therefore, gave to Belgium on the 24th of April 1937
-a specific guarantee that they would maintain, in respect of Belgium,
-the undertakings of assistance which they had entered into with
-her both under the Locarno Pact and under the Covenant of the
-League. On the 13th of October 1937 the German Government also
-made a declaration assuring Belgium of its intention to recognize
-the integrity of that country.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is, perhaps, convenient to deal with the remaining assurances
-as we review the evidence which is available as to the preparations
-and intentions of the German Government prior to their actual
-invasion of Belgium on the 10th of May 1940.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As in the case of Poland, as in the case of Norway and Denmark,
-so also here the dates speak for themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As early as August of 1938 steps were being taken to utilize the
-Low Countries as bases for decisive action in the West in the event
-of France and England opposing Germany in the aggressive plan
-which was on foot at that time against Czechoslovakia.
-<span class='pageno' title='133' id='Page_133'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In an Air Force letter dated the 25th of August 1938 which deals
-with the action to be taken if England and France should interfere
-in the operation against Czechoslovakia, it is stated:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It is not expected for the moment that other states will
-intervene against Germany. The Dutch and the Belgian area
-assumes in this connection much more importance for the
-conduct of war in Western Europe than during the World
-War, mainly as advance base for the air war.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the last paragraph of that order it is stated:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Belgium and the Netherlands, when in German hands,
-represent an extraordinary advantage in the prosecution
-of the air war against Great Britain as well as against
-France .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That was in August 1938. Eight months later, on the 28th of
-April 1939, Hitler is declaring again:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I was pleased that a number of European states availed
-themselves of this declaration by the German Government
-to express and emphasize their desire to have absolute neutrality.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A month later, on the 23rd of May 1939, Hitler held that conference
-in the Reich Chancellery, to which I already referred. The
-minutes of that meeting report Hitler as saying:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Dutch and Belgian air bases must be occupied by armed
-forces. Declarations of neutrality cannot be considered of any
-value. If England and France want a general conflict on the
-occasion of the war between Germany and Poland they will
-support Holland and Belgium in their neutrality .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Therefore,
-if England intends to intervene at the occasion of the
-Polish war, we must attack Holland with lightning speed. It
-is desirable to secure a defense line on Dutch soil up to the
-Zuider Zee.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Even after that he was to give his solemn declarations that he
-would observe the neutrality of these countries. On the 26th of
-August 1939, when the crisis in regard to Danzig and Poland was
-reaching its climax, on the very day he had picked for the invasion
-of Poland, declarations assuring the governments concerned of the
-intention to respect their neutrality were handed by the German
-Ambassadors to the King of the Belgians, the Queen of the Netherlands,
-and to the Government of the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg
-in the most solemn form. But to the Army Hitler was saying:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“If Holland and Belgium are successfully occupied and held,
-a successful war against England will be secured.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 1st of September Poland was invaded, and 2 days later
-England and France came into the war against Germany, in
-<span class='pageno' title='134' id='Page_134'></span>
-pursuance of the treaty obligations already referred to. On the 6th of
-October Hitler renewed his assurances of friendship to Belgium and
-Holland, but on the 9th of October, before any kind of accusation
-had been made by the German Government of breaches of neutrality,
-Hitler issued a directive for the conduct of the war. And
-he said this:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1) If it becomes evident in the near future that England and
-France, acting under her leadership, are not disposed to end
-the war, I am determined to take firm and offensive action
-without letting much time elapse.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk292'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2) A long waiting period results not only in the ending of
-Belgian and perhaps also of Dutch neutrality to the advantage
-of the Western Powers, but also strengthens the military
-power of our enemies to an increasing degree, causes confidence
-of the neutrals in final German victory to wane, and
-does not help to bring Italy to our aid as brothers-in-arms.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk293'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3) I therefore issue the following orders for the further conduct
-of military operations:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk294'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(a) Preparations should be made for offensive action on the
-northern flank of the Western Front crossing the area of
-Luxembourg, Belgium, and Holland. This attack must be
-carried out as soon and as forcefully as possible.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk295'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(b) The object of this attack is to defeat as many strong
-sections of the French fighting army as possible, and her ally
-and partner in the fighting, and at the same time to acquire
-as great an area of Holland, Belgium, and northern France as
-possible, to use as a base offering good prospects for waging
-aerial and sea warfare against England and to provide ample
-coverage for the vital district of the Ruhr.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nothing could state more clearly or more definitely the object
-behind the invasion of these three countries than that document
-expresses it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 15th of October 1939 the Defendant Keitel wrote a most-secret
-letter concerning “Fall Gelb” which was the name given to
-the operation against the Low Countries. In it he said that:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The protection of the Ruhr area by moving aircraft reporting
-service and the air defense as far forward as possible in the
-area of Holland is significant for the whole conduct of the
-war. The more Dutch territory we occupy, the more effective
-can the defense of the Ruhr area be made. This point of view
-must determine the choice of objectives of the Army, even if
-the Army and Navy are not directly interested in such territorial
-gain. It must be the object of the Army’s preparations,
-<span class='pageno' title='135' id='Page_135'></span>
-therefore, to occupy, on receipt of a special order, the territory
-of Holland, in the first instance in the area of the
-Grebbe-Maas line. It will depend on the military and political
-attitude of the Dutch, as well as on the effectiveness of
-their flooding, whether objectives can and must be further
-extended.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Fall Gelb operation had apparently been planned to take
-place at the beginning of November 1939. We have in our possession
-a series of 17 letters, dated from 7th November until the 9th May
-postponing almost from day to day the D-Day of the operation, so
-that by the beginning of November all the major plans and preparations
-had in fact been made.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 10th of January 1940 a German airplane force-landed in
-Belgium. In it was found the remains of an operation order which
-the pilot had attempted to burn; setting out considerable details of
-the Belgian landing grounds that were to be captured by the Air
-Force. Many other documents have been found which illustrate the
-planning and preparation for this invasion in the latter half of 1939
-and early 1940, but they carry the matter no further, and they show
-no more clearly than the evidence to which I have already referred,
-the plans and intention of the German Government and its Armed
-Forces.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 10th of May 1940 at about 0500 hours in the morning,
-the German invasion of Belgium, Holland, and Luxembourg began.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And so once more the forces of aggression moved on. Treaties,
-assurances, the rights of sovereign states meant nothing. Brutal
-force, covered by as great an element of surprise as the Nazis
-could secure, was to seize that which was deemed necessary for
-striking the mortal blow against England, the main enemy. The
-only fault of these three unhappy countries was that they stood
-in the path of the German invader, in his designs against England
-and France. That was enough, and they were invaded.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>SIR HARTLEY SHAWCROSS: On the 6th of April 1941 German
-Armed Forces invaded Greece and Yugoslavia. Again the blow was
-struck without warning and with the cowardice and deceit which
-the world now fully expected from the self-styled “Herrenvolk”. It
-was a breach of the Hague Convention. It was a breach of the
-Pact of Paris. It was a breach of a specific assurance given by
-Hitler on the 6th of October 1939.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He had then said this:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Immediately after the completion of the Anschluss, I informed
-Yugoslavia that from now on the frontier with this country
-<span class='pageno' title='136' id='Page_136'></span>
-will also be an unalterable one and that we desire only to
-live in peace and friendship with her.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But the plan for aggression against Yugoslavia had, of course,
-been in hand well before that. In the aggressive action eastward
-towards the Ukraine and the Soviet territories, security of the
-southern flank and the lines of communication had already been
-considered by the Germans.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The history of the events leading up to the invasion of Yugoslavia
-by Germany is well known. At 3 o’clock in the morning
-of the 28th of October 1940 a 3-hour ultimatum had been presented
-by the Italian Government to the Greek Government, and the
-presentation of that ultimatum was immediately followed by the
-aerial bombardment of Greek provincial towns and the advance
-of Italian troops into Greek territory. The Greeks were not prepared.
-They were at first forced to withdraw. But later the Italian advance
-was at first checked, then driven towards the Albanian frontier,
-and by the end of 1940 the Italian Army had suffered severe
-reverses at Greek hands.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Of the German position in the matter there is, of course, the
-evidence of what occurred when, on the 12th of August 1939, Hitler
-had this meeting with Ciano.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>You will remember that Hitler said then:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Generally speaking, the best thing to happen would be to
-liquidate false neutrals one after the other. This process
-could be carried out more easily if, on every occasion, one
-partner of the Axis covered the other while it was dealing
-with an uncertain neutral. Italy might well regard Yugoslavia
-as a neutral of this kind.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then the conference went on and it met again on the 13th of
-August, and in the course of lengthy discussions, Hitler said this:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In general, however, on success by one of the Axis partners,
-not only strategical but also psychological strengthening of
-the other partner and also of the whole Axis would ensue.
-Italy carried through a number of successful operations in
-Abyssinia, Spain, and Albania, and each time against the
-wishes of the democratic entente. These individual actions
-have not only strengthened Italian local interests, but have
-also .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. reinforced her general position. The same was the
-case with German action in Austria and Czechoslovakia .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-The strengthening of the Axis by these individual operations
-was of the greatest importance for the unavoidable clash
-with the Western Powers.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And so once again we see the same procedure being followed.
-That meeting had taken place on the 12th and the 13th of August
-<span class='pageno' title='137' id='Page_137'></span>
-of 1939. Less than 2 months later, Hitler was giving his assurance
-to Yugoslavia that Germany only desired to live in peace and
-friendship with her, with the state, the liquidation of which by
-his Axis partner, he had himself so recently suggested.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then came the Italian ultimatum to Greece and war against
-Greece and the Italian reverse.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We have found, amongst the captured documents, an undated
-letter from Hitler to Mussolini which must have been written about
-the time of the Italian aggression against Greece:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Permit me”—Hitler said—“at the beginning of this letter
-to assure you that within the last 14 days my heart and my
-thoughts have been more than ever with you. Moreover,
-Duce, be assured of my determination to do everything on
-your behalf which might ease the present situation for you.
-When I asked you to receive me in Florence, I undertook the
-trip in the hope of being able to express my views prior to
-the beginning of the threatening conflict with Greece, about
-which I had received only general information. First, I wanted
-to request you to postpone the action, if at all possible, until
-a more favorable time of the year, at all events until after
-the American presidential election. But in any case, however,
-I wanted to request you, Duce, not to undertake this action
-without a previous lightning-like occupation of Crete and,
-for this purpose, I also wanted to submit to you some practical
-suggestions in regard to the employment of a German
-parachute division and a further airborne division .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Yugoslavia
-must become disinterested, if possible, however, from
-our point of view, interested in co-operating in the liquidation
-of the Greek question. Without assurances from Yugoslavia,
-it is useless to risk any successful operation in the Balkans .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-Unfortunately, I must stress the fact that waging a war in
-the Balkans before March is impossible. Hence it would also
-serve to make any threatening influence upon Yugoslavia of
-no purpose, since the Serbian General Staff is well aware
-of the fact that no practical action could follow such a threat
-before March. Hence, Yugoslavia must, if at all possible, be
-won over by other means and in other ways.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 12th of November 1939, in his top-secret order, Hitler
-ordered the OKH to make preparations to occupy Greece and
-Bulgaria, if necessary. Apparently 10 divisions were to be used
-in order to prevent Turkish intervention. I think I said 1939; it
-should, of course, have been the 12th of November 1940. And to
-shorten the time, the German divisions in Romania were to be
-increased.
-<span class='pageno' title='138' id='Page_138'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 13th of December Hitler issued an order to OKW, OKL,
-OKH, OKM, and the General Staff on the operation Marita, as the
-invasion of Greece was to be called. In that order it was stated
-that the invasion of Greece was planned and was to commence as
-soon as the weather was advantageous. A further order was issued
-on the 11th of January of 1941.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 28th of January of 1941 Hitler saw Mussolini. The
-Defendants Jodl, Keitel, and Ribbentrop were present at the
-meeting. We know about it from Jodl’s notes of what took place.
-We know that Hitler stated that one of the purposes of German
-troop concentrations in Romania was for use in the plan Marita
-against Greece.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 1st of March 1941 German troops entered Bulgaria and
-moved towards the Greek frontier. In the face of this threat of
-an attack on Greece by German as well as Italian forces, British
-troops were landed in Greece on the 3rd of March, in accordance
-with the declaration which had been given by the British Government
-on the 13th of April 1939; that Britain would feel bound to
-give Greece and Romania, respectively, all the support in her
-power in the event of either country becoming the victim of
-aggression and resisting such aggression. Already, of course, the
-Italian operations had made that pledge operative.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 25th of March of 1941, Yugoslavia, partly won over
-by the “other means and in other ways” to which Hitler had
-referred, joined the Three Power Pact which had already been
-signed by Germany, Italy, and Japan. The preamble of the pact
-stated that the three powers would stand side by side and work
-together.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the same day the Defendant Ribbentrop wrote two notes to
-the Yugoslav Prime Minister assuring him of Germany’s full
-intention to respect the sovereignty and independence of his country.
-That declaration was just another example of the treachery employed
-by German diplomacy. We have already seen the preparations that
-had been made. We have seen Hitler’s attempts to tempt the
-Italians into an aggression against Yugoslavia. We have seen, in
-January, his own orders for preparations to invade Yugoslavia
-and then Greece. And now, on the 25th of March, he is signing
-a pact with that country and his Foreign Minister is writing assurances
-of respect for her sovereignty and territorial integrity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As a result of the signing of that pact, the anti-Nazi element in
-Yugoslavia immediately accomplished a <span class='it'>coup d’état</span> and established
-a new government. And thereupon, no longer prepared to respect
-the territorial integrity and sovereignty of her ally, Germany
-immediately took the decision to invade. On the 27th of March,
-<span class='pageno' title='139' id='Page_139'></span>
-2 days after the Three Power Pact had been signed, Hitler issued
-instructions that Yugoslavia was to be invaded and used as a base
-for the continuance of the combined German and Italian operation
-against Greece.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Following that, further deployment and instructions for the
-action Marita were issued by Von Brauchitsch on the 30th of
-March 1941.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was said—and I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The orders issued with regard to the operation against
-Greece remain valid so far as not affected by this order .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-On the 5th April, weather permitting, the Air Forces are to
-attack troops in Yugoslavia, while simultaneously the attack
-of the 12th Army begins against both Yugoslavia and Greece.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And as we now know, the invasion actually commenced in the
-early hours of the 6th of April.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Treaties, pacts, assurances, obligations of any kind, are brushed
-aside and ignored wherever the aggressive interests of Germany
-are concerned.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I turn now to the last act of aggression in Europe—my American
-colleagues will deal with the position in relation to Japan—I turn
-now to the last act of aggression in Europe with which these Nazi
-conspirators are charged, the attack upon Russia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In August of 1939 Germany, although undoubtedly intending to
-attack Russia at some convenient opportunity, concluded a treaty
-of non-aggression with the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
-When Belgium and the Low Countries were occupied and France
-collapsed in June of 1940, England—although with the inestimably
-valuable moral and economic support of the United States of
-America—was left alone in the field as the sole representative of
-democracy in the face of the forces of aggression. At that moment
-only the British Empire stood between Germany and the achievement
-of her aim to dominate the Western World. Only the British
-Empire—and England as its citadel. But it was enough. The first,
-and possibly the decisive, military defeat which the enemy sustained
-was in the campaign against England; and that defeat had a
-profound influence on the future course of the war.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 16th of July of 1940 Hitler issued to the Defendants
-Keitel and Jodl a directive—which they found themselves unable
-to obey—for the invasion of England. It started off—and Englishmen
-will forever be proud of it—by saying that:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Since England, despite her militarily hopeless situation,
-shows no signs of willingness to come to terms, I have decided
-to prepare a landing operation against England and if necessary
-to carry it out. The aim is .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. to eliminate the English
-<span class='pageno' title='140' id='Page_140'></span>
-homeland as a base for the carrying on of the war against
-Germany .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Preparations for the entire operation must be
-completed by mid-August.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But the first essential condition for that plan was, I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. the British Air Force must morally and actually be so
-far overcome that it does not any longer show any considerable
-aggressive force against the German attack.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Göring and his Air Force, no doubt, made the
-most strenuous efforts to realize that condition, but, in one of the
-most splendid pages of our history, it was decisively defeated. And
-although the bombardment of England’s towns and villages was
-continued throughout that dark winter of 1940-41, the enemy
-decided in the end that England was not to be subjugated by these
-means, and, accordingly, Germany turned back to the East, the
-first major aim unachieved.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 22d of June 1941 German Armed Forces invaded Russia,
-without warning, without declaration of war. It was, of course,
-a breach of the usual series of treaties; they meant no more in this
-case than they had meant in the other cases. It was a violation of
-the Pact of Paris; it was a flagrant contradiction of the Treaty of
-Non-Aggression which Germany and Russia had signed on the
-23rd of August a year before.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hitler himself said, in referring to that agreement, that “agreements
-were only to be kept as long as they served a purpose.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Ribbentrop was more explicit. In an interview
-with the Japanese Ambassador in Berlin on the 23rd of February
-1941, he made it clear that the object of the agreement had merely
-been, so far as Germany was concerned, to avoid a two-front war.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In contrast to what Hitler and Ribbentrop and the rest of them
-were planning within the secret councils of Germany, we know what
-they were saying to the rest of the world.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 19th of July, Hitler spoke in the Reichstag:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In these circumstances”—he said—“I considered it proper to
-negotiate as a first priority a sober definition of interest with
-Russia. It would be made clear once and for all what Germany
-believes she must regard as her sphere of interest to safeguard
-her future and, on the other hand, what Russia considers
-important for her existence. From this clear delineation of
-the sphere of interest there followed the new regulation of
-Russian-German relations. Any hope that now, at the end
-of the term of the agreement, a new Russo-German tension
-could arise is childish. Germany has taken no step which
-would lead her outside her sphere of interest, nor has Russia.
-But England’s hope to achieve an amelioration of her own
-<span class='pageno' title='141' id='Page_141'></span>
-position through the engineering of some new European crisis,
-is, insofar as it is concerned with Russo-German relations, an
-illusion.</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“English statesmen perceive everything somewhat slowly, but
-they too will learn to understand this in the course of time.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The whole statement was, of course, a tissue of lies. It was not
-many months after it had been made that the arrangements for
-attacking Russia were put into hand. And the Defendant Raeder
-gives us the probable reason for the decision in a note which he sent
-to Admiral Assmann:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The fear that control of the air over the Channel in the
-Autumn of 1940 could no longer be attained, a realization which
-the Führer no doubt gained earlier than the Naval War Staff,
-who were not so fully informed of the true results of air
-raids on England (our own losses), surely caused the Führer,
-as far back as August and September”—this was August and
-September of 1940—“to consider whether, even prior to
-victory in the West, an Eastern campaign would be feasible,
-with the object of first eliminating our last serious opponent
-on the Continent .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. The Führer did not openly express this
-fear, however, until well into September.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He may not have spoken to the Navy of his intentions until
-later in September, but by the beginning of that month he had
-undoubtedly told the Defendant Jodl about them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dated the 6th of September 1940, we have a directive of the
-OKW signed by the Defendant Jodl, and I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Directions are given for the occupation forces in the East to
-be increased in the following weeks. For security reasons”—and
-I quote—“this should not create the impression in Russia
-that Germany is preparing for an Eastern offensive.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Directives are given to the German Intelligence Service pertaining
-to the answering of questions by the Russian Intelligence Service,
-and I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The respective strength of the German troops in the East is
-to be camouflaged by .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. frequent changes in this area .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-The impression is to be created that the bulk of the troops
-is in the south of the Government General and that the
-occupation in the North is relatively small.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And so we see the beginning of the operations.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 12th of November 1940 Hitler issued a directive, signed
-by the Defendant Jodl, in which it was stated that the political task
-to determine the attitude of Russia had begun, but that without
-reference to the result of preparations against the East, which had
-been ordered orally.
-<span class='pageno' title='142' id='Page_142'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is not to be supposed that the U.S.S.R. would have taken part
-in any conversations at that time if it had been realized that on the
-very day orders were being given for preparations to be made for
-the invasion of Russia, and that the order for the operation, which
-was called “Plan Barbarossa”, was in active preparation. On the
-18th of December the order was issued, and I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The German Armed Forces have to be ready to defeat Soviet
-Russia in a swift campaign before the end of the war against
-Great Britain.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And later, in the same instruction—and I quote again:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“All orders which shall be issued by the High Commanders in
-accordance with this instruction have to be clothed in such
-terms that they may be taken as measures of precaution in
-case Russia should change her present attitude towards ourselves.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Germany kept up the pretense of friendliness and, on the 10th
-of January 1941, well after the Plan Barbarossa for the invasion of
-Russia had been decided upon, Germany signed the German-Russian
-Frontier Treaty. Less than a month later, on the 3rd of February
-of 1941, Hitler held a conference, attended by the Defendants Keitel
-and Jodl, at which it was provided that the whole operation against
-Russia was to be camouflaged as if it was part of the preparation for
-the “Plan Seelöwe”, as the plan for the invasion of England was
-described.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By March of 1941 plans were sufficiently advanced to include provision
-for dividing the Russian territory into nine separate states
-to be administered under Reich Commissars, under the general
-control of the Defendant Rosenberg; and at the same time detailed
-plans for the economic exploitation of the country were made under
-the supervision of the Defendant Göring, to whom the responsibility
-in this matter—and it is a serious one—had been delegated by Hitler.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>You will hear something of the details of these plans. I remind
-you of one document which has already been referred to in this
-connection.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is significant that on the 2d of May of 1941 a conference of
-State Secretaries took place in regard to the Plan Barbarossa, and in
-the course of that it was noted:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. The war can be continued only if all Armed Forces are fed
-out of Russia in the third year of the war.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk296'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. There is no doubt that, as a result, many millions of people
-will be starved to death if we take out of the country the
-things necessary for us.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But that apparently caused no concern. The “Plan Oldenbourg”,
-as the scheme for the economic organization and exploitation of
-<span class='pageno' title='143' id='Page_143'></span>
-Russia was called, went on. By the 1st of May 1941, the D-Day of the
-operation had been fixed. By the 1st of June preparations were
-virtually complete and an elaborate timetable was issued. It was
-estimated that, although there would be heavy frontier battles,
-lasting perhaps 4 weeks, after that no serious opposition was to be
-expected.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 22d of June, at 3:30 in the morning, the German armies
-marched again. As Hitler said in his proclamation to them, “I have
-decided to give the fate of the German people and of the Reich and
-of Europe again into the hands of our soldiers.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The usual false pretexts were, of course, given. Ribbentrop
-stated on the 28th of June that the step was taken because of the
-threatening of the German frontiers by the Red Army. It was a
-lie, and the Defendant Ribbentrop knew it was a lie.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 7th of June 1941 Ribbentrop’s own Ambassador in Moscow
-was reporting to him, and I quote, that, “All observations show that
-Stalin and Molotov, who are alone responsible for Russian foreign
-policy, are doing everything to avoid a conflict with Germany.”
-The staff records which you will see make it clear that the Russians
-were making no military preparations and that they were continuing
-their deliveries under the Trade Agreement to the very last day.
-The truth is, of course, that the elimination of Russia as a political
-opponent and the incorporation of the Soviet territory in the German
-Lebensraum had been one of the cardinal features of Nazi policy
-for a very long time, subordinated latterly for what the Defendant
-Jodl called diplomatic reasons.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And so, on the 22d of June, the Nazi armies were flung against
-the power with which Hitler had so recently sworn friendship,
-and Germany embarked upon that last act of aggression in Europe,
-which, after long and bitter fighting, was eventually to result in
-Germany’s own collapse.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That, then, is the case against these defendants, as amongst the
-rulers of Germany, under Count Two of this Indictment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It may be said that many of the documents which have been
-referred to were in Hitler’s name, and that the orders were
-Hitler’s orders, and that these men were mere instruments of
-Hitler’s will. But they were the instruments without which Hitler’s
-will could not be carried out; and they were more than that. These
-men were no mere willing tools, although they would be guilty
-enough if that had been their role. They are the men whose support
-had built Hitler up into the position of power he occupied; these
-are the men whose initiative and planning often conceived and
-certainly made possible the acts of aggression done in Hitler’s name;
-and these are the men who enabled Hitler to build up the Army, the
-Navy, the Air Force, the war economy, the political philosophy, by
-<span class='pageno' title='144' id='Page_144'></span>
-which these treacherous attacks were carried out, and by which he
-was able to lead his fanatical followers into peaceful countries to
-murder, to loot, and to destroy. They are the men whose cooperation
-and support made the Nazi Government of Germany possible.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The government of a totalitarian country may be carried on
-without representatives of the people, but it cannot be carried on
-without any assistance at all. It is no use having a leader unless
-there are also people willing and ready to serve their personal greed
-and ambition by helping and following him. The dictator who is set
-up in control of the destinies of his country does not depend on himself
-alone either in acquiring power or in maintaining it. He depends
-upon the support and the backing which lesser men, themselves
-lusting to share in dictatorial power, anxious to bask in the
-adulation of their leader, are prepared to give.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the criminal courts of our countries, when men are put on
-their trial for breaches of the municipal laws, it not infrequently
-happens that of a gang indicted together in the dock, one has the
-master mind, the leading personality. But it is no excuse for the
-common thief to say, “I stole because I was told to steal”, for the
-murderer to plead, “I killed because I was asked to kill.” And these
-men are in no different position, for all that it was nations they
-sought to rob, and whole peoples which they tried to kill. “The
-warrant of no man excuseth the doing of an illegal act.” Political
-loyalty, military obedience are excellent things, but they neither
-require nor do they justify the commission of patently wicked acts.
-There comes a point where a man must refuse to answer to his
-leader if he is also to answer to his conscience. Even the common
-soldier, serving in the ranks of his army, is not called upon to obey
-illegal orders. But these men were no common soldiers: They were
-the men whose skill and cunning, whose labor and activity made
-it possible for the German Reich to tear up existing treaties, to enter
-into new ones and to flout them, to reduce international negotiations
-and diplomacy to a hollow mockery, to destroy all respect for and
-effect in international law and, finally, to march against the peoples
-of the world to secure that domination in which, as arrogant members
-of their self-styled master race, they professed to believe.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If these crimes were in one sense the crimes of Nazi Germany,
-they also are guilty as the individuals who aided, abetted, counselled,
-procured, and made possible the commission of what was done.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The total sum of the crime these men have committed—so awful
-in its comprehension—has many aspects. Their lust and sadism,
-their deliberate slaughter and degradation of so many millions
-of their fellow creatures that the imagination reels, are but
-one side of this matter. Now that an end has been put to this
-nightmare, and we come to consider how the future is to be lived,
-<span class='pageno' title='145' id='Page_145'></span>
-perhaps their guilt as murderers and robbers is of less importance
-and of less effect to future generations of mankind than their crime
-of fraud—the fraud by which they placed themselves in a position
-to do their murder and their robbery. That is the other aspect of
-their guilt. The story of their “diplomacy”, founded upon cunning,
-hypocrisy, and bad faith, is a story less gruesome no doubt, but no
-less evil and deliberate. And should it be taken as a precedent of
-behavior in the conduct of international relations, its consequences
-to mankind will no less certainly lead to the end of civilized society.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Without trust and confidence between nations, without the faith
-that what is said is meant and that what is undertaken will be
-observed, all hope of peace and security is dead. The Governments
-of the United Kingdom and the British Commonwealth, of the
-United States of America, of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics,
-and of France, backed by and on behalf of every other peace-loving
-nation of the world, have therefore joined to bring the inventors
-and perpetrators of this Nazi conception of international relationship
-before the bar of this Tribunal. They do so, so that these defendants
-may be punished for their crimes. They do so, also, that their
-conduct may be exposed in all its naked wickedness and they do
-so in the hope that the conscience and good sense of all the world
-will see the consequences of such conduct and the end to which
-inevitably it must always lead. Let us once again restore sanity
-and with it also the sanctity of our obligations towards each other.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Attorney, would it be convenient to the
-prosecutors from Great Britain to continue?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>SIR HARTLEY SHAWCROSS: The proposal was that my friend,
-Mr. Sidney Alderman, should continue with the presentation of the
-case with regard to the final acts of aggression against Czechoslovakia
-and that that being done, my British colleagues would continue
-with the presentation of the British case. As the Tribunal will
-appreciate, Counts One and Two are in many respects complementary,
-and my American colleagues and ourselves are working in closest
-cooperation in presenting the evidence affecting those counts.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Alderman, would it be convenient for
-you to go on until 5 o’clock?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: Yes. May it please the Tribunal, it is quite
-convenient for me to proceed. I can but feel that it will be quite
-anticlimactic after the address which you just heard.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When the Tribunal rose yesterday afternoon, I had just
-completed an outline of the plans laid by the Nazi conspirators in
-the weeks immediately following the Munich Agreement. These
-plans called for what the German officials called “the liquidation
-of the remainder of Czechoslovakia.” You will recall that 3 weeks
-after Munich, on 21 October, the same day on which the
-<span class='pageno' title='146' id='Page_146'></span>
-administration of the Sudetenland was handed over to the civilian
-authorities, Hitler and Keitel had issued an order to the Armed
-Forces. This document is C-136, Exhibit USA-104.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In this order Hitler and Keitel ordered the beginning of preparations
-by the Armed Forces for the conquest of the remainder of
-Czechoslovakia. You will also recall that 2 months later, on
-17 December, the Defendant Keitel issued an appendix to the
-original order directing the continuation of these preparations. This
-document is C-138, Exhibit USA-105, and both these documents
-have already been introduced.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Proceeding on the assumption that no resistance worth mentioning
-was to be expected, this order emphasized that the attack
-on Czechoslovakia was to be well camouflaged so that it would not
-appear to be a warlike action. “To the outside world,” it said, and
-I quote, “it must appear obvious that it is merely an action of
-pacification and not a warlike undertaking.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thus, in the beginning of 1939 the basic planning for military
-action against the mutilated Czechoslovak Republic had already
-been carried out by the German High Command.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I turn now to the underhand and criminal methods used by the
-Nazi conspirators to ensure that no resistance worth mentioning
-would, in fact, be met by the German Army. As in the case of
-Austria and the Sudetenland, the Nazi conspirators did not intend
-to rely on the Wehrmacht alone to accomplish their calculated
-objective of liquidating Czechoslovakia. With the German minority
-separated from Czechoslovakia, they could no longer use the cry,
-“Home to the Reich.” One sizable minority, the Slovaks, still
-remained within the Czechoslovak state.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I should mention at this point that the Czechoslovak Government
-had made every effort to conciliate Slovak extremists in the months
-after the cession of the Sudetenland. Autonomy had been granted
-to Slovakia, with an autonomous Cabinet and Parliament at
-Bratislava. Nevertheless, despite these concessions, it was in
-Slovakia that the Nazi conspirators found fertile ground for their
-tactics. The picture which I shall now draw of Nazi operations
-in Slovakia is based on the Czechoslovak official Government
-Report, Document Number 998-PS, already admitted in evidence
-as Exhibit USA-91, and of which the Court has already taken
-judicial notice.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nazi propaganda and research groups had long been interested
-in maintaining close connection with the Slovak autonomist
-opposition. When Bela Tuka, who later became Prime Minister of
-the puppet state of Slovakia, was tried for espionage and treason
-in 1929, the evidence established that he had already established
-connections with Nazi groups within Germany. Prior to 1938 Nazi
-<span class='pageno' title='147' id='Page_147'></span>
-aides were in close contact with the Slovak traitors living in exile
-and were attempting to establish more profitable contacts in the
-semi-fascist Slovak Catholic People’s Party of Monsignor Andrew
-Hlinka. In February and July 1938 the leaders of the Henlein
-movement conferred with top men of Father Hlinka’s party and
-agreed to furnish one another with mutual assistance in pressing
-their respective claims to autonomy. This understanding proved
-useful in the September agitation when at the proper moment the
-Foreign Office in Berlin wired the Henlein leader, Kundt, in Prague
-to tell the Slovaks to start their demands for autonomy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This telegram, our Document Number 2858-PS, Exhibit USA-97,
-has already been introduced in evidence and read.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By this time—midsummer 1938—the Nazis were in direct contact
-with figures in the Slovak autonomist movement and had paid agents
-among the higher staff of Father Hlinka’s party. These agents
-undertook to render impossible any understanding between the
-Slovak autonomists and the Slovak parties in the government at
-Prague.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hans Karmasin, later to become Volksgruppenführer, had been
-appointed Nazi leader in Slovakia and professed to be serving the
-cause of Slovak autonomy while actually on the Nazi payroll. On
-22 November the Nazis indiscreetly wired Karmasin to collect his
-money at the German Legation in Prague, and I offer in evidence
-Document 2859-PS as Exhibit USA-107, captured from the German
-Foreign Office files. I read this telegram which was sent from the
-German Legation at Prague to Pressburg:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Delegate Kundt asks to notify State Secretary Karmasin he
-would appreciate it if he could personally draw the sum
-which is being kept for him at the treasury of the Embassy.”—signed—“Hencke.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Karmasin proved to be extremely useful to the Nazi cause.
-Although it is out of its chronological place in my discussion,
-I should like now to offer in evidence Document 2794-PS, a captured
-memorandum of the German Foreign Office which I offer as Exhibit
-USA-108, dated Berlin, 29 November 1939.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This document, dated 8 months after the conquest of Czechoslovakia,
-throws a revealing light both on Karmasin and on the
-German Foreign Office, and I now read from this memorandum:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“On the question of payments to Karmasin.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk297'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Karmasin receives 30,000 marks monthly from the VDA”—Peoples’
-League for Germans Abroad—“until 1 April 1940;
-from then on 15,000 marks monthly.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk298'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Furthermore, the Central Office for Racial Germans”—Volksdeutsche
-Mittelstelle—“has deposited 300,000 marks for
-<span class='pageno' title='148' id='Page_148'></span>
-Karmasin with the German Mission in Bratislava”—Pressburg—“on
-which he could fall back in an emergency.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk299'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Furthermore, Karmasin has received money from Reich
-Minister Seyss-Inquart; for the present it has been impossible
-to determine what amounts had been involved, and
-whether the payments still continue.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk300'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Therefore, it appears that Karmasin has been provided with
-sufficient money; thus one could wait to determine whether
-he would put up new demands himself.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk301'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Herewith presented to the Reich Foreign Minister.”—signed—“Woermann.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This document shows the complicity of the German Foreign
-Office in the subsidization of illegal organizations abroad. More
-important, it shows that the Germans still considered it necessary
-to supply their undercover representatives in Pressburg with substantial
-funds, even after the declaration of the so-called Independent
-State of Slovakia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sometime in the winter of 1938-39, the Defendant Göring conferred
-with Durkansky and Mach, two leaders in the Slovak extremist
-group, who were accompanied by Karmasin. The Slovaks told
-Göring of their desire for what they called independence, with
-strong political, economic, and military ties to Germany. They
-promised that the Jewish problem would be solved as it had been
-solved in Germany; that the Communist Party would be prohibited.
-The notes of the meeting report that Göring considered that the
-Slovak efforts towards independence were to be supported, but as
-the document will show, his motives were scarcely altruistic.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now offer in evidence Document 2801-PS as Exhibit USA-109,
-undated minutes of a conversation between Göring and Durkansky.
-This document was captured among the files of the German Foreign
-Office.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now read these minutes, which are jotted down in somewhat
-telegraphic style. To begin with:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Durkansky (Deputy Prime Minister) reads out declaration.
-Contents: Friendship for the Führer; gratitude, that through
-the Führer, autonomy has become possible for the Slovaks:
-The Slovaks never want to belong to Hungary. The Slovaks
-want full independence with strongest political, economic,
-and military ties to Germany. Bratislava to be the capital.
-The execution of the plan only possible if the army and
-police are Slovak.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk302'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“An independent Slovakia to be proclaimed at the meeting
-of the first Slovak Diet. In the case of a plebiscite the
-majority would favor a separation from Prague. Jews will
-<span class='pageno' title='149' id='Page_149'></span>
-vote for Hungary. The area of the plebiscite to be up to the
-March, where a large Slovak population lives.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk303'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Jewish problem will be solved similarly to that in
-Germany. The Communist Party to be prohibited.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk304'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Germans in Slovakia do not want to belong to Hungary
-but wish to stay in Slovakia.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk305'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The German influence with the Slovak Government considerable;
-the appointment of a German Minister (member
-of the Cabinet) has been promised.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk306'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“At present negotiations with Hungary are being conducted
-by the Slovaks. The Czechs are more yielding towards the
-Hungarians than the Slovaks.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk307'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Field Marshal”—that is Field Marshal Göring—“considers
-that the Slovak negotiations towards independence are
-to be supported in a suitable manner. Czechoslovakia without
-Slovakia is still more at our mercy.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk308'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Air bases in Slovakia are of great importance for the German
-Air Force for use against the East.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On 12 February a Slovak delegation journeyed to Berlin. It
-consisted of Tuka, one of the Slovaks with whom the Germans
-had been in contact, and Karmasin, the paid representative of the
-Nazi conspirators in Slovakia. They conferred with Hitler and the
-Defendant Ribbentrop in the Reich Chancellery in Berlin on Sunday,
-12 February 1939.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now offer in evidence Document 2790-PS as Exhibit USA-110,
-the captured German Foreign Office minutes of that meeting:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“After a brief welcome Tuka thanks the Führer for granting
-this meeting. He addresses the Führer with ‘My Führer’ and
-he voices the opinion that he, though only a modest man
-himself, might well claim to speak for the Slovak nation.
-The Czech courts and prison gave him the right to make such
-a statement. He states that the Führer had not only opened
-the Slovak question but that he had been also the first one
-to acknowledge the dignity of the Slovak nation. The
-Slovakian people will gladly fight under the leadership of
-the Führer for the maintenance of European civilization.
-Obviously future association with the Czechs had become an
-impossibility for the Slovaks from a moral as well as an
-economic point of view.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then skipping to the last sentence: “ ‘I entrust the fate of my
-people to your care.’ ”—addressing that to the Führer!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>During the meeting the Nazi conspirators apparently were
-successful in planting the idea of insurrection with the Slovak
-delegation. I refer to the final sentence of the document, which I
-<span class='pageno' title='150' id='Page_150'></span>
-have just read, the sentence spoken by Tuka, “I entrust the fate of
-my people to your care.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is apparent from these documents that in mid-February 1939
-the Nazis had a well-disciplined group of Slovaks at their service,
-many of them drawn from the ranks of Father Hlinka’s party.
-Flattered by the personal attention of such men as Hitler and the
-Defendant Ribbentrop and subsidized by German representatives,
-these Slovaks proved willing tools in the hands of the Nazi
-conspirators.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In addition to Slovaks, the conspirators made use of the few
-Germans still remaining within the mutilated Czechoslovak Republic.
-Kundt, Henlein’s deputy who had been appointed leader of
-this German minority, created as many artificial “focal points of
-German culture” as possible. Germans from the districts handed
-over to Germany were ordered from Berlin to continue their studies
-at the German University in Prague and to make it a center of
-aggressive Nazism.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With the assistance of German civil servants, a deliberate
-campaign of Nazi infiltration into Czech public and private
-institutions was carried out, and the Henleinists gave full co-operation
-to Gestapo agents from the Reich who appeared on Czech soil.
-The Nazi political activity was designed to undermine and to
-weaken Czech resistance to the commands from Germany.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the face of continued threats and duress on both diplomatic
-and propaganda levels, the Czech Government was unable to take
-adequate measures against these trespassers upon its sovereignty.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I am using as the basis of my remarks the Czechoslovak official
-Government report, Document Number 998-PS.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In early March, with the date for the final march into Czechoslovakia
-already close at hand, Fifth Column activity moved into
-its final phase. In Bohemia and Moravia the FS, Henlein’s equivalent
-of the SS, were in touch with the Nazi conspirators in the
-Reich and laid the groundwork of the events of 14 and 15 March.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now offer in evidence Document 2826-PS as Exhibit USA-111.
-This is an article by SS Group Leader Karl Hermann Frank,
-published in the publication <span class='it'>Böhmen and Mähren</span>, the official
-periodical of the Reich Protector of Bohemia and Moravia, edition
-May 1941, Page 179.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This is an article written by one of the Nazi leaders in Czechoslovakia
-at the moment of Germany’s greatest military successes.
-It is a boastful article and reveals with a frankness rarely found
-in the Nazi press both the functions which the FS and the SS served
-and the pride the Nazi conspirators took in the activities of these
-organizations. It is a long quotation.
-<span class='pageno' title='151' id='Page_151'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Are you going on with this tomorrow, Mr.
-Alderman?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Will you take the whole day?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: No, not more than an hour and a half.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: And after that the British prosecutors will
-go on?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: Yes.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>The Tribunal adjourned until 5 December 1945 at 1000 hours.</span>]</h3>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='152' id='Page_152'></span><h1>THIRTEENTH DAY<br/> <span style='font-size:smaller'>Wednesday, 5 December 1945</span></h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'><span class='it'>Morning Session</span></h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: May it please the Tribunal, when the
-Tribunal rose yesterday afternoon, I had just offered in evidence
-Document 2826-PS, Exhibit USA-111. This was an article by SS
-Group Leader Karl Hermann Frank, published in <span class='it'>Böhmen und
-Mähren</span> (or <span class='it'>Bohemia and Moravia</span>), the official periodical of the
-Reich Protector of Bohemia and Moravia, the issue of March 1941,
-at Page 79. It is an article which reveals with considerable
-frankness the functions which the FS and SS had, and shows the
-pride which the Nazi conspirators took in the activities of these
-organizations. I read from that article, under the heading “The SS
-on March 15, 1939”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A modern people and a modern state are today unthinkable
-without political troops. To these are allotted the special task
-of being the advance guard of the political will and the
-guarantor of its unity. This is especially true of the German
-folk-groups, which have their home in some other people’s
-state. Accordingly the Sudeten German Party had formerly
-also organized its political troop, the Voluntary Vigilantes”—or,
-in German, “Freiwilliger Selbstschutz”, called FS for
-short.—“This troop was trained especially in accordance with
-the principles of the SS, so far as these could be used in
-this region at that time. The troop was likewise assigned
-here the special task of protecting the homeland actively, if
-necessary. It stood up well in its first test in this connection,
-wherever in the fall crisis of 1938 it had to assume the
-protection of the homeland, arms in hand.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk309'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“After the annexation of the Sudeten Gau the tasks of the
-FS were transferred essentially to the German student
-organizations as compact troop formations in Prague and
-Brünn, aside from the isolated German communities which
-remained in the Second Republic. This was also natural
-because many active students from the Sudeten Gau were
-already members of the SS. The student organizations then
-had to endure this test, in common with other Germans,
-during, the crisis of March 1939 .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-<span class='pageno' title='153' id='Page_153'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk310'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the early morning hours of 15 March, after the announcement
-of the planned entry of German troops, German men
-had to act in some localities in order to assure a quiet course
-of events, either by assumption of the police authority, as
-for instance in Brünn, or by corresponding instructions of the
-police president. In some Czech offices men had likewise,
-in the early hours of the morning, begun to burn valuable
-archives and the material of political files. It was also
-necessary to take measures here in order to prevent foolish
-destruction .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. How significant the many-sided and comprehensive
-measures were considered by the competent
-German agencies follows from the fact that many of the
-men either on March 15 itself or on the following days were
-admitted into the SS with fitting acknowledgment, in part
-even through the Reich leader of the SS himself or through
-SS Group Leader Heydrich. The activities and deeds of these
-men were thereby designated as accomplished in the interest
-of the SS .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk311'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Immediately after the corresponding divisions of the SS had
-marched in with the first columns of the German Army and
-had assumed responsibility in the appropriate sectors, the
-men here placed themselves at once at their further disposition
-and became valuable auxiliaries and collaborators.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now ask the Court to take judicial notice under Article 21
-of the Charter of three official documents. These are identified
-by us as Documents D-571, D-572, and 2943-PS. I offer them in
-evidence, respectively, D-571 as Exhibit USA-112; D-572, Exhibit
-USA-113; and 2943-PS, which is the <span class='it'>French Official Yellow Book</span>,
-at Pages 66 and 67, as Exhibit USA-114.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The first two documents are British diplomatic dispatches,
-properly certified to by the British Government, which gave the
-background of intrigue in Slovakia—German intrigue in Slovakia.
-The third document, 2943-PS or Exhibit USA-114, consists of
-excerpts from the <span class='it'>French Yellow Book</span>, principally excerpts from
-dispatches signed by M. Coulondre, the French Ambassador in
-Berlin, to the French Foreign Office between 13 and 18 March 1939.
-I expect to draw on these three dispatches rather freely in the
-further course of my presentation, since the Tribunal will take
-judicial notice of each of these documents, I think; and therefore,
-it may not be necessary to read them at length into the transcript.
-In Slovakia the long-anticipated crisis came on 10 March. On that
-day the Czechoslovakian Government dismissed those members
-of the Slovak Cabinet who refused to continue negotiations with
-Prague, among them Foreign Minister Tiso and Durcansky. Within
-24 hours the Nazis seized upon this act of the Czechoslovak
-<span class='pageno' title='154' id='Page_154'></span>
-Government as an excuse for intervention. On the following day,
-March 11, a strange scene was enacted in Bratislava, the Slovak
-capital. I quote from Document D-571, which is USA-112. That is
-the report of the British Minister in Prague to the British
-Government.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Herr Bürckel, Herr Seyss-Inquart, and five German generals
-came at about 10 o’clock in the evening of Saturday, the 11th
-of March, into a Cabinet meeting in progress in Bratislava
-and told the Slovak Government that they should proclaim
-the independence of Slovakia. When M. Sidor, the Prime
-Minister, showed hesitation, Herr Bürckel took him on one
-side and explained that Herr Hitler had decided to settle
-the question of Czechoslovakia definitely. Slovakia ought,
-therefore, to proclaim her independence, because Herr Hitler
-would otherwise disinterest himself in her fate. M. Sidor
-thanked Herr Bürckel for this information, but said that he
-must discuss the situation with the Government at Prague.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A very strange situation that he should have to discuss such
-a matter with his own Government, before obeying instructions
-of Herr Hitler delivered by five German generals and Herr Bürckel
-and Herr Seyss-Inquart.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Events went on moving rapidly, but Durcansky, one of the
-dismissed ministers, escaped with Nazi assistance to Vienna, where
-the facilities of the German broadcasting station were placed at
-his disposal. Arms and ammunition were brought from German
-offices in Engerau across the Danube into Slovakia, where they
-were used by the FS and the Hlinka Guards to create incidents
-and disorder of the type required by the Nazis as an excuse for
-military action. The German press and radio launched a violent
-campaign against the Czechoslovak Government; and, significantly,
-an invitation from Berlin was delivered in Bratislava. Tiso, the
-dismissed Prime Minister, was summoned by Hitler to an audience
-in the German capital. A plane was awaiting him in Vienna.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At this point, in the second week of March 1939, preparations
-for what the Nazi leaders like to call the liquidation of Czechoslovakia
-were progressing with what to them must have been very
-satisfying smoothness. The military, diplomatic, and propaganda
-machinery of the Nazi conspirators was moving in close co-ordination.
-All during the process of the Fall Grün (or Case
-Green) of the preceding summer, the Nazi conspirators had invited
-Hungary to participate in this new attack. Admiral Horthy, the
-Hungarian Regent, was again greatly flattered by this invitation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I offer in evidence Document 2816-PS as Exhibit USA-115. This
-is a letter the distinguished Admiral of Hungary, a country which,
-<span class='pageno' title='155' id='Page_155'></span>
-incidentally, had no navy, wrote to Hitler on 13 March 1939, and
-which we captured in the German Foreign Office files.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Your Excellency, my sincere thanks.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk312'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I can hardly tell you how happy I am because this headwater
-region—I dislike using big words—is of vital importance to
-the life of Hungary.”—I suppose he needed some headwaters
-for the non-existent navy of which he was admiral.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk313'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In spite of the fact that our recruits have been serving for
-only 5 weeks we are going into this affair with eager
-enthusiasm. The dispositions have already been made. On
-Thursday, the 16th of this month, a frontier incident will
-take place which will be followed by the big blow on Saturday.”—He
-doesn’t like to use big words; “big blow” is sufficient.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk314'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I shall never forget this proof of friendship, and Your
-Excellency may rely on my unshakeable gratitude at all
-times. Your devoted friend, Horthy.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From this cynical and callous letter from the distinguished
-Admiral .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Was that letter addressed to the Hungarian
-Ambassador at Berlin?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: I thought it was addressed to Hitler, if the
-President please.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: There are some words at the top which look
-like a Hungarian name.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: That is the letter heading. As I understand
-it, the letter was addressed to Adolf Hitler.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: All right.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: And I should have said it was—it ended
-with the .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Is there anything on the letter which indicates
-that?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: Only the fact that it was found in the Berlin
-Foreign Office, and the wording of the letter and the address “Your
-Excellency.” We may be drawing a conclusion as to whom it was
-addressed; but it was found in the Berlin Foreign Office.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From that cynical and callous letter it may be inferred that the
-Nazi conspirators had already informed the Hungarian Government
-of their plans for further military action against Czechoslovakia.
-As it turned out the timetable was advanced somewhat. I would
-draw the inference that His Excellency, Adolf Hitler, informed his
-devoted friend Horthy of this change in good time.
-<span class='pageno' title='156' id='Page_156'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the diplomatic level the Defendant Ribbentrop was quite
-active. On 13 March, the same day on which Horthy wrote his
-letter, Ribbentrop sent a cautionary telegram to the German
-Minister in Prague outlining the course of conduct he should pursue
-during the coming diplomatic pressure. I offer in evidence Document
-2815-PS as Exhibit USA-116. This is the telegram sent by Ribbentrop
-to the German Legation in Prague on 13 March.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Berlin, 13 March 1939.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk315'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Prague. Telegram in secret code.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk316'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“With reference to telephone instructions given by Kordt
-today. In case you should get any written communication
-from President Hacha, please do not make any written or
-verbal comments or take any other action on them, but pass
-them on here by cipher telegram. Moreover, I must ask you
-and the other members of the legation to make a point of
-not being available if the Czech Government wants to
-communicate with you during the next few days.”—Signed—“Ribbentrop.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the afternoon of 13 March Monsignor Tiso, accompanied by
-Durcansky and Herr Meissner and the local Nazi leader, arrived
-in Berlin in response to the summons from Hitler to which I have
-heretofore referred. Late that afternoon Tiso was received by
-Hitler in his study in the Reich Chancellery and presented with an
-ultimatum. Two alternatives were given him: Either declare the
-independence of Slovakia, or be left without German assistance to
-what were referred to as the emergence of Poland and Hungary.
-This decision Hitler said was not a question of days, but of hours.
-I now offer in evidence Document 2802-PS as Exhibit USA-117—again
-a document captured in the German Foreign Office—German
-Foreign Office minutes of the meeting between Hitler and Tiso on
-13 March. I read the bottom paragraph on Page 2 and the top
-paragraph on Page 3 of the English translation. The first paragraph
-I shall read is a summary of Hitler’s remark. You will note that
-in the inducements he held out to the Slovaks Hitler displayed his
-customary disregard for the truth. I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Now he had permitted Minister Tiso to come here in order
-to make this question clear in a very short time. Germany
-had no interest east of the Carpathian mountains. It was
-indifferent to him what happened there. The question was
-whether Slovakia wished to conduct her own affairs or not.
-He did not wish for anything from Slovakia. He would not
-pledge his people, or even a single soldier, to something
-which was not in any way desired by the Slovak people. He
-would like to secure final confirmation as to what Slovakia
-<span class='pageno' title='157' id='Page_157'></span>
-really wished. He did not wish that reproaches should come
-from Hungary that he was preserving something which did
-not wish to be preserved at all. He took a liberal view of
-unrest and demonstration in general, but in this connection
-unrest was only an outward indication of interior instability.
-He would not tolerate it and he had for that reason permitted
-Tiso to come in order to hear his decision. It was not a
-question of days, but of hours. He had stated at that time
-that if Slovakia wished to make herself independent he would
-support this endeavor and even guarantee it. He would stand
-by his word so long as Slovakia would make it clear that
-she wished for independence. If she hesitated or did not
-wish to dissolve the connection with Prague, he would leave
-the destiny of Slovakia to the mercy of events for which
-he was no longer responsible. In that case he would only
-intercede for German interests, and those did not lie east
-of the Carpathians. Germany had nothing to do with Slovakia.
-She had never belonged to Germany.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk317'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer asked the Reich Foreign Minister”—the
-Defendant Ribbentrop—“if he had any remarks to add. The
-Reich Foreign Minister also emphasized for his part the
-conception that in this case a decision was a question of hours
-not of days. He showed the Führer a message he had just
-received which reported Hungarian troop movements on the
-Slovak frontiers. The Führer read this report, mentioned it
-to Tiso, and expressed the hope that Slovakia would soon
-decide clearly for herself.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A most extraordinary interview. Germany had no interest in
-Slovakia; Slovakia had never belonged to Germany; Tiso was
-invited there. And this is what happened: Those present at that
-meeting included the Defendant Ribbentrop, the Defendant Keitel,
-State Secretary Dietrich, State Secretary Keppler, the German
-Minister of State Meissner. I invite the attention of the Tribunal
-to the presence of the Defendant Keitel on this occasion, as on so
-many other occasions, where purely political measures in furtherance
-of Nazi aggression were under discussion, and where apparently
-there was no need for technical military advice.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>While in Berlin the Slovaks also conferred separately with the
-Defendant Ribbentrop and with other high Nazi officials, Ribbentrop
-very solicitously handed Tiso a copy, already drafted in Slovak
-language, of the law proclaiming the independence of Slovakia.
-On the night of the 13th a German plane was conveniently placed
-at Tiso’s disposal to carry him home. On 14 March, pursuant to
-the wishes of the Nazi conspirators, the Diet of Bratislava
-proclaimed the independence of Slovakia. With Slovak extremeness
-<span class='pageno' title='158' id='Page_158'></span>
-acting at the Nazi bidding in open revolt against the Czechoslovak
-Government, the Nazi leaders were now in a position to move
-against Prague. On the evening of the 14th, at the suggestion of
-the German Legation in Prague, M. Hacha, the President of the
-Czechoslovak Republic, and M. Chvalkowsky, his Foreign Minister,
-arrived in Berlin. The atmosphere in which they found themselves
-might be described as somewhat hostile. Since the preceding
-weekend, the Nazi press had accused the Czechs of using violence
-against the Slovaks, and especially against the members of the
-German minority and citizens of the Reich. Both press and radio
-proclaimed that the lives of Germans were in danger. Such a
-situation was intolerable. It was necessary to smother as quickly
-as possible the focus of trouble, which Prague had become, in the
-heart of Europe.—These peacemakers!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After midnight on the 15th, at 1:15 in the morning, Hacha and
-Chvalkowsky were ushered into the Reich Chancellery. They found
-there Adolf Hitler, the Defendants Ribbentrop, Göring, and Keitel
-and other high Nazi officials. I now offer in evidence Document
-2798-PS as Exhibit USA-118. This document is the captured German
-Foreign Office account of this infamous meeting. It is a long
-document. Parts of it are so revealing and give so clear a picture
-of Nazi behavior and tactics that I should like to read them in full.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It must be remembered that this account of the fateful conference
-on the night of March 14-15 comes from German sources, and of
-course it must be read as an account biased by its source, or as
-counsel for the defendants said last week “a tendentious account”.
-Nevertheless, even without too much discounting of the report on
-account of its source, it constitutes a complete condemnation of the
-Nazis, who by pure and simple international banditry forced the
-dissolution of Czechoslovakia. And I interpolate to suggest that
-international banditry has been a crime against international law
-for centuries.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I will first read the headings to the minutes. In the English
-mimeographed version in the document books the time given is an
-incorrect translation of the original. It should read 0115 to 0215:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Conversation between the Führer and Reich Chancellor and
-the President of Czechoslovakia, Hacha, in the presence of the
-Reich Foreign Minister, Von Ribbentrop, and of the Czechoslovakian
-Foreign Minister, Chvalkowsky, in the Reich Chancellery
-on 15 March 1939, 0115 to 0215 hours.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Others present were General Field Marshal Göring, General
-Keitel, Secretary of the State Von Weizsäcker, Minister of the State
-Meissner, Secretary of the State Dietrich, Counselor of the Legation
-Hewel. Hacha opened the conference. He was conciliatory—even
-<span class='pageno' title='159' id='Page_159'></span>
-humble, though the President of a sovereign state. He thanked
-Hitler for receiving him and he said he knew that the fate of
-Czechoslovakia rested in the Führer’s hands. Hitler replied that he
-regretted that he had been forced to ask Hacha to come to Berlin,
-particularly because of the great age of the President. Hacha was
-then, I believe, in his seventies. But this journey, Hitler told the
-President, could be of great advantage to his country because, and
-I quote, “It was only a matter of hours until Germany would
-intervene.” I quote now from the top of Page 3 of the English
-translation. You will bear in mind that what I am reading are
-rough notes or minutes of what Adolf Hitler said:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Slovakia was a matter of indifference to him. If Slovakia
-had kept closer to Germany it would have been an obligation
-to Germany, but he was glad that he did not have this
-obligation now. He had no interests whatsoever in the
-territory east of the Little Carpathian Mountains. He did not
-want to draw the final consequences in the autumn.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Alderman, don’t you think you ought
-to read the last sentence on Page 2?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: Perhaps so; yes. The last sentence from
-the preceding page was:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“For the other countries Czechoslovakia was nothing but a
-means to an end. London and Paris were not in a position
-to really stand up for Czechoslovakia.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk318'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Slovakia was a matter of indifference to him.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then I had read down to:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“But even at that time and also later in his conversations
-with Chvalkowsky he made it clear that he would ruthlessly
-smash this State if Beneš’ tendencies were not completely
-revised. Chvalkowsky understood this and asked the Führer
-to have patience.”—He often bragged of his patience.—“The
-Führer saw this point of view, but the months went by
-without any change. The new regime did not succeed in
-eliminating the old one psychologically. He observed this
-from the press, mouth-to-mouth propaganda, dismissals of
-Germans, and many other things which, to him, were a
-symbol of the total perspective.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk319'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“At first he had not understood this but when it became
-clear to him he drew his consequences because, had the
-development continued in this way, the relations with
-Czechoslovakia would in a few years have become the same
-as 6 months ago. Why did Czechoslovakia not immediately
-reduce its Army to a reasonable size? Such an army was a
-<span class='pageno' title='160' id='Page_160'></span>
-tremendous burden for such a state, because it only makes
-sense if it supports the foreign political mission of the state.
-Since Czechoslovakia no longer has a foreign political
-mission such an army is meaningless. He enumerated several
-examples which proved to him that the spirit in the Army
-had not changed. This symptom convinced him that the
-Army also would be a source of a severe political burden in
-the future. Added to this were the inevitable development
-of economic necessities, and, further, the protests of national
-groups which could no longer endure life as it was.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now interpolate, if the Tribunal please, to note the significance
-of that language of Adolf Hitler to the President of a supposed
-sovereign state and its Prime Minister, having in his presence
-General Field Marshal Göring, the Commander of the Air Force,
-and General Keitel. And continuing to quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Thus it is that the die was cast on the past Sunday.”—This
-is still the language of Hitler.—“I sent for the Hungarian
-minister and told him that I am withdrawing my hands from
-this country. We were now confronted with this fact. He
-had given the order to the German troops to march into
-Czechoslovakia and to incorporate Czechoslovakia into the
-German Reich. He wanted to give Czechoslovakia fullest
-autonomy and a life of her own to a larger extent than she
-had ever enjoyed during Austrian rule. Germany’s attitude
-towards Czechoslovakia will be determined tomorrow, and
-the day after tomorrow, and depends on the attitude of the
-Czechoslovakian people and the Czechoslovakian military
-towards the German troops. He no longer trusts the Government.
-He believes in the honesty and straightforwardness of
-Hacha and Chvalkowsky, but doubts that the Government
-will be able to assert itself in the entire nation. The German
-Army had already started out today, and at one barracks
-where resistance was offered, it was ruthlessly broken;
-another barracks had given in at the deployment of heavy
-artillery.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk320'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“At 6 o’clock in the morning the German Army would invade
-Czechoslovakia from all sides and the German Air Force
-would occupy the Czech airfields. There existed two
-possibilities. The first one would be that the invasion of the
-German troops would lead to a battle. In this case the
-resistance will be broken by all means with physical force.
-The other possibility is that the invasion of the German troops
-occurs in bearable form. In that case, it would be easy for
-the Führer to give Czechoslovakia in the new organization of
-<span class='pageno' title='161' id='Page_161'></span>
-Czech life a generous life of her own, autonomy, and a certain
-national liberty.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk321'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“We witnessed at the moment a great historical turning-point.
-He would not like to torture and denationalize the Czechs. He
-also did not do all that because of hatred, but in order to
-protect Germany. If Czechoslovakia in the fall of last year
-would not have yielded”—I suppose that is a bad translation
-for “had not yielded”—“the Czech people would have been
-exterminated. Nobody could have prevented him from doing
-that. It was his will that the Czech people should live a full
-national life and he believed firmly that a way could be found
-which would make far-reaching concessions to the Czech
-desires. If fighting should break out tomorrow, the pressure
-would result in counter-pressure. One would annihilate
-another and it would then not be possible any more for him
-to give the promised alleviations. Within 2 days the Czech
-Army would not exist any more. Of course, Germans would
-also be killed and this would result in a hatred which would
-force him”—that is, Hitler—“because of his instinct of self-preservation,
-not to grant autonomy any more. The world
-would not move a muscle. He felt pity for the Czech people
-when he was reading the foreign press. It would leave the
-impression on him which could be summarized in a German
-proverb: ‘The Moor has done his duty, the Moor may go.’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk322'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“That was the state of affairs. There existed two trends in
-Germany, a harder one which did not want any concessions
-and wished, in memory to the past, that Czechoslovakia would
-be conquered with blood, and another one, the attitude of
-which corresponded with his just-mentioned suggestions.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk323'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“That was the reason why he had asked Hacha to come here.
-This invitation was the last good deed which he could offer
-to the Czech people. If it should come to a fight, the bloodshed
-would also force us to hate. But the visit of Hacha could
-perhaps prevent the extreme. Perhaps it would contribute to
-finding a form of construction which would be so far-reaching
-for Czechoslovakia as she could never have hoped for in the
-old Austria. His aim was only to create the necessary security
-for the German people.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk324'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The hours went past. At 6 o’clock the troops would march in.
-He was almost ashamed to say that there was one German
-division to each Czech battalion. The military action was no
-small one, but planned with all generosity. He would advise
-him”—that is, Adolf Hitler advised poor old Hacha—“now
-to retire with Chvalkowsky in order to discuss what should
-be done.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='162' id='Page_162'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In his reply to this long harangue, Hacha, according to the German
-minutes, said that he agreed that resistance would be useless.
-He expressed doubt that he would be able to issue the necessary
-orders to the Czech Army, in the 4 hours left to him, before the
-German Army crossed the Czech border. He asked if the object
-of the invasion was to disarm the Czech Army. If so, he indicated
-that might possibly be arranged. Hitler replied that his decision
-was final; that it was well known what a decision of the Führer
-meant. He turned to the circle of Nazi conspirators surrounding
-him, for their support, and you will remember that the Defendants
-Göring, Ribbentrop, and Keitel were all present. The only possibility
-of disarming the Czech Army, Hitler said, was by the intervention
-of the German Army.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I read now one paragraph from Page 4 of the English version of
-the German minutes of this infamous meeting. It is the next to the
-last paragraph on Page 4.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer states that his decision was irrevocable. It was
-well known what a decision of the Führer meant. He did
-not see any other possibility for disarmament and asked the
-other gentlemen”—that is, including Göring, Ribbentrop, and
-Keitel—“whether they shared his opinion, which was answered
-in the affirmative. The only possibility to disarm the
-Czech Army was by the German Army.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At this sad point, Hacha and Chvalkowsky retired from the room.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now offer in evidence Document 2861-PS, an excerpt from the
-official <span class='it'>British War Blue Book</span>, at Page 24, and I offer it as Exhibit
-USA-119. This is an official document of the British Government,
-of which the Tribunal will take judicial notice under the provisions
-of Article 21 of the Charter. The part from which I read is a
-dispatch from the British Ambassador, Sir Nevile Henderson,
-describing a conversation with the Defendant Göring, in which the
-events of this early morning meeting are set forth.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Sir N. Henderson to Viscount Halifax, Berlin, May 28, 1939.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk325'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“My Lord: I paid a short visit to Field Marshal Göring at
-Karinhall yesterday.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then I skip two paragraphs and begin reading with Paragraph 4.
-I am sorry, I think I better read all of those paragraphs:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Field Marshal Göring, who had obviously just been talking
-to someone else on the subject, began by inveighing against
-the attitude which was being adopted in England towards
-everything German and, particularly, in respect of the gold
-held there on behalf of the National Bank of Czechoslovakia.
-Before, however, I had time to reply, he was called to the
-<span class='pageno' title='163' id='Page_163'></span>
-telephone and on his return did not revert to this specific
-question. He complained, instead, of British hostility in
-general, of our political and economic encirclement of Germany
-and the activities of what he described as the war
-party in England.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk326'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I told the Field Marshal that before speaking of British
-hostility, he must understand why the undoubted change of
-feeling towards Germany in England had taken place. As
-he knew quite well, the basis of all the discussions between
-Mr. Chamberlain and Herr Hitler last year had been to the
-effect that, once the Sudeten were allowed to enter the Reich,
-Germany would leave the Czechs alone and would do nothing
-to interfere with their independence. Herr Hitler had given
-a definite assurance to that effect in his letter to the Prime
-Minister of the 27th September. By yielding to the advice of
-his ‘wild men’ and deliberately annexing Bohemia and
-Moravia, Herr Hitler had not only broken his word to Mr.
-Chamberlain but had infringed the whole principle of self-determination
-on which the Munich Agreement rested.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk327'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“At this point, the Field Marshal interrupted me with a
-description of President Hacha’s visit to Berlin. I told Field
-Marshal Göring that it was not possible to talk of free will
-when I understood that he himself had threatened to bombard
-Prague with his airplanes, if Doctor Hacha refused to sign.
-The Field Marshal did not deny the fact but explained how
-the point had arisen. According to him, Doctor Hacha had
-from the first been prepared to sign everything but had said
-that constitutionally he could not do so without reference first
-to Prague. After considerable difficulty, telephonic communication
-with Prague was obtained and the Czech Government
-had agreed, while adding that they could not guarantee
-that one Czech battalion at least would not fire on German
-troops. It was, he said, only at that stage that he had warned
-Doctor Hacha that, if German lives were lost, he would
-bombard Prague. The Field Marshal also repeated, in reply
-to some comment of mine, the story that the advance
-occupation of Vitkovice had been effected solely in order to
-forestall the Poles who, he said, were known to have the
-intention of seizing this valuable area at the first opportunity.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I also invite the attention of the Tribunal and the judicial notice
-of the Tribunal, to Dispatch Number 77, in the <span class='it'>French Official Yellow
-Book</span>, at Page 96 of the book, identified as our Document 2943-PS,
-appearing in the Document Book under that number, and I ask
-that it be given an identifying number, Exhibit USA-114. This is
-<span class='pageno' title='164' id='Page_164'></span>
-a dispatch from M. Coulondre, the French Ambassador, and it gives
-another well-informed version of this same midnight meeting. The
-account, which I shall present to the Court, of the remainder of this
-meeting is drawn from these two sources, the <span class='it'>British Blue Book</span> and
-the <span class='it'>French Yellow Book</span>. I think the Court may be interested to
-read somewhat further at large, in those two books, which furnish
-a great deal of the background of all of these matters.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When President Hacha left the conference room in the Reich
-Chancellery, he was in such a state of exhaustion that he needed
-medical attention from a physician who was conveniently on hand
-for that purpose, a German physician. When the two Czechs
-returned to the room, the Nazi conspirators again told them of the
-power and invincibility of the Wehrmacht. They reminded them
-that in 3 hours, at 6 in the morning .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: You are not reading? I beg your pardon!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: I am not reading, I am summarizing.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Go on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: They reminded them that in 3 hours, at 6 in
-the morning, the German Army would cross the border. The
-Defendant Göring boasted of what the Wehrmacht would do if the
-Czech forces dared to resist the invading Germans. If German lives
-were lost, Defendant Göring said, his Luftwaffe would blaze half
-of Prague into ruins in 2 hours and that, Göring said, would be
-only the beginning.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Under this threat of imminent and merciless attack by land and
-air, the aged President of Czechoslovakia at 4:30 o’clock in the
-morning, signed the document with which the Nazi conspirators
-confronted him and which they had already had prepared. This
-Document is TC-49, the declaration of 15 March 1939, one of the
-series of documents which will be presented by the British prosecutor,
-and from it I quote this, on the assumption that it will
-subsequently be introduced.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The President of the Czechoslovakian State .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. entrusts with
-entire confidence the destiny of the Czech people and the
-Czech country to the hands of the Führer of the German
-Reich”—really a rendezvous with destiny.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>While the Nazi officials were threatening and intimidating the
-representatives of the Czech Government, the Wehrmacht had in
-some areas already crossed the Czech border.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I offer in evidence Document 2860-PS, another excerpt from the
-<span class='it'>British Blue Book</span>, of which I ask the Court to take judicial notice.
-This is a speech by Lord Halifax, the Secretary of State for Foreign
-Affairs, from which I quote one passage:
-<span class='pageno' title='165' id='Page_165'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It is to be observed”—and the fact is surely not without
-significance—“that the towns of Mährisch-Ostrau and Vitkovice
-were actually occupied by German SS detachments on the
-evening of the 14th March, while the President and the
-Foreign Minister of Czechoslovakia were still on their way
-to Berlin and before any discussion had taken place.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At dawn on March 15, German troops poured into Czechoslovakia
-from all sides. Hitler issued an order of the day to the Armed
-Forces and a proclamation to the German people, which stated
-distinctly, “Czechoslovakia has ceased to exist.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the following day, in contravention of Article 81 of the
-Treaty of Versailles, Czechoslovakia was formally incorporated into
-the German Reich under the name of “The Protectorate of Bohemia
-and Moravia.” The decree is Document TC-51, another of the
-documents which the British Delegation will present to the Tribunal
-later in this week. It was signed in Prague on 16 March 1939, by
-Hitler, Lammers, and the Defendants Frick and Von Ribbentrop.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I should like to quote the first sentence of this decree, “The
-Bohemian and Moravian countries belonged for a millennium to
-the Lebensraum”—living space—“of the German people.” The
-remainder of the decree sets forth in bleak detail the extent to which
-Czechoslovakia henceforth was subjected to Germany. A German
-Protector was to be appointed by the German Führer for the so-called
-“Protectorate”—the Defendant Von Neurath. God deliver us
-from such protectors! The German Government assumed charge of
-their foreign affairs and of their customs and of their excises. It
-was specified that German garrisons and military establishments
-would be maintained in the Protectorate. At the same time the
-extremist leaders in Slovakia who, at German Nazi insistence, had
-done so much to undermine the Czech State, found that the
-independence of their week-old state was itself, in effect, qualified.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I offer in evidence Document 1439-PS as Exhibit USA—I need
-not offer that. I think it is a decree in the <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>,
-of which I ask the Tribunal to take judicial notice, and it is
-identified as our Document 1439-PS. It appears at Page 606, 1939,
-<span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>, Part II.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The covering declaration is signed by the Defendant Ribbentrop,
-Minister of Foreign Affairs, and then there is a heading:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Treaty of Protection to be extended by the German Reich
-to the State of Slovakia.”</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk328'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The German Government and the Slovakian Government
-have agreed, after the Slovakian State has placed itself under
-the protection of the German Reich, to regulate by treaty the
-consequences resulting from this fact. For this purpose, the
-<span class='pageno' title='166' id='Page_166'></span>
-undersigned representatives of the two governments have
-agreed on the following provisions:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk329'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Article 1. The German Reich undertakes to protect the
-political independence of the State of Slovakia and integrity
-of its territory.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk330'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Article 2. For the purpose of making effective the protection
-undertaken by the German Reich, the German Armed Forces
-shall have the right, at all times, to construct military
-installations and to keep them garrisoned in the strength they
-deem necessary, in an area delimited on its western side, by
-the frontiers of the State of Slovakia, and on its eastern side
-by a line formed by the eastern rims of the Lower
-Carpathians, the White Carpathians, and the Javornik
-Mountains.”—Then I skip—</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk331'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Government of Slovakia will organize its military
-forces in close agreement with the German Armed Forces.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Wouldn’t that be a convenient time to break
-off? I understand, too, that it would be for the convenience of the
-Defense Counsel if the Tribunal adjourn for an hour and a quarter
-rather than for an hour at midday, and accordingly, the Tribunal
-will retire at 12:45 and sit again at 2:00.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: May it please the Tribunal, this secret
-protocol between Germany and Slovakia provided for close
-economic and financial collaboration between Germany and
-Slovakia. Mineral resources and subsoil rights were placed at the
-disposal of the German Government.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I offer in evidence Document 2793-PS, Exhibit USA-120, and
-from it I read Paragraph 3:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Investigation, development, and utilization of the Slovak
-natural resources. In this respect the basic principle is that,
-insofar as they are not needed to meet Slovakia’s own
-requirements, they should be placed in first line at Germany’s
-disposal. The entire soil research”—“Bodenforschung”
-is the German word—“will be placed under the Reich Agency
-for soil research.”—that is the Reichsstelle für Bodenforschung—“The
-Government of the Slovak State will soon
-start an investigation to determine whether the present
-owners of concessions and privileges have fulfilled the
-industrial obligations prescribed by law and it will cancel
-concessions and privileges in cases where these duties have
-been neglected.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='167' id='Page_167'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In their private conversations the Nazi conspirators gave
-abundant evidence that they considered Slovakia a mere puppet
-state—in effect a German possession.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I offer in evidence Document R-100 as Exhibit USA-121. This
-document is a memorandum of information given by Hitler to Von
-Brauchitsch on 25 March 1939. Much of it deals with problems
-arising from recently occupied Bohemia and Moravia and Slovakia.
-I quote, beginning at the sixth paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Colonel General Keitel shall inform Slovak Government via
-Foreign Office that it would not be allowed to keep or
-garrison armed Slovak units (Hlinka Guards) on this side of
-the border formed by the river Waag. They shall be transferred
-to the new Slovak territory. Hlinka Guards should
-be disarmed.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk332'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Slovakia shall be requested via Foreign Office to deliver to
-us, against payment, any arms we want and which are still
-kept in Slovakia. This request is to be based upon agreement
-made between Army and Czech troops. For this payment
-those millions should be used which we will pour anyhow
-into Slovakia.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk333'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Czech Protectorate:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk334'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“H. Gr.”—the translator’s note indicates that that probably
-means army groups, but I can’t vouch for it—“shall be asked
-again whether the request shall be repeated again for the
-delivery of all arms within a stated time limit and under the
-threat of severe penalties.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk335'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“We take all war material of former Czechoslovakia without
-paying for it. The guns bought by contract before 15 February,
-though, shall be paid for .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Bohemia and Moravia have to
-make annual contributions to the German Treasury. Their
-amount shall be fixed on the basis of the expenses earmarked
-formerly for the Czech Army.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The German conquest of Czechoslovakia, in direct contravention
-of the Munich Agreement, was the occasion for the formal protest
-by the British and French Governments. These documents, Numbers
-TC-52 and TC-53, dated 17 March 1939, will be presented to the
-Tribunal by the British prosecutor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the same day, 17 March 1939, the Acting Secretary of State
-of the United States Government issued a statement, which I will
-offer in evidence and I invite the Court to take judicial notice of
-the entire volume, Document 2862-PS as Exhibit USA-122, which is
-an excerpt from the official volume entitled <span class='it'>Peace and War: United
-States Foreign Policy, 1931-1941</span> issued under the seal of the
-Department of State of the United States of America. Incidentally,
-this volume which happens to be my own copy—and I hope I can
-<span class='pageno' title='168' id='Page_168'></span>
-get another one—I am placing in evidence, because I am quite
-certain that in its study of the background of this whole case, the
-Court will be very much interested in this volume, which is a
-detailed chronological history of all the diplomatic events leading
-up to and through the second World War of 1941. But what I am
-actually offering in evidence at the moment appears on Pages 454
-and 455 of the volume, a statement by the Acting Secretary of State
-Welles, dated 17 March 1939:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Government of the United States has on frequent
-occasions stated its conviction that only through international
-support of a program of order based upon law can world
-peace be assured.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk336'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“This Government, founded upon and dedicated to the
-principles of human liberty and of democracy, cannot refrain
-from making known this country’s condemnation of the acts
-which have resulted in the temporary extinguishment of the
-liberties of a free and independent people with whom, from
-the day when the Republic of Czechoslovakia attained its
-independence, the people of the United States have
-maintained specially close and friendly relations.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk337'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The position of the Government of the United States has
-been made consistently clear. It has emphasized the need for
-respect for the sanctity of treaties and of the pledged word,
-and for non-intervention by any nation in the domestic affairs
-of other nations; and it has on repeated occasions expressed
-its condemnation of a policy of military aggression.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk338'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It is manifest that acts of wanton lawlessness and of
-arbitrary force are threatening the world peace and the very
-structure of modern civilization. The imperative need for the
-observance of the principles advocated by this Government
-has been clearly demonstrated by the developments which
-have taken place during the past 3 days.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With Czechoslovakia in German hands, the Nazi conspirators
-had accomplished the program they had set themselves in the
-meeting in Berlin on 5 November 1937. You will recall that this
-program of conquest was intended to shorten their frontiers, to
-increase their industrial and food reserves, and to place them in
-a position, both industrially and strategically, from which they
-could launch more ambitious and more devastating campaigns of
-aggression. In less than a year and a half this program had been
-carried through to the satisfaction of the Nazi leaders, and at that
-point I would again invite the Court’s attention to the large chart
-on the wall. I think it is no mere figure of speech to make reference
-to the wolf’s head, what is known in Anglo-American law as <span class='it'>caput
-lupinum</span>.
-<span class='pageno' title='169' id='Page_169'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The lower jaw formed near Austria was taken—the red part
-on the first chart—12 March 1938. Czechoslovakia thereby was
-encircled, and the next step was the absorption of the mountainous
-part, the Sudetenland, indicated on the second chart in red. On
-1 October 1938 Czechoslovakia was further encircled and its
-defenses weakened, and then the jaws clamped in, or the pincers,
-as I believe General Keitel or General Jodl called them—I believe
-it was General Jodl’s diary—and you see what they did to
-Czechoslovakia. On 15 March 1939 the borders were shortened, new
-bases were acquired, and then Czechoslovakia was destroyed.
-Bohemia and Moravia are in black and Slovakia in what might be
-called light tan. But I have read to you the documents which
-showed in what condition Slovakia was left; and with the German
-military installations in Slovakia, you see how completely the
-southern border of Poland was flanked, as well as the western
-border, the stage being set for the next aggression, which the
-British prosecutor will describe to you.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Of all the Nazi conspirators the Defendant Göring was the most
-aware of the economic and strategic advantages which would
-accrue from the possession by Germany of Czechoslovakia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now offer in evidence Document 1301-PS, which is a rather
-large file, and we offer particularly Item 10 of the document, at
-Page 25 of the English translation. I offer it as Exhibit USA-123;
-Page 25 of the English translation contained the top-secret minutes
-of a conference with Göring in the Luftwaffe Ministry (the Air
-Ministry). The meeting which was held on 14 October 1938, just
-2 weeks after the occupation of the Sudetenland, was devoted to
-the discussion of economic problems. As of that date, the Defendant
-Göring’s remarks were somewhat prophetic. I quote from
-the third paragraph, from the bottom of Page 26 of the English
-translation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Sudetenland has to be exploited by every means. General
-Field Marshal Göring counts upon a complete industrial
-assimilation of Slovakia. Czech and Slovakia would become
-German dominions. Everything possible must be taken out.
-The Oder-Danube Canal has to be speeded up. Searches
-for oil and ore have to be conducted in Slovakia, notably by
-State Secretary Keppler.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the summer of 1939, after the incorporation of Bohemia and
-Moravia into the German Reich, Defendant Göring again revealed
-the great interest of the Nazi leaders in the Czech economic potential.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I offer in evidence Document R-133 as Exhibit USA-124. This
-document is the minutes, dated Berlin, 27 July 1939, signed by
-Müller, of a conference between Göring and a group of officials
-from the OKW and from other agencies of the German Government
-<span class='pageno' title='170' id='Page_170'></span>
-concerned with war production. This meeting had been held 2 days
-previously, on 25 July. I read the first part of the account of this
-meeting.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In a rather long statement the Field Marshal explained
-that the incorporation of Bohemia and Moravia into the
-German economy had taken place, among other reasons, to
-increase the German war potential, by exploitation of the
-industry there. Directives, such as the decree of the Reich
-Minister for Economics (S 10 402/39 of 10 July 1939) as well
-as a letter with similar meaning to the Junkers firm, which
-might possibly lower the kind and extent of the armament
-measures in the Protectorate are contrary to this principle.
-If it is necessary to issue such directives, this should be
-done only with his consent. In any case, he insists,”—that
-is Defendant Göring insists—“in agreement with the directive
-by Hitler, that the war potential of the Protectorate is definitely
-to be exploited in part or in full and is to be directed
-towards mobilization as soon as possible.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In addition to strengthening the Nazi economic potential for
-the following wars of aggression, the conquest of Czechoslovakia
-provided the Nazis with new bases from which to wage their next
-war of aggression, the attack on Poland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>You will recall the minutes of the conference between Göring
-and a pro-Nazi Slovak delegation in the winter of 1938-1939. Those
-minutes are Document 2801-PS, which I introduced into evidence
-earlier, as Exhibit USA-109. You will recall the last sentence of
-those minutes, a statement of Defendant Göring’s conclusions.
-I quote this sentence again, “Air bases in Slovakia are of great
-importance for the German Air Force for use against the East.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now offer in evidence Document 1874-PS, as Exhibit USA-125.
-This document is the German minutes of a conference which Defendant
-Göring held with Mussolini and Ciano on 15 April 1939,
-one month after the conquest of Czechoslovakia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In this conference, Göring told his junior partners in the Axis
-of the progress of German preparations for war. He compared the
-strength of Germany with the strength of England and France.
-Not unnaturally, he mentioned the German occupation of Czechoslovakia
-in this connection. I read two paragraphs of these thoughts,
-on Page 4, Paragraph 2, of the German minutes.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“However, the heavy armament of Czechoslovakia shows, in
-any case, how dangerous this could have been, even after
-Munich, in the event of a serious conflict. Because of German
-action, the situation of both Axis countries was ameliorated—among
-other reasons—because of the economic possibilities
-which resulted from the transfer to Germany of the great
-<span class='pageno' title='171' id='Page_171'></span>
-production capacity of Czechoslovakia. That contributes
-toward a considerable strengthening of the Axis against the
-Western Powers.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk339'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Furthermore, Germany now need not keep ready a single
-division for protection against that country in case of bigger
-conflict. This, too, is an advantage by which both Axis
-countries will, in the last analysis, benefit.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then on Page 5, Paragraph 2, of the German version:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The action taken by Germany in Czechoslovakia is to be
-viewed as an advantage for the Axis in case Poland should
-finally join the enemies of the Axis powers. Germany could
-then attack this country from two flanks and would be within
-only 25 minutes flying distance from the new Polish industrial
-center, which had been moved further into the interior of
-the country, nearer to the other Polish industrial districts
-because of its proximity to the border. Now, by the turn of
-events, it is located again in the proximity of the border.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And that flanking on two fronts is illustrated on the four-segment
-chart.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I think the chart itself demonstrates, better than any oral argument,
-the logic and cold calculation, the deliberation of each step
-to this point of the German aggression. More than that, it demonstrates
-what I might call the master fight of the aggressive war
-case, that is, that each conquest of the Nazi conspirators was
-deliberately planned, as a stepping stone to new and more ambitious
-aggression.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>You will recall the words of Hitler, at the conference in the
-Reich Chancellery on 23 May 1939, when he was planning the
-Polish campaign, Document L-79, Exhibit Number USA-27. I quote
-from it:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The period which lies behind us has, indeed, been put to
-good use. All measures have been taken in the correct
-sequence and in harmony with our aims.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is appropriate to refer to two other speeches of the Nazi
-leaders. In his lecture in Munich on 7 November 1943, the Defendant
-Jodl spoke as follows, and I quote from Page 5 of Document
-L-172, already received in evidence as Exhibit USA-34—on Page 8
-of the German text:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The bloodless solution of the Czech conflict in the autumn
-of 1938 and spring of 1939 and the annexation of Slovakia
-rounded off the territory of Greater Germany in such a way
-that it now became possible to consider the Polish problem
-on the basis of more or less favorable strategic premises.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='172' id='Page_172'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the speech to his military commanders on 23 November 1939,
-Hitler described the process by which he had rebuilt the military
-power of the Reich. This is our Document 789-PS, Exhibit USA-23.
-I quote one passage from the second paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The next step was Bohemia, Moravia, and Poland. This step
-also was not possible to accomplish in one campaign. First
-of all, the Western fortifications had to be finished. It was
-not possible to reach the goal in one effort. It was clear to
-me from the first moment, that I could not be satisfied with
-the Sudeten German territory. That was only a partial solution.
-The decision to march into Bohemia was made. Then
-followed the erection of the Protectorate and with that the
-basis for the action against Poland was laid.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Before I leave the subject of the aggression against Czechoslovakia,
-I should like to submit to the Court a document which
-became available to us too late to be included in our document
-book. It reached me Saturday, late in the afternoon or late at night.
-This is an official document, again from the Czechoslovakian
-Government, a supplement to the Czechoslovakian report, which
-I had previously offered in evidence. I now offer it, identified as
-Document 3061-PS, as Exhibit USA-126.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The document was furnished us, if the Court please, in the
-German text with an English translation, which didn’t seem to us
-quite adequate and we have had it re-translated into English and
-the translation has just been passed up, I believe, to the Tribunal.
-That mimeographed translation should be appended to our Document
-Book O.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I shall not read the report; it is about 12 pages long. The Court
-will take judicial notice of it, under the provisions of the Charter.
-I merely summarize. This document gives confirmation and
-corroboration to the other evidence which I presented to the
-Tribunal. In particular, it offers support to the following allegations:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>First, the close working relationship between Henlein and the
-SDP, on the one hand, and Hitler and Defendants Hess and
-Ribbentrop, on the other;</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Second, the use of the German Legation in Prague to direct
-the German Fifth Column activities;</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Third, the financing of the Henlein movement by agencies of
-the German Government, including the German diplomatic
-representatives at Prague;</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Fourth, the use of the Henlein movement to conduct espionage
-on direct orders from the Reich.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In addition, this document gives further details of the
-circumstances of the visit of President Hacha to Berlin on the
-<span class='pageno' title='173' id='Page_173'></span>
-night of 14 March. It substantiates the fact that President Hacha
-required the medical attention of Hitler’s physician and it supports
-the threat which the Defendant Göring made to the Czech
-Delegation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, if it please the Tribunal, that concludes my presentation
-of what, to me, has always seemed one of the saddest chapters
-in human history, the rape and destruction of the frail little
-nation of Czechoslovakia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE (Deputy Chief Prosecutor for
-the United Kingdom): May it please the Tribunal, before I tender
-the evidence which I desire to place before the Tribunal, it might
-be convenient if I explained how the British case is to be divided
-up and who will present the different parts.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I shall deal with the general treaties. After that, my learned
-friend, Colonel Griffith-Jones, will deal with Poland. Thirdly,
-Major Elwyn Jones will deal with Norway and Denmark. Fourthly,
-Mr. Roberts will deal with Belgium, Holland, and Luxembourg.
-Fifthly, Colonel Phillimore will deal with Greece and Yugoslavia.
-After that, my friend, Mr. Alderman, of the American Delegation,
-will deal on behalf of both delegations with the aggression against
-the U.S.S.R. and the U.S.A.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>May I also, with the Tribunal’s permission, say one word about
-the arrangements that we have made as to documents. Each of
-the defendants’ counsel will have a copy of the document book—of
-the different document books—in English. In fact, 30 copies of the
-first four of our document books have already been placed in the
-defendants’ Information Center. We hope that the last document
-book, dealing with Greece and Yugoslavia, will have the 30 copies
-placed there today.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In addition, the defendants’ counsel have at least six copies in
-German of every document.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With regard to my own part of the case, the first section on
-general treaties, all the documents on this phase are in the <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>
-or <span class='it'>Die Dokumente der Deutschen Politik</span>, of which
-10 copies have been made available to the defendants’ counsel, so
-that with regard to the portion with which the Tribunal is
-immediately concerned, the defendants’ counsel will have at least
-16 copies in German of every document referred to.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Finally, there is a copy of the <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span> and <span class='it'>Die
-Dokumente</span> available for the Tribunal, other copies if they so
-desire, but one is placed ready for the Tribunal if any member
-wishes to refer to a German text.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Do you propose to call any oral witnesses?
-<span class='pageno' title='174' id='Page_174'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: No, My Lord, no oral witnesses.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If the Tribunal please, before I come to the first treaty I want
-to make three quotations to deal with a point which was mentioned
-in the speech of my learned friend, the Attorney General, yesterday.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It might be thought from the melancholy story of broken treaties
-and violated assurances, which the Tribunal has already heard,
-that Hitler and the Nazi Government did not even profess it
-necessary or desirable to keep the pledged word. Outwardly,
-however, the professions were very different. With regard to
-treaties, on the 18th of October 1933, Hitler said, “Whatever we
-have signed we will fulfill to the best of our ability.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal will note the reservation, “Whatever we have
-signed.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But on the 21st of May 1935 Hitler said, “The German Government
-will scrupulously maintain every treaty voluntarily signed,
-even though it was concluded before their accession to power and
-office.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On assurances Hitler was even more emphatic. In the same
-speech, the Reichstag Speech on May 21, 1935, Hitler accepted
-assurances as being of equal obligation, and the world at that time
-could not know that that meant of no obligation at all. What
-he actually said was:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“And when I now hear from the lips of a British statesman
-that such assurances are nothing and that the only proof of
-sincerity is the signature appended to collective pacts, I must
-ask Mr. Eden to be good enough to remember that it is a
-question of an assurance in any case. It is sometimes much
-easier to sign treaties with the mental reservations that one
-will reconsider one’s attitude at the decisive hour than to
-declare before an entire nation and with full opportunity
-one’s adherence to a policy which serves the course of peace
-because it rejects anything which leads to war.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then he proceeds with the illustration of his assurance to
-France.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Never having seen the importance which Hitler wished the
-world to believe he attached to treaties, I shall ask the Tribunal
-in my part of the case to look at 15 only of the treaties which
-he and the Nazis broke. The remainder of the 69 broken treaties
-shown on the chart and occurring between 1933 and 1941 will be
-dealt with by my learned friends.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There is one final point as to the position of a treaty in German
-law, as I understand it. The appearance of a treaty in the <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>
-makes it part of the statute law of Germany, and that
-<span class='pageno' title='175' id='Page_175'></span>
-is by no means an uninteresting aspect of the breaches which I
-shall put before the Tribunal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The first treaty to be dealt with is the Convention for the
-Pacific Settlement of International Disputes, signed at The Hague
-on the 29th of July 1899. I ask that the Tribunal take judicial
-notice of the Convention, and for convenience I hand in as Exhibit
-GB-1 the British Document TC-1. The German reference is to the
-<span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span> for 1901, Number 44, Sections 401 to 404, and
-482 and 483. The Tribunal will find the relevant charge in
-Appendix C as Charge 1.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As the Attorney General said yesterday, these Hague Conventions
-are only the first gropings towards the rejection of the
-inevitability of war. They do not render the making of aggressive
-war a crime, but their milder terms were as readily broken as
-the more severe agreements.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On 19 July 1899, Germany, Greece, Serbia, and 25 other nations
-signed a convention. Germany ratified the convention on 4 September
-1900, Serbia on 11 May 1901, and Greece on 4 April 1901.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By Article 12 of the treaty between the Principal Allied and
-Associated Powers and the Serb-Croat-Slovene State, signed at the
-St. Germaine-en-Laye on 10 September 1919, the new Kingdom
-succeeded to all the old Serbian treaties, and later, as the Tribunal
-knows, changed its name to Yugoslavia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I think it is sufficient, unless the Tribunal wish otherwise, for
-me to read the first two articles only:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Article 1: With a view to obviating as far as possible recourse
-to force in the relations between states, the signatory powers
-agree to use their best efforts to insure the pacific settlement
-of international differences.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk340'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Article 2: In case of serious disagreement or conflict, before
-an appeal to arms the signatory powers agree to have recourse,
-as far as circumstances allow, to the good offices or mediation
-of one or more friendly powers.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After that the Convention deals with machinery, and I don’t
-think, subject to any wish of the Tribunal, that it is necessary
-for me to deal with it in detail.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The second treaty is the Convention for the Pacific Settlement
-of International Disputes, signed at The Hague on the 18th of
-October 1907. Again I ask the Tribunal to take judicial notice of
-this, and for convenience I hand in as Exhibit GB-2 the Final Act
-of the Conference at The Hague, which contains British Documents
-TC-2, 3, and 4. The reference to this Convention in German is to
-the <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span> for 1910, Number 52, Sections 22 to 25; and
-the relevant charge is Charge 2.
-<span class='pageno' title='176' id='Page_176'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This Convention, was signed at The Hague by 44 nations, and
-it is in effect as to 31 nations, 28 signatories, and 3 adherents. For
-our purposes it is in force as to the United States, Belgium,
-Czechoslovakia, Denmark, France, Germany, Luxembourg, Japan,
-Netherlands, Norway, Poland, and Russia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By the provisions of Article 91 it replaces the 1899 Convention
-as between the contracting powers. As Greece and Yugoslavia are
-parties to the 1899 Convention and not to the 1907, the 1899 Convention
-is in effect with regard to them, and that explains the
-division of countries in Appendix C.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Again I only desire that the Tribunal should look at the first two
-articles:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. With a view to obviating as far as possible recourse to
-force in the relations between states, the contracting powers
-agree to use their best efforts to insure the pacific settlement
-of international differences.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then I don’t think I need trouble to read 2. It is the same article
-as to mediation, and again, there are a number of machinery provisions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The third treaty is the Hague Convention relative to the opening
-of hostilities, signed at the same time. It is contained in the exhibit
-which I put in. Again I ask that judicial notice be taken of it. The
-British Document is TC-3. The German reference is the <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>
-for 1910, Number 2, Sections 82 to 102, and the reference
-in Appendix C to Charge 3.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This Convention applies to Germany, Poland, Norway, Denmark,
-Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, and Russia. It relates to
-a procedural step in notifying one’s prospective opponent before
-opening hostilities against him. It appears to have had its immediate
-origin in the Russo-Japanese war, 1904, when Japan attacked Russia
-without any previous warning. It will be noted that it does not fix
-any particular lapse of time between the giving of notice and the
-commencement of hostilities, but it does seek to maintain an absolutely
-minimum standard of international decency before the outbreak
-of war.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Again, if I might refer the Tribunal to the first article:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The contracting powers recognize that hostilities between
-them must not commence without a previous and explicit
-warning in the form of either a declaration of war, giving
-reasons, or an ultimatum with a conditional declaration of
-war.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then there are a number again of machinery provisions, with
-which I shall not trouble the Tribunal.
-<span class='pageno' title='177' id='Page_177'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The fourth treaty is the Hague Convention 5, respecting the
-rights and duties of neutral powers and persons in case of war on
-land, signed at the same time. That is British Document TC-4, and
-the German reference is <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span> 1910, Number 2, Sections
-168 and 176. Reference in Appendix C is to Charge 4.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Is it necessary to give the German reference?
-If it is necessary for defendants’ counsel, all right, but if not it need
-not be done.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: If I may omit them it will save
-some time.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: If any of the defendants’ counsel
-want any specific reference perhaps they will be good enough to
-ask me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Germany was an original signatory
-to the Convention, and the Treaty is in force as a result of
-ratification or adherence between Germany and Norway, Denmark,
-Belgium, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, the U.S.S.R., and the United
-States.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I call the attention of the Tribunal to the short contents of
-Article 1, “The territory of neutral powers is inviolable.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A point does arise, however, on this Convention. I want to make
-this clear at once. Under Article 20, the provisions of the present
-Convention do not apply except between the contracting powers,
-and then only if all the belligerents are parties to the Convention.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As Great Britain and France entered the war within 2 days of
-the outbreak of the war between Germany and Poland, and one of
-these powers had not ratified the Convention, it is arguable that its
-provisions did not apply to the second World War.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I do not want the time of the Tribunal to be occupied by an
-argument on that point when there are so many more important
-treaties to be considered. Therefore, I do not press that as a charge
-of a breach of treaty. I merely call the attention of the Tribunal
-to the terms of Article 1 as showing the state of international
-opinion at that time and as an element in the aggressive character
-of the war which we are considering.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Perhaps this would be a good time to
-break off.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken until 1400 hours.</span>]</h3>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<h2><span class='pageno' title='178' id='Page_178'></span><span class='it'>Afternoon Session</span></h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: As the Tribunal adjourned I had
-come to the fifth treaty, the Treaty of Peace between the Allied and
-Associated Powers and Germany, signed at Versailles the 28th of
-June 1919. I again ask the Tribunal to take judicial cognizance of
-this treaty, and I again hand in for convenience Exhibit GB-3, which
-is a copy of the treaty, including the British documents TC-5 to TC-10
-inclusive. The reference in Appendix C is to Charge 5.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Before I deal with the relevant portions, may I explain very
-briefly the layout of the treaty.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Part I contains the Covenant of the League of Nations, and
-Part II sets the boundaries of Germany in Europe. These boundaries
-are described in detail but Part II makes no provision for
-guaranteeing these boundaries.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Part III, Articles 31 to 117, with which the Tribunal is concerned,
-contains the political clauses for Europe. In it, Germany guarantees
-certain territorial boundaries in Belgium, Luxembourg, Austria,
-Czechoslovakia, France, Poland, Memel, Danzig, and so forth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It might be convenient for the Tribunal to note, at the moment,
-the interweaving of this treaty with the next, which is the Treaty
-for the Restoration of Friendly Relations between the United States
-and Germany.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Parts I, II, and III of the Versailles Treaty are not included in
-the United States treaty. Parts IV, V, VI, VIII, IX, X, XI, XII,
-XIV, and XV are all repeated verbatim in the United States treaty
-from the Treaty of Versailles.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal is concerned with Part V—the military, naval, and
-air clauses. Parts VII and XIII are not included in the United
-States treaty.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I don’t think there is any reason to explain what the parts are,
-but if the Tribunal wishes to know about any specific part, I shall
-be very happy to explain it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The first part that the Tribunal is concerned with is that contained
-in the British Document TC-5, and consists of Articles 42
-to 44 dealing with the Rhineland. These are very short, and as they
-are repeated in the Locarno Treaty, perhaps I had better read them
-once, just so that the Tribunal will have them in mind.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Article 42: Germany is forbidden to maintain or construct
-any fortifications either on the left bank of the Rhine or on
-the right bank to the west of a line drawn 50 kilometers to
-the east of the Rhine.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk341'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Article 43: In the area defined above, the maintenance and
-the assembly of armed forces, either permanently or temporarily,
-and military maneuvers of any kind, as well as the
-<span class='pageno' title='179' id='Page_179'></span>
-upkeep of all permanent works for mobilization, are in the
-same way forbidden.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk342'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Article 44: In case Germany violates in any manner whatever
-the provisions of Articles 42 and 43, she shall be regarded
-as committing a hostile act against the powers signatory of
-the present treaty and as calculated to disturb the peace of
-the world.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I am not going to put in evidence, but I simply draw the Tribunal’s
-attention to a document of which they can take judicial
-notice, as it has been published by the German State, the memorandum
-of March 7, 1936, giving their account of the breach. The
-matters regarding the breach have been dealt with by my friend,
-Mr. Alderman, and I don’t propose to go over the ground again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The next part of the treaty is in the British Document TC-6,
-dealing with Austria:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Article 80: Germany acknowledges and will respect strictly
-the independence of Austria within the frontiers which may
-be fixed in a treaty between that state and the Principal
-Allied and Associated Powers; she agrees that this independence
-shall be inalienable, except with the consent of the
-Council of the League of Nations.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Again in the same way, the proclamation of Hitler dealing with
-Austria, the background of which has been dealt with by my friend,
-Mr. Alderman, is attached as TC-47. I do not intend to read it
-because the Tribunal can again take judicial notice of the public
-proclamation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Next is Document TC-8, dealing with Memel:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Germany renounces, in favor of the Principal Allied and
-Associated Powers, all rights and title over the territories
-included between the Baltic, the northeastern frontier of East
-Prussia as defined in Article 28 of Part II, (Boundaries of Germany)
-of the present treaty, and the former frontier between
-Germany and Russia.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk343'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Germany undertakes to accept the settlement made by the
-Principal Allied and Associated Powers in regard to these
-territories, particularly insofar as concerns the nationality of
-inhabitants.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I don’t think that the Tribunal has had any reference to the
-formal document of incorporation of Memel, of which again the
-Tribunal can take judicial notice; and I put in, for convenience,
-a copy as GB-4. It is British Document TC-53A, and it appears in
-our book. It is very short, so perhaps the Tribunal will bear with
-me while I read it:
-<span class='pageno' title='180' id='Page_180'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Transfer Commissioner for the Memel territory, Gauleiter
-und Oberpräsident Erich Koch, effected on 3 April
-during a conference at Memel, the final incorporation of the
-Memel territory into the National Socialist Party Gau of East
-Prussia and into the state administration of the East Prussian
-Regierungsbezirk of Gumbinnen .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then, next we come to TC-9, which is the article relating to
-Danzig, Article 100, and I shall read only the first sentence, because
-the remainder consists of geographical boundaries;</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Germany renounces, in favor of the Principal Allied and
-Associated Powers, all rights and title over the territory comprised
-within the following limits .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>—And then the limits are set out and are described in a German
-map attached to the treaty.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lieutenant Colonel Griffith-Jones, who will deal with this part
-of the case, will formally prove the documents relating to the
-occupation of Danzig, and I shall not trouble the Tribunal with
-them now.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So if the Tribunal would go on to British Document TC-7—that
-is Article 81, dealing with the Czechoslovak State:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Germany, in conformity with the action already taken by
-the Allied and Associated Powers, recognizes the complete
-independence of the Czechoslovak State, which will include
-the autonomous territory of the Ruthenians to the south of
-the Carpathians. Germany hereby recognizes the frontiers of
-this state as determined by the Principal Allied and Associated
-Powers and other interested states.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Alderman has dealt with this matter only this morning, and
-he has already put in an exhibit giving in detail the conference
-between Hitler and President Hacha, and the Foreign Minister
-Chvalkowsky, at which the Defendants Göring and Keitel were
-present. Therefore, I am not going to put in to the Tribunal the
-British translation of the captured Foreign Office minutes, which
-occurs in TC-48; but I put in formally, as Mr. Alderman asked me
-to this morning, as GB-6, the Document TC-49, which is the agreement
-signed by Hitler and the Defendant Ribbentrop for Germany
-and Dr. Hacha and Dr. Chvalkowsky for Czechoslovakia. It is an
-agreement of which the Tribunal will take judicial notice. I am
-afraid I can’t quite remember whether Mr. Alderman read it this
-morning; it is Document TC-49. He certainly referred to it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: No, he did not read it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Then perhaps I might read it.
-Text of the:
-<span class='pageno' title='181' id='Page_181'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Agreement between the Führer and Reich Chancellor Adolf
-Hitler and the President of the Czechoslovak State Dr.
-Hacha .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk344'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer and Reich Chancellor today received in Berlin,
-at their own request, the President of the Czechoslovak State,
-Dr. Hacha, and the Czechoslovak Foreign Minister, Dr. Chvalkowsky,
-in the presence of Herr von Ribbentrop, the Foreign
-Minister of the Reich. At this meeting the serious situation
-which had arisen within the previous territory of Czechoslovakia,
-owing to the events of recent weeks, was subjected
-to a completely open examination. The conviction was unanimously
-expressed on both sides that the object of all their
-efforts must be to assure quiet, order, and peace in this part
-of Central Europe. The President of the Czechoslovak State
-declared that, in order to serve this end and to reach a final
-pacification, he confidently placed the fate of the Czech people
-and of their country in the hands of the Führer of the
-German Reich. The Führer accepted this declaration and
-expressed his decision to assure to the Czech people, under
-the protection of the German Reich, the autonomous development
-of their national life, in accordance with their special
-characteristics. In witness whereof this document is signed
-in duplicate.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>The signatures I mentioned appear.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal will understand that it is not my province to make
-any comment; that has been done by Mr. Alderman. And I am
-not putting forward any of the documents I read as having my
-support; they are merely put forward factually as part of the case.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The next document, which I put in as GB-7, is the British
-Document TC-50. That is Hitler’s proclamation to the German
-people, dated the 15th of March 1939. Again, I don’t think that Mr.
-Alderman read that document.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: No, he did not read it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Then I shall read it:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Proclamation of the Führer to the German people, 15 March
-1939.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk345'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“To the German People:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk346'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Only a few months ago Germany was compelled to protect
-her fellow countrymen, living in well-defined settlements,
-against the unbearable Czechoslovakian terror regime; and
-during the last weeks the same thing has happened on an
-ever-increasing scale. This is bound to create an intolerable
-state of affairs within an area inhabited by citizens of so
-many nationalities.
-<span class='pageno' title='182' id='Page_182'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk347'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“These national groups, to counteract the renewed attacks
-against their freedom and life, have now broken away from
-the Prague Government. Czechoslovakia has ceased to exist.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk348'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Since Sunday at many places wild excesses have broken
-out, amongst the victims of which are again many Germans.
-Hourly the number of oppressed and persecuted people crying
-for help is increasing. From areas thickly populated by German-speaking
-inhabitants, which last autumn Czechoslovakia
-was allowed by German generosity to retain, refugees robbed
-of their personal belongings are streaming into the Reich.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk349'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Continuation of such a state of affairs would lead to the
-destruction of every vestige of order in an area in which Germany
-is vitally interested particularly as for over 1,000 years
-it formed a part of the German Reich.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk350'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In order definitely to remove this menace to peace and to
-create the conditions for a necessary new order in this living
-space, I have today resolved to allow German troops to march
-into Bohemia and Moravia. They will disarm the terror gangs
-and the Czechoslovakian forces supporting them, and protect
-the lives of all who are menaced. Thus they will lay the
-foundations for introducing a fundamental re-ordering of
-affairs which will be in accordance with the 1,000-year-old
-history and will satisfy the practical needs of the German and
-Czech peoples.”—Signed—“Adolf Hitler, Berlin, 15 March 1939.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then there is a footnote, an order of the Führer to the German
-Armed Forces of the same date, in which the substance is that they
-are told to march in, to safeguard lives and property of all
-inhabitants, and not to conduct themselves as enemies, but as an
-instrument for carrying out the German Reich Government’s
-decision.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I put in, as GB-8, the decrees establishing the Protectorate, which
-is TC-51.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I think again, as these are public decrees, the Tribunal can take
-judicial knowledge of them. Their substance has been fully
-explained by Mr. Alderman. With the permission of the Tribunal,
-I won’t read them in full now.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then again, as Mr. Alderman requested, I put in, as GB-9, British
-Document TC-52, the British protest. If I might just read that to
-the Tribunal—it is from Lord Halifax to Sir Neville Henderson, our
-Ambassador in Berlin:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Foreign Office, March 17, 1939.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk351'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Please inform the German Government that His Majesty’s
-Government desire to make it plain to them that they cannot
-but regard the events of the past few days as a complete
-<span class='pageno' title='183' id='Page_183'></span>
-repudiation of the Munich Agreement and a denial of the
-spirit in which the negotiators of that Agreement bound
-themselves to co-operate for a peaceful settlement.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk352'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“His Majesty’s Government must also take this occasion to
-protest against the changes effected in Czechoslovakia by German
-military action, which are in their view, devoid of any
-basis of legality.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And again at Mr. Alderman’s request, I put in as GB-10 the
-Document TC-53, which is the French protest of the same date, and
-if I might read the third paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The French Ambassador has the honor to inform the Minister
-for Foreign Affairs of the Reich, of the formal protest made
-by the Government of the French Republic against the
-measures which the communication of Count de Welczeck
-records.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk353'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Government of the Republic consider, in fact, that in
-face of the action directed by the German Government against
-Czechoslovakia, they are confronted with a flagrant violation
-of the letter and the spirit of the agreement signed at Munich
-on September 29, 1938.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk354'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The circumstances in which the agreement of March 15 has
-been imposed on the leaders of the Czechoslovak Republic
-do not, in the eyes of the Government of the Republic, legalize
-the situation registered in that agreement.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk355'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The French Ambassador has the honor to inform His Excellency,
-the Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Reich, that the
-Government of the Republic cannot recognize under these
-conditions the legality of the new situation created in Czechoslovakia
-by the action of the German Reich.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now come to Part 5 of the Versailles Treaty, and the relevant
-matters are contained in the British Document TC-10. As considerable
-discussion is centered around them, I read the introductory
-words:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Part V, Military, Naval, and Air Clauses: In order to render
-possible the initiation of a general limitation of the armaments
-of all nations, Germany undertakes strictly to observe the
-military, naval, and air clauses which follow.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk356'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Section 1. Military Clauses. Chapter I. Effectives and Cadres
-of the German Army.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk357'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Article 159. The German military forces shall be demobilized
-and reduced as prescribed hereinafter.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk358'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Article 160. (1) By a date which must not be later than
-March 31, 1920, the German Army must not comprise more
-than seven divisions of infantry and three divisions of cavalry.
-<span class='pageno' title='184' id='Page_184'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk359'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“After that date, the total number of effectives in the Army
-of the states constituting Germany must not exceed 100,000
-men, including officers and establishments of depots. The
-Army shall be devoted exclusively to the maintenance of order
-within the territory and to the control of the frontiers.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk360'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The total effective strength of officers, including the personnel
-of staffs, whatever their composition, must not exceed
-4,000.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk361'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(2) Divisions and Army Corps headquarters staffs, shall be
-organized in accordance with Table Number 1 annexed to
-this Section. The number and strength of the units of infantry,
-artillery, engineers, technical services and troops laid down
-in the aforesaid table constitute maxima which must not be
-exceeded.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then there is a description of units that can have their own
-depots and the grouping of divisions under corps headquarters, and
-then the next two provisions are of some importance:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The maintenance or formation of forces differently grouped
-or of other organizations for the command of troops or for
-preparation for war is forbidden.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk362'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The great German General Staff and all similar organizations
-shall be dissolved and may not be reconstituted in any form.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I don’t think I need trouble the Tribunal with Article 161, which
-deals with administrative services.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Article 163 provides the steps by which the reduction will take
-place, and then we come to Chapter 2, dealing with armament, and
-that provides that up till the time at which Germany is admitted as
-a member of the League of Nations, armaments shall not be greater
-than the amounts fixed in Table Number 11.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If the Tribunal will note the second part, Germany agrees that
-after she has become a member of the League of Nations, the armaments
-fixed in the said table shall remain in force until they are
-modified by the Council of the League. Furthermore, she hereby
-agrees strictly to observe the decisions of the Council of the League
-on this subject.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then, 165 deals with guns and machine guns, and so forth, and
-167 deals with notification of guns, and 168, the first part, says:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The manufacture of arms, munitions, or any war material
-shall only be carried out in factories or works, the location
-of which shall be communicated to and approved by the governments
-of the Principal Allied and Associated Powers, and
-the number of which they retain the right to restrict.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Article 169 deals with the surrender of material. Number 170
-prohibits importation; 171 prohibits gas, and 172 provides for
-<span class='pageno' title='185' id='Page_185'></span>
-disclosure. Then 173, under the heading, “Recruiting and Military
-Training” deals with one matter, the breach of which is of great
-importance:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Universal compulsory military service shall be abolished in
-Germany. The German Army may only be constituted and
-recruited by means of voluntary enlistment.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then the succeeding articles deal with the method of enlistment
-in order to prevent a quick rush through the army of men enlisted
-for a short time.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I think that all I need do is to draw the attention of the Tribunal
-to the completeness and detail with which all these points are
-covered in Articles 174 to 179.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then, passing to TC-10, Article 180. That contains the prohibition
-of fortress works beyond a certain limit and in the Rhineland.
-The first sentence is:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“All fortified works, fortresses, and field works situated in
-German territory to the west of a line drawn 50 kilometers
-to the east of the Rhine shall be disarmed and dismantled.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I shall not trouble the Tribunal with the tables which show the
-amounts.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then we come to the naval clauses. If the Tribunal will be good
-enough to go on four pages, they will come to Article 181, and I will
-just read that to show the way in which the naval limitations are
-imposed and refer briefly to the others.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Article 181 says:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“After the expiration of a period of 2 months from the coming
-into force of the present treaty the German naval forces in
-commission must not exceed:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk363'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Six battleships of the Deutschland or Lothringen type, six
-light cruisers, 12 destroyers, 12 torpedo boats, or an equal
-number of ships constructed to replace them as provided in
-Article 190.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk364'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“No submarines are to be included.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk365'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“All other warships, except where there is provision to the
-contrary in the present treaty, must be placed in reserve or
-devoted to commercial purposes.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then 182 simply deals with the mine sweeping necessary to clear
-up the mines, and 183 limits the personnel to 15,000, including
-officers and men of all grades and corps, and 184 deals with surface
-ships not in German ports, and the succeeding clauses deal with
-various details, and I pass at once to Article 191, which says:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The construction or acquisition of any submarines, even for
-commercial purposes, shall be forbidden in Germany.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='186' id='Page_186'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Article 194 makes corresponding obligations of voluntary engagements
-for longer service, and 196 and 197 deal with naval fortifications
-and wireless stations.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then, if the Tribunal please, would they pass to Article 198, the
-first of the air clauses. The essential and important sentence is the
-first:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Armed Forces of Germany must not include any military
-or naval air forces.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I don’t think that I need trouble the Tribunal with the detailed
-provisions which occur in the next four clauses, which are all consequential.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then, the next document, which for convenience is put next to
-that, is the British Document TC-44. For convenience I put in a
-copy as GB-11, but this again is merely ancillary to Mr. Alderman’s
-argument. It is the report of the formal statement made at the
-German Air Ministry about the restarting of the Air Corps, and I
-respectfully submit that the Tribunal can take judicial notice of that.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Similarly, without proving formally the long Document, TC-45,
-the Tribunal can again take judicial notice of the public proclamation,
-which is a well-known public document in Germany, the
-proclamation of compulsory military service. Mr. Alderman has
-again dealt with this fully in his address.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now come to the sixth treaty, which is the treaty between the
-United States and Germany restoring friendly relations, and I put
-in a copy as Exhibit GB-12. It is Document TC-11, and the Tribunal
-will find it as the second last document in the document book. The
-purpose of this treaty was to complete official cessation of hostilities
-between the United States of America and Germany, and I have
-already explained to the Tribunal that it incorporated certain parts
-of the Treaty of Versailles. The relevant portion for the consideration
-of the Tribunal is Part V, and I have just concluded going
-through the clauses of the Treaty of Versailles which are repeated
-verbatim in this treaty. I therefore, with the approval of the
-Tribunal, will not read them again, but at Page 11 of my copy, they
-will see the clauses are repeated in exactly the same way.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then I pass to the seventh treaty, which is the Treaty of Mutual
-Guarantee between Germany, Belgium, France, Great Britain, and
-Italy, negotiated at Locarno, October 16, 1925. I ask the Tribunal to
-take judicial notice of that, and I put in as Exhibit GB-13, the
-British Document TC-12.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I was dealing with the Treaty of Locarno, and it might be convenient
-if I just reminded the Tribunal of the treaties that were
-negotiated at Locarno, because they do all go together and are to a
-certain extent mutually dependent.
-<span class='pageno' title='187' id='Page_187'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At Locarno, Germany negotiated five treaties:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>(A) The Treaty of Mutual Guarantee between Germany, Belgium,
-France, Great Britain, and Italy; (B) the Arbitration Convention
-between Germany and France; (C) the Arbitration Convention
-between Germany and Belgium; (D) the Arbitration Treaty between
-Germany and Poland; and (E) an Arbitration Treaty between Germany
-and Czechoslovakia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Article 10 of the Treaty of Mutual Guarantee provided that it
-should come into force as soon as ratifications were deposited at
-Geneva, in the archives of the League of Nations, and as soon as
-Germany became a member of the League of Nations. The ratifications
-were deposited on the 14th September 1926 and Germany
-became a member of the League of Nations on the 10th of September
-1926.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The two arbitration conventions and the two arbitration treaties
-which I mentioned provide that they shall enter into force under the
-same conditions as the Treaty of Mutual Guarantee. That is Article 21
-of the Arbitration Conventions and Article 22 of the Arbitration
-Treaties.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The most important of the five agreements is the Treaty of
-Mutual Guarantee. One of its purposes was to establish in perpetuity
-the borders between Germany and Belgium, and Germany and
-France. It contains no provision for denunciation or withdrawal
-therefrom and provides that it shall remain in force until the
-Council of the League of Nations decides that the League of Nations
-ensures sufficient protection to the parties to the treaty—an event
-which never happened—in which case the Treaty of Mutual
-Guarantee shall expire 1 year later.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The general scheme of the Treaty of Mutual Guarantee is that
-Article 1 provides that the parties guarantee three things:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The border between Germany and France, the border between
-Germany and Belgium, and the demilitarization of the Rhineland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Article 2 provides that Germany and France, and Germany and
-Belgium, agree that they will not attack or invade each other with
-certain inapplicable exceptions, and Article 3 provides that Germany
-and France, and Germany and Belgium, agree to settle all
-disputes between them by peaceful means.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal will remember, because this point was made by
-my friend, Mr. Alderman, that the first important violation of the
-Treaty of Mutual Guarantee appears to have been the entry of
-German troops into the Rhineland on 7 March 1936. The day after,
-France and Belgium asked the League of Nations Council to consider
-the question of the German re-occupation of the Rhineland and the
-purported repudiation of the treaty, and on the 12th of March, after
-a protest from the British Secretary for Foreign Affairs, Belgium,
-<span class='pageno' title='188' id='Page_188'></span>
-France, Great Britain, and Italy recognized unanimously that the
-re-occupation was a violation of this treaty, and on the 14th of
-March, the League Council duly and properly decided that it was
-not permissible and that the Rhineland clauses of the pact were not
-voidable by Germany because of the alleged violation by France
-in the Franco-Soviet Mutual Assistance Pact.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That is the background to the treaty with the international
-organizations that were then in force, and if I might suggest them
-to the Tribunal without adding to the summary which I have given,
-the relevant articles are 1, 2, and 3, which I have mentioned, and 4,
-which provides for the bringing of violations before the Council of
-the League, as was done, and 5 I ask the Tribunal to note, because
-it deals with the clauses of the Versailles Treaty which I have
-already mentioned. It says:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The provisions of Article 3 of the present treaty are placed
-under the guarantee of the High Contracting Parties as
-provided by the following stipulations:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk366'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“If one of the powers referred to in Article 3 refuses to submit
-a dispute to peaceful settlement or to comply with an arbitral
-or judicial decision and commits a violation of Article 2 of
-the present treaty or a breach of Articles 42 or 43 of the
-Treaty of Versailles, the provisions of Article 4 of the present
-treaty shall apply.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That is the procedure of going to the League or in the case of a
-flagrant breach, of taking more stringent action.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I remind the Tribunal of this provision because of the quotations
-from Hitler which I mentioned earlier, when he said that the German
-Government will scrupulously maintain every treaty voluntarily
-signed, even though they were concluded before their accession to
-power and office. Whatever may be said of the Treaty of Versailles,
-whatever may be argued and has been argued, no one has ever
-argued for a moment, to the best of my knowledge, that Herr
-Stresemann was in any way acting involuntarily when he signed,
-along with the other representatives, the Locarno pact on behalf of
-Germany. It was signed not only by Herr Stresemann, but by Herr
-Hans Luther, so that there you have a treaty freely entered into,
-which repeats the Rhineland provisions of Versailles and binds
-Germany in that regard. I simply call the attention of the Tribunal
-to Article 8, which deals with the remaining in force of the treaty.
-I might perhaps read it because as I told the Tribunal all the other
-treaties have the same lasting qualities, the same provisions as to
-the time they will last, as the Treaty of Mutual Guarantee. It says:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Article 8. The present treaty shall be registered at the
-League of Nations in accordance with the Covenant of the
-League. It shall remain in force until the Council, acting on
-<span class='pageno' title='189' id='Page_189'></span>
-a request by one or other of the High Contracting Parties
-notified to the other signatory powers 3 months in advance,
-and voting at least by a two-thirds majority, decides that the
-League of Nations ensures sufficient protection to the High
-Contracting Parties; the treaty shall cease to have effect on
-the expiration of a period of 1 year from such decision.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That is, that in signing this treaty, the German representatives
-clearly placed the question of repudiation or avoidance of the treaty
-in hands other than their own. They were at the time, of course,
-a member of the League, and a member of the Council of the
-League, but they left the repudiation and avoidance to the decision
-of the League.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then the next treaty on my list is the Arbitration Treaty between
-Germany and Czechoslovakia, which was one of the Locarno group
-and to which I have already referred, but for convenience I have
-put in Exhibit GB-14, which is British Document TC-14. As a breach
-of this treaty, as charged in Charge 8, of Appendix C, I mentioned
-the background of the treaty, and I shall not go into it again but I
-think the only clauses that the Tribunal need look at, are Article 1,
-which is the governing clause, and says as follows (Document TC-14):</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“All disputes of every kind between Germany and Czechoslovakia
-with regard to which the parties are in conflict as to
-their respective rights, and which it may not be possible to
-settle amicably by the normal methods of diplomacy, shall be
-submitted for decision either to an arbitral tribunal, or to the
-Permanent Court of International Justice as laid down hereafter.
-It is agreed that the disputes referred to above include,
-in particular, those mentioned in Article 13 of the Covenant
-of the League of Nations.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk367'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“This provision does not apply to disputes arising out of events
-prior to the present treaty and belonging to the past.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk368'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Disputes for the settlement of which a special procedure is
-laid down in other conventions in force between the High
-Contracting Parties, shall be settled in conformity with the
-provisions of these conventions.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Articles 2 to 21 of the machinery. In Article 22 the second
-sentence says it—that’s the present treaty—shall enter into and
-remain in force under the same conditions as the said treaty, which
-is the Treaty of Mutual Guarantee.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now that, I think, is all I need mention about that treaty. I think
-I am right that my friend, Mr. Alderman, referred to it. It is
-certainly the treaty to which President Beneš unsuccessfully appealed
-during the crisis in the autumn of 1938. Now the ninth treaty which
-I should deal with is not in this document book, and I merely am
-putting it in formally, because my friend, Mr. Roberts, will deal
-<span class='pageno' title='190' id='Page_190'></span>
-with it and read the appropriate parts—if the Tribunal will be good
-enough to note it because it is mentioned in Charge 9 of Appendix C.
-It is the Arbitration Convention between Germany and Belgium
-also done at Locarno, of which I hand in a copy for convenience as
-GB-15. In fact, I can tell the Tribunal all these arbitration conventions
-are in the same form, and I am not going to deal with it
-because it is essentially part of the case concerned with Belgium,
-the Low Countries, and Luxembourg, which my friend, Mr. Roberts,
-will present. Therefore, I only ask the Tribunal to accept the formal
-document for the moment. And the same applies to the tenth treaty,
-which is mentioned in Charge 10 of Appendix C. That is the Arbitration
-Treaty between Germany and Poland, of which I ask the
-Tribunal to take notice, and I hand in as GB-16. That again will be
-dealt with by my friend, Colonel Griffith-Jones, when he is dealing
-with the Polish case.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I therefore can take the Tribunal straight to a matter which is
-not a treaty, but is a solemn declaration, and that is TC-18, which
-I now put in as Exhibit GB-17, and ask the Tribunal to take judicial
-notice of, as a Declaration of the Assembly of the League of Nations.
-The importance is the date which was the 24th of September 1927.
-The Tribunal may remember that I asked them to take judicial
-notice of the fact that Germany had become a member of the
-League of Nations on 10 September 1926, a year before.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The importance of this Declaration is not only its effect in international
-law, to which my learned friend, the Attorney General,
-referred, but the fact that it was unanimously adopted by the Assembly
-of the League, of which Germany was a free, and let me say at once,
-an active member at the time. I think that all I need read of TC-18
-is, if the Tribunal would be good enough to look at it, the speech
-which begins “M. Sokal of Poland (Rapporteur),” and then the translation
-after the Rapporteur had dealt with the formalities, that this
-had gone to the third committee and been unanimously adopted, and
-he had been asked to act as Rapporteur, he says—the second
-paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The committee was of opinion that, at the present juncture,
-a solemn resolution passed by the Assembly, declaring that
-wars of aggression must never be employed as a means of
-settling disputes between states, and that such wars constitute
-an international crime, would have a salutary effect on public
-opinion, and would help to create an atmosphere favorable to
-the League’s future work in the matter of security and disarmament.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk369'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“While recognizing that the draft resolution does not constitute
-a regular legal instrument, which would be adequate
-in itself and represent a concrete contribution towards
-<span class='pageno' title='191' id='Page_191'></span>
-security, the Third Committee unanimously agreed as to its
-great moral and educative value.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then he asked the Assembly to adopt the draft resolution, and
-I will read simply the terms of the resolution, which shows what so
-many nations, including Germany, put forward at that time:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Assembly, recognizing the solidarity which unites the
-community of nations, being inspired by a firm desire for the
-maintenance of general peace, being convinced that a war of
-aggression can never serve as a means of settling international
-disputes, and is in consequence an international crime;
-considering that a solemn renunciation of all wars of
-aggression would tend to create an atmosphere of general
-confidence calculated to facilitate the progress of the work
-undertaken .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. with a view to disarmament:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk370'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Declares: 1. That all wars of aggression are and shall always
-be prohibited: 2. That every pacific means must be employed
-to settle disputes of every description, which may arise between
-states.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk371'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Assembly declares that the states, members of the
-League, are under an obligation to conform to these principles.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After a solemn vote taken in the form of roll call the President
-announced—which you will see at the end of the extract:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“All the delegations having pronounced in favor of the declaration
-submitted by the Third Committee, I declare it unanimously
-adopted.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The last general treaty which I have to place before the Tribunal
-is the Kellogg-Briand Pact. The Pact of Paris of 1928, which my
-learned friend, the Attorney General, in opening this part of the
-case read <span class='it'>in extenso</span> and commented on fully, I hand in as Exhibit
-GB-18—the British Document TC-19, which is a copy of that pact.
-I did not intend, unless the Tribunal desired otherwise, that I
-should read it again, as the Attorney General yesterday read it in
-full, but of course I am at the service of the Tribunal and therefore
-I leave that document before the Tribunal in that way.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now all that remains for me to do is to place before the Tribunal
-certain documents which Mr. Alderman mentioned in the course of
-his address, and left to me. I am afraid that I haven’t placed them
-in a special order, because they don’t really relate to the treaties
-I have dealt with, but to Mr. Alderman’s argument. The first of
-these I hand in as Exhibit GB-19. It is British Document TC-26, and
-comes just after that resolution of the League of Nations to which
-the Tribunal had just been giving attention—TC-26. It is the
-assurance contained in Hitler’s speech on 21 May 1935, and it is
-very short, and unless the Tribunal has it in mind from Mr. Alderman’s
-speech, I will read it again; I am not sure of his reading it:
-<span class='pageno' title='192' id='Page_192'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Germany neither intends nor wishes to interfere in the
-domestic affairs of Austria, to annex Austria, or to attach that
-country to her. The German people and the German Government
-have, however, the very comprehensible desire, arising
-out of the simple feeling of solidarity due to a common
-national descent, that the right to self-determination should
-be guaranteed not only to foreign nations, but to the German
-people everywhere. I myself believe that no regime which is
-not anchored in the people, supported by the people, and
-desired by the people, can exist permanently.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The next document which is TC-22, and which is on the next
-page, I now hand in as Exhibit GB-20. It is the copy of the official
-proclamation of the agreement between the German Government
-and the Government of the Federal State of Austria on 11 July 1936,
-and I am almost certain that Mr. Alderman did read this document,
-but I refer the Tribunal to Paragraph 1 of the agreement to remind
-them of the essential content:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The German Government recognizes the full sovereignty of
-the Federal State of Austria in the sense of the pronouncements
-of the German Leader and Chancellor of the 21st of
-May 1935.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now have three documents which Mr. Alderman asked me to
-hand in with regard to Czechoslovakia. The first is TC-27, which
-the Tribunal will find two documents further on from the one of
-Austria, to which I have just been referring. That is the German
-assurance to Czechoslovakia, and what I am handing in as GB-21 is
-the letter from M. Masaryk, Jan Masaryk’s son, to Lord Halifax,
-dated the 12th of March 1938. Again I think that if Mr. Alderman
-did not read this, he certainly quoted the statement made by the
-Defendant Göring, which appears in the third paragraph. In the
-first statement the Field Marshal used the expression, “ich gebe
-Ihnen mein Ehrenwort,” which I understand means, “I give you my
-word of honor,” and if you will look down three paragraphs, after
-the Defendant Göring had asked that there would not be a mobilization
-of the Czechoslovak Army, the communication continues:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“M. Mastny was in a position to give him definite and binding
-assurances on this subject, and today spoke with Baron Von
-Neurath—that is the Defendant Von Neurath—who, among
-other things assured him on behalf of Herr Hitler that Germany
-still considers herself bound by the German-Czechoslovak
-Arbitration Convention concluded at Locarno in
-October 1925.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So there I remind the Tribunal that in 1925 Herr Stresemann
-was speaking on behalf of Germany in an agreement voluntarily
-concluded. Had there been the slightest doubt of that, here is the
-<span class='pageno' title='193' id='Page_193'></span>
-Defendant Von Neurath giving the assurance on behalf of Hitler
-that Germany still considers herself bound by the German-Czechoslovak
-Arbitration Convention on 12 March 1938, 6 months before
-Dr. Beneš made a hopeless appeal to it, before the crisis in the
-autumn of 1938. Of course the difficult position of the Czechoslovak
-Government is set out in the last paragraph, but M. Masaryk says—and
-the Tribunal may think with great force—in his last sentence:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“They cannot however fail to view with great apprehension
-the sequel of events in Austria between the date of the
-bilateral agreement between Germany and Austria, 11 July
-1936, and yesterday, 11 March 1938.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I refrain from comment, but I venture to say that is one of the
-most pregnant sentences relating to this period.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now the next document which is on the next page is the British
-Document TC-28, which I hand in as Exhibit GB-22. And that is an
-assurance of the 26th of September 1938, which Hitler gave to
-Czechoslovakia, and again—the Tribunal will check my memory—I
-don’t think that Mr. Alderman read this but .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: No, I don’t think so.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Then I think if he did not, the
-Tribunal ought to have it before them, because it gives very important
-point as to the alleged governing principle of getting Germans
-back to the Reich, which the Nazi conspirators purported to ask for
-a considerable time, while it suited them. It says:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I have little to explain. I am grateful to Mr. Chamberlain
-for all his efforts, and I have assured him that the German
-people want nothing but peace; but I have also told him that
-I cannot go back beyond the limits of our patience.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal will remember this is between the Godesberg visit
-and the Munich Pact:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I assured him, moreover, and I repeat it here, that when this
-problem is solved there will be no more territorial problems
-for Germany in Europe. And I further assured him that from
-the moment when Czechoslovakia solves its other problems, that
-is to say, when the Czechs have come to an agreement with
-their other minorities peacefully, and without oppression, I
-will no longer be interested in the Czech State, and that, as
-far as I am concerned, I will guarantee it. We don’t want any
-Czechs. But I must also declare before the German people
-that in the Sudeten-German problem my patience is now at
-an end. I made an offer to Herr Beneš which was no more
-than the realization of what he had already promised. He has
-now peace or war in his hands. Either he will accept this
-<span class='pageno' title='194' id='Page_194'></span>
-offer and at length give the Germans their freedom, or we
-shall get this freedom for ourselves.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Less than 6 months before the 15th of March Hitler was saying
-in the most violent terms that “he didn’t want any Czechs.” The
-Tribunal has heard the sequel from my friend, Mr. Alderman, this
-morning. The last document which I have been asked to put in, and
-which I now ask the Tribunal to take notice of, and hand in, is
-Exhibit GB-23, which is the British Document TC-23 and a copy of
-the Munich Agreement of September 29, 1938. That was signed by
-Hitler, the late Mr. Neville Chamberlain, M. Daladier, and Mussolini,
-and it is largely a procedural agreement by which the entry of
-German troops into the Sudeten-Deutsche territory is regulated. That
-is shown by the preliminary clause:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Germany, the United Kingdom, France, and Italy, taking into
-consideration the agreement which has been already reached
-in principle, for the cession to Germany of the Sudeten-German
-territory, have agreed on the following terms and
-conditions governing the said cession and the measures consequent
-thereon, and by this agreement they each hold themselves
-responsible for the steps necessary to secure fulfillment.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then I don’t think, unless the Tribunal want me, I need go
-through the steps. In Article 4, it said that “The occupation by
-stages of the predominantly German territory by German troops
-will begin on 1 October.” The four territories are marked on a map.
-And by Article 6, “The final determination of the frontiers will be
-carried out by the international commission.” And it provides also
-for rights of option and release from the forces—the Czech forces
-of Sudeten Germans.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That is what Hitler was asking for in the somewhat rhetorical
-passage which I have just read out, and it will be observed that
-there is an annex to the agreement which is most significant.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Annex to the Agreement:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk372'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“His Majesty’s Government in the United Kingdom and the
-French Government have entered into the above agreement
-on the basis that they stand by the offer contained in
-Paragraph 6 of the Anglo-French Proposals of the 19th September,
-relating to an international guarantee of the new
-boundaries of the Czechoslovak State against unprovoked
-aggression.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk373'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“When the question of the Polish and Hungarian minorities
-in Czechoslovakia has been settled, Germany and Italy, for
-their part, will give a guarantee to Czechoslovakia.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>The Polish and Hungarian minorities, not the question of Slovakia
-which the Tribunal heard this morning. That is why Mr. Alderman
-<span class='pageno' title='195' id='Page_195'></span>
-submitted—and I respectfully joined him in his submission—that
-the action of the 15th of March was a flagrant violation of the
-letter and spirit of that agreement.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That, My Lord, is the part of the case which I desired to
-present.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn now for 10 minutes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: If your Lordship pleases.
-Thank you.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LIEUTENANT COLONEL J. M. G. GRIFFITH-JONES (Junior
-Counsel for the United Kingdom): May it please the Tribunal,
-Count Two of the Indictment charges these defendants with
-participating in the planning, the preparation, the initiation, and
-waging of various wars of aggression, and it charges that those
-wars are also in breach of international treaty. It is our purpose
-now to present to the Tribunal the evidence in respect of those
-aggressive wars against Poland and against the United Kingdom
-and France.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Under Paragraph (B) of the particulars to Count Two, reference
-is made to Count One in the Indictment for the allegations
-charging that those wars were wars of aggression, and Count One
-also sets out the particulars of the preparations and planning for
-those wars, and in particular those allegations will be found in
-Paragraph (F) 4. But, My Lord, with the Tribunal’s approval
-I would propose first to deal with the allegations of breach of
-treaties which are mentioned in Paragraph (C) of the particulars,
-and of which the details are set out in Appendix C. My Lord, those
-sections of Appendix C which relate to the war against Poland are
-Section 2, which charges a violation of the Hague Convention in
-respect of the pacific settlement of international disputes, on which
-Sir David has already addressed the Court, and I do not propose,
-with the Court’s approval, to say more than that.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Section 3 of Appendix C and Section 4 charge breaches of the
-other Hague Conventions of 1907. Section 5, Sub-section 4, charges
-a breach of the Versailles Treaty in respect of the Free City of
-Danzig, and Section 13, a breach of the Kellogg-Briand Pact.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>All those have already been dealt with by Sir David Maxwell-Fyfe,
-and it remains, therefore, only for me to deal with two other
-sections of Appendix C: Section 10, which charges a breach of the
-Arbitration Treaty between Germany and Poland, signed at
-Locarno on the 16th of October 1925; and Section 15 of Appendix C
-which charges a violation of the Declaration of Non-Aggression
-<span class='pageno' title='196' id='Page_196'></span>
-which was entered into between Germany and Poland on the
-26th of January 1934.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If the Tribunal would take Part I of the British Document Book
-Number 2, I will describe in a moment how the remaining parts
-are divided. The document book is divided into six parts. If the
-Tribunal will look at Part I for the moment—the document books
-which have been handed to the Counsel for the Defense are in
-exactly the same order, except that they are bound in one and not
-in six separate covers, in which the Tribunal’s documents are
-bound for convenience.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The German-Polish Arbitration Treaty, the subject matter of
-Section 10 of Appendix C, is Document TC-15 and appears the one
-but end document in the book. It has already been put in under
-the Number GB-16.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, I would quote the preamble and Articles 1 and 2 from
-that treaty:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The President of the German Empire and the President of
-the Polish Republic:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk374'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Equally resolved to maintain peace between Germany and
-Poland by assuring the peaceful settlement of differences
-which might arise between the two countries;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk375'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Declaring that respect for the rights established by treaty
-or resulting from the law of nations is obligatory for international
-tribunals;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk376'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Agreeing to recognize that the rights of a state cannot be
-modified save with its consent;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk377'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“And considering that sincere observance of the methods of
-peaceful settlement of international disputes permits of
-resolving, without recourse to force, questions which may
-become the cause of division between states;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk378'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Have decided.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Then, go on to Article 1:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“All disputes of every kind between Germany and Poland
-with regard to which the parties are in conflict as to their
-respective rights, and which it may not be possible to settle
-amicably by the normal methods of diplomacy, shall be
-submitted for decision either to an arbitral tribunal or to the
-Permanent Court of International Justice, as laid down
-hereafter.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>I go straight to Article 2:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Before any resort is made to arbitral procedure before the
-Permanent Court of International Justice, the dispute may,
-by agreement between the parties, be submitted, with a
-<span class='pageno' title='197' id='Page_197'></span>
-view to amicable settlement, to a permanent international
-commission, styled the Permanent Conciliation Commission,
-constituted in accordance with the present treaty.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, thereafter the treaty goes on to lay down the
-procedure for arbitration and for conciliation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: It is in the same terms, is it not, as the
-arbitration treaty between Germany and Czechoslovakia, and
-Germany and Belgium?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: Well—yes, it is, My Lord, both
-signed at Locarno.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: The words of the charge in
-Section 10, will be noted particularly in that Germany did, on or
-about the 1st of September 1939, unlawfully attack and invade
-Poland without first having attempted to settle its dispute with
-Poland by peaceful means.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The only other treaty to which I refer, the German-Polish
-Declaration of the 26th of January 1934, will be found as the last
-document in Part I of the Tribunal’s document book, which is the
-subject of Section 10 of Appendix C:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The German Government and the Polish Government
-consider that the time has come to introduce a new era in
-the political relations between Germany and Poland by a
-direct understanding between the states. They have therefore
-decided to establish by the present declaration a basis for
-the future shaping of those relations.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk379'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The two Governments assume that the maintenance and
-assurance of a permanent peace between their countries is
-an essential condition for general peace in Europe.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Do you think it is necessary to read all this?
-We are taking judicial notice of it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: I am very much obliged; I am
-only too anxious to shorten this, if I can.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In view of what is later alleged by the Nazi Government,
-I would particularly draw attention to the last paragraph in that
-declaration.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The declaration shall remain in effect for a period of 10 years
-counting from the day of exchange of instruments of ratification.
-In case it is not denounced by one of the two governments
-6 months before the expiration of that period of time,
-it shall continue in effect but can then be denounced by either
-Government at any time 6 months in advance.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='198' id='Page_198'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, I pass then from the breach of treaties to present to
-the Court the evidence upon the planning and preparation of these
-wars and in support of the allegations that they were wars of aggression.
-For convenience, as I say, the documents have been divided
-into separate parts and if the Tribunal would look at the index, the
-total index to their document, which is a separate book, on the front
-page it will be seen how these documents have been divided. Part I is
-the “Treaties”; Part II is entitled “Evidence of German Intentions
-prior to March 1939.” It might perhaps be more accurately described
-as “pre-March 1939 evidence,” and it will be with that part that I
-would now deal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, it has been put to the Tribunal that the actions against
-Austria and Czechoslovakia were in themselves part of the preparation
-for further aggression, and I now—dealing with the early
-history of this matter—wish to draw the Court’s particular attention
-only to those parts of the evidence which show that even at that
-time, before the Germans had seized the whole of Czechoslovakia,
-they were perfectly prepared to fight England, Poland, and France,
-if necessary, to achieve those preliminary aims; that they appreciated
-the whole time that they might well have to do so. And, what is
-more, although not until after March 1939 did they commence upon
-their immediate and specific preparations for war against Poland,
-nevertheless, they had for a considerable time before had it in mind
-specifically to attack Poland once Czechoslovakia was completely
-theirs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>During this period also—and this happens throughout the whole
-story of the Nazi regime in Germany—during this period, as afterwards,
-while they are making their preparations and carrying out
-their plans, they are giving to the outside world assurance after
-assurance so as to lull them out of any suspicion of their real object.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The dates, I think—as the learned Attorney General said in
-addressing you yesterday—the dates in this case, almost more than
-the documents, speak for themselves. The documents in this book
-are arranged in the order in which I will refer to them, and the first
-that I would refer to is Document TC-70, which will go in as GB-25.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is only interesting to see what Hitler said of the agreement
-with Poland when it was signed in January 1934:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“When I took over the Government on the 30th of January,
-the relations between the two countries seemed to me more
-than unsatisfactory. There was a danger that the existing
-differences, which were due to the territorial clauses of the
-Treaty of Versailles and the mutual tension resulting therefrom,
-would gradually crystallize into a state of hostility
-which, if persisted in, might only too easily acquire the
-character of a dangerous traditional enmity.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='199' id='Page_199'></span></p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>I go down to the one but last paragraph.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the spirit of this treaty the German Government is willing
-and prepared also to cultivate economic-political relations with
-Poland in such a way that here, too, the state of unprofitable
-suspicion can be succeeded by a period of useful co-operation.
-It is a matter of particular satisfaction to us that in this same
-year the National Socialist Government of Danzig has been
-enabled to effect a similar clarification of its relations with its
-Polish neighbor.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That was in 1934. Three years later, again on the 30th of January,
-speaking in the Reichstag, Hitler said—this is Document PS-2368,
-which will be GB-26. I will, if I may, avoid so far as possible
-repeating passages which the Attorney General quoted in his speech
-the other day. The first paragraph, in fact, he quoted to the
-Tribunal. It is a short paragraph but perhaps I might read it now,
-but I will—dealing with this evidence—so far as possible avoid
-repetition:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“By a series of agreements we have eliminated existing
-tension and thereby contributed considerably to an improvement
-in the European atmosphere. I merely recall an agreement
-with Poland which has worked out to the advantage of
-both sides .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. True statesmanship will not overlook realities,
-but consider them. The Italian nation and the new Italian
-State are realities. The German nation and the German Reich
-are equally realities. And to my own fellow citizens I would
-say that the Polish nation and the Polish State have also
-become a reality.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>That was on the 30th of January 1937.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 24th of June 1937 we have a top-secret order, C-175,
-which has already been put in as USA-69. It is a top-secret order
-issued by the Reich Minister for War and Commander-in-Chief of
-the Armed Forces, signed “Von Blomberg.” It has at the top,
-“Written by an officer .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Outgoing documents in connection with
-this matter and dealing with it .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. are to be written by an officer.”
-So it is obviously highly secret. And with it is enclosed a directive
-for the unified preparation for war of the Armed Forces to come
-into force on the 1st of August 1937. The directive enclosed with it
-is divided into Part 1, “General Guiding Principles”; Part 2, “Likely
-Warlike Eventualities”; Part 3, “Special Preparations.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal will remember that the Attorney General quoted
-the opening passages:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The general political position justifies the supposition that
-Germany need not consider an attack from any side.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='200' id='Page_200'></span></p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>It goes on—the second paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The intention to unleash a European war is held just as little
-by Germany. Nevertheless, the politically fluid world situation,
-which does not preclude surprising incidents, demands
-a continuous preparedness for war of the German Armed
-Forces to counter attacks at any time, and to enable the
-military exploitation of politically favorable opportunities,
-should they occur.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It then goes on to set out the preparations which are to be made,
-and I would particularly draw the Tribunal’s attention to Paragraph
-2b:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The further working on mobilization without public announcement
-in order to put the Armed Forces in a position to begin
-a war suddenly and by surprise both as regards strength and
-time.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>On the next page, under Paragraph 4:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Special preparations are to be made for the following eventualities:
-Armed intervention against Austria; warlike entanglements
-with Red Spain.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>And thirdly, and this shows so clearly how they appreciated at that
-time that their actions against Austria and Czechoslovakia might
-well involve them in war:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“England, Poland, and Lithuania take part in a war against us.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If the Tribunal would turn over to Part 2 of that directive,
-Page 5 of that document:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“For the treatment of probable warlike eventualities (concentrations)
-the following suppositions, tasks, and orders are to
-be considered as basic:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk380'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. War on two fronts with focal point in the West.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk381'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Suppositions. In the West, France is the opponent. Belgium
-may side with France, either at once or later, or not at all.
-It is also possible that France may violate Belgium’s neutrality
-if the latter is neutral. She will certainly violate that
-of Luxembourg.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I pass to Part 3, which will be found on Page 9 of that Exhibit,
-and I particularly refer to the last paragraph on that page under the
-heading “Special Case—Extension Red-Green”. It will be remembered
-that Red was Spain and Green was Czechoslovakia.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The military political starting point used as a basis for concentration
-plans Red and Green can be aggravated if either
-England, Poland, or Lithuania .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. join the side of our opponents.
-Thereupon our military position would deteriorate to
-an unbearable, even hopeless extent. The political leadership
-<span class='pageno' title='201' id='Page_201'></span>
-will therefore do everything to keep these countries neutral,
-above all England and Poland.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thereafter, it sets out the conditions which are to be the basis
-for the discussion. Before I leave that document, the date will be
-noted: June 1937; and it shows clearly that at that date anyway, the
-Nazi Government appreciated the likelihood, if not the probability,
-of fighting England, and Poland, and France, and were perfectly
-prepared to do so, if they had to. On the 5th of November 1937—the
-Tribunal will remember—Hitler held his conference in the Reich
-Chancellery, the minutes of which have been referred to as the
-Hossbach notes. I refer to only one or two lines of that document
-to draw the attention of the Tribunal to what Hitler said in respect
-to England, Poland, and France. On Page 1 of that Exhibit, the
-middle of the page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer then stated: ‘The aim of German policy is the
-security and preservation of the nation and its propagation.
-This is consequently a problem of space.’ ”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He then went on, you will remember, to discuss what he described
-“participation in world economy,” and at the bottom of Page 2
-he said:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The only way out, and one which may appear imaginary, is
-the securing of greater living space, an endeavor which at all
-times has been the cause of the formation of states and movements
-of nations.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And at the end of that first paragraph on Page 3:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The history of all times, Roman Empire, British Empire, has
-proved that every space expansion can be effected only by
-breaking resistance and taking risks. Even setbacks are
-unavoidable. Neither formerly, nor today, has space been
-found without an owner. The attacker always comes up
-against the proprietor.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, it is clear that that reference was not only .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: [<span class='it'>Interposing.</span>] It has been read already.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: My object was only to try to
-collect, so far as England and Poland were concerned, the evidence
-that had been given. I would welcome in actual fact if the Tribunal
-thought that it was unnecessary, I would welcome the opportunity
-to .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal would wish you not to read
-anything that has been read already.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: I would pass then to the next
-document in that part of your document book. I put that document in.
-It was referred to by the Attorney General in his address yesterday,
-<span class='pageno' title='202' id='Page_202'></span>
-and it shows that on the same date the Hossbach meeting was taking
-place, a communiqué was being issued as a result of the Polish
-Ambassador’s audience with Hitler, in which it was said in the
-course of the conversation that it was confirmed that Polish-German
-relations should not meet with difficulties because of the Danzig
-question. That Document is TC-73. I put it in as GB-27. On the
-2d of January .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: That hasn’t been read before, has it?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: It was read by the Attorney General
-in his opening.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: In his opening? Very well.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: On the 2d of January 1938 some
-unknown person wrote a memorandum for the Führer. This document
-was one of the German Foreign Office documents of which
-a microfilm was captured by Allied troops when they came into
-Germany. It is headed, “Very confidential—personal only,” and
-is called, “Deductions on the Report, German Embassy, London,
-regarding the Future Form of Anglo-German Relations”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“With the realization that Germany will not tie herself to a
-<span class='it'>status quo</span> in Central Europe, and that sooner or later a military
-conflict in Europe is possible, the hope of an agreement
-will slowly disappear among Germanophile British politicians,
-insofar as they are not merely playing a part that has been
-given to them. Thus the fateful question arises: Will Germany
-and England eventually be forced to drift into separate camps
-and will they march once more against each other one day?
-To answer this question, one must realize the following:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk382'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A change of the <span class='it'>status quo</span> in the East in the German sense
-can only be carried out by force. As long as France knows
-that England, which so to speak, has taken on a guarantee to
-aid France against Germany, is on her side, France’s fighting
-for her eastern allies is probable, in any case, always possible,
-and thus with it war between Germany and England. This
-applies then even if England does not want war. England,
-believing she must defend her borders on the Rhine, would
-be dragged in automatically by France. In other words, peace
-or war between England and Germany rests solely in the
-hands of France, who could bring about such a war between
-Germany and England by way of a conflict between Germany
-and France. It follows, therefore, that war between Germany
-and England on account of France can be prevented only if
-France knows from the start that England’s forces would not
-be sufficient to guarantee their common victory. Such a situation
-might force England, and thereby France, to accept a
-<span class='pageno' title='203' id='Page_203'></span>
-lot of things that a strong Anglo-French coalition would never
-tolerate.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk383'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“This position would arise for instance if England, through
-insufficient armament or as a result of threats to her empire
-by a superior coalition of powers, for example, Germany,
-Italy, Japan, thereby tying down her military forces in other
-places, would not be able to assure France of sufficient support
-in Europe.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The next page goes on to discuss the possibilities of a strong
-partnership between Italy and Japan, and I would pass from my
-quotation to the next page where the writer is summarizing his
-ideas.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Paragraph 5:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Therefore, conclusions to be drawn by us.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk384'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. Outwardly, further understanding with England in regard
-to the protection of the interests of our friends.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk385'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. Formation under great secrecy, but with whole-hearted
-tenacity of a coalition against England, that is to say, a
-tightening of our friendship with Italy and Japan, also the
-winning over of all nations whose interests conform with ours
-directly or indirectly.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk386'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Close and confidential co-operation of the diplomats of the
-three great powers towards this purpose. Only in this way
-can we confront England, be it in a settlement or in war.
-England is going to be a hard and astute opponent in this
-game of diplomacy.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk387'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The particular question whether, in the event of a war by
-Germany in Central Europe .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”—I am afraid the translation
-of this is not very good—“The particular question whether, in
-the event of a war by Germany in Central Europe, France,
-and thereby England, would interfere, depends on the
-circumstances and the time at which such a war commences
-and ceases, and on military considerations which cannot be
-gone into here.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And whoever it was that wrote that document appears to be on
-a fairly high level, because he concludes by saying:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I should like to give the Führer some of these points of view
-verbally:”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>That document is GB-28.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Well, I am afraid that the next two documents have gotten into
-your books in the wrong order. If you would refer to 2357-PS which
-is the one following our L-43—it will be remembered that document
-to the Führer which I have just read was dated the 2d of January
-1938.
-<span class='pageno' title='204' id='Page_204'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 20th of January 1938 Hitler spoke in the Reichstag.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: February, the document said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: I beg your pardon—February 1938.
-That is 2357-PS, and will be GB-30. In that speech he said:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the fifth year following the first great foreign political
-agreement with the Reich, it fills us with sincere gratification
-to be able to state that in our relations with the state, with
-which we had had perhaps the greatest differences, not only
-has there been a <span class='it'>détente</span>, but in the course of these years
-there has been a constant improvement in relations. This
-good work, which was regarded with suspicion by so many
-at the time, has stood the test, and I may say that since the
-League of Nations finally gave up its continual attempts to
-unsettle Danzig and appointed a man of great personal attainments
-as the new commissioner, the most dangerous spot from
-this point of view of European peace has entirely lost its
-menacing character. The Polish State respects the national
-conditions in this state, and both the City of Danzig and
-Germany respect Polish rights. And so the way to friendly
-understanding has been successfully paved, an understanding
-which beginning with Danzig has today, in spite of the
-attempts of certain mischief makers, succeeded in finally
-taking the poison out of the relations between Germany
-and Poland and transforming them into a sincere, friendly
-co-operation.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk388'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“To rely on her friendships, Germany will not leave a stone
-unturned to save that ideal which provides the foundation for
-the task which is ahead of us—peace.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I turn back to the next—to the document which was in your
-document books, the one before that, L-43, which will be GB-29.
-This is a document to which the Attorney General referred yesterday.
-It is dated the 2d of May 1938, and is entitled “Organizational Study
-of 1930.” It comes from the office of the Chief of the Organizational
-Staff of the General Staff of the Air Force, and its purpose is said
-to be:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The task is to search, within a framework of very broadly
-conceived conditions, for the most suitable type of organization
-of the Air Force. The result gained is termed ‘Distant
-Objective.’ From this shall be deduced the goal to be reached
-in the second phase of the setting-up process in 1942. This
-will be called ‘Final Objective 1942.’ This in turn yields what
-is considered the most suitable proposal for the reorganization
-of the staffs of the Air Force group commands, air Gaue, air
-divisions, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='205' id='Page_205'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The table of contents, the Tribunal will see, is divided into various
-sections, and Section I is entitled “Assumptions.” If the Tribunal
-will turn over to the next page one finds the assumption under the
-heading “Assumptions I, frontier of Germany, see map, Enclosure 1.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal sees a reproduction of that map on the wall and it
-will be seen that on the 2d of May 1938, the Air Force were envisaging
-Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Austria, and
-Hungary, all coming within the bounds of the Reich. The original
-map is here attached to this file and if the Tribunal will look at the
-original exhibit, it will be seen that this organizational study has
-been prepared with the greatest care and thoroughness, with a mass
-of charts attached as appendices.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I would refer also to the bottom of the second page, to the
-Tribunal’s copy of the translation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Consideration of the principles of organization on the basis
-of the assumptions for war and peace made in Section I:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk389'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>1) Attack forces: Principal adversaries: England, France,
-Russia.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>And it then goes on to say if all the 144 Geschwader are employed
-against England, they must be concentrated in the western half of
-the Reich; that is to say, they must be deployed in such a way that
-by making full use of their range they can reach all English territory
-down to the last corner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: It is perhaps involved in the map. I think
-perhaps you should refer to the organization of the Air Force, with
-group commands at Warsaw and Königsberg.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: I am much obliged. Under the
-paragraph “Assumptions,” Sub-heading 2, “Organization of the Air
-Force in Peacetime,” seven group commands:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>1-Berlin, 2-Brunswick, 3-Munich, 4-Vienna, 5-Budapest, 6-Warsaw,
-and 7-Königsberg.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: I am very much obliged. And
-lastly, in connection with that document, on Page 4 of the Tribunal’s
-translation, the last paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The more the Reich grows in area, and the more the Air
-Force grows in strength, the more imperative it becomes, to
-have locally bound commands .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>I emphasize only the opening, “The more the Reich grows in
-area, and the more the Air Force grows in strength .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” Now I
-would say one word on that document. The original, I understand,
-is signed by an officer who is not at the top rank in the Air Force
-and I, therefore, don’t want to overemphasize the inferences that
-<span class='pageno' title='206' id='Page_206'></span>
-can be drawn from it, but it is submitted that it at least shows the
-lines upon which the General Staff of the Air Force were thinking
-at that date.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal will remember that in February 1938 the Defendant
-Ribbentrop succeeded Von Neurath as Foreign Minister. We have
-another document from that captured microfilm, which is dated the
-26th of August 1938, when Ribbentrop had become Foreign Minister,
-and it is addressed to him as “the Reich Minister via the State
-Secretary.” It is a comparatively short document and one that I will
-read in whole:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The most pressing problem of German policy, the Czech
-problem, might easily, but must not, lead to a conflict with
-the Entente.”—TC-76 becomes GB-31—“Neither France nor
-England is looking for trouble regarding Czechoslovakia.
-Both would perhaps leave Czechoslovakia to herself, if she
-should, without direct foreign interference and through
-internal signs of disintegration due to her own faults, suffer
-the fate she deserves. This process, however, would have to
-take place step by step, and would have to lead to a loss of
-power in the remaining territory, by means of a plebiscite
-and an annexation of territory.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk390'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Czech problem is not yet politically acute enough for any
-immediate action, which the Entente would watch inactively,
-and not even if this action should come quickly and surprisingly.
-Germany cannot fix any definite time when this fruit
-could be plucked without too great a risk. She can only
-prepare the desired developments.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I pass to the last paragraph on that page. I think I can leave
-out the intervening lines, Paragraph 5.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Should you not read the next paragraph,
-“For this purpose .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”?</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: “For this purpose the slogan
-emanating from England at present of the right for autonomy
-of the Sudeten Germans, which we have intentionally not
-used up to now, is to be taken up gradually. The international
-conviction that the choice of nationality is being withheld
-from these Germans will do useful spadework, notwithstanding
-the fact that the chemical process of dissolution of
-the Czech form of states may or may not be finally speeded
-up by mechanical means as well. The fate of the actual body
-of Czechoslovakia, however, would not as yet be clearly
-decided by this, but would nevertheless be definitely sealed.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk391'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“This method of approach towards Czechoslovakia is to be
-recommended because of our relationship with Poland. It is
-<span class='pageno' title='207' id='Page_207'></span>
-unavoidable that the German departure from the problems of
-boundaries in the southeast and their transfer to the east and
-northeast must make the Poles sit up. The fact is”—I put in
-an “is” because I think it is obviously left out of the copy
-that I have in front of me.—</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk392'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The fact is that after the liquidation of the Czech question,
-it will be generally assumed that Poland will be the next
-in turn.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk393'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“But the later this assumption sinks in in international politics
-as a firm factor, the better. In this sense, however, it is
-important for the time being, to carry on the German policy,
-under the well-known and proved slogans of ‘the right to
-autonomy’ and ‘racial unity.’ Anything else might be interpreted
-as pure imperialism on our part, and provoke resistance
-by the Entente at an earlier date and more energetically than
-our forces could stand up to.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That was on the 26th of August 1938, just as the Czech crisis was
-leading up to a Munich settlement. While at Munich, or rather a
-day or two before the Munich Agreement was signed, Herr Hitler
-made a speech. On the 26th of September he said—I think Sir David
-Maxwell-Fyfe has just read this document to the Tribunal. I’ll refer
-to only two lines of it:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I assured him, moreover, and I repeat it here, that when this
-problem is solved, there will be no more territorial problems
-for Germany in Europe.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And again, the last document in your book, which is another
-extract from that same speech, I will not read to the Tribunal unless
-the Tribunal desire, because the Attorney General did quote it in
-full in his address yesterday. These two documents are already
-in, TC-28 as GB-2, and TC-29, which is the second extraction of
-that same speech, as GB-32.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, I would refer the Tribunal to one more document
-under this part which has already been put in by my American
-colleagues. It is C-23, now USA-49, and which appears before
-TC-28 in your document book. The particular passage of that
-exhibit, to which I would refer, is a letter from Admiral Carls, which
-appears at the bottom of the second page. It is dated some time in
-September, with no precise date, and is entitled, “Opinion on the
-‘Draft Study of Naval Warfare against England.’ There is full
-agreement with the main theme of the study.” Again, the Attorney
-General quoted the remainder of that letter yesterday, which the
-Tribunal will remember.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“If, according to the Führer’s decision, Germany is to acquire
-a position of security as a world power she needs not only
-<span class='pageno' title='208' id='Page_208'></span>
-sufficient colonial possessions but also secure naval communications
-and secure access to the ocean.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>That, then, was the position at the time of the Munich Agreement
-in September 1938.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The gains of Munich were not, of course, so great as the Nazi
-Government had hoped and had intended, and as a result, they
-were not prepared straight away to start any further aggressive
-action against Poland or elsewhere, but Your Lordships heard this
-morning, when Mr. Alderman dealt in his closing remarks with the
-advantages that were gained by the seizure of Czechoslovakia, what
-Jodl and Hitler said on subsequent occasions, that Czechoslovakia
-was only setting the stage for the attack on Poland. It is, of course,
-obvious now that they intended and indeed had taken the decision
-to proceed against Poland as soon as Czechoslovakia had been
-entirely occupied. We know now, from what Hitler said in talking
-to his military commanders at a later date. The Tribunal will
-remember the speech where he said that from the first, he never
-intended to abide by the Munich Agreement but that he had to
-have the whole of Czechoslovakia. As a result, although not ready
-to proceed in full force against Poland after September 1938, they
-did at once begin to approach the Poles on the question of Danzig.
-Until—as the Tribunal will see—until the whole of Czechoslovakia
-had been taken in March, no pressure was put on; but immediately
-after the Sudetenland had been occupied, preliminary steps were
-taken to stir up trouble with Poland, which would and was to
-lead eventually to their excuse, or so-called justification for their
-attack on that country.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If the Tribunal would turn to Part 3.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I think it is time to adjourn now until
-10 o’clock tomorrow morning.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>The Tribunal adjourned until 6 December at 1000 hours.</span>]</h3>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='209' id='Page_209'></span><h1>FOURTEENTH DAY<br/> <span style='font-size:smaller'>Thursday, 6 December 1945</span></h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'><span class='it'>Morning Session</span></h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal has received an urgent request
-from the defendants’ counsel that the Trial should be adjourned at
-Christmas for a period of 3 weeks. The Tribunal is aware of the
-many interests which must be considered in a trial of this complexity
-and magnitude, and, as the Trial must inevitably last for a considerable
-time, the Tribunal considers that it is not only in the interest
-of the defendants and their counsel but of every one concerned in
-the Trial that there should be a recess. On the whole it seems best
-to take that recess at Christmas rather than at a later date when
-the Prosecution’s case has been completed. The Tribunal will therefore
-rise for the Christmas week and over the 1st of January, and
-will not sit after the session on Thursday, the 20th of December,
-and will sit again on Wednesday, the 2d of January.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: I should like, in justice to my staff, to
-note the American objection to the adjournment for the benefit of
-the defendants.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: May it please the Tribunal, the
-Tribunal will return to Part III of that document book in which
-I included the documents relating to the earlier discussions between
-the German and Polish Governments on the question of Danzig.
-Those discussions, the Tribunal will remember, started almost
-immediately after the Munich crisis in September 1938, and started,
-in the first place, as cautious and friendly discussions until the
-remainder of Czechoslovakia had finally been seized in March of
-the following year.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I would refer the Tribunal to the first document in that part,
-TC-73, Number 44. That is a document taken from the official
-<span class='it'>Polish White Book</span>, which I put in as Exhibit GB-27 (a). It gives an
-account of a luncheon which took place at the Grand Hotel, Berchtesgaden,
-on the 24th of October, where Ribbentrop saw Mr. Lipski,
-the Polish Ambassador to Germany:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In a conversation of the 24th of October, over a luncheon at
-the Grand Hotel, Berchtesgaden, at which M. Hewel was
-present, Von Ribbentrop put forward a proposal for a general
-settlement of issues between Poland and Germany. This
-included the reunion of Danzig with the Reich, while Poland
-<span class='pageno' title='210' id='Page_210'></span>
-would be assured the retention of railway and economic facilities
-there. Poland would agree to the building of an extra-territorial
-motor road and a railway line across Pomorze
-(northern part of the corridor). In exchange Von Ribbentrop
-mentioned the possibility of an extension of the Polish-German
-Agreement to 25 years and a guarantee of Polish-German
-frontiers.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I do not think I need read the following lines. I go to the last
-but one paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Finally, I said to Von Ribbentrop that I could see no possibility
-of an agreement involving the reunion of the Free City
-with the Reich. I concluded by promising to communicate the
-substance of this conversation to you.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I would emphasize the submission of the Prosecution as to this
-part of the case and that is that the whole question of Danzig was,
-indeed, as Hitler has himself said, no question at all. Danzig was
-raised simply as an excuse, a so-called justification, not for the
-seizure of Danzig, but for the invasion and seizure of the whole
-of Poland, and we see it starting now. As we progress with the
-story it will become ever more apparent that that is what the Nazi
-Government were really aiming at—only providing themselves with
-some kind of crisis which would provide some kind of justification
-for walking into the rest of Poland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I turn to the next document. It is again a document taken from
-the <span class='it'>Polish White Book</span>, TC-73, Number 45, which will be GB-27 (b).
-TC-73 will be the <span class='it'>Polish White Book</span>, which I shall put in later.
-That document sets out the instructions that Mr. Beck, the Polish
-Foreign Minister, gave to Mr. Lipski to hand to the German Government
-in reply to the suggestion put forward by Ribbentrop at
-Berchtesgaden on the 24th of October. I need not read the first
-page. The history of Polish-German relationship is set out, and the
-needs of Poland in respect of Danzig are emphasized. I turn to the
-second page of that exhibit, to Paragraph 6:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the circumstances, in the understanding of the Polish
-Government, the Danzig question is governed by two factors:
-The right of the German population of the city and the
-surrounding villages to freedom of life and development, and
-the fact that in all matters appertaining to the Free City as
-a port it is connected with Poland. Apart from the national
-character of the majority of the population, everything in
-Danzig is definitely bound up with Poland.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It then sets out the guarantees to Poland under the existing
-statute, and I pass to Paragraph 7:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Taking all the foregoing factors into consideration, and
-desiring to achieve the stabilization of relations by way of
-<span class='pageno' title='211' id='Page_211'></span>
-a friendly understanding with the Government of the German
-Reich, the Polish Government proposes the replacement of
-the League of Nations guarantee and its prerogatives by a
-bilateral Polish-German agreement. This agreement should
-guarantee the existence of the Free City of Danzig so as to
-assure freedom of national and cultural life to its German
-majority, and also should guarantee all Polish rights. Notwithstanding
-the complications involved in such a system, the
-Polish Government must state that any other solution, and in
-particular any attempt to incorporate the Free City into the
-Reich, must inevitably lead to a conflict. This would not only
-take the form of local difficulties, but also would suspend all
-possibility of Polish-German understanding in all its aspects.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then finally in Paragraph 8:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In face of the weight and cogency of these questions, I am
-ready to have final conversations personally with the governing
-circles of the Reich. I deem it necessary, however, that you
-should first present the principles to which we adhere, so that
-my eventual contact should not end in a breakdown, which
-would be dangerous for the future.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The first stage in those negotiations had been entirely successful
-from the German point of view. They had put forward a proposal,
-the return of the City of Danzig to the Reich, which they might well
-have known would have been unacceptable. It was unacceptable,
-and the Polish Government had warned the Nazi Government that
-it would be. They had offered to enter into negotiations, but they
-had not agreed, which is exactly what the German Government had
-hoped. They had not agreed to the return of Danzig to the Reich.
-The first stage in producing the crisis had been accomplished.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Shortly afterward, within a week or so of that taking place,
-after the Polish Government had offered to enter into discussions
-with the German Government, we find another top-secret order,
-issued by the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces, signed by
-the Defendant Keitel. It goes to the OKH, OKM, and OKW and
-it is headed, “The First Supplement to the Instruction Dated the
-21st of October 1938”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer has ordered: Apart from the three contingencies
-mentioned in the instructions of that date of 21 October 1938,
-preparations are also to be made to enable the Free State of
-Danzig to be occupied by German troops by surprise .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk394'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The preparations will be made on the following basis: Condition
-is a quasi-revolutionary occupation of Danzig, exploiting
-a politically favorable situation, not a war against Poland.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We remember, of course, that at that moment the remainder of
-Czechoslovakia had not been seized and therefore they were not
-<span class='pageno' title='212' id='Page_212'></span>
-ready to go to war with Poland. That document does show how the
-German Government answered the proposal to enter into discussions.
-That is C-137 and will become GB-33.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 5th of January 1939 Mr. Beck had a conversation with
-Hitler. It is unnecessary to read the first part of that document,
-which is the next in the Tribunal’s book, TC-73, Number 48, which
-will become GB-34. In the first part of that conversation, of which
-that document is an account, Hitler offers to answer any questions.
-He says he has always followed the policy laid down by the 1934
-agreement. He discusses the Danzig question and emphasizes that
-in the German view it must sooner or later return to Germany.
-I quote the last but one paragraph of that page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Mr. Beck replied that the Danzig question was a very difficult
-problem. He added that in the Chancellor’s suggestion
-he did not see any equivalent for Poland, and that the whole
-of Polish opinion, and not only people thinking politically but
-the widest spheres of Polish society, were particularly sensitive
-on this matter.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk395'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In answer to this the Chancellor stated that to solve this
-problem it would be necessary to try to find something quite
-new, some new form, for which he used the term Körperschaft,
-which on the one hand would safeguard the interests
-of the German population, and on the other the Polish interests.
-In addition, the Chancellor declared that the Minister
-could be quite at ease, there would be no <span class='it'>faits accomplis</span> in
-Danzig, and nothing would be done to render difficult the
-situation of the Polish Government.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal will remember that in the very last document we
-looked at, on the 24th of November, orders had already been
-received, or issued, for preparations to be made for the occupation
-of Danzig by surprise; yet here he is assuring the Polish Foreign
-Minister that there is to be no <span class='it'>fait accompli</span> and he can be quite
-at his ease.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I turn to the next step, Document TC-73, Number 49, which will
-become GB-35, conversation between Mr. Beck and Ribbentrop, on
-the day after the one to which I have just referred between Beck
-and Hitler.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Did you draw attention to the fact that the
-last conversation took place in the presence of the Defendant Ribbentrop?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: I am very obliged to you. No, I
-did not. As I say, it was on the next day, the 6th of January. The
-date in actual fact does not appear on the copy I have got in my
-book. It does appear in the <span class='it'>White Book</span> itself.
-<span class='pageno' title='213' id='Page_213'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Mr. Beck asked Ribbentrop to inform the Chancellor that
-whereas previously, after all his conversations and contacts
-with German statesmen, he had been feeling optimistic, today,
-for the first time he was in a pessimistic mood. Particularly
-in regard to the Danzig question, as it had been raised by the
-Chancellor, he saw no possibility whatever of agreement.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I emphasize this last paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In answer Ribbentrop once more emphasized that Germany
-was not seeking any violent solution. The basis of their policy
-towards Poland was still a desire for the further building up
-of friendly relations. It was necessary to seek such a method
-of clearing away the difficulties as would respect the rights
-and interests of the two parties concerned.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Ribbentrop apparently was not satisfied with
-that one expression of good faith. On the 25th of the same month,
-January 1939, some fortnight or three weeks later, he was in Warsaw
-and made another speech, of which an extract is set out in PS-2530,
-which will become GB-36:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In accordance with the resolute will of the German national
-leader, the continual progress and consolidation of friendly
-relations between Germany and Poland, based upon the
-existing agreement between us, constitute an essential element
-in German foreign policy. The political foresight and the
-principles worthy of true statesmanship, which induced both
-sides to take the momentous decision of 1934, provide a
-guarantee that all other problems arising in the course of the
-future evolution of events will also be solved in the same
-spirit, with due regard to the respect and understanding of
-the rightful interests of both sides. Thus Poland and Germany
-can look forward to the future with full confidence in the
-solid basis of their mutual relations.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And even so, the Nazi Government must have been still
-anxious that the Poles were beginning to sit up—Your Lordship
-will remember the expression “sit up” used in the note to the
-Führer—and to assume they would be the next in turn, because
-on the 30th of January Hitler again spoke in the Reichstag, 30th of
-January 1939, and gave further assurances of their good faith.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That document, that extract, was read by the Attorney General
-in his address, and therefore, I only put it in now as an exhibit.
-That is TC-73, Number 57, which will become GB-37.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That, then, brings us up to the March 1939 seizure of the
-remainder of Czechoslovakia and the setting up of the Protectorate
-of Bohemia and Moravia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If the Tribunal will now pass to the next part, Part IV, of that
-document book, I had intended to refer to three documents where
-<span class='pageno' title='214' id='Page_214'></span>
-Hitler and Jodl were setting out the advantage gained through the
-seizure of the remainder of Czechoslovakia. But the Tribunal will
-remember that Mr. Alderman, in his closing remarks yesterday
-morning, dealt very fully with that matter showing what advantages
-they did gain by that seizure and showing on the chart that he had
-on the wall the immense strengthening of the German position
-against Poland. Therefore, I leave that matter. The documents are
-already in evidence, and if the Tribunal should wish to refer to
-them, they are found in their correct order in the story in that
-document book.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As soon as that occupation had been completed, within a week
-of marching into the rest of Czechoslovakia, the heat was beginning
-to be turned on against Poland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If the Tribunal would pass to Document TC-73, which is about
-half way through that document book—it follows after Jodl’s lecture,
-which is a long document—TC-73, Number 61. It is headed: “Official
-Documents concerning Polish-German Relations.” This will be GB-38.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 21st of March Mr. Lipski again saw Ribbentrop and the
-nature of the conversation was generally very much sharper than
-that that had been held a little time back at the Grand Hotel,
-Berchtesgaden:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I saw Ribbentrop today. He began by saying he had asked
-me to call in order to discuss Polish-German relations in their
-entirety.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk396'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“He complained about our press, and the Warsaw students’
-demonstrations during Count Ciano’s visit.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I think I can go straight on to the larger paragraph, which
-commences with “further”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Further, Ribbentrop referred to the conversation at Berchtesgaden
-between you and the Chancellor, in which Hitler put
-forward the idea of guaranteeing Poland’s frontiers in
-exchange for a motor road and the incorporation of Danzig
-into the Reich. He said that there had been further conversations
-between you and him in Warsaw”—that is, between
-him, of course, and Mr. Beck—“He said that there had been
-further conversations between you and him in Warsaw on the
-subject, and that you had pointed out the great difficulties
-in the way of accepting these suggestions. He gave me to
-understand that all this had made an unfavorable impression
-on the Chancellor, since so far he had received no positive
-reaction whatever on our part to his suggestions. Ribbentrop
-had talked to the Chancellor, only yesterday. He stated that
-the Chancellor was still in favor of good relations with Poland,
-and had expressed a desire to have a thorough conversation
-with you on the subject of our mutual relations. Ribbentrop
-<span class='pageno' title='215' id='Page_215'></span>
-indicated that he was under the impression that difficulties
-arising between us were also due to some misunderstanding
-of the Reich’s real aims. The problem needed to be considered
-on a higher plane. In his opinion, our two States were
-dependent on each other.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I think it unnecessary that I should read the next page. Briefly,
-Ribbentrop emphasizes the German argument as to why Danzig
-should return to the Reich, and I turn to the first paragraph on the
-following page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I stated”—that is Mr. Lipski—“I stated that now, during the
-settlement of the Czechoslovakian question, there was no
-understanding whatever between us. The Czech issue was
-already hard enough for the Polish public to swallow, for,
-despite our disputes with the Czechs, they were after all a
-Slav people. But in regard to Slovakia, the position was far
-worse. I emphasized our community of race, language, and
-religion, and mentioned the help we had given in their
-achievement of independence. I pointed out our long frontier
-with Slovakia. I indicated that the Polish man in the street
-could not understand why the Reich had assumed the protection
-of Slovakia, that protection being directed against Poland.
-I said emphatically that this question was a serious blow to
-our relations.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk397'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Ribbentrop reflected for a moment, and then answered that
-this could be discussed.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk398'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I promised to refer to you the suggestion of a conversation
-between you and the Chancellor. Ribbentrop remarked that
-I might go to Warsaw during the next few days to talk the
-matter over. He advised that the talk should not be delayed,
-lest the Chancellor should come to the conclusion that Poland
-was rejecting all his offers.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk399'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Finally, I asked whether he could tell me anything about
-his conversation with the Foreign Minister of Lithuania.
-Ribbentrop answered vaguely that he had seen Mr. Urbszys
-on the latter’s return from Rome, and that they had discussed
-the Memel question, which called for a solution.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That conversation took place on the 21st of March. It was not
-very long before the world knew what the solution to Memel was.
-On the next day German Armed Forces marched in.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If the Tribunal would turn over—I think the next document is
-unnecessary—turn over to TC-72, Number 17, which becomes GB-39.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As a result of these events, not unnaturally, considerable
-anxiety was growing both in the government of Great Britain and
-the Polish Government, and the two governments therefore had
-been undertaking conversations with each other.
-<span class='pageno' title='216' id='Page_216'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 31st of March, the Prime Minister, Mr. Chamberlain,
-spoke in the House of Commons, and he explained that as a result
-of the conversations that had been taking place between the British
-and Polish Governments—I quote from the last but one paragraph
-of his statement:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“As the House is aware, certain consultations are now
-proceeding with other governments. In order to make
-perfectly clear the position of His Majesty’s Government in
-the meantime, before those consultations are concluded,
-I now have to inform the House that during that period, in
-the event of any action which clearly threatened Polish
-independence and which the Polish Government accordingly
-considered it vital to resist with their national forces, His
-Majesty’s Government would feel themselves bound at once
-to lend the Polish Government all support in their power.
-They have given the Polish Government an assurance to this
-effect.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk400'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I may add that the French Government have authorized
-me to make it plain that they stand in the same position in
-this matter as do His Majesty’s Government.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 6th of April, a week later, a formal communiqué was
-issued by the Anglo-Polish Governments which repeated the
-assurance the Prime Minister had given a week before and in
-which Poland assured Great Britain of her support should she,
-Great Britain, be attacked. I need not read it all. In fact, I need
-not read any of it. I put it in. It is TC-72, Number 18. I put it
-in as GB-40.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The anxiety and concern that the governments of Poland and
-Great Britain were feeling at that time appear to have been well
-justified. During the same week, on the 3rd of April, the Tribunal
-will see in the next document an order signed by Keitel. It
-emanates from the High Command of the Armed Forces. It is dated
-Berlin, 3rd of April 1939. Its subject is: “Directive for the Armed
-Forces 1939-40”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“ ‘Directive for the Uniform Preparation of War by the
-Armed Forces for 1939-40’ is being reissued.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk401'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Part I (Frontier Defense) and Part III (Danzig) will be
-issued in the middle of April. Their basic principles remain
-unchanged.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk402'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Part II, Case White”—which is the code name for the operation
-against Poland—“Part II, Case White, is attached herewith.
-The signature of the Führer will be appended later.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk403'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer has added the following directives to Case
-White:
-<span class='pageno' title='217' id='Page_217'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk404'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. Preparations must be made in such a way that the
-operation can be carried out at any time from 1st of September
-1939 onwards.”—This is in April, the beginning of April.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk405'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. The High Command of the Armed Forces has been
-directed to draw up a precise timetable for Case White and
-to arrange by conferences the synchronized timings among
-the three branches of the Armed Forces.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk406'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3. The plans of the branches of the Armed Forces and the
-details for the timetable must be submitted to the OKW by
-the 1st of May.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That document, as the Tribunal will see on the following page
-under the heading “Distribution”, went to the OKH, OKM, OKW.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Are those words at the top part of the
-document, or are they just notes?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: They are part of the document.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Directives from Hitler and Keitel, preparing
-for war.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: I beg your pardon; no, they are
-not. The document starts from under the words “Translation of a
-document signed by Keitel.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes, I see.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: The first words being “top-secret.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If the Tribunal will look at the second page, following after
-“Distribution”, it will be seen that there follows a translation of
-another document, dated the 11th of April, and that document is
-signed by Hitler:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I shall lay down in a later directive the future tasks of the
-Armed Forces and the preparations to be made in accordance
-with these for the conduct of the war.”—No question about
-war—“conduct of the war.”</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk407'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Until that directive comes into force, the Armed Forces must
-be prepared for the following eventualities:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk408'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I. Safeguarding the frontiers of the German Reich, and
-protection against surprise air attacks;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk409'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“II. Case White;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk410'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“III. The Annexation of Danzig.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk411'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Annex IV contains regulations for the exercise of military
-authority in East Prussia in the event of a warlike development.”
-Again that document goes to the OKH, OKM, OKW.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the next page of the copy the Tribunal have, the translation
-of Annex I is set out, which is the safeguarding of the frontiers of
-<span class='pageno' title='218' id='Page_218'></span>
-the German Reich, and I would quote from Paragraph (2) under
-“Special Orders”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Legal Basis. It should be anticipated that a state of defense
-or a state of war, as defined in the Reich defense law of the
-4th of September 1938, will not be declared. All measures
-and demands necessary for carrying out a mobilization are
-to be based on the laws valid in peacetime.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, that document is C-120. It becomes GB-41. It contains
-some other later documents to which I shall refer in chronological
-order.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The statement of the Prime Minister in the House of Commons,
-followed by the Anglo-Polish communiqué of the 6th of April, was
-seized upon by the Nazi Government to urge on, as it were, the
-crisis which they were developing in Danzig between themselves
-and Poland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 28th of April the German Government issued a
-memorandum in which they alleged that the Anglo-Polish
-Declaration was incompatible with the 1934 agreement between
-Poland and Germany, and that as a result of entering into or by
-reason of entering into that agreement, Poland had unilaterally
-renounced the 1934 agreement.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I would only quote three short passages, or four short passages,
-from that document. It is TC-72, Number 14. It becomes GB-42.
-Some of these passages are worth quoting, if only to show the
-complete dishonesty of the whole document on the face of it:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The German Government have taken note of the Polish-British
-declaration regarding the progress and aims of the
-negotiations recently conducted between Poland and Great
-Britain. According to this declaration there has been
-concluded between the Polish Government and the British
-Government a temporary understanding, to be replaced
-shortly by a permanent agreement, which will provide for the
-giving of mutual assistance by Poland and Great Britain in
-the event of the independence of one of the two states
-being directly or indirectly threatened.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thereafter, the document sets out in the next three paragraphs
-the history of German friendship towards Poland. I quote from the
-last paragraph, Paragraph 5, on that page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The agreement which has now been concluded by the Polish
-Government with the British Government is in such obvious
-contradiction to these solemn declarations of a few months
-ago that the German Government can take note only with
-surprise and astonishment of such a violent and fundamental
-reversal of Polish policy.
-<span class='pageno' title='219' id='Page_219'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk412'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Irrespective of the manner in which its final formulation
-may be determined by both parties, the new Polish-British
-agreement is intended as a regular pact of alliance which,
-by reason of its general sense and of the present state of
-political relations, is directed exclusively against Germany.
-From the obligation now accepted by the Polish Government,
-it appears that Poland intends, in certain circumstances, to
-take an active part in any possible German-British conflict,
-in the event of aggression against Germany, even should this
-conflict not affect Poland and her interests. This is a direct
-and open blow against the renunciation of all use of force
-contained in the 1934 declaration.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I think I can omit Paragraph 6. Paragraph 7:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Polish Government, however, by their recent decision
-to accede to an alliance directed against Germany, have given
-it to be understood that they prefer a promise of help by a
-third power to the direct guarantee of peace by the German
-Government. In view of this, the German Government are
-obliged to conclude that the Polish Government do not at
-present attach any importance to seeking a solution of
-German-Polish problems by means of direct, friendly discussion
-with the German Government. The Polish Government
-have thus abandoned the path, traced out in 1934, to the
-shaping of German-Polish relations.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>All this would sound very well, if it had not been for the fact
-that orders for the invasion of Poland had already been issued and
-the Armed Forces had been told to draw up a precise timetable.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The document goes on to set out the history of the last negotiations
-and discussions. It sets out the demands of the 21st, which
-the German Government had made; the return of Danzig, the
-Autobahn, the railway, the promise by Germany of the 25 years’
-guarantee, and I go down to the last but one paragraph on Page 3
-of the Exhibit, under the heading (1):</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Polish Government did not avail themselves of the
-opportunity offered to them by the German Government for
-a just settlement of the Danzig question; for the final safeguarding
-of Poland’s frontiers with the Reich and thereby
-for permanent strengthening of the friendly, neighborly
-relations between the two countries. The Polish Government
-even rejected German proposals made with this object.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk413'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“At the same time the Polish Government accepted, with
-regard to another state, political obligations which are not
-compatible either with the spirit, the meaning, or the text
-of the German-Polish declaration of the 26th of January 1934.
-<span class='pageno' title='220' id='Page_220'></span>
-Thereby, the Polish Government arbitrarily and unilaterally
-rendered this declaration null and void.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the last paragraph the German Government says that, nevertheless,
-they are prepared to continue friendly relations with
-Poland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the same day as that memorandum was issued Hitler made
-a speech in the Reichstag, 28 April, in which he repeated, in effect,
-the terms of the memorandum. This is Document TC-72, Number 13,
-which becomes GB-43. I would only refer the Tribunal to the latter
-part of the second page of the translation. He has again repeated
-the demands and offers that Germany made in March, and he goes
-on to say that the Polish Government have rejected his offer and
-lastly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I have regretted greatly this incomprehensible attitude of
-the Polish Government. But that alone is not the decisive
-fact. The worst is that now Poland, like Czechoslovakia a
-year ago, believes under the pressure of a lying international
-campaign, that it must call up troops although Germany, on
-her part, has not called up a single man and had not thought
-of proceeding in any way against Poland. As I have said,
-this is, in itself, very regrettable and posterity will one day
-decide whether it was really right to refuse the suggestion
-made this once by me. This, as I have said, was an endeavor
-on my part to solve a question which intimately affects the
-German people by a truly unique compromise and to solve
-it to the advantage of both countries. According to my conviction,
-Poland was not a giving party in this solution at all,
-but only a receiving party, because it should be beyond all
-doubt that Danzig will never become Polish. The intention
-to attack, on the part of Germany, which was merely invented
-by the international press, led, as you know, to the so-called
-guarantee offer and to an obligation on the part of the Polish
-Government for mutual assistance .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is unnecessary, My Lord, to read more of that. It shows us,
-as I say, how completely dishonest was everything that the German
-Government was saying at that time. There was Hitler, probably
-with a copy of the orders for Fall Weiss in his pocket as he spoke,
-saying that the intention to attack, by Germany, was an invention
-of the international press.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In answer to that memorandum and that speech the Polish
-Government issued a memorandum on the 28th of April. It is set
-out in the next exhibit, TC-72, Number 16, which becomes GB-44.
-It is unnecessary to read more than .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: It is stated as the 5th of May, not the
-28th of April.
-<span class='pageno' title='221' id='Page_221'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: I beg your pardon, yes, on the
-5th of May.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is unnecessary to read more than two short paragraphs from
-that reply. I can summarize the document in a word. It sets out
-the objects of the 1934 agreement: to renounce the use of force and
-to carry on friendly relationship between the two countries, to solve
-difficulties by arbitration and other friendly means. The Polish
-Government appreciate that there are difficulties about Danzig and
-have long been ready to carry out discussions. They set out again
-their part in the recent discussions, and I turn to the second page
-of the document, the one but last paragraph or, perhaps, I should go
-back a little to the top of that page, the first half of that page. The
-Polish Government allege that they wrote, as indeed they did, to
-the German Government on the 26th of March giving their point of
-view, that they then proposed joint guarantees by the Polish and
-German Governments of the City of Danzig based on the principles
-of freedom for the local population in internal affairs. They said
-they were prepared to examine the possibilities of a motor road and
-railway facilities and that they received no reply to those proposals:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It is clear that negotiations in which one state formulates
-demands and the other is to be obliged to accept those
-demands unaltered, are not negotiations in the spirit of the
-declaration of 1934 and are incompatible with the vital
-interests and dignity of Poland.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Which, of course, in a word summarizes the whole position of the
-Polish point of view. And thereafter they reject the German
-accusation that the Anglo-Polish agreement is incompatible with the
-1934 German-Polish agreement. They state that Germany herself
-has entered into similar agreements with other nations and lastly,
-on the next page, they too say that they are still willing to entertain
-a new pact with Germany, should Germany wish to do so.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If the Tribunal would turn back to the Document C-120, to the
-first two letters, to which I referred only a few minutes ago, it
-becoming GB-41. On the bottom of the page there is a figure 614,
-on the first page of that exhibit, “Directives from Hitler and Keitel
-Preparing for War and the Invasion of Poland”. I would refer to
-Page 6 of that particular exhibit. The page number will be found
-at the bottom of the page, in the center. It is a letter from the
-Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, signed by Hitler and
-dated the 10th of May. It goes to OKW, OKH, OKM, various
-branches of the OKW and with it apparently were enclosed
-“Instructions for the Economic War and the Protection of Our Own
-Economy.” I only mention it now to show better that throughout
-this time preparations for the immediate aggression were continuing.
-That document will still be part of the same exhibit.
-<span class='pageno' title='222' id='Page_222'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Again on the next page, which is headed Number C-120(1),
-I am afraid this is a précis only, not a full translation and therefore,
-perhaps, I will not read it. But it is the annex, showing the
-“Directives for the War against the Enemy Economy and Measures
-of Protection for Our Own Economy.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As we will see later, not only were the military preparations
-being carried out throughout these months and weeks, but economic
-and every other kind of preparation was being made for war at
-the earliest moment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I think this period of preparation, translated up to May 1939,
-finishes really with that famous meeting or conference in the Reich
-Chancellery on the 23rd of May about which the Tribunal has
-already heard. It was L-79 and is now Exhibit USA-27; and it was
-referred to, I think, and has been known as the “Schmundt minutes.”
-It is the last document which is in the Tribunal’s document book
-of this part and I do not propose to read anything of it. It has been
-read already and the Tribunal will remember that it was the
-speech in which Hitler was crying out for Lebensraum and said that
-Danzig was not the dispute at all. It was a question of expanding
-their living space in the East, where he said that the decision had
-been taken to attack Poland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Would you remind me of the date of it?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: The 23rd of May 1939. Your
-Lordship will remember that Göring, Raeder, and Keitel, among
-many others, were present. It has three particular lines of which
-I want to remind the Tribunal, where he said:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“If there were an alliance of France, England, and Russia
-against Germany, Italy, and Japan, I would be constrained
-to attack England and France with a few annihilating blows.
-The Führer doubts the possibility of a peaceful settlement
-with England.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So that, not only has the decision been taken definitely to attack
-Poland, but almost equally definitely to attack England and France,
-also.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I pass to the next period, which I have described as the final
-preparations taken from June up to the beginning of the war, at
-the beginning of September—Part V of the Tribunal’s document
-book. If the Tribunal will glance at the index to the document
-book, they will find I have, for convenience, divided the evidence
-up under four subheadings:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Final preparations of the Armed Forces; economic preparation;
-the famous Obersalzberg speeches; and the political or diplomatic
-preparations urging on the crisis and the justification for the
-invasion of Poland.
-<span class='pageno' title='223' id='Page_223'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I refer the Tribunal to the first document in that book, dealing
-with the final preparations of the Armed Forces. It again is an
-exhibit containing various documents, and I refer particularly to
-the second document, dated the 22d of June 1939. This is Document
-C-126, which will become GB-45.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It will be remembered that a precise timetable had been called
-for. Now, here it is:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Supreme Command of the Armed Forces has submitted
-to the Führer and Supreme Commander, a ‘preliminary timetable’
-for Case White based on the particulars so far available
-from the Navy, Army, and Air Force. Details concerning the
-days preceding the attack and the start of the attack were
-not included in this timetable.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk414'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer and Supreme Commander is, in the main, in
-agreement with the intentions of the Navy, Army, and Air
-Force and made the following comments on individual points:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk415'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. In order not to disquiet the population by calling up
-reserves on a larger scale than usual for the maneuvers
-scheduled for 1939, as is intended, civilian establishments,
-employers or other private persons who make inquiries
-should be told that men are being called up for the autumn
-maneuvers and for the exercise units it is intended to form
-for these maneuvers.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk416'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It is requested that directions to this effect be issued to
-subordinate establishments.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>All this became relevant, particularly relevant, later when we
-find the German Government making allegations of mobilization on
-the part of the Poles. Here we have it in May, or rather June—they
-are mobilizing, only doing so secretly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. For reasons of security, the clearing of hospitals in the
-area of the frontier must not be carried out.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If the Tribunal will turn to the top of the following page, it
-will be seen that that order is signed by the Defendant Keitel.
-I think it is unnecessary to read any further from that document.
-There is—which perhaps will save turning back, if I might take it
-rather out of date now—the first document on that front page of
-that exhibit, a short letter dated the 2d of August. It is only an
-extract, I am afraid, as it appears in the translation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Attached are operational directions for the employment of
-U-boats which are to be sent out to the Atlantic, by way of
-precaution, in the event of the intention to carry out Case
-White remaining unchanged. Commander, U-boats is handing
-in his operation orders by the 12th of August to the operations
-staff of the Navy.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='224' id='Page_224'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>One must assume that the Defendant Dönitz knew that his
-U-boats were to go out into the Atlantic “by way of precaution in
-the event of the intention to carry out Case White remaining
-unchanged.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I turn to the next document in the Tribunal’s book, C-30, which
-becomes GB-46. That is a letter dated the 27th of July. It contains
-orders for the air and sea forces for the occupation of the German
-Free City of Danzig:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer and Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces
-has ordered the reunion of the German Free State of Danzig
-with the Greater German Reich. The Armed Forces must
-occupy Danzig Free State immediately in order to protect
-the German population. There will be no hostile intention on
-the part of Poland so long as the occupation takes place
-without the force of arms.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It then sets out how the occupation is to be effected. All this
-again becomes more relevant when we discuss the diplomatic action
-of the last few days before the war, when Germany was purporting
-to make specious offers for the settlement of the question by
-peaceful means. I would like to offer this as evidence that the
-decision had been taken and nothing was going to move him from
-that decision. That document, as set out, says that, “There will be
-no hostile intention on the part of Poland so long as the occupation
-takes place without the force of arms.” Nevertheless, that was
-not the only condition upon which the occupation was to take place
-and we find that during July, right up to the time of the war, steps
-were being taken to arm the population of Danzig and to prepare
-them to take part in the coming occupation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I refer the Tribunal to the next Document, TC-71, which becomes
-GB-47, where there are set out a few only of the reports which
-were coming back almost daily during this period from Mr. Shepherd,
-the Consul-General in Danzig, to the British Foreign Minister. The
-sum total of those reports can be found in the <span class='it'>British Blue Book</span>.
-I now would refer to only two of them as examples of the kind
-of thing that was happening.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I refer to the first that appears on that exhibit, dated the 1st of
-July 1939.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Yesterday morning four German army officers in mufti
-arrived here by night express from Berlin to organize Danzig
-Heimwehr. All approaches to hills and dismantled forts,
-which constitute a popular public promenade on the western
-fringe of the city, have been closed with barbed wire and
-‘verboten’ notices. The walls surrounding the shipyards bear
-placards: ‘Comrades keep your mouths shut lest you regret
-consequence.’
-<span class='pageno' title='225' id='Page_225'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk417'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Master of British steamer <span class='it'>High Commissioner Wood</span>, while
-he was roving Königsberg from the 28th of June to 30th of
-June, observed considerable military activity, including
-extensive shipment of camouflaged covered lorries and similar
-material, by small coasting vessels. On the 28th of June four
-medium-sized steamers, loaded with troops, lorries, field
-kitchens, and so forth, left Königsberg ostensibly returning
-to Hamburg after maneuvers, but actually proceeding to
-Stettin. Names of steamers .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And again, as another example, the report Number 11, on the
-next page of the exhibit, dated the 10th of July, states:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The same informant, whom I believe to be reliable, advises
-me that on the 8th of July, he personally saw about 30 military
-lorries with East Prussian license numbers on the Bischofsberg,
-where numerous field kitchens had been placed along
-the hedges. There were also eight large antiaircraft guns in
-position, which he estimated as being of over 3-inch caliber,
-and three six-barreled light antiaircraft machine guns. There
-were about 500 men, drilling with rifles, and the whole place
-is extensively fortified with barbed wire.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I do not think it is necessary to occupy the Tribunal’s time in
-reading more. Those, as I say, are two reports only, of a number
-of others that can be found in the <span class='it'>British Blue Book</span>, which sets out
-the arming and preparation of the Free City of Danzig.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 12th of August and the 13th of August, when preparations
-were practically complete—and it will be remembered that they had
-to be complete for an invasion of Poland on the 1st of September—we
-find Hitler and the Defendant Ribbentrop at last disclosing
-their intentions to their allies, the Italians.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>One of the passages in Hitler’s speech of the 23rd of May, it will
-be remembered—I will not quote it now because the document has
-been read before. However, in a passage in that speech Hitler, in
-regard to his proposed attack on Poland, had said, “Our object must
-be kept secret even from the Italians and the Japanese.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, when his preparations are complete, he discloses his intentions
-to his Italian comrades, and does so in hope that they will
-join him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The minutes of that meeting are long, and it is not proposed to
-read more than a few passages. The meeting can be summarized
-generally by saying, as I have, that Hitler is trying to persuade the
-Italians to come into the war with him. The Italians, or Ciano,
-rather, is most surprised. He had no idea, as he says, of the urgency
-of the matter; and they are not prepared. He, therefore, is trying
-to dissuade Hitler from starting off so soon until the Duce can have
-had a little more time to prepare himself.
-<span class='pageno' title='226' id='Page_226'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The value—perhaps the greatest value—of the minutes of that
-meeting is that they show quite clearly the German intention to
-attack England and France ultimately, anyway, if not at the same
-time as Poland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I refer the Tribunal to the second page of the exhibit. Hitler is
-trying to show the strength of Germany, the certainty of winning
-the war; and, therefore, he hopes to persuade the Italians to come in:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“At sea, England had for the moment no immediate reinforcements
-in prospect.”—I quote from the top of the second page.—“Some
-time would elapse before any of the ships now under
-construction could be taken into service. As far as the land
-army was concerned, after the introduction of conscription
-60,000 men had been called to the colors.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I quote this passage particularly to show the intention to attack
-England. We have been concentrating rather on Poland, but here
-his thoughts are turned entirely towards England:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“If England kept the necessary troops in her own country she
-could send to France, at the most, two infantry divisions and
-one armored division. For the rest she could supply a few
-bomber squadrons, but hardly any fighters, since, at the outbreak
-of war, the German Air Force would at once attack
-England and the English fighters would be urgently needed
-for the defense of their own country.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk418'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“With regard to the position of France, the Führer said that
-in the event of a general war, after the destruction of Poland—which
-would not take long—Germany would be in a position
-to assemble a hundred divisions along the West Wall and
-France would then be compelled to concentrate all her available
-forces from the colonies, from the Italian frontier and
-elsewhere, on her own Maginot Line for the life and death
-struggle which would then ensue. The Führer also thought
-that the French would find it no easier to overrun the Italian
-fortifications than to overrun the West Wall. Here Count
-Ciano showed signs of extreme doubt.”—Doubts which, perhaps,
-in view of the subsequent performances, were well
-justified.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk419'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Polish Army was most uneven in quality. Together with
-a few parade divisions, there were large numbers of troops
-of less value. Poland was very weak in antitank and antiaircraft
-defense and at the moment neither France nor England
-could help her in this respect.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What this Tribunal will appreciate, of course, is that Poland
-formed such a threat to Germany on Germany’s eastern frontier.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“If, however, Poland were given assistance by the Western
-Powers over a longer period, she could obtain these weapons
-<span class='pageno' title='227' id='Page_227'></span>
-and German superiority would thereby be diminished. In
-contrast to the fanatics of Warsaw and Kraków, the population
-of their areas is indifferent. Furthermore, it was necessary
-to consider the position of the Polish State. Out of
-34 million inhabitants, one and one-half million were German,
-about four million were Jews, and approximately nine million
-Ukrainians, so that genuine Poles were much less in number
-than the total population and, as already said, their striking
-power was to be valued variably. In these circumstances
-Poland could be struck to the ground by Germany in the
-shortest time.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk420'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Since the Poles, through their whole attitude, had made it
-clear that in any case, in the event of a conflict, they would
-stand on the side of the enemies of Germany and Italy, a
-quick liquidation at the present moment could only be of
-advantage for the unavoidable conflict with the Western
-Democracies. If a hostile Poland remained on Germany’s
-eastern frontier, not only would the 11 East Prussian divisions
-be tied down; but also further contingents would be
-kept in Pomerania and Silesia. This would not be necessary
-in the event of a previous liquidation.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>The argument goes on on those lines.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I pass on to the next page, at the top of the page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Coming back to the Danzig question, the Führer said to
-Count Ciano that it was impossible for him to go back now.
-He had made an agreement with Italy for the withdrawal of
-the Germans from South Tyrol, but for this reason he must
-take the greatest care to avoid giving the impression that this
-Tyrolese withdrawal could be taken as a precedent for other
-areas. Furthermore, he had justified the withdrawal by
-pointing to a general easterly and northeasterly direction of
-a German policy. The east and northeast, that is to say the
-Baltic countries, had been Germany’s undisputed sphere of
-influence since time immemorial, as the Mediterranean had
-been the appropriate sphere for Italy. For economic reasons
-also, Germany needed the foodstuffs and timber from these
-eastern regions.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now we get the truth of this matter. It is not the persecution of
-German minorities on the Polish frontiers, but the economic reasons,
-the need for foodstuffs and timber from Poland:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the case of Danzig, German interests were not only
-material, although the city had the greatest harbor in the
-Baltic—the transshipment by tonnage was 40 percent of that
-of Hamburg—but Danzig was a Nuremberg of the north, an
-ancient German city awaking sentimental feelings for every
-<span class='pageno' title='228' id='Page_228'></span>
-German, and the Führer was bound to take account of this
-psychological element in public opinion. To make a comparison
-with Italy, Count Ciano should suppose that Trieste
-was in Yugoslav hands and that a large Italian minority was
-being treated brutally on Yugoslav soil. It would be difficult
-to assume that Italy would long remain quiet over anything
-of this kind.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk421'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Count Ciano, in replying to the Führer’s statement, first
-expressed the great surprise on the Italian side over the
-completely unexpected seriousness of the position. Neither in
-the conversations in Milan nor in those which took place
-during his Berlin visit had there been any sign, from the
-German side, that the position with regard to Poland was so
-serious. On the contrary, the Minister of Foreign Affairs had
-said that in his opinion the Danzig question would be settled
-in the course of time. On these grounds, the Duce, in view
-of his conviction that a conflict with the Western Powers was
-unavoidable, had assumed that he should make his preparations
-for this event; he had made plans for a period of 2 or
-3 years. If immediate conflict was unavoidable, the Duce, as
-he had told Ciano, would certainly stand on the German side;
-but for various reasons he would welcome the postponement
-of a general conflict until a later time.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>No question of welcoming the cancellation of a general conflict;
-the only concern of anybody is as to time.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Ciano then showed, with the aid of a map, the position of
-Italy in the event of a general war. Italy believed that a
-conflict with Poland would not be limited to that country but
-would develop into a general European war.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thereafter, during the meeting, Ciano goes on to try to dissuade
-Hitler from any immediate action. I quote two lines from the argument
-at the top of Page 5 of the exhibit:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“For these reasons the Duce insisted that the Axis Powers
-should make a gesture which would reassure people of the
-peaceful intentions of Italy and Germany.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then we get the Führer’s answer to those arguments, half-way
-down Page 5:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer answered that for a solution of the Polish
-problem no time should be lost; the longer one waited until
-the autumn, the more difficult would military operations in
-eastern Europe become. From the middle of September
-weather conditions made air operations hardly possible in
-these areas, while the conditions of the roads, which were
-quickly turned into a morass by the autumn rains, would be
-such as to make them impossible for motorized forces. From
-<span class='pageno' title='229' id='Page_229'></span>
-September to May, Poland was a great marsh and entirely
-unsuited for any kind of military operations. Poland could,
-however, occupy Danzig in October .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and Germany would
-not be able to do anything about it since they obviously could
-not bombard or destroy the place.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>They couldn’t possibly bombard or destroy any place where there
-happened to be Germans living. Warsaw, Rotterdam, England,
-London—I wonder whether any sentiments of that kind were held
-in consideration in regard to those places.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Ciano asked how soon, according to the Führer’s view, the
-Danzig question must be settled. The Führer answered that
-this settlement must be made one way or another by the end
-of August. To the question of Ciano as to what solution the
-Führer proposed, Hitler answered that Poland must give up
-political control of Danzig, but that Polish economic interests
-would obviously be reserved and that Polish general behavior
-must contribute to a general lessening of the tension. He
-doubted whether Poland was ready to accept this solution
-since, up to the present, the German proposals had been
-refused. The Führer had made this proposal personally to
-Beck, at his visit to Obersalzberg. They were extremely
-favorable to Poland. In return for the political surrender of
-Danzig, under a complete guarantee of Polish interests, and
-the establishment of a connection between East Prussia and
-the Reich, Germany would have given a frontier guarantee,
-a 25-year pact of friendship, and the participation of Poland
-in influence over Slovakia. Beck had received the proposal
-with the remark that he was willing to examine it. The plain
-refusal of it came only as a result of English intervention.
-The general Polish aims could be seen clearly from the press.
-They wanted the whole of East Prussia, and even proposed
-to advance to Berlin .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”—That was something quite
-different.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>The meeting was held over that night, and it continued on the
-following day.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On Page 7, in the middle of the page, it will be seen:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer had therefore come to two definite conclusions:
-(1) in the event of any further provocation, he would immediately
-attack; (2) if Poland did not clearly and plainly
-state her political intention, she must be forced to do so.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>I go to the last line on that page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“As matters now stand, Germany and Italy would simply not
-exist further in the world through the lack of space; not only
-was there no more space, but existing space was completely
-blockaded by its present possessors; they sat like misers with
-<span class='pageno' title='230' id='Page_230'></span>
-their heaps of gold and deluded themselves about their
-riches .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. The Western Democracies were dominated by the
-desire to rule the world and would not regard Germany and
-Italy as in their class. This psychological element of contempt
-was perhaps the worst thing about the whole business. It
-could only be settled by a life and death struggle which the
-two Axis partners could meet more easily because their
-interests did not clash on any point.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk422'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Mediterranean was obviously the most ancient domain
-for which Italy had a claim to predominance. The Duce himself
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. had summed up the position to him in the words that
-Italy, because of its geographic location, was already the
-dominant power in the Mediterranean. On the other hand,
-the Führer said that Germany must take the old German
-road eastwards and that this road was also desirable for
-economic reasons, and that Italy had geographical and historical
-claims to permanency in the Mediterranean. Bismarck .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-had recognized it and had said as much in his well-known
-letter to Mazzini. The interests of Germany and Italy went
-in quite different directions and there never could be a conflict
-between them.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk423'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Minister of Foreign Affairs added that if the two problems
-mentioned in yesterday’s conversations were settled,
-Italy and Germany would have their backs free for work
-against the West. The Führer said that Poland must be struck
-down so that for 10 years”—there appears to have been a
-query raised in the translation—“for so many years long she
-would have been incapable of fighting. In such a case, matters
-in the west could be settled.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk424'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Ciano thanked the Führer for his extremely clear explanation
-of the situation. He had, on his side, nothing to add and
-would give the Duce full details. He asked for more definite
-information on one point, in order that the Duce might have
-all the facts before him. The Duce might indeed have to make
-no decision because the Führer believed that the conflict with
-Poland could be localized. On the basis of long experience
-he”—Ciano—“quite saw that so far the Führer had always
-been right in his judgment of the position. If, however,
-Mussolini had no decision to make, he had to take certain
-measures of precaution, and therefore Ciano would put the
-following question:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk425'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer had mentioned two conditions under which he
-would take Poland: (1) if Poland were guilty of serious provocation,
-and (2) if Poland did not make her political position
-clear. The first of these conditions did not depend on the
-<span class='pageno' title='231' id='Page_231'></span>
-decision of the Führer, and German reaction would follow in
-a moment. The second condition required certain decisions
-as to time. Ciano therefore asked what was the date by which
-Poland must have satisfied Germany about her political condition.
-He realized that this date depended upon climatic
-conditions.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk426'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer answered that the decision of Poland must be
-made clear at the latest by the end of August. Since, however,
-the decisive part of military operations against Poland
-could be carried out within a period of 14 days, and the final
-liquidation would need another .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. 4 weeks, it could be
-finished at the end of September or the beginning of October.
-These could be regarded as the dates. It followed, therefore,
-that the last date on which he could begin to take action was
-the end of August.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk427'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Finally, the Führer reassured Ciano that since his youth he
-had favored German-Italian co-operation, and that no other
-view was expressed in his publications. He had always
-thought that Germany and Italy were naturally suited for
-collaboration, since there were no conflicts of interest between
-them. He was personally fortunate to live at a time in which,
-apart from himself, there was one other statesman who would
-stand out great and unique in history; that he could be this
-man’s friend was for him a matter of great personal satisfaction,
-and if the hour of common battle struck, he would
-always be found on the side of the Duce for better or for
-worse.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: We might adjourn now for 10 minutes.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: If the Tribunal please, I never
-actually put that last document that I was referring to in as an
-exhibit. It is Document TC-77, which becomes GB-48.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Having referred the Tribunal to those documents showing that
-the military preparations were throughout the whole period in hand
-and nearing their completion, I would refer to one letter from the
-Defendant Funk, showing that at the same time the economists had
-not been idle. It is a letter dated the 26th of August 1939, in which
-Funk is writing to his Führer. He says:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“My Führer! I thank you sincerely and heartily for your most
-friendly and kind wishes on the occasion of my birthday. How
-happy and how grateful to you we ought to be for being
-granted the favor of experiencing these overwhelmingly great
-<span class='pageno' title='232' id='Page_232'></span>
-and world-changing times and taking part in the mighty
-events of these days.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk428'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The information given to me by Field Marshal Göring, that
-you, my Führer, yesterday evening approved in principle the
-measures prepared by me for financing the war and for
-shaping the relationship between wages and prices and for
-carrying through emergency sacrifices, made me deeply happy.
-I hereby report to you, with all respect, that I have succeeded
-by means of precautions taken during the last few months in
-making the Reich Bank internally so strong and externally so
-unassailable that even the most serious shocks in the international
-money and credit market cannot affect us in the
-least. In the meantime, I have quite inconspicuously changed
-into gold all the assets of the Reich Bank and of the whole of
-the German economy abroad on which it was possible to lay
-hands. Under the proposals I have prepared for a ruthless
-elimination of all consumption which is not of vital importance
-and of all public expenditure and public works which
-are not of importance for the war effort, we will be in a position
-to cope with all demands on finance and economy without
-any serious shocks. I have considered it my duty as the
-general plenipotentiary for economy, appointed by you, to
-make this report and solemn promise to you, my Führer. Heil
-my Führer”—signed—“Walter Funk.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>That document is PS-699, and it goes in as GB-49.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is difficult in view of that letter to see how the Defendant
-Funk can say that he did not know of the preparations and of
-the intentions of the German Government to wage war.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I come now to the speech which Hitler made on the 22d of August
-at Obersalzberg to his commanders-in-chief. By the end of the third
-week of August, preparations were complete. That speech has
-already been read to the Tribunal. I would, perhaps, ask the
-Tribunal’s patience if I quoted literally half a dozen lines so as to
-carry the story on in sequence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the first page of PS-1014, which is already USA-30, the fourth
-line:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Everybody shall have to make a point of it that we were
-determined from the beginning to fight the Western Powers.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The second paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Destruction of Poland is in the foreground. The aim is the
-elimination of living forces, not the arrival at a certain line.
-Even if war should break out in the West, the destruction of
-Poland shall be the primary objective.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Again, the famous sentence in the third paragraph:
-<span class='pageno' title='233' id='Page_233'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I shall give a propagandists cause for starting the war, never
-mind whether it be plausible or not. The victor shall not be
-asked later on whether he told the truth or not. In starting
-and making a war, not the right is what matters but victory.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We are going to see only too clearly how that propagandistic cause,
-which already had been put in hand, was brought to its climax.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I turn to the next page (798-PS, USA-29), the third paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It was clear to me that a conflict with Poland had to come
-sooner or later. I had already made this decision in the spring,
-but I thought that I would first turn against the West in a
-few years, and only afterwards against the East.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I refer to these passages again particularly to emphasize the
-intention of the Nazi Government, not only to conquer Poland, but
-ultimately, in any event, to wage aggressive war against the
-Western Democracies.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I refer lastly to the last page, a passage which becomes more and
-more significant as we continue the story of the last few days:
-I quote from the fourth paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“We need not be afraid of a blockade. The East will supply
-us with grain, cattle, coal, lead, and zinc. It is a big aim,
-which demands great efforts. I am only afraid that at the
-last minute some ‘Schweinehund’ will make a proposal for
-mediation.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk429'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The political aim is set farther. A beginning has been made
-for the destruction of England’s hegemony. The way is open
-for the soldier, after I have made the political preparations.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>And, again, the very last line becomes significant later:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Göring answers with thanks to the Führer and the assurance
-that the Armed Forces will do their duty.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We pass from the military-economic preparations and his exhortations
-to his generals to see how he was developing the position in
-the diplomatic and political field.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 23rd of August 1939 the Danzig Senate passed a decree
-whereby Gauleiter Forster was appointed head of the State of the
-Free City of Danzig, a position which did not exist under the statute
-setting up the constitution of the Free City. I put in the next document,
-which is taken from the <span class='it'>British Blue Book</span>, only as evidence
-of that event, an event that was, of course, aimed at stirring up the
-feeling in the Free City at that time. That is TC-72, Number 62,
-which becomes GB-50.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the same time, frontier incidents were being manufactured
-by the Nazi Government with the aid of the SS. The Tribunal has
-already heard the evidence of General Lahousen the other day in
-which he referred to the provision of Polish uniforms to the SS
-<span class='pageno' title='234' id='Page_234'></span>
-forces for these purposes, so that dead Poles could be found lying
-about the German side of the frontier. I refer the Tribunal now to
-three short reports which corroborate the evidence that that gentleman
-came and gave before you, and they are found in the <span class='it'>British
-Blue Book</span>. They are reports from the British Ambassador in
-Warsaw.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The first of them, TC-72, Number 53, which becomes GB-51, is
-dated 26th of August.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A series of incidents again occurred yesterday on German
-frontier.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk430'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Polish patrol met a party of Germans one kilometer from
-the East Prussian frontier near Pelta. Germans opened fire.
-Polish patrol replied, killing leader, whose body is being
-returned.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk431'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“German bands also crossed Silesian frontier near Szczyglo,
-twice near Rybnik, and twice elsewhere, firing shots and
-attacking blockhouses and customs posts with machine guns
-and hand grenades. Poles have protested vigorously to Berlin.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk432'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“<span class='it'>Gazeta Polska</span>, in an inspired lead article today, says these
-are more than incidents. They are clearly prepared acts of
-aggression of para-military disciplined detachments, supplied
-with regular army’s arms, and in one case it was a regular
-army detachment. Attacks more or less continuous.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk433'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“These incidents did not cause Poland to forsake calm and
-strong attitude of defense. Facts spoke for themselves and
-acts of aggression came from German side. This was the best
-answer to the ravings of German press.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk434'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Ministry for Foreign Affairs state uniformed German detachment
-has since shot a Pole across frontier and wounded
-another.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I pass to the next report, TC-72, Number 54, which becomes
-GB-52. It is dated the same date, the 26th of August.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Ministry for Foreign Affairs categorically deny story recounted
-by Hitler to the French Ambassador that 24 Germans were
-recently killed at Lodz and eight at Bielsko. The story is
-without any foundation whatever.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And lastly, TC-72, Number 55, which becomes GB-53, the report
-of the next day, the 27th of August.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“So far as I can judge, German allegations of mass ill-treatment
-of German minority by Polish authorities are gross
-exaggeration, if not complete falsification.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk435'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. There is no sign of any loss of control of situation by
-Polish civil authorities. Warsaw, and so far as I can ascertain,
-the rest of Poland is still completely calm.
-<span class='pageno' title='235' id='Page_235'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk436'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3. Such allegations are reminiscent of Nazi propaganda
-methods regarding Czechoslovakia last year.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk437'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“4. In any case it is purely and simply deliberate German
-provocation in accordance with fixed policy that has since
-March”—since the date when the rest of Czechoslovakia was
-seized and they were ready to go against Poland—“that has
-since March exacerbated feeling between the two nationalities.
-I suppose this has been done with the object:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk438'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(a) Creating war spirit in Germany, (b) impressing public
-opinion abroad, (c) provoking either defeatism or apparent
-aggression in Poland.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk439'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“5. It has signally failed to achieve either of the two latter
-objects.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk440'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“6. It is noteworthy that Danzig was hardly mentioned by
-Herr Hitler.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk441'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“7. German treatment of Czech Jews and Polish minority is
-apparently negligible factor compared with alleged sufferings
-of Germans in Poland where, be it noted, they do not amount
-to more than 10 per cent of the population in any commune.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk442'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“8. In the face of these facts it can hardly be doubted that,
-if Herr Hitler decided on war, it is for the sole purpose of
-destroying Polish independence.</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“9. I shall lose no opportunity of impressing on Minister for
-Foreign Affairs necessity of doing everything possible to
-prove that Hitler’s allegations regarding German minority are
-false.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And yet, again, we have further corroboration of General
-Lahousen’s evidence in a memorandum, which has been captured,
-of a conversation between the writer and Keitel. It is 795-PS, and it
-becomes GB-54. That conversation with Keitel took place on the 17th
-of August, and from the memorandum I quote the first paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I reported my conference with Jost to Keitel. He said that
-he would not pay any attention to this action, as the Führer
-had not informed him, and had only let him know that we
-were to furnish Heydrich with Polish uniforms. He agrees
-that I instruct the General Staff. He says he does not think
-much of actions of this kind. However, there is nothing else
-to be done if they have been ordered by the Führer; that he
-could not ask the Führer how he had planned the execution
-of this special action. In regard to Dirschau, he has decided
-that this action would be executed only by the Army.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That then, My Lord, was the position at the end of the first week
-in August—I mean at the end of the third week in August. On the
-22d of August the Russian-German Non-Aggression Pact was signed
-<span class='pageno' title='236' id='Page_236'></span>
-in Moscow, and we have heard in Hitler’s speech of that date to his
-commanders-in-chief how it had gone down as a shock to the rest
-of the world. In fact, the orders to invade Poland were given immediately
-after the signing of that treaty, and the H-hour was actually
-to be in the early morning of the 25th of August. Orders were
-given to invade Poland in the early hours of the 25th of August,
-and that I shall prove in a moment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Oh the same day—the 23rd of August—that the German-Russian
-agreement was signed in Moscow, news reached England that it was
-being signed. And of course the significance of it from a military
-point of view as to Germany, particularly in the present circumstances,
-was obvious; and the British Government immediately made
-their position clear in one last hope—and that one last hope was
-that if they did so the German Government might possibly think
-better of it. And I refer to Document TC-72, Number 56; it is the
-first document in the next to the last part of the Tribunal document
-book, in which the Prime Minister wrote to Hitler. That document
-becomes GB-55:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:0em;margin-bottom:.5em;'>“Your Excellency:</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Your Excellency will have already heard of certain measures
-taken by His Majesty’s Government, and announced in the
-press and on the wireless this evening.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk443'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“These steps have, in the opinion of His Majesty’s Government,
-been rendered necessary by the military movements
-which have been reported from Germany and by the fact that
-apparently the announcement of a German-Soviet agreement
-is taken in some quarters in Berlin to indicate that intervention
-by Great Britain on behalf of Poland is no longer
-a contingency that need be reckoned with. No greater mistake
-could be made. Whatever may prove to be the nature of the
-German-Soviet agreement, it cannot alter Great Britain’s
-obligation to Poland, which His Majesty’s Government have
-stated in public repeatedly and plainly and which they are
-determined to fulfill.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk444'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It has been alleged that, if His Majesty’s Government had
-made their position more clear in 1914, the great catastrophe
-would have been avoided. Whether or not there is any force
-in that allegation, His Majesty’s Government are resolved that
-on this occasion there shall be no such tragic misunderstanding.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk445'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“If the case should arise, they are resolved and prepared to
-employ without delay all the forces at their command; and it
-is impossible to foresee the end of hostilities once engaged.
-It would be a dangerous delusion to think that, if war once
-starts, it will come to an early end even if a success on any
-<span class='pageno' title='237' id='Page_237'></span>
-one of the several fronts on which it will be engaged should
-have been secured.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thereafter the Prime Minister urged the German Government
-to try and resolve the difficulty without recourse to the use of force;
-and he suggested that a truce should be declared while direct discussions
-between the two Governments, the Polish and German
-Governments, might take place. I quote in Prime Minister Chamberlain’s
-language:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“At this moment I confess I can see no other way to avoid a
-catastrophe that will involve Europe in war. In view of the
-grave consequences to humanity which may follow from the
-action of their rulers, I trust that Your Excellency will weigh
-with the utmost deliberation the considerations which I have
-put before you.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the following day, the 23rd of August, Hitler replied to Prime
-Minister Chamberlain, and that document is TC-72, Number 60, and
-it becomes GB-56. He starts off by saying that Germany has always
-wanted England’s friendship, and has always done everything to
-get it; on the other hand, she has some essential interests which it is
-impossible for Germany to renounce. I quote the third paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Germany was prepared to settle the questions of Danzig and
-of the corridor by the method of negotiation on the basis of
-a proposal of truly unparalleled magnanimity. The allegation
-which is disseminated by England regarding a German mobilization
-against Poland”—we see here the complete dishonesty
-of the whole business—“the assertion of aggressive designs
-towards Romania, Hungary, and so forth as well as the
-so-called guarantee declarations, which were subsequently
-given, had, however, dispelled Polish inclination to negotiate
-on a basis of this kind which would have been tolerable for
-Germany also.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk446'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The unconditional assurance given by England to Poland,
-that she would render assistance to that country in all circumstances
-regardless of the causes from which a conflict might
-spring, could only be interpreted in that country as an
-encouragement thenceforward to unloosen, under cover of
-such a charter, a wave of appalling terrorism against the one
-and a half million German inhabitants living in Poland.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Again I cannot help remembering the report by the British
-Ambassador, to which I just referred:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The atrocities which since then have been taking place in
-that country are terrible for the victims but intolerable for
-a great power such as the German Reich, which is expected
-to remain a passive onlooker during these happenings. Poland
-has been guilty of numerous breaches of her obligations
-<span class='pageno' title='238' id='Page_238'></span>
-towards the Free City of Danzig, has made demands in the
-character of ultimata, and has initiated a process of economic
-strangulation.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It goes on to say that “Germany will not tolerate a continuance
-of the persecution” and the fact that there is a British guarantee
-to Poland makes no difference to her determination to end this
-state of affairs. I quote from Paragraph 7:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The German Reich Government has received information to
-the effect that the British Government has the intention to
-carry out measures of mobilization which, according to the
-statements contained in your own letter, are clearly directed
-against Germany alone. This is said to be true of France as
-well. Since Germany has never had the intention of taking
-military measures other than those of a defensive character
-against England or France and, as has already been emphasized,
-has never intended, and does not in the future intend, to attack
-England or France, it follows that this announcement as confirmed
-by you, Mr. Prime Minister, in your own letter, can
-only refer to a contemplated act of menace directed against
-the Reich. I, therefore, inform your Excellency that in the
-event of these military announcements being carried into
-effect, I shall order immediate mobilization of the German
-forces.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If the intention of the German Government had been peaceful,
-if they really wanted peace and not war, what was the purpose of
-these lies; these lies saying that they had never intended to attack
-England or France, carried out no mobilization, statements which,
-in view of what we now have, we know to be lies? What can have
-been their object if their intention had always been for a peaceful
-settlement of the Danzig question only? Then I quote again from
-the last paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The question of the treatment of European problems on a
-peaceful basis is not a decision which rests on Germany, but
-primarily on those who since the crime committed by the
-Versailles dictate have stubbornly and consistently opposed
-any peaceful revision. Only after a change of the spirit on the
-part of the responsible powers can there be any real change
-in the relationship between England and Germany. I have all
-my life fought for Anglo-German friendship; the attitude
-adopted by British diplomacy—at any rate up to the present—has,
-however, convinced me of the futility of such an
-attempt. Should there be any change in this respect in the
-future, nobody could be happier than I.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 25th of August the formal Anglo-Polish Agreement of
-mutual assistance was signed in London. It is unnecessary to read
-<span class='pageno' title='239' id='Page_239'></span>
-the document. The Tribunal will be well aware of its contents
-where both Governments undertake to give assistance to the other
-in the event of aggression against either by any third power. I point
-to Document TC-73; it is Number 91 and it becomes GB-57. I shall
-refer to the fact of its signing again in a moment but perhaps it
-is convenient while we are dealing with a letter between the British
-Prime Minister and Hitler to refer also to a similar correspondence
-which took place a few days later between the French Prime
-Minister M. Daladier and Hitler. I emphasize these because it is
-desired to show how deliberately the German Government was set
-about their pattern of aggression. “The French Ambassador in
-Berlin has informed me of your personal communication,” written
-on the 26th of August:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the hours in which you speak of the greatest responsibility
-which two heads of the Governments can possibly take upon
-themselves, namely, that of shedding the blood of two great
-nations who long only for peace and work, I feel I owe it to
-you, personally, and to both our peoples to say that the fate
-of peace still rests in your hands alone.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk447'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“You cannot doubt but what are my own feelings towards
-Germany, nor France’s peaceful feelings towards your nation.
-No Frenchman has done more than myself to strengthen
-between our two nations not only peace but also sincere
-co-operation in their own interests as well as in those of
-Europe and of the whole world. Unless you credit the French
-people with a lower sense of honor than I credit to the German
-nation, you cannot doubt that France loyally fulfills her
-obligations toward other powers, such as Poland, which, as
-I am fully convinced, wants to live in peace with Germany.
-These two convictions are fully compatible.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk448'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Till now there has been nothing to prevent a peaceful solution
-of the international crisis with all honor and dignity for
-all nations, if the same will for peace exists on all sides.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk449'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Together with the good will of France I proclaim that of all
-her allies. I take it upon myself to guarantee Poland’s readiness,
-which she has always shown, to submit to the mutual application
-of a method of open settlement as it can be imagined
-between the governments of two sovereign nations. With the
-clearest conscience I can assure you that, among the differences
-which have arisen between Germany and Poland over
-the question of Danzig, there is not one which could not be
-submitted to such a method with a purpose of reaching a
-peaceful and just solution.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk450'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Moreover, I can declare on my honor that there is nothing
-in France’s clear and loyal solidarity with Poland and her
-<span class='pageno' title='240' id='Page_240'></span>
-allies, which could in any way prejudice the peaceful attitude
-of my country. This solidarity has never prevented us, and
-does not prevent us today, from keeping Poland in the same
-friendly state of mind.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk451'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In so serious an hour I sincerely believe that no high-minded
-human being could understand it if a war of destruction were
-started without a last attempt being made to reach a peaceful
-settlement between Germany and Poland. Your desire for
-peace could, in all certainty, work for this aim without any
-prejudice to German honor. I, who desire good harmony
-between the French and the German people, and who am, on
-the other hand, bound to Poland by bonds of friendship and
-by a promise, am prepared, as head of the French Government,
-to do everything an upright man can do to bring this
-attempt to a successful conclusion.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk452'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“You and I were in the trenches in the last war. You know,
-as I do, what horror and condemnation the devastations of
-that war have left in the conscience of the people without any
-regard to its outcome. The picture I can see in my mind’s
-eye of your outstanding role as the leader of the German
-people on the road of peace, toward the fulfillment of its
-task in the common work of civilization, leads me to ask for
-a reply to this suggestion.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk453'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“If French and German blood should be shed again as it was
-shed 25 years ago in a still longer and more murderous war,
-then each of the two nations will fight believing in its own
-victory. But the most certain victors will be destruction and
-barbarity.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I think we will adjourn now until 2 o’clock.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken until 1400 hours.</span>]</h3>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<h2><span class='pageno' title='241' id='Page_241'></span><span class='it'>Afternoon Session</span></h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COLONEL ROBERT G. STOREY (Executive Trial Counsel for
-the United States): If it please the Tribunal, with the consent of
-Lieutenant Colonel Griffith-Jones, may I make an announcement
-to the Defense Counsel.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At 7:30 in the courtroom this evening, the remainder of the
-motion pictures which the United States will offer in evidence will
-be shown for the Defense Counsel. We urge that all of them come
-at 7:30.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. DIX: I believe I can say on behalf of all members of the
-Defense that they do not consider it necessary that the films be
-shown to them before the proceedings, that is, shown to them twice.
-We fully and with gratitude appreciate the courtesy and readiness
-to facilitate our work; but our evenings are very much taken up
-by the preparation of our cases and by the necessary consultations
-with our clients.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The question of films is on a level different from that of documents.
-Documents one likes to read in advance or simultaneously
-or later; but since we can hear and take note of the testimony of
-witnesses only during the main proceedings, we are, of course, to an
-even greater degree in a position and prepared to become acquainted
-with the films submitted as evidence only during the proceedings.
-We believe the Prosecution need not take the trouble of showing
-every film to us on some evening before it is shown again in the
-proceedings. We hope this will not be construed as, shall I say,
-a sort of demonstration in some respect, for the reason really is
-that our time is so fully taken up by our preparations that all
-superfluous work might well be spared both the Prosecution and us.
-I repeat and emphasize that we fully and gratefully appreciate the
-Prosecution’s manifest readiness to facilitate our work, and I ask
-that my words be understood in this light.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Do I understand that you think it will be
-unnecessary for the defendants’ counsel to have a preview of the
-films, to see them before they are produced in evidence? Is that
-what you are saying?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. DIX: Yes, that is what I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Colonel Storey, I am not sure that you were
-here when Dr. Dix began his observation; but I understand that what
-he says is that in view of the amount of preparation which the
-defendants’ counsel have to undertake, they do not consider it necessary
-to have a view of these films before they are produced in evidence,
-but at the same time he wishes to express his gratification at
-the co-operation of the Counsel for the Prosecution.
-<span class='pageno' title='242' id='Page_242'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COL. STOREY: Very agreeable. It’s all right with us. We were
-doing it for their benefit.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Very well.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: When the Tribunal rose for the
-adjournment, I had just read the letter from M. Daladier to Hitler,
-of the 26th of August. On the 27th of August Hitler replied to that
-letter, and I think it unnecessary to read the reply. The sense of
-it was very much the same as that which he wrote to the British
-Prime Minister in answer to the letter that he had received earlier
-in the week.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Those two letters are taken from the <span class='it'>German White Book</span> which
-I put in evidence as GB-58, so perhaps the Tribunal would treat
-both those letters as of the same number. After that, nobody could
-say that the German Government could be in any doubt as to the
-position that was to be taken up by both the British and French
-Governments in the event of a German aggression against Poland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But the pleas for peace did not end there. On the 24th of August
-President Roosevelt wrote to both Hitler and the President of the
-Polish Republic. I quote only the first few paragraphs of his letter:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the message which I sent you on April the 14th, I stated
-that it appeared to be that the leaders of great nations had
-it in their power to liberate their peoples from the disaster
-that impended, but that, unless the effort were immediately
-made, with goodwill on all sides, to find a peaceful and constructive
-solution to existing controversies, the crisis which
-the world was confronting must end in catastrophe. Today
-that catastrophe appears to be very near at hand indeed.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk454'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“To the message which I sent you last April I have received
-no reply, but because my confident belief that the cause of
-world peace—which is the cause of humanity itself—rises
-above all other considerations, I am again addressing myself
-to you, with the hope that the war which impends, and the
-consequent disaster to all peoples, may yet be averted.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk455'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I therefore urge with all earnestness—and I am likewise
-urging the President of the Republic of Poland—that the
-Governments of Germany and Poland agree by common
-accord to refrain from any positive act of hostility for a
-reasonable, stipulated period; and that they agree, likewise
-by common accord, to solve the controversies which have
-arisen between them by one of the three following methods:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk456'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“First, by direct negotiation; second, by the submission of these
-controversies to an impartial arbitration in which they can
-both have confidence; third, that they agree to the solution of
-these controversies through the procedure of conciliation.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='243' id='Page_243'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I think it is unnecessary to read any more of that letter. As
-I have already indicated to the Tribunal, the answer to that was
-the order to his armed forces to invade Poland on the following
-morning.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That document is Exhibit TC-72, Number 124, which becomes
-GB-59.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I put in evidence also the next document, TC-72, Number 126,
-GB-60, which is the reply to that letter from the President of the
-Polish Republic, in which he accepts the offer to settle the differences
-by any of the peaceful methods suggested.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 25th of August, no reply having been received from the
-German Government, President Roosevelt wrote again:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I have this hour received from the President of Poland a
-reply to the message which I addressed to Your Excellency
-and to him last night.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>The text of the Polish reply is then set out.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Your Excellency has repeatedly publicly stated that the aims
-and objects sought by the German Reich were just and
-reasonable.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk457'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In his reply to my message the President of Poland has
-made it plain that the Polish Government are willing, upon
-the basis set forth in my message, to agree to solve the
-controversy which has arisen between the Republic of Poland
-and the German Reich by direct negotiation or the process
-of conciliation.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk458'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Countless human lives can yet be saved, and hope may still
-be restored that the nations of the modern world may even
-now construct the foundation for a peaceful and happier
-relationship, if you and the Government of the German Reich
-will agree to the pacific means of settlement accepted by the
-Government of Poland. All the world prays that Germany,
-too, will accept.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But, My Lord, Germany would not accept, nor would she accept
-the appeals by the Pope which appear in the next document.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I am sorry—the President of Poland’s reply, TC-72 becomes
-Number 127, GB-61.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They would not agree to those proposals, nor would they pay
-heed to the Pope’s appeal, which is TC-72, Number 139 on the same
-date, the 24th of August, which becomes GB-62. I do not think it
-is necessary to read that. It is an appeal in similar terms. And
-there is yet a further appeal from the Pope on the 31st of August,
-TC-72, Number 14, which becomes GB-63. It is 141; I beg your
-pardon. It is TC-72, Number 141. I think the printing is wrong in
-the Tribunal’s translation:
-<span class='pageno' title='244' id='Page_244'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Pope is unwilling to abandon hope that pending negotiations
-may lead to a just pacific solution, such as the whole
-world continues to pray for.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I think it is unnecessary to read the remainder of that. If the
-Pope had realized that those negotiations to which he referred as
-the “pending negotiations” in the last days of August, which we
-are about to deal with now, were completely bogus negotiations,
-bogus insofar as Germany was concerned, and put forward, as
-indeed they were—and as I hope to illustrate to the Tribunal in
-a moment—simply as an endeavor to dissuade England either by
-threat or by bribe from meeting her obligations to Poland, then
-perhaps he would have saved himself the trouble in ever addressing
-that last appeal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It will be seen quite clearly that those final German offers, to
-which I now turn, were no offers in the accepted sense of the word
-at all; that there was never any intention behind them of entering
-into discussions, negotiation, arbitration, or any other form of
-peaceful settlement with Poland. They were just an attempt to
-make it rather easier to seize and conquer Poland than appeared
-likely if England and France observed the obligations that they had
-undertaken.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Perhaps I might, before dealing with the documents, summarize
-in a word those last negotiations.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 22d of August, as we have seen, the German-Soviet Pact
-was signed. On the 24th of August, orders were given to his armies
-to march the following morning. After those orders had been given,
-the news apparently reached the German Government that the
-British and Polish Governments had actually signed a formal pact
-of non-aggression and of mutual assistance. Until that time, it will
-be remembered, the position was that the Prime Minister had made
-a statement in the House and a joint communiqué had been issued—I
-think on the 6th of April—that they would in fact assist one
-another if either were attacked, but no formal agreement had been
-signed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, on the 24th of August after those orders had been given
-by him, the news came that such a formal document had been
-signed; and the invasion was postponed for the sole purpose of
-making one last effort to keep England and France out of the war—not
-to end the war, not to cancel the war, but to keep them out.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And to do that, on the 25th of August, having postponed the
-invasion, Hitler issued a verbal communiqué to Sir Nevile Henderson
-which, as the Tribunal will see, was a mixture of bribe and
-threat with which he hoped to persuade England to keep out.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 28th of August Sir Nevile Henderson handed the British
-Government’s reply to that communiqué to Hitler. That reply
-<span class='pageno' title='245' id='Page_245'></span>
-stressed that the difference ought to be settled by agreement. The
-British Government put forward the view that Danzig should be
-guaranteed and, indeed, any agreement come to should be guaranteed
-by other powers, which, of course, in any event would have
-been quite unacceptable to the German Reich.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I say, one really need not consider what would have been
-acceptable and not acceptable because once it had been made
-clear—as indeed it was in that British Government’s reply of the
-28th of August—that England would not be put off assisting Poland
-in the event of German aggression, the German Government really
-had no concern with further negotiation but were concerned only
-to afford themselves some kind of justification and to prevent themselves
-appearing too blatantly to turn down all the appeals to
-reason that were being put forward.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 29th of August, in the evening at 7:15, Hitler handed to
-Sir Nevile Henderson the German Government’s answer to the
-British Government’s reply of the 28th. And here again in this
-document it is quite clear that the whole object of it was to put
-forward something which was quite unacceptable. He agrees to
-enter into direct conversations as suggested by the British Government,
-but he demands that those conversations must be based upon
-the return of Danzig to the Reich and also of the whole of the
-Corridor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It will be remembered that hitherto, even when he alleged that
-Poland had renounced the 1934 agreement, even then he had put
-forward as his demands the return of Danzig alone and the arrangement
-for an extra-territorial Autobahn and railroad running through
-the Corridor to East Prussia. That was unacceptable then. To make
-quite certain, he now demands the whole of the Corridor; no question
-of an Autobahn or railway. The whole thing must become German.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Even so, even to make doubly certain that the offer would not
-be accepted, he says:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. on those terms I am prepared to enter into discussion;
-but to do so, as the matter is urgent, I expect a plenipotentiary
-with full powers from the Polish Government to be here in
-Berlin by Wednesday, the 30th of August 1939.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This offer was made at 7:15 p.m. on the evening of the 29th.
-That offer had to be transmitted first to London, and from London
-to Warsaw; and from Warsaw the Polish Government had to give
-authority to their Ambassador in Berlin. So that the timing made
-it quite impossible to get authority to their Ambassador in Berlin
-by midnight the following night. It allowed them no kind of opportunity
-for discussing the matters at all. As Sir Nevile Henderson
-described it, the offer amounted to an ultimatum.
-<span class='pageno' title='246' id='Page_246'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At midnight on the 30th of August at the time by which the
-Polish Plenipotentiary was expected to arrive, Sir Nevile Henderson
-saw Ribbentrop; and I shall read to you the account of that interview,
-in which Sir Nevile Henderson handed a further message to
-Ribbentrop in reply to the message that had been handed to him
-the previous evening, and at which Ribbentrop read out in German
-a two- or three-page document which purported to be the German
-proposal to be discussed at the discussions between them and the
-Polish Government. He read it out quickly in German. He refused
-to hand a copy of it to the British Ambassador. He passed no copy
-of it at all to the Polish Ambassador. So that there was no kind
-of possible chance of the Poles ever having before them the proposals
-which Germany was so graciously and magnanimously offering
-to discuss.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the following day, the 31st of August, Mr. Lipski saw
-Ribbentrop and could get no further than to be asked whether
-he came with full powers. When he did not—when he said he
-did not come with full powers, Ribbentrop said that he would
-put the position before the Führer. But, in actual fact, it was
-much too late to put any position to the Führer by that time,
-because on the 31st of August—I am afraid I am unable to give
-you the exact time—but on the 31st of August, Hitler had already
-issued his Directive Number 1 for the conduct of the war, in
-which he laid down H-Hour as being a quarter to five the
-following morning, the 1st of September. And on the evening of
-the 31st of August at 9 o’clock the German radio broadcast the
-proposals which Ribbentrop had read out to Sir Nevile Henderson
-the night before, saying that these were the proposals which had
-been made for discussion but that, as no Polish Plenipotentiary had
-arrived to discuss them, the German Government assumed that they
-were turned down. That broadcast at 9 o’clock on the evening of
-the 31st of August was the first that the Poles had ever heard of
-the proposals, and the first, in fact, that the British Government or
-their representatives in Berlin knew about them, other than what
-had been heard when Ribbentrop had read them out and refused
-to give a written copy, on the evening of the 30th.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After that broadcast at 9:15, perhaps when the broadcast was
-in its course, a copy of those proposals was handed to Sir Nevile
-Henderson, for the first time.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Having thus summarized for the convenience, I hope, of the
-Tribunal, the timing of events during that last week, I would ask
-the Tribunal to refer briefly to the remaining documents in that
-document book. I first put in evidence an extract from the interrogation
-of the Defendant Göring, which was taken on the 29th of
-August 1945.
-<span class='pageno' title='247' id='Page_247'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: As defense counsel for the Defendant Göring,
-I object to the use of this document which is an extract from testimony
-given by the Defendant Göring. Since the defendant is present
-here in court, he can at any time be called to the stand and give
-direct evidence on this subject before the Tribunal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Is that your objection?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal does not understand the ground
-of your objection, in view of Article 15 (c) and Article 16 (b)
-and (c) of the Charter. Article 15 (c) provides that the Chief Prosecutors
-shall undertake, among others, the duty of “the preliminary
-examination of all necessary witnesses and of the defendants”; and
-Article 16 provides that:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In order to ensure fair trial for the defendants, the following
-procedure shall be followed: .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. (b) During any preliminary
-examination .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. of a defendant he shall have the
-right to give any explanation relevant to the charges made
-against him; (c) A preliminary examination of a defendant
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. shall be conducted in, or translated into, a language which
-the defendant understands.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Those provisions of the Charter, in the opinion of the Tribunal,
-show that the defendants may be interrogated and that their interrogations
-may be put in evidence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. STAHMER: I was prompted by the idea that when it is
-possible to call a witness, direct examination in court is preferable,
-since the evidence thus obtained is more concrete.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: You certainly have the opportunity of summoning
-the defendant for whom you appear to give evidence
-himself, but that has nothing to do with the admissibility of his
-interrogation—his preliminary examination.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: This extract is TC-90, which I put
-in as GB-64. I quote from the middle of the first answer. It is
-at the end of the 7th line. The Defendant Göring says there:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“On the day when England gave her official guarantee to
-Poland, the Führer called me on the telephone and told me
-that he had stopped the planned invasion of Poland. I asked
-him then whether this was just temporary or for good. He
-said ‘No, I will have to see whether we can eliminate British
-intervention.’ ”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Ought you not read the question before the
-answer?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: I go back to the question:
-<span class='pageno' title='248' id='Page_248'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“When the negotiations of the Polish Foreign Minister in
-London brought about the Anglo-Polish Treaty, at the end
-of March or the beginning of April 1939, was it not fairly
-obvious that a peaceful solution was impossible?”—answer—“Yes,
-it seemed impossible after my conviction”—I think that
-must be a bad translation—“according to my conviction.”</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk459'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk460'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: [<span class='it'>Continuing.</span>] “.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. but not
-according to the convictions of the Führer. When it was
-mentioned to the Führer that England had given her
-guarantee to Poland, he said that England was also guaranteeing
-Romania, but then when the Russians took Bessarabia,
-nothing happened; and this made a big impression on him.
-I made a mistake here. At this time Poland only had the
-promise of a guarantee. The guarantee itself was only given
-shortly before the beginning of the war. On the day when
-England gave her official guarantee to Poland, the Führer
-called me on the telephone and told me that he had stopped
-the planned invasion of Poland. I asked him then whether
-this was just temporary, or for good. He said, ‘No, I will
-have to see whether we can eliminate British intervention.’
-So, then I asked him, ‘Do you think that it will be any
-different within 4 or 5 days?’ At this same time—I do not
-know whether you know about that, Colonel—I was in
-communication with Lord Halifax by a special courier,
-outside the regular diplomatic channels, to do everything to
-stop war with England. After the guarantee, I held an
-English declaration of war inevitable. I already told him in
-the spring of 1939, after occupying Czechoslovakia, I told
-him that from now on, if he tried to solve the Polish
-question, he would have to count on the enmity of
-England—1939, that is, after the Protectorate.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk461'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Question: ‘Is it not a fact that preparations for the campaign
-against Poland were originally supposed to have been completed
-by the end of August 1939?’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk462'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Answer: ‘Yes.’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk463'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Question: ‘And that the final issuance of the order for
-the campaign against Poland came sometime between the
-15th and 20th of August 1939, after the signing of the treaty
-with Soviet Russia?’ ”—The dates obviously are wrong there.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk464'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Answer: ‘Yes, that is true.’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk465'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Question: ‘Is it not also a fact that the start of the
-campaign was ordered for the 25th of August but on the
-24th of August in the afternoon it was postponed until
-<span class='pageno' title='249' id='Page_249'></span>
-September the 1st in order to await the results of new
-diplomatic maneuvers with the English Ambassador?’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk466'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Answer: ‘Yes.’ ”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My only comment upon that document is in respect to the
-second paragraph where Göring is purporting not to want war
-with England. The Court will remember how it was Göring, after
-the famous speech of the 22d of August to his commanders-in-chief,
-who got up and thanked the Führer for his exhortation and assured
-him that the Armed Forces would play their part.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I omit the next document in the document book, which carries
-the matter a little further, and we go on to Hitler’s verbal
-communiqué, as it is called in the <span class='it'>British Blue Book</span>, that he handed
-to Sir Nevile Henderson on the 25th of August, after he had heard
-of the signing of the Anglo-Polish agreement, in an endeavor to
-keep England from meeting her obligations. He states in the first
-paragraph, after hearing the British Ambassador, that he is anxious
-to make one more effort to save war. In the second paragraph,
-he asserts again that Poland’s provocations were unbearable; and
-I quote Paragraph 2:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Germany was in all circumstances determined to abolish
-these Macedonian conditions on her eastern frontier and,
-what is more, to do so in the interests of quiet and order
-and also in the interests of European peace.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk467'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The problem of Danzig and the Corridor must be solved.
-The British Prime Minister had made a speech which was
-not in the least calculated to induce any change in the
-German attitude. At the most, the result of this speech could
-be a bloody and incalculable war between Germany and
-England. Such a war would be bloodier than that of 1914
-to 1918. In contrast to the last war, Germany would no
-longer have to fight on two fronts.”—One sees the threats,
-veiled threats, appearing in this paragraph—“Agreement
-with Russia was unconditional and signified a change in
-foreign policy of the Reich which would last a very long
-time. Russia and Germany would never again take up arms
-against each other. Apart from this, the agreements reached
-with Russia would also render Germany secure economically
-for the longest possible period of war.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk468'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer had always wanted Anglo-German understanding.
-War between England and Germany could at best
-bring some profit to Germany, but none at all to England.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Then we come to the bribe:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer declared the German-Polish problem must be
-solved and will be solved. He is, however, prepared and
-determined, after the solution of this problem, to approach
-<span class='pageno' title='250' id='Page_250'></span>
-England once more with a large, comprehensive offer. He
-is a man of great decisions; and in this case also,
-he will be capable of being great in his action.”—and then,
-magnanimously—“He accepts the British Empire and is ready
-to pledge himself personally for its continued existence and
-to place the power of the German Reich at its disposal on
-condition that his colonial demands, which are limited, should
-be negotiated by peaceful means .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. His obligations to
-Italy remain untouched.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Again he stresses irrevocable determination never to enter into
-war with Russia. I quote the last two paragraphs:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“If the British Government would consider these ideas, a
-blessing for Germany .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Why do you not read the first few lines of
-Paragraph 3?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: Yes; I did summarize it—Paragraph
-3:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“He also desired to express the irrevocable determination
-of Germany never again to enter into conflict with Russia.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: I quote the last two paragraphs:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“If the British Government would consider these ideas,
-a blessing for Germany and also for the British Empire
-might result. If they reject these ideas, there will be war.
-In no case will Great Britain emerge stronger; the last war
-proved it. The Führer repeats that he himself is a man of
-far-reaching decisions by which he is bound, and that this is
-his last offer .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will adjourn and then the
-matter can be investigated.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: I had just finished reading the
-offer from Hitler to the British Government, which was TC-72,
-Number 68, and which becomes GB-65.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The British Government were not, of course, aware of the real
-object that lay behind that message; and, taking it at its face value
-and desirous to enter into discussions, they wrote back on the 28th
-of August saying that they were prepared to enter into discussions.
-They agreed with Hitler that the differences must be settled, and
-I quote from Paragraph 4:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the opinion of His Majesty’s Government, a reasonable
-solution of the differences between Germany and Poland
-<span class='pageno' title='251' id='Page_251'></span>
-could and should be effected by agreement between the two
-countries on lines which would include the safeguarding of
-Poland’s essential interests; and they recall that in his speech
-of the 28th of April, the German Chancellor recognized the
-importance of these interests to Poland.</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“But, as was stated by the Prime Minister in his letter to
-the German Chancellor of the 22d of August, His Majesty’s
-Government consider it essential for the success of the
-discussions, which would precede the agreement, that it
-should be understood beforehand that any settlement arrived
-at would be guaranteed by other powers. His Majesty’s
-Government would be ready, if desired, to make their
-contribution to the effective operation of such a guarantee.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I go to the last paragraph on that page, Paragraph 6:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“His Majesty’s Government have said enough to make their
-own attitude plain in the particular matters at issue between
-Germany and Poland. They trust that the German Chancellor
-will not think that, because His Majesty’s Government are
-scrupulous concerning their obligations to Poland, they are
-not anxious to use all their influence to assist the achievement
-of a solution which may commend itself both to Germany
-and to Poland.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That, of course, knocked the German hopes on the head. They
-had failed by their tricks and their bribes to dissuade England
-from observing her obligations to Poland, and it was now only
-a matter of getting out of their embarrassment as quickly as
-possible and saving their face as much as possible. The last
-document becomes GB-66. And I put in also Sir Nevile Henderson’s
-account of that interview, TC-72, Number 75, which becomes GB-67.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>During that interview, the only importance of it is that Sir
-Nevile Henderson again emphasized the British attitude and that
-they were determined in any event to meet their obligations to
-Poland. One paragraph I would quote, which is interesting in view
-of the letters that were to follow, paragraph 10:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the end I asked him two straight questions: ‘Was he
-willing to negotiate directly with the Poles?’ and ‘Was he
-ready to discuss the question of an exchange of population?’
-He replied in the affirmative as regards the latter, although
-there I have no doubt that he was thinking at the same
-time of a rectification of frontiers. As regards the first, he
-said he could not give me an answer until after he had
-given the reply of His Majesty’s Government the careful
-consideration which such a document deserved. In this
-connection he turned to Ribbentrop and said, ‘We must
-summon Field Marshal Göring to discuss it with him.’ ”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='252' id='Page_252'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then in the next paragraph, again Sir Nevile Henderson finally
-repeated to him very solemnly the main note of the whole
-conversation, so far as he was concerned.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I pass to the next document, which is TC-72, Number 78, which
-becomes GB-68.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The German reply, as I outlined before, was handed to Sir
-Nevile Henderson at 7:15 p.m. on the 29th of August. The reply
-sets out the suggestion submitted by the British Government in
-their previous note; and it goes on to say that the German
-Government are prepared to enter into discussion on the basis
-that the whole of the Corridor, as well as Danzig, are returned to
-the Reich. I quote particularly the next to the last paragraph on
-the first page of that document:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The demands of the German Government are in conformity
-with the revision of the Versailles Treaty, which has always
-been recognized as being necessary, in regard to this territory,
-namely: return of Danzig and the Corridor to Germany,
-the safeguarding of the existence of the German national
-group in the territories remaining to Poland.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is only just now, as I emphasized before, that that right has
-been recognized for so long. On the 28th of April his demands
-consisted only of Danzig, of an Autobahn, and of the railway.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal will remember the position which he is trying
-to get out of now. He is trying to manufacture justification by
-putting forth proposals which under no possible circumstances
-could either Poland or Great Britain accept. But, as I said before,
-he wanted to make doubly certain.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I go to the second page, and start with the third paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The British Government attach importance to two considerations:
-(1) That the existing danger of an imminent explosion
-should be eliminated as quickly as possible by direct negotiation;
-and (2) that the existence of the Polish State, in the
-form in which it would then continue to exist, should be
-adequately safeguarded in the economic and political sphere
-by means of international guarantees.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk469'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“On this subject the German Government make the following
-declaration:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk470'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Though skeptical as to the prospects of a successful outcome,
-they are, nevertheless, prepared to accept the English proposal
-and to enter into direct discussion. They do so, as has already
-been emphasized, solely as the result of the impression made
-upon them by the written statement received from the British
-Government that they, too, desire a pact of friendship in
-<span class='pageno' title='253' id='Page_253'></span>
-accordance with the general lines indicated to the British
-Ambassador.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then, to the last but one paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“For the rest, in making these proposals, the German
-Government have never had any intention of touching
-Poland’s vital interests or questioning the existence of an
-independent Polish State.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>These letters really sound like the letters of some common
-swindler rather than of the government of a great nation.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The German Government, accordingly, in these circumstances
-agree to accept the British Government’s offer of
-their good offices in securing the dispatch to Berlin of a Polish
-Emissary with full powers. They count on the arrival of this
-Emissary on Wednesday, the 30th August 1939.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk471'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The German Government will immediately draw up proposals
-for a solution acceptable to themselves and will, if
-possible, place these at the disposal of the British Government
-before the arrival of the Polish negotiator.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That was at 7:15 in the evening of the 29th of August and
-as I have explained, it allowed little time in order to get the Polish
-Emissary there by midnight the following night. That document was
-GB-68.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The next document, Sir Nevile Henderson’s account of the
-interval, summarizes what had taken place; and I quote particularly
-Paragraph 4:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I remarked that this phrase”—that is the passage about
-the Polish Emissary being there by midnight the following
-night—“sounded like an ultimatum, but after some heated
-remarks both Herr Hitler and Herr Von Ribbentrop assured
-me that it was only intended to stress the urgency of the
-moment when the two fully mobilized armies were standing
-face to face.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>That was the interview on the evening of the 29th of August. The
-last document becomes GB-69.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Again the British Government replied, and Sir Nevile Henderson
-handed this reply to Ribbentrop at the famous meeting on midnight
-of the 30th of August at the time the Polish Emissary had been
-expected. I need not read at length. The British Government
-reciprocate the desire for improved relations. They stress again
-that they cannot sacrifice the interest of other friends in order to
-obtain an improvement in the situation. They understand, they
-say, that the German Government accept the condition that the
-settlement should be subject to international guarantee. They make
-a reservation as to the demands that the Germans put forward in
-<span class='pageno' title='254' id='Page_254'></span>
-their last letter and they are informing the Polish Government
-immediately; and lastly, they understand that the German Government
-are drawing up the proposals. That Document TC-72,
-Number 89, will be GB-70. For the account of the interview, we
-go to the next document in the Tribunal’s book, TC-72, Number 92,
-which becomes GB-71. It is not a very long document. It is perhaps
-worth reading in full:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I told Herr Ribbentrop this evening that His Majesty’s
-Government found it difficult to advise the Polish Government
-to accept the procedure adumbrated in the German
-reply and suggested that he should adopt the normal contact,
-i.e. that when German proposals were ready, to invite the
-Polish Ambassador to call and to hand him proposals for
-transmission to his Government with a view to immediate
-opening of negotiations. I added that if this basis afforded
-prospect of settlement, His Majesty’s Government could be
-counted upon to do their best in Warsaw to temporize negotiations.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk472'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Ribbentrop’s reply was to produce a lengthy document which
-he read out in German, aloud, at top speed. Imagining that
-he would eventually hand it to me, I did not attempt to follow
-too closely the 16 or more articles which it contained. Though
-I cannot, therefore, guarantee the accuracy, the main points
-were .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”—and I need not read out the main points.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I go to Paragraph 3:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“When I asked Ribbentrop for text of these proposals in
-accordance with undertaking in the German reply of yesterday,
-he asserted that it was now too late as Polish representative
-had not arrived in Berlin by midnight.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk473'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I observed that to treat the matter in this way meant that
-the request for Polish representative to arrive in Berlin on
-the 30th of August constituted in fact an ultimatum, in spite
-of what he and Herr Hitler had assured me yesterday. This
-he denied, saying that the idea of an ultimatum was a figment
-of my imagination. Why then, I asked, could he not adopt the
-normal procedure and give me a copy of the proposals, and
-ask the Polish Ambassador to call on him just as Hitler had
-summoned me a few days ago, and hand them to him for
-communication to the Polish Government? In the most violent
-terms Ribbentrop said that he would never ask the Ambassador
-to visit him. He hinted that if the Polish Ambassador
-asked him for interview it might be different. I said that I
-would, naturally, inform my Government so at once. Whereupon
-he said, while those were his personal views, he would
-<span class='pageno' title='255' id='Page_255'></span>
-bring all that I had said to Hitler’s notice. It was for the
-Chancellor to decide.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk474'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“We parted on that note, but I must tell you that Von Ribbentrop’s
-demeanor during an unpleasant interview was aping
-Hitler at his worst. He inveighed incidentally against the
-Polish mobilization, but I retorted that it was hardly surprising
-since Germany had also mobilized as Herr Hitler
-himself had admitted to me yesterday.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nevertheless, Sir Nevile Henderson did not know at that time
-that Germany had also already given the orders to attack Poland
-some days before. The following day, the 31st of August at 6:30
-in the evening, Mr. Lipski, the Polish Ambassador, had an interview
-with Ribbentrop. This document, the next Document TC-73,
-Number 112, becomes GB-72, and is a short account in a report to
-Mr. Beck:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I carried out my instructions. Ribbentrop asked if I had
-special plenipotentiary powers to undertake negotiations.
-I said, ‘No’. He then asked whether I had been informed
-that on London’s suggestion the German Government had
-expressed their readiness to negotiate directly with a delegate
-of the Polish Government, furnished with the requisite full
-powers, who was to have arrived on the preceding day, the
-30th of August. I replied that I had no direct information on
-the subject. In conclusion, Ribbentrop repeated that he had
-thought I would be empowered to negotiate. He would communicate
-my <span class='it'>démarche</span> to the Chancellor.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I have indicated already, it was too late. The orders had
-already been given on that day to the German Army to invade.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I turn to C-126. It is already in as GB-45. Other portions of it
-were put in, and I refer now to the letter on the second page, for
-the order (most-secret order). It is signed by Hitler and is described
-as his “Directive Number 1 for the Conduct of the War,” dated
-31st of August 1939. Paragraph 1:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(1) Now that all the political possibilities of disposing by
-peaceful means of a situation on the eastern frontier, which
-is intolerable for Germany, are exhausted, I have determined
-on a solution by force.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk475'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(2) The attack on Poland is to be carried out in accordance
-with the preparations made for Case White with the alterations
-which result, where the Army is concerned, from the
-fact that it has in the meantime almost completed its dispositions.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk476'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Allotment of tasks and the operational target remain unchanged.
-<span class='pageno' title='256' id='Page_256'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk477'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The date of attack: 1st of September 1939; time of attack:
-4:45”—inserted in red pencil—“this time also applies to the
-operation at Gdynia, Bay of Danzig and the Dirschau Bridge.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk478'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(3) In the West it is important that the responsibility for the
-opening of hostilities should rest unequivocally with England
-and France. At first, purely local action should be taken
-against insignificant frontier violations.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There it sets out the details of the order which, for the purpose of
-this Court, it is unnecessary to read. That evening at 9 o’clock the
-German radio broadcast the terms of the German proposals about
-which they were so willing to enter into discussions with the Polish
-Government. It sets out the proposals at length. It will be remembered
-that by this time neither Sir Nevile Henderson nor the Polish
-Government nor their Ambassador had yet been given their written
-copy of them, and it is indeed a document which is tempting to
-read—or to read extracts of it simply as an exhibition or an
-example of pure hypocrisy. I refer to the second paragraph Document
-TC-72, Number 98, exhibit GB-39:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Further, the German Government pointed out that they felt
-able to make the basic points regarding the offer of an understanding
-available to the British Government by the time the
-Polish negotiator arrived in Berlin.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Now, we have heard the manner in which they did that. They then
-say that:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Instead of a statement regarding the arrival of authorized
-Polish personage, the first answer the Government of the
-Reich received of their readiness for an understanding was
-the news of the Polish mobilization; and only toward 12 o’clock
-on the night of the 30th of August 1939, did they receive a
-somewhat general assurance of British readiness to help
-towards the commencement of negotiations.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk479'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Although the fact that the Polish negotiator expected by the
-Government of the Reich did not arrive removed the necessary
-conditions for informing His Majesty’s Government of the
-views of the German Government as regards a possible basis
-for negotiation, since His Majesty’s Government themselves
-had pleaded for direct negotiations between Germany and
-Poland, the German Minister for Foreign Affairs Ribbentrop
-gave the British Ambassador, on the occasion of the presentation
-of the last British note, precise information as to the
-text of the German proposals which will be regarded as a
-basis of negotiation in the event of the arrival of the Polish
-Plenipotentiary.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And, thereafter, they go on to set out the story, or rather their
-version of the story, of the negotiations over the last few days.
-<span class='pageno' title='257' id='Page_257'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I pass to the next but one document in the Tribunal’s book,
-TC-54, which becomes GB-73. On the 1st of September when his
-armies were already crossing the frontier and the whole of the
-frontier, he issued this proclamation to his Armed Forces:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Polish Government, unwilling to establish good neighborly
-relations as aimed at by me, want to force the issue by
-way of arms.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk480'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Germans in Poland are being persecuted with bloody
-terror and driven from their homes. Several acts of frontier
-violation, which cannot be tolerated by a great power, show
-that Poland is no longer prepared to respect the Reich’s frontiers.
-To put an end to these mad acts, I can see no other
-way but from now onwards to meet force with force.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk481'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The German Armed Forces will with firm determination
-take up the struggle for the honor and the vital rights of the
-resuscitated German people.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk482'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I expect every soldier to be conscious of the high tradition
-of the eternal German soldierly qualities and to do his duty
-to the last.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk483'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Remember always and in any circumstances that you are
-the representatives of National Socialist Greater Germany.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk484'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Long live our people and the Reich.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And so we see that at last Hitler had kept his word to his
-generals. He had afforded them their propagandistic justification;
-and at that time, anyway, it did not matter what people said about
-it afterwards. “The victor shall not be asked later on, whether he
-told the truth or not.” Might is what counts—or victory is what
-counts and not right.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On that day, the 1st of September, when news came of this
-violation of Polish ground, the British Government in accordance
-with their treaty obligations sent an ultimatum to the German
-Government in which they stated—I quote from the last paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I am accordingly to inform your Excellency that unless the
-German Government are prepared to give His Majesty’s
-Government satisfactory assurances that the German Government
-have suspended all aggressive action against Poland and
-are prepared promptly to withdraw their forces from Polish
-territory, His Majesty’s Government in the United Kingdom
-will without hesitation fulfil their obligations to Poland.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By the 3rd of September no withdrawal had taken place, and
-so at 9 o’clock—the document, TC-72, Number 110, I have just
-referred to will be GB-74—at 9 o’clock on the 3rd of September,
-a final ultimatum was handed to the German Minister of Foreign
-Affairs. I quote from the third paragraph:
-<span class='pageno' title='258' id='Page_258'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Although this communication was made more than 24 hours
-ago, no reply has been received but German attacks upon
-Poland have been continued and intensified. I have accordingly
-the honor to inform you that, unless not later than
-11 o’clock British summer time today, the 3rd of September,
-satisfactory assurances to the above effect have been given
-by the German Government and have reached His Majesty’s
-Government in London, a state of war will exist between
-the two countries as from that hour.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>And so it was that at 11 o’clock on the 3rd of September a state
-of war existed between Germany and England and between Germany
-and France. All the appeals to peace, all the appeals to reason we
-now see completely stillborn; stillborn when they were made. Plans,
-preparations, intentions, determination to carry out this assault
-upon Poland, had been going on for months, for years before. It
-mattered not what anybody but the German Government had in
-mind or whatever rights anybody else but the German nation
-thought they had; and, if there is any doubt left at all after what
-we have seen, I would ask you to look at two more documents.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If you would look at the last document first of all, in your
-document book—1831-PS, which becomes GB-75. Even now on the
-3rd of September, Mussolini offers some chance of peace.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We have here a telegram. It is timed 6:30 hours, and I am
-afraid I am unable to say whether that is 6:30 in the morning or
-evening; but it is dated the 3rd of September, and I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Italian Ambassador handed to the State Secretary at
-the Duce’s order the following copy for the Führer and Reich
-Chancellor and for the Reich Minister for Foreign Affairs:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk485'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“ ‘Italy sends the information, leaving, of course, every decision
-to the Führer, that it still has a chance to call a conference
-with France, England, and Poland on the following basis:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk486'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“ ‘1. An armistice which would leave the army corps where
-they are at present’ ”—and it will be remembered that on the
-3rd of September they had advanced a considerable way over
-the frontier—“ ‘2. calling a conference within 2 or 3 days;—“ ‘3.
-solution of the Polish-German controversy would be certainly
-favorable for Germany as matters stand today.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk487'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“ ‘This idea, which originated from the Duce, has its foremost
-exponent in France.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk488'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“ ‘Danzig is already German and Germany is holding already
-securities which guarantee most of her demands. Besides,
-Germany has had already her “moral satisfaction.” If she
-would accept the plan for a conference, it will achieve all her
-aims and at the same time prevent a war which already today
-<span class='pageno' title='259' id='Page_259'></span>
-has the aspect of being universal and of extremely long
-duration.’ ”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But, My Lord, perhaps even Mussolini did not appreciate what
-all Germany’s aims were; and, of course, the offer was turned down
-in the illuminating letter which Hitler was to write in reply. I refer
-you back to the document before that. It is still part of the same
-Exhibit GB-75.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: As I understand it, the “GB” references you
-give are not on the documents at all; they are the exhibit numbers
-themselves, which are to be put on the document after they have
-been put in.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: Yes. That is correct. They will
-be put in by the Court, of course.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Will you try to make clear the references
-which are on the document so that the Tribunal could find the
-document itself?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: Yes. The last document was
-1831-PS, and it is the very last one in the document book. That
-is the one I have just referred to—the telegram from Mussolini.
-The document to which I am about to refer is the one before last
-in the Tribunal’s book but it has the same number on it as the last
-because it forms part of the same exhibit.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I think if you would just explain the system
-in which the exhibits are numbered, it would help us.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: The exhibits are numbered at the
-present moment before they are put in evidence with a variety of
-serial numbers, such as “PS”, “TC”, “L” and other letters. There
-is no significance attached to that at all. It depends on whom they
-have been found by and what files they have come from. When the
-documents are put in as exhibits, they are marked by the Court
-with a court number. The documents put in by the United States
-representatives were all prefixed with the letters “USA.” The documents
-which have been put in by the British prosecutors have all
-been prefixed with the letters “GB.” If it would be of any assistance
-to members of the Tribunal, I will have their document books
-marked up this evening with the new court numbers that have been
-put upon them by the Court officials, during the course of the day.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: We will talk about that later.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: If there is any document missing
-from any of these books, I have a copy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: You are going to read 1831-PS?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>LT. COL. GRIFFITH-JONES: Yes, that is GB-75.
-<span class='pageno' title='260' id='Page_260'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Duce:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk489'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I first want to thank you for your last attempt at a
-mediation, I would have been ready to accept, but only
-under condition that there would be a possibility to give me
-certain guarantees that the conference would be successful.
-Because for the last 2 days the German troops are engaged in
-an extraordinarily rapid advance in Poland, it would have been
-impossible to devaluate the bloody sacrifices made thereby
-by diplomatic intrigues. Nevertheless, I believe that a way
-could have been found if England would not have been
-determined to wage war under all circumstances. I have not
-given in to the English because, Duce, I do not believe
-that peace could have been maintained for more than one-half
-a year or a year. Under these circumstances I thought
-that, in spite of everything, the present moment was better
-for resistance. At present the superiority of the German
-Armed Forces in Poland is so overwhelming in all the fields
-that the Polish Army will collapse in a very short time.
-I doubt whether this fast success could have been achieved
-in 1 or 2 years. England and France would have armed their
-allies to such an extent that the crushing technical superiority
-of the German Armed Forces could not have become so
-apparent any more. I am aware, Duce, that the fight which
-I enter is one for life and death. My own fate does not play
-any role in it at all. But I am also aware that one cannot
-avoid such a struggle permanently and that one has to choose,
-after cold deliberation, the moment for resistance in such a
-way that the probability of success is guaranteed; and I
-believe in this success, Duce, with the firmness of a rock.
-Recently you have given me the kind assurance that you
-think you will be able to help me in a few fields. I
-acknowledge this in advance, with sincere thanks. But I
-believe also—even if we march now over different roads—that
-fate will finally join us. If the National Socialistic Germany
-were destroyed by the Western Democracies, the Fascist
-Italy would also have to face a grave future. I was personally
-always aware of this community of the future of our two
-governments and I know that you, Duce, think the same
-way. To the situation in Poland, I would like to make the
-brief remark that we lay aside, of course, all unimportant
-things, that we do not waste any man on unimportant
-tasks, but direct all on acts in the light of great operational
-considerations. The northern Polish Army, which is in the
-Corridor, has already been completely encircled by our
-action. It will be either wiped out or will surrender. Otherwise,
-all operations proceed according to plan. The daily
-<span class='pageno' title='261' id='Page_261'></span>
-achievements of the troops are far beyond all expectations.
-The superiority of our Air Force is complete, although
-scarcely one-third of it is in Poland. In the West, I will be
-on the defensive. France can here sacrifice its blood first.
-Then the moment will come when we can confront the enemy
-also there with the full power of the nation. Accept my
-thanks, Duce, for all your assistance which you have given
-to me in the past; and I ask you not to deny it to me in the
-future.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That completes the evidence which I propose to offer upon this
-part of the case in respect of the war of aggression against Poland,
-England, and France, which is charged in Count Two.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR F. ELWYN JONES (Junior Counsel for the United
-Kingdom): May it please the Tribunal, in the early hours of the
-morning of the 9th of April 1940 Nazi Germany invaded Norway
-and Denmark. It is my duty to present to the Tribunal the
-Prosecution’s evidence which has been prepared in collaboration
-with my American colleague, Major Hinely, with regard to these
-brutal wars of aggression, which were also wars in violation of
-international treaties, agreements, and assurances. With the Court’s
-permission I would like, first of all, to deal with the treaties and
-agreements and assurances that were in fact violated by these
-two invasions of Norway and Denmark.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The invasions were, of course, in the first instance violations
-of the Hague Convention and of the Kellogg-Briand Pact. My
-learned friend, Sir David Maxwell-Fyfe, has already dealt with
-those matters in the course of his presentation of the evidence. In
-addition to these general treaties, there were specific agreements
-between Germany and Norway and Denmark. In the first instance
-there was the Treaty of Arbitration and Conciliation between
-Germany and Denmark, which was signed at Berlin on 2 June 1926.
-The Court will find that treaty, TC-17, on the first page of British
-Document Book Number 3; and to that exhibit it may be convenient
-to give the Number GB-76. I am proposing to read only the first
-article of that treaty, which is in these terms:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The contracting parties undertake to submit to the procedure
-of arbitration or conciliation, in conformity with the present
-treaty, all disputes of any nature whatsoever which may arise
-between Germany and Denmark, and which it has not been
-possible to settle within a reasonable period by diplomacy
-or to bring with the consent of both parties, before the
-Permanent Court of International Justice.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk490'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Disputes for the solution of which a special procedure has
-been laid down in other conventions in force between the
-<span class='pageno' title='262' id='Page_262'></span>
-contracting parties shall be settled in accordance with the
-provisions of such conventions.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then there follows in the remaining articles the establishment
-of the machinery for arbitration.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I would next refer to the Treaty of Non-Aggression between
-Germany and Denmark, which was signed by the Defendant
-Ribbentrop on the 31st of May 1939 which, as the Tribunal will
-recollect, was 10 weeks after the Nazi seizure of Czechoslovakia.
-The Court will find that as Document TC-24 in the document book
-and it will now bear the Exhibit Number GB-77.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With the Court’s permission, in view of the identity of the signatory
-of that treaty, I would like to read the Preamble and Articles 1
-and 2.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Chancellor of the German Reich and His Majesty, the
-King of Denmark and Iceland, being firmly resolved to maintain
-peace between Denmark and Germany in all circumstances,
-have agreed to confirm this resolve by means of a
-treaty and have appointed as their Plenipotentiaries: The
-Chancellor of the German Reich .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and His Majesty, the
-King of Denmark and Iceland .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Article 1 reads as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The German Reich and the Kingdom of Denmark shall in no
-case resort to war or to any other use of force, one against
-the other.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk491'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Should action of the kind referred to in Paragraph 1 be
-taken by a third power against one of the contracting parties,
-the other contracting party shall not support such action in
-any way.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then Article 2 deals with the ratification of the treaty, and the
-second paragraph states:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The treaty shall come into force on the exchange of the
-instruments of ratification and shall remain in force for a
-period of 10 years from that date .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>As the Tribunal will observe, the treaty is dated the 31st of May
-1939. At the bottom of the page there appears the signature of the
-Defendant Ribbentrop. The Tribunal will shortly see that less than
-a year after the signature of this treaty the invasion of Denmark
-by the Nazi forces was to show the utter worthlessness of treaties
-to which the Defendant Ribbentrop put his signature.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With regard to Norway, the Defendant Ribbentrop and the Nazi
-conspirators were party to a similar perfidy. In the first instance
-I would refer to Document TC-30, which is the next document in
-the British Document Book 3 and which will bear the Exhibit Number
-GB-78. The Tribunal will observe that that is an assurance given
-<span class='pageno' title='263' id='Page_263'></span>
-to Denmark, Norway, Belgium, and the Netherlands on the 28th of
-April 1939. That, of course, was after the annexation of Czechoslovakia
-had shaken the confidence of the world; and this was
-presumably an attempt, now submitted by the Prosecution to be
-a dishonest attempt, to try to reassure the Scandinavian States.
-The assurance is in a speech by Hitler and reads:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I have given binding declarations to a large number of
-states. None of these states can complain that even a trace
-of a demand contrary thereto has ever been made to them by
-Germany. None of the Scandinavian statesmen, for example,
-can contend that a request has ever been put to them by the
-German Government or by German public opinion which
-was incompatible with the sovereignty and integrity of their
-state.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk492'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I was pleased that a number of European states availed
-themselves of these declarations by the German Government
-to express and emphasize their desire too for absolute neutrality.
-This applies to the Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland,
-Denmark, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A further assurance was given by the Nazi Government on the
-2d of September 1939 which, as the Tribunal will recollect, was the
-day after the Nazi invasion of Poland. The Court will observe the
-next document in British Document Book 3 is the Document TC-31,
-which will be Exhibit GB-79. That is an <span class='it'>aide-mémoire</span> that was
-handed to the Norwegian Foreign Minister by the German Minister
-in Oslo on the 2d of September 1939. It reads:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The German Reich Government are determined, in view of
-the friendly relations which exist between Norway and Germany,
-under no circumstances to prejudice the inviolability
-and integrity of Norway and to respect the territory of the
-Norwegian State. In making this declaration, the Reich
-Government naturally expect on their side that Norway will
-observe an unimpeachable neutrality towards the Reich and
-will not tolerate any breaches of Norwegian neutrality by any
-third party. Should the attitude of the Royal Norwegian
-Government differ from this so that any such breach of neutrality
-by a third party occurs, the Reich Government would
-then obviously be compelled to safeguard the interest of the
-Reich in such a way as the resulting situation might dictate.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There follows, finally, the further German assurance to Norway,
-which appears as the next document in the book, TC-32, which will
-be Exhibit GB-80. That is a speech by Hitler on the 6th of October
-1939; and if the Court will observe Paragraph 2 at the top of the
-page, the extract from the speech reads as follows:
-<span class='pageno' title='264' id='Page_264'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Germany has never had any conflicts of interest or even
-points of controversy with the Northern States; neither has
-she any today. Sweden and Norway have both been offered
-non-aggression pacts by Germany and have both refused
-them solely because they did not feel themselves threatened
-in any way.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Those are clear and positive assurances which Germany gave.
-The Court will see that violation of those assurances is charged in
-Paragraph XXII of Appendix C of the Indictment at Page 43. The
-Court will notice that there is a minor typographical error in the
-date of the first assurance which is alleged in the Indictment to have
-been given on the 3rd of September 1939. The Court will see from
-Document TC-31, which is Exhibit GB-79, that the assurance was
-in fact given on the 2d of September 1939.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now those treaties and assurances were the diplomatic background
-to the brutal Nazi aggression on Norway and Denmark, and
-the evidence which the Prosecution will now place before the Court
-will in my submission establish beyond reasonable doubt that these
-assurances were simply given to lull suspicion and cause the intended
-victims of Nazi aggression to be unprepared to meet the Nazi attack.
-For we now know that as early as October 1939 these conspirators
-and their confederates were plotting the invasion of Norway, and
-the evidence will indicate that the most active conspirators in that
-plot were the Defendants Raeder and Rosenberg.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Norwegian invasion is, in one respect, not a typical Nazi
-aggression in that Hitler had to be persuaded to embark upon it.
-The chief instruments of persuasion were Raeder and Rosenberg;
-Raeder because he thought Norway strategically important and
-because he coveted glory for his Navy, Rosenberg because of his
-political connections in Norway which he sought to develop.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As the Tribunal will shortly see, in the Norwegian Vidkun Quisling
-the Defendant Rosenberg found a very model of the Fifth
-Column agent, the very personification of perfidy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The evidence as to the early stages of the Nazi conspiracy to
-invade Norway is found in a letter which the Defendant Raeder
-wrote on the 10th of January 1944 to Admiral Assmann, the official
-German naval historian.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I put in this letter, the document C-66, which will be Exhibit
-GB-81, and which the Court will find further on in this book of
-documents. I should explain that in this book of documents the
-documents are inserted in the numerical order of the series to which
-they belong and not in the order of their submission to the Court.
-I am trusting that that will be a more convenient form of bundling
-them together than to set them down in the order of presentation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: 66?
-<span class='pageno' title='265' id='Page_265'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR JONES: C-66. It is headed, “Memorandum to Admiral
-Assmann; for his own information; not to be used for publication.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Court will observe that the first page deals with Barbarossa.
-If the Tribunal turns to the next page headed “(b) Weserübung,”
-the Tribunal will find from documents which I shall shortly be
-submitting to the Court that Weserübung was the code name for
-the invasion of Norway and Denmark.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I will omit the first sentence. The document which, as I have
-said, is a communication from the Defendant Raeder to Assmann
-reads as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“During the weeks preceding the report on the 10th of October
-1939, I was in correspondence with Admiral Carls, who, in a
-detailed letter to me, first pointed out the importance of an
-occupation of the Norwegian coast by Germany. I passed this
-letter on to C/SKL”—which is the Chief of Staff of the Naval
-War Staff—“for their information and prepared some notes
-based on this letter .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. for my report to the Führer, which
-I made on the 10th of October 1939, since my opinion was
-absolutely identical with that of Admiral Carls, while at that
-time SKL was more dubious about the matter. In these notes I
-stressed the disadvantages which an occupation of Norway by
-the British would have for us: Control of the approaches to
-the Baltic, outflanking of our naval operations and of our air
-attacks on Britain, pressure on Sweden. I also stressed the
-advantages for us of the occupation of the Norwegian coast:
-Outlet to the North Atlantic, no possibility of a British mine
-barrier, as in the years 1917-18. Naturally, at the time, only
-the coast and bases were considered; I included Narvik, though
-Admiral Carls, in the course of our correspondence, thought
-that Narvik could be excluded .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. The Führer saw at once
-the significance of the Norwegian problem; he asked me to
-leave the notes and stated that he wished to consider the
-question himself.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I will pause in the reading of that document at that point and
-return to it later so that the story may be revealed to the Court
-in a chronological order.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That report of Raeder, in my submission, shows that the whole
-evolution of this Nazi campaign against Norway affords a good
-example of the participation of the German High Command in the
-Nazi conspiracy to attack inoffensive neighbors.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This letter, an extract from which I have just read, has revealed
-that Raeder reported to Hitler on the 10th of October 1939 .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE TRIBUNAL (Mr. Biddle): When was that report?
-<span class='pageno' title='266' id='Page_266'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR JONES: The report, C-66, was made in January 1944
-by the Defendant Raeder to Assmann, who was the German naval
-historian, and so, presumably, was for the purposes of history.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Before Raeder’s report of 10 October 1939 was made to the
-Führer, Raeder got a second opinion on the Norwegian invasion.
-On the 3rd of October Raeder made out the questionnaire to which
-I now invite the Court’s attention. It is Document C-122 and the
-Court will find it next but one to C-66 in the document book. That
-will now be Exhibit GB-82.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That, as the Tribunal will observe, is headed “Gaining of Bases
-in Norway (extract from War Diary)” and bears the date of the
-3rd of October 1939. It reads:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Chief of the Naval Operations Staff”—who was the
-Defendant Raeder—“considers it necessary that the Führer
-be informed as soon as possible of the opinions of the Naval
-Operations Staff on the possibilities of extending the operational
-base to the north. It must be ascertained whether it is
-possible to gain bases in Norway under the combined pressure
-of Russia and Germany, with the basic aim of improving our
-strategic and operational position. The following questions
-must be given consideration:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk493'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(a) What places in Norway can be considered as bases?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk494'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(b) Can bases be gained by military force against Norway’s
-will if it is impossible to carry this out without fighting?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk495'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(c) What are the possibilities of defense after the occupation?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk496'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(d) Will the harbors have to be developed completely as
-bases or have they already decisive advantages suitable for
-supply position?”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Then there follows in parenthesis:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Commander of the U-boat Fleet”—which is a reference,
-of course, to the Defendant Dönitz—”.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. considers such
-harbors already extremely useful as equipment and supply
-bases at which Atlantic U-boats can call temporarily.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>And then Question (e):</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“What decisive advantages would exist for the conduct of the
-war at sea in gaining bases in north Denmark, e.g. Skagen?”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There is, in our possession, a document C-5, to find which it will
-be necessary for the Court to go back in the document book to the
-first of the C exhibits. This will be Exhibit GB-83.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This is a memorandum written by the Defendant Dönitz on
-Norwegian bases. It presumably relates to the questionnaire of the
-Defendant Raeder which, as I have indicated, was in circulation at
-about that time. The document is headed, “Commander of the
-<span class='pageno' title='267' id='Page_267'></span>
-U-boat Fleet; Operations Division,” and is marked “most secret.”
-The subject is “Base in Norway.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then there are set out “suppositions,” “advantages and disadvantages,”
-and, over one page, “conclusions”. I am proposing to
-read the last paragraph, III:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The following is therefore proposed:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk497'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(1) Establishment of a base in Trondheim, including:</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“a) Possibility of supplying fuel, compressed air, oxygen,
-provisions;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk498'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“b) Repair opportunities for normal overhaul work after an
-encounter;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk499'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“c) Good opportunities for accommodating U-boat crews;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk500'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“d) Flak protection, L.A. antiaircraft armament, patrol and
-M/S units.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk501'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(2) Establishment of the possibility of supplying fuel in
-Narvik as an alternative.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>That is a Dönitz memorandum.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, as the Tribunal saw in the report of Raeder to Assmann,
-in October 1939, Hitler was merely considering the Norwegian
-aggression and had not yet committed himself to it, although, as
-the Tribunal will see very shortly, Hitler was most susceptible to
-any suggestions of aggression against the territory of another
-country.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The documents will show that the Defendant Raeder persevered
-in pressing his point of view with regard to Norway, and at this
-stage he found a powerful ally in the Defendant Rosenberg.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Nazi employment of traitors and the stimulation of treachery
-as a political weapon are now unhappily proven historical facts, but
-should proof be required of that statement it is found in the
-remarkable document which I now invite the Court to consider.
-I refer to Document 007-PS, which is after the TC and D series in
-the document book. That will be Exhibit GB-84.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That is headed on Page 1, “Brief Report on Activities of the
-Foreign Affairs Bureau of the Party”—Aussenpolitisches Amt der
-NSDAP—“from 1933 to 1943.” It reads:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“When the Foreign Affairs Bureau”—Aussenpolitisches Amt—“was
-established on the 1st of April 1933, the Führer directed
-that it should not be expanded to a large bureaucratic agency;
-but should rather develop its effectiveness through initiative
-and suggestions.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk502'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Corresponding to the extraordinarily hostile attitude adopted
-by the Soviet Government in Moscow from the beginning, the
-newly-established bureau devoted particular attention to
-<span class='pageno' title='268' id='Page_268'></span>
-internal conditions in the Soviet Union as well as to the
-effects of world Bolshevism, primarily in other European
-countries. It entered into contact with the most variegated
-groups inclining towards National Socialism in combatting
-Bolshevism, focussing its main attentions on nations and
-states bordering on the Soviet Union. On the one hand those
-nations and states constituted an insulating ring encircling
-the Bolshevist neighbor; on the other hand they were the
-laterals of German living space and took up a flanking position
-towards the Western Powers, especially Great Britain.
-In order to wield the desired influence by one means or
-another”—and the Court will shortly see the significance of
-that phrase—“the bureau was compelled to use the most
-varying methods, taking into consideration the completely
-different living conditions, the ties of blood and intellect, and
-historical dependence of the movements observed by the
-bureau in those countries.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk503'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In Scandinavia a progressively more outspoken pro-Anglo-Saxon
-attitude based on economic considerations had become
-more dominant after the World War of 1914-18. There the
-bureau put the entire emphasis on influencing general cultural
-relations with the Nordic peoples. For this purpose it took
-the Nordic Society in Lübeck under its protection. The Reich
-conventions of this society were attended by many outstanding
-personalities, especially from Finland. While there were no
-openings for purely political co-operation in Sweden and
-Denmark, an association based on Greater Germanic ideology
-was found in Norway. Very close relations, which led to
-further consequences, were established with its founder.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If the Court will turn to the end of the main part of the statement
-which is 4 pages forward—in the intervening pages, I may
-say, there is an account of the activity of Rosenberg’s bureau in
-various parts of Europe, and indeed of the world, which I am not
-proposing to call the Tribunal’s attention to at this stage—but if the
-Tribunal will look at the last paragraph of the main body of the
-report which bears the signature of the Defendant Rosenberg, the
-last two sentences read:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“With the outbreak of war it was entitled to consider its task
-as terminated. The exploitation of the many personal connections
-in many lands can be resumed under a different guise.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If the Tribunal will turn to the annex to the document, which is
-on the next page, the Tribunal will appreciate what “exploitation
-of personal connections” involved.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Annex I to the document is headed, “Brief Report on Activities
-of the Foreign Affairs Bureau of the Nazi Party from 1933 to 1943.”
-<span class='pageno' title='269' id='Page_269'></span>
-It is headed, “The Political Preparation of the Military Occupation
-of Norway during the War Years 1939-40,” and it reads:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“As previously mentioned, of all political groupings in Scandinavia
-only Nasjonal Samling, led in Norway by the former
-Minister of War and retired major, Vidkun Quisling, deserved
-serious political attention. This was a fighting political group
-possessed by the idea of a Greater Germanic community.
-Naturally all ruling powers were hostile and attempted to
-prevent by any means its success among the population. The
-bureau maintained constant relation with Quisling and attentively
-observed the attacks he conducted with tenacious
-energy on the middle class, which had been taken in tow
-by the English. From the beginning it appeared probable
-that without revolutionary events which would stir the population
-from their former attitude no successful progress of
-Nasjonal Samling was to be expected. During the winter
-1938-39 Quisling was privately visited by a member of the
-bureau. When the political situation in Europe came to a
-head in 1939, Quisling made an appearance at the convention
-of the Nordic Society in Lübeck in June. He expounded his
-conception of the situation and his apprehensions concerning
-Norway. He emphatically drew attention to the geopolitically
-decisive importance of Norway in the Scandinavian area and
-to the advantages that would accrue to the power dominating
-the Norwegian coast in case of a conflict between the Greater
-German Reich and Great Britain.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk504'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Assuming that his statements would be of special interest to
-the Marshal of the Reich, Göring, for aero-strategical reasons,
-Quisling was referred to State Secretary Körner by the
-bureau. The Staff Director of the bureau handed the Chief
-of the Reich Chancellery a memorandum for transmission to
-the Führer .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In a later part of the document, which I shall read at a later
-stage of my presentation of the evidence, if I may, the Court will
-see how Quisling came into contact with Raeder. The Prosecution’s
-submission with regard to this document is that it is another illustration
-of the close interweaving between the political and the
-military leadership of the Nazi State, of the close link between the
-professional soldiers and the professional thugs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Raeder, in his report to Admiral Assmann,
-admitted his collaboration with Rosenberg; and I will invite the
-Court’s attention once more to Document C-66, which is Exhibit
-GB-81. In the page headed “Weserübung,” the second paragraph
-of the Raeder report reads as follows:
-<span class='pageno' title='270' id='Page_270'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the further developments, I was supported by Commander
-Schreiber, Naval Attaché in Oslo, and the M-Chief personally—in
-conjunction with the Rosenberg organization.
-Thus we got in touch with Quisling and Hagelin, who came to
-Berlin in the beginning of December and were taken to the
-Führer by me—with the approval of Reichsleiter Rosenberg
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I will later draw the attention of the Tribunal to the developments
-in December.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The details of the manner in which the Defendant Raeder did
-make contact personally with Quisling are not very clear. But I
-would draw the Court’s attention to the Document C-65, which
-precedes .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Would you read the end of that paragraph?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR JONES: With your Lordship’s permission, I would like
-to revert to that in a later stage in my unfolding of the evidence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the Document C-65, which will be Exhibit GB-85, we have a
-report of Rosenberg to Raeder in which the full extent of Quisling’s
-preparedness for treachery and his potential usefulness to the
-Nazi aggressors was reported and disclosed to the Defendant Raeder.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Paragraph 1 of that report deals with matters which I have
-already dealt with in reading Rosenberg’s statement, 007-PS. But
-if the Court will look at the second paragraph of Exhibit GB-85,
-C-65, it reads as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The reasons for a <span class='it'>coup</span>, on which Quisling made a report,
-would be provided by the fact that the Storthing”—that is to
-say the Norwegian parliament—“had, in defiance of the
-constitution, passed a resolution prolonging its own life which
-is to become operative on January 12th. Quisling still retains
-in his capacity as a long-standing officer and a former
-Minister of War the closest relations with the Norwegian
-Army. He showed me the original of a letter which he had
-received only a short time previously from the commanding
-officer in Narvik, Colonel Sunlo. In this letter Colonel Sunlo
-frankly lays emphasis on the fact that if things went on
-as they were going at present, Norway was finished.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If the Court will turn to the next page of that document, the
-last two paragraphs, the details of a treacherous plot to overthrow
-the government of his own country, by the traitor Quisling in
-collaboration with the Defendant Rosenberg, will be indicated to
-the Court.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A plan has been put forward which deals with the possibility
-of a <span class='it'>coup</span> and which provides for a number of selected
-Norwegians to be trained in Germany with all possible speed
-<span class='pageno' title='271' id='Page_271'></span>
-for such a purpose, being allotted their exact tasks and
-provided with experienced and die-hard National Socialists
-who are practiced in such operations. These trained men
-should then proceed with all speed to Norway where details
-would then require to be further discussed. Some important
-centers in Oslo would have to be taken over forthwith, and
-at the same time, the German Fleet together with suitable
-contingents of the German Army would go into operation
-when summoned specially by the new Norwegian Government
-in a specified bay at the approaches to Oslo. Quisling has
-no doubts that such a <span class='it'>coup</span>, having been carried out with
-instantaneous success, would immediately bring him the
-approval of those sections of the army with which he at
-present has connections; and thus it goes without saying that
-he has never discussed a political fight with them. As far
-as the King is concerned, he believes that he would respect
-it as an accomplished fact.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>How wrong Quisling was in that anticipation was shown, of
-course, by subsequent developments. The last sentence reads:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Quisling gives figures of the number of German troops
-required which accord with German calculations.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal may think that there are no words in the whole
-vocabulary of abuse sufficiently strong to describe that degree of
-treachery.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Is that document dated?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR JONES: That document does not bear a date.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: We will break off now.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>The Tribunal adjourned until 7 December 1945 at 1000 o’clock.</span>]</h3>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='272' id='Page_272'></span><h1>FIFTEENTH DAY<br/> <span style='font-size:smaller'>Friday, 7 December 1945</span></h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'><span class='it'>Morning Session</span></h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR JONES: May it please the Tribunal, yesterday afternoon
-when the Tribunal adjourned I was dealing with the stage of
-the Nazi conspiracy against Norway at which the activities of the
-Defendants Raeder and Rosenberg converged. And the Court will
-remember that I submitted in evidence Document C-65, which was
-a report from the Defendant Rosenberg to Raeder regarding Quisling
-and ending with the infamous words, “Quisling gives figures
-of the number of German troops required which accord with German
-calculations.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Court has already received in evidence and has heard read
-material parts of Document C-66, which was the report of Raeder
-to Admiral Assmann which disclosed how, in December of 1939, the
-Defendant Raeder did in fact meet Quisling and Hagelin.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now invite the Court to look at Document C-64 which, for
-the purpose of the record, will be Exhibit GB-86. The Court will
-observe that that is a report by Raeder of a meeting of the Naval
-Staff with Hitler on the 12th of December 1939, at 1200 hours, in
-the presence of the Defendants Keitel and Jodl, and Puttkammer,
-who at this time was adjutant to Hitler.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The report is headed “Norwegian Question,” and the first sentence
-reads:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Commander-in-Chief, Navy”—who of course was the
-Defendant Raeder—“has received Quisling and Hagelin.
-Quisling creates the impression of being reliable.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then there follows, in the next two paragraphs, a statement
-of Quisling’s views, views with which the Court is by now familiar
-because of my reading of extracts from the Document 007-PS; but
-I draw the Court’s attention to the fourth paragraph in Document
-C-64, beginning:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer thought of speaking to Quisling personally so
-that he might form an impression of him. He wanted to see
-Rosenberg once more beforehand, as the latter has known
-Quisling for a long while. Commander-in-Chief, Navy”—that
-is, of course, Raeder—“suggests that if the Führer forms a
-favorable impression, the OKW should obtain permission to
-make plans with Quisling for the preparation and carrying
-<span class='pageno' title='273' id='Page_273'></span>
-out of the occupation: (a) By peaceful means—that is to say,
-German forces summoned by Norway; (b) to agree to do so
-by force.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That was the 12th of December, the meeting at which Raeder
-made this report to Hitler.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If the Court will now look at Document C-66, which is Raeder’s
-record of these transactions for the purpose of history, the Court
-will observe, in the last sentence of the second paragraph of the
-section of C-66 headed “(b) Weserübung,” these words:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. thus we got in touch with Quisling and Hagelin, who
-came to Berlin at the beginning of December, and were taken
-to the Führer by me with the approval of Reichsleiter Rosenberg.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>And then the Court will observe a note at the end of the page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“At the crucial moment R”—presumably Rosenberg—“hurt
-his foot, so that I visited him in his house on the morning
-of the 14th December.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That is, of course, Raeder’s note; and it indicates the extent of
-his contact in this conspiracy. The report continues:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“On the grounds of the Führer’s discussion with Quisling and
-Hagelin on the afternoon of the 14th of December 1939, the
-Führer gave the order that preparations for the Norwegian
-operation were to be made by the Supreme Command of the
-Armed Forces.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk505'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Until that moment the naval operations staff had taken no
-part in the development of the Norwegian question and continued
-to be somewhat skeptical about it. The preparations
-which were undertaken by Captain Krancke in the Supreme
-Command of the Armed Forces were founded, however, on
-a memorandum of the naval war staff.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Court may well think that the note of the Defendant Raeder
-referring to the crucial moment was an appropriate one because
-the Court will see that on that day, the 14th of December, Hitler
-gave the order that preparations for the Norwegian operation were
-to be begun by the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If the Court will now turn to Document 007-PS, which is further
-on in the document book and which the Court will remember is
-Rosenberg’s report on the activities of his organization—it is after
-the “D” documents—if the Court will turn to about 10 lines from
-the bottom of the first page of Annex I dealing with Norway, the
-Court will see that there were further meetings between Quisling
-and the Nazi chiefs in December; and I am going to read now the
-section beginning:
-<span class='pageno' title='274' id='Page_274'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“As a result of these steps Quisling was granted a personal
-audience with the Führer on the 16th of December, and once
-more on the 18th of December. In the course of this audience
-the Führer emphasized repeatedly that he personally would
-prefer a completely neutral attitude of Norway as well as of
-the whole of Scandinavia. He did not intend to enlarge the
-theater of war and to draw still other nations into the conflict.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I have said in opening the presentation of this part of the
-case, here was an instance where pressure had to be brought to bear
-on Hitler to induce him to take part in these operations.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The report continues:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Should the enemy attempt”—there is a mis-translation here—“to
-extend the war, however, with the aim of achieving
-further throttling and intimidation of the Greater German
-Reich, he would be compelled to gird himself against such an
-undertaking. In order to counterbalance increasing enemy
-propaganda activity, the Führer promised Quisling financial
-support of this movement, which is based on Greater Germanic
-ideology. Military exploitation of the question now
-raised was assigned to the special military staff which transmitted
-special missions to Quisling. Reichsleiter Rosenberg
-was to take over political exploitation. Financial expenses
-were to be defrayed by the Ministry for Foreign Affairs”—that
-is to say, by Ribbentrop’s organization—“the Minister for
-Foreign Affairs”—that is to say, Ribbentrop—“being kept
-continuously informed by the Foreign Affairs Bureau”—which,
-of course, was Rosenberg’s organization.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk506'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Chief of Section Scheidt was charged with maintaining liaison
-with Quisling. In the course of further developments he was
-assigned to the Naval Attaché in Oslo .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Orders were given
-that the whole matter be handled with strictest secrecy.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Here again the Court will note the close link between the Nazi
-politicians and the Nazi service chiefs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The information that is available to the Prosecution as to the
-events of January 1940 is not full, but the Court will see that the
-agitation of the Defendants Raeder and Rosenberg did bear fruit,
-and I now invite the Court to consider a letter of Keitel’s, Document
-C-63, which for the purposes of the record will be Exhibit
-GB-87. The Court will observe that that is an order—a memorandum—signed
-by the Defendant Keitel dated the 27th of January
-1940. It is marked “Most secret, five copies; reference, Study ‘N’;”—which
-was another code name for the Weserübung preparations—“access
-only through an officer.” It is indicated that “C-in-C of the
-<span class='pageno' title='275' id='Page_275'></span>
-Navy”—that is to say, the Defendant Raeder—“has a report on this.”
-The document reads:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer and Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces
-wishes that Study ‘N’ should be further worked on under my
-direct and personal guidance, and in the closest conjunction
-with the general war policy. For these reasons the Führer
-has commissioned me to take over the direction of further
-preparations.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk507'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A working staff has been formed at the Supreme Command
-of the Armed Forces headquarters for this purpose, and this
-represents at the same time the nucleus of a future operational
-staff.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Then, at the end of the memorandum:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“All further plans will be made under the cover name Weserübung.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I should like respectfully to draw the Tribunal’s attention to the
-importance of that document, to the signature of Keitel upon it, and
-to the date of this important decision.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Prior to this date, the 27th of January 1940, the planning of the
-various aspects of the invasion of Norway and Denmark had been
-confined to a relatively small group, whose aim had been to persuade
-Hitler of the desirability of undertaking this Norwegian operation.
-The issuance of this directive of Keitel’s on the 27th January 1940
-was the signal that the Supreme Command of the German Armed
-Forces, the OKW, had accepted the proposition of the group that
-was pressing for this Norwegian adventure, and turned the combined
-resources of the German military machine to the task of
-producing practical and co-ordinated plans for the Norwegian
-operation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Court will observe that from January onward the operational
-planning for the invasion of Norway and Denmark was started
-through the normal channels.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now I would refer the Court to some entries in the diary
-of the Defendant Jodl, to see how the preparations progressed. That
-is Document Number 1809-PS, which will be for the purposes of the
-record Exhibit GB-88. That, the Court will observe, is the last
-document in the document book.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There is a slight confusion in the order in which the entries are
-set out in the diary because the first three pages relate to entries
-which will be dealt with in another part of the case.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I invite the Court’s attention to Page 3 of these extracts from
-Jodl’s diary beginning at the bottom February the 6th. The entry
-under the date line of February the 6th 1940 starts, “New idea:
-<span class='pageno' title='276' id='Page_276'></span>
-Carry out ‘H’ and Weser Exercise only, and guarantee Belgium’s
-neutrality for the duration of the war.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I would like to repeat that entry if I may be permitted to do so.
-“New idea: Carry out ‘H’ and Weser Exercise only, and guarantee
-Belgium’s neutrality for the duration of the war.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The next entry to which I invite the Court’s attention is the
-entry of the 21st of February.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE TRIBUNAL (Mr. Biddle): What does that mean, to “carry
-out ‘H’ ”?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR JONES: That is a reference to another code word, “Hartmut,”
-which the Court will see disclosed in a subsequent document.
-That is another code word for this Norwegian and Danish operation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The entry of February 21st in Jodl’s diary reads:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Führer has talked with General Von Falkenhorst and charges
-him with preparation of Weser Exercise. Falkenhorst accepts
-gladly. Instructions issued to the three branches of the Armed
-Forces.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then the next entry, on the next page .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: “Weser Exercise”—is that Norway too?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR JONES: That is Norway too, My Lord, yes. That is a
-translation of “Weserübung.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The entry on the next page, under the date of February the 28th:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I propose first to the Chief of OKW and then to the Führer
-that Case Yellow”—which as the Court knows is the code
-name for the invasion of the Netherlands—“and Weser Exercise”—the
-invasion of Norway and Denmark—“must be
-prepared in such a way that they will be independent of one
-another as regards both time and forces employed. The
-Führer completely agrees, if this is in any way possible.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So that the Court will observe that the new idea of February
-the 6th that the neutrality of Belgium might be preserved had been
-abandoned by February the 28th.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The next entry is of February the 29th—I am not troubling the
-Court with further entries of the 28th of February, which relate to
-the forces to be employed in the invasion of Norway and Denmark.
-February 29th, the second paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Führer also wishes to have a strong task force in Copenhagen
-and a plan elaborated in detail showing how individual
-coastal batteries are to be captured by shock troops. Warlimont,
-Chief of Land Defense, instructed to make out immediately
-the order of the Army, Navy, and Air Force; and Chief
-‘WZ’ to make out a similar order regarding the strengthening
-of the staff.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='277' id='Page_277'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And there for the moment, I will leave the entries in Jodl’s
-diary and refer the Court to the vital Document C-174, which for
-the purposes of the record will be Exhibit GB-89. The Court will
-see from that document that it is Hitler’s operation order to complete
-the preparations for the invasion of Norway and Denmark. It bears
-the date of the 1st of March 1940, and it is headed, “The Führer
-and Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces; most secret.” Then,
-“Directive for Case Weserübung”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The development of the situation in Scandinavia requires
-the making of all preparations for the occupation of Denmark
-and Norway by a part of the German Armed Forces—Weser
-Exercise. This operation should prevent British encroachment
-on Scandinavia and the Baltic; further, it should guarantee
-our ore base in Sweden and give our Navy and Air Force a
-wider start line against Britain.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>The second part of Paragraph 1 reads:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In view of our military and political power in comparison
-with that of the Scandinavian States, the force to be employed
-in the Weser Exercise will be kept as small as possible. The
-numerical weakness will be balanced by daring actions and
-surprise execution. On principle we will do our utmost to
-make the operation appear as a peaceful occupation, the object
-of which is the military protection of the neutrality of the
-Scandinavian States. Corresponding demands will be transmitted
-to the governments at the beginning of the occupation.
-If necessary, demonstrations by the Navy and the Air
-Force will provide the necessary emphasis. If, in spite of this,
-resistance should be met with, all military means will be
-used to crush it.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There follows, in Paragraph 2 on the next page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I put in charge of the preparations and the conduct of the
-operation against Denmark and Norway the commanding
-general of the 21st Army Corps, General Von Falkenhorst.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Paragraph 3:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The crossing of the Danish border and the landings in Norway
-must take place simultaneously. I emphasize that the
-operations must be prepared as quickly as possible. In case
-the enemy seizes the initiative against Norway, we must be
-able to apply immediately our own counter measures.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk508'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It is most important that the Scandinavian States as well as
-the western opponents should be taken by surprise by our
-measures. All preparations, particularly those of transport
-and of readiness, drafting, and embarkation of the troops,
-must be made with this factor in mind.
-<span class='pageno' title='278' id='Page_278'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk509'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In case the preparations for embarkation can no longer be
-kept secret, the leaders and the troops will be deceived with
-fictitious objectives.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then Paragraph 4 on the next page, “The Occupation of Denmark,”
-which is given the code name of “Weserübung Süd”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The task of Group XXI: Occupation by surprise of Jutland
-and of Fünen immediately after occupation of Zealand.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk510'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Added to this, having secured the most important places, the
-group will break through as quickly as possible from Fünen
-to Skagen and to the east coast.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then there follow other instructions with regard to the operation.
-Paragraph 5:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Occupation of Norway, ‘Weserübung Nord’ ”:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk511'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The task of the Group XXI: Capture by surprise of the most
-important places on the coast by sea and airborne operations.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk512'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Navy will take over the preparation and carrying out
-of the transport by sea of the landing troops.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And there follows a reference to the part of the Air Force, and
-I would like particularly to draw the Court’s attention to that
-reference. This is Paragraph 5 on Page 3 of Hitler’s directive:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Air Force, after the occupation has been completed, will
-ensure air defense and will make use of Norwegian bases for
-air warfare against Britain.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I am underlining that entry at this stage because I shall be
-referring to it in connection with a later document.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Whilst these preparations were being made and just prior to the
-final decision of Hitler .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Did you draw our attention to the defendant
-by whom it was initialed, Frick, on the first page of that document.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR JONES: That is an initial by Fricke. That is a different
-person altogether. That is a high functionary in the German
-Admiralty and has no connection with the defendant who is before
-the Tribunal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I was saying, My Lord, while these decisions were being
-made reports were coming in through Rosenberg’s organization
-from Quisling; and if the Court will again turn for the last time
-to Document 007-PS, which is Rosenberg’s report, the Tribunal will
-observe the kind of information which Rosenberg’s organization was
-supplying at this time. The third paragraph, “Quisling’s reports”—that
-is in Annex I in Rosenberg’s report, the section dealing with
-Norway, Page 6 on my copy—referring to the second page of the
-annex, the paragraph beginning with:
-<span class='pageno' title='279' id='Page_279'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Quisling’s reports transmitted to his representative in Germany,
-Hagelin, and dealing with the possibility of intervention
-by the Western Powers in Norway, with tacit consent
-of the Norwegian Government, became more urgent by
-January. These increasingly better substantiated communications
-were in sharpest contrast to the view of the German
-Legation in Oslo which relied on the desire for neutrality of
-the then Norwegian Nygardsvold Cabinet and was convinced
-of that government’s intention and readiness to defend Norway’s
-neutrality. No one in Norway knew that Quisling’s
-representative for Germany maintained closest relations with
-him; he therefore succeeded in gaining a foothold within
-governmental circles of the Nygardsvold Cabinet and in
-listening to the Cabinet members’ true views. Hagelin transmitted
-what he had heard to the bureau”—Rosenberg’s
-bureau—“which conveyed the news to the Führer through
-Reichsleiter Rosenberg. During the night of the 16th to
-17th February English destroyers attacked the German
-steamer <span class='it'>Altmark</span> in Jössingfjord.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal will remember that that is a reference to the action
-by the British destroyer <span class='it'>Cossack</span> against the German naval auxiliary
-vessel <span class='it'>Altmark</span> which was carrying 300 British prisoners captured
-on the high seas to Germany through Norwegian territorial waters.
-The position of the British Delegation with regard to that episode
-is that the use that was being made by the <span class='it'>Altmark</span> of Norwegian
-territorial waters was in fact a flagrant abuse in itself of Norwegian
-neutrality and the action taken by <span class='it'>H.M.S. Cossack</span> which was
-restricted to rescuing the 300 British prisoners on board—no attempt
-being made to destroy the <span class='it'>Altmark</span> or to capture the armed guards
-on board of her—was fully justified under international law.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now the Rosenberg report which I interrupted to give that statement
-of the British view on the <span class='it'>Altmark</span> episode—the Rosenberg
-report continues:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Norwegian Government’s reaction to this question permitted
-the conclusion that certain agreements had been
-covertly arrived at between the Norwegian Government and
-the Allies. Such assumption was confirmed by reports of
-Chief of Section Scheidt, who in turn derived his information
-from Hagelin and Quisling. But even after this incident the
-German Legation in Oslo championed the opposite view and
-went on record as believing in the good intentions of the
-Norwegians.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And so the Tribunal will see that the Nazi Government preferred
-the reports of the traitor Quisling to the considered judgment of
-German diplomatic representatives in Norway. The result of the
-<span class='pageno' title='280' id='Page_280'></span>
-receipt of reports of that kind was the Hitler decision to invade
-Norway and Denmark. The culminating details in the preparations
-for the invasion are again found in Jodl’s diary, which is the last
-document in the document book. I will refer the Court to the entry
-of the 3rd of March.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer expressed himself very sharply on the necessity
-of a swift entry into N”—which is Norway—“with strong
-forces.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk513'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“No delay by any branch of the Armed Forces. Very rapid
-acceleration of the attack necessary.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Then the last entry on March the 3rd:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Führer decides to carry out Weser Exercise before Case
-Yellow with a few days interval.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So that the important issue of strategy which had been concerning
-the German High Command for some time had been decided by
-this date, and the fate of Scandinavia was to be sealed before the
-fate of the Low Countries; and the Court will observe from those
-entries of March 3 that by that date Hitler had become an enthusiastic
-convert to the idea of a Norwegian aggression.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The next entry in Jodl’s diary of the 5th of March:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Big conference with the three commanders-in-chief about
-Weser Exercise; Field Marshal in a rage because not consulted
-till now. Won’t listen to anyone and wants to show
-that all preparations so far made are worthless.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk514'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Result:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk515'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(a) Stronger forces to Narvik; (b) Navy to leave ships in the
-ports (<span class='it'>Hipper</span> or <span class='it'>Lützow</span> in Trondheim); (c) Christiansand can
-be left out at first; (d) six divisions envisaged for Norway;
-(e) a foothold to be gained immediately in Copenhagen also.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then the next entry to which I desire to draw the Court’s attention
-is the entry of the 13th of March, which the Court may think
-is one of the most remarkable in the whole documentation of this
-case:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Führer does not give order yet for ‘W.’ ”—Weser Exercise—</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk516'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“He is still looking for justification.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The entry of the next day, the 14th of March, shows a similar
-pre-occupation on the part of Hitler with seeking justification for
-this flagrant aggression. It reads:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“English keep vigil in the North Sea with 15 to 16 submarines;
-doubtful whether reason to safeguard own operations
-or prevent operations by Germans. Führer has not yet
-decided what reason to give for Weser Exercise.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='281' id='Page_281'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then I would like the Court to look at the entry for the
-21st of March, which by inadvertence has been included in the next
-page at the bottom of Page 6:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Misgivings of Task Force 21 .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Court has seen from documents that I have put in already
-that Task Force 21 was Falkenhorst’s force, which was detailed to
-conduct this invasion.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Misgivings of Task Force 21 about the long interval between
-taking up readiness positions at 0530 hours and closing of
-diplomatic negotiations. Führer rejects any earlier negotiations
-as otherwise calls for help go out to England and
-America. If resistance is put up it must be ruthlessly broken.
-The political plenipotentiaries must emphasize the military
-measures taken and even exaggerate them.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Comment upon that entry is, I think, unnecessary. The next
-entry, if the Court will turn to Page 5, of the 28th of March, the
-third sentence:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Individual naval officers seem to be lukewarm concerning
-the Weser Exercise and need a stimulus. Also Falkenhorst
-and the other three commanders are worrying about matters
-which are none of their business. Krancke sees more disadvantages
-than advantages.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk517'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the evening the Führer visits the map room and roundly
-declares that he won’t stand for the Navy clearing out of the
-Norwegian ports right away. Narvik, Trondheim, and Oslo
-will have to remain occupied by naval forces.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>There the Court will observe that Jodl, as ever, is the faithful
-collaborator of Hitler.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then April the 2d:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1530 hours. Commander-in-Chief of the Air Force, Commander-in-Chief
-of the Navy, and General Von Falkenhorst
-with the Führer. All confirm preparations completed. Führer
-orders carrying out of the Weser Exercise for April the 9th.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then the last entry in the next page, the 4th of April:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Führer drafts the proclamations. Pieckenbrock, Chief of
-Military Intelligence I, returns with good result from the
-talks with Quisling in Copenhagen.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Until the very last the treachery of Quisling continued most
-active.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution has in its possession a large number of operation
-orders that were issued in connection with the aggression against
-Norway and Denmark, but I propose only to draw the Court’s
-attention to two of them to illustrate the extent of the secrecy and
-<span class='pageno' title='282' id='Page_282'></span>
-the deception that was used by the defendants and their confederates
-in the course of that aggression. I would now draw the
-Court’s attention to Document C-115, which for the purpose of
-the record will be Exhibit GB-90. First of all I will draw the
-Court’s attention to the second paragraph, “General Orders,” with
-a date, “4th of April 1940”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The barrage-breaking vessels”—Sperrbrecher—“will penetrate
-inconspicuously and with lights on into Oslo Fjord
-disguised as merchant steamers.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk518'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Challenge from coastal signal stations and look-outs are to
-be answered by the deceptive use of the names of English
-steamers. I lay particular stress on the importance of not
-giving away the operation before zero hour.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then the next entry is an order for reconnaissance forces dated
-the 24th of March 1940, “Behavior during entrance into the harbor.”
-The third paragraph is the part to which I wish to draw the Court’s
-attention:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The disguise as British craft must be kept up as long as
-possible. All challenges in Morse by Norwegian ships will
-be answered in English. In answer to questions a text with
-something like the following content will be chosen:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk519'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“ ‘Calling at Bergen for a short visit; no hostile intent.’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk520'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Challenges to be answered, with names of British warships:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk521'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“<span class='it'>Köln</span>—<span class='it'>H.M.S. Cairo; Königsberg-</span>-<span class='it'>H.M.S. Calcutta; Bremse</span>—<span class='it'>H.M.S.
-Faulkner; Karl Peters</span>—<span class='it'>H.M.S. Halcyon; Leopard</span>—British
-destroyer; <span class='it'>Wolf</span>—British destroyer; S-boats—British
-motor torpedo boats.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk522'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Arrangements are to be made enabling British war flags to
-be illuminated. Continual readiness for making smoke screen.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then finally the next order dated the 24th of March 1940,
-Annex 3, “From Flag Officer, Reconnaissance Forces; most secret.”
-Next page, page two:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Following is laid down as guiding principle should one
-of our own units find itself compelled to answer the challenge
-of passing craft. To challenge in case of the <span class='it'>Köln</span>—‘<span class='it'>H.M.S.
-Cairo</span>’; then to order to stop—‘(1) Please repeat last signal,
-(2) Impossible to understand your signal’; in case of a warning
-shot—‘Stop firing, British ship, good friend’; in case of an
-inquiry as to destination and purpose—‘Going Bergen, chasing
-German steamers.’ ”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then I would draw the Court’s attention to Document C-151,
-which for the purposes of the record will be Exhibit GB-91, which
-is a Dönitz order in connection with this operation. If the Court
-will observe, it is headed:
-<span class='pageno' title='283' id='Page_283'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Top secret, Operation Order—‘Hartmut.’ Occupation of Denmark
-and Norway.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk523'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“This order comes into force on the code word Hartmut.
-With its coming into force the orders hitherto valid for the
-boats taking part lose their validity.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk524'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The day and hour are designated as Weser-Day and Weser-Hour,
-and the whole operation is known as Weser Exercise.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk525'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The operation ordered by the code word has as its objective
-the rapid surprise landing of troops in Norway. Simultaneously
-Denmark will be occupied from the Baltic and from the land
-side.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And there is at the end of that paragraph another contribution
-by Dönitz to this process of deception:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The naval force will, as they enter the harbor, fly the British
-flag until the troops have landed except, presumably, at
-Narvik.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal now knows as a matter of history that on the
-9th of April 1940 the Nazi onslaught on the unsuspecting and
-almost unarmed people of Norway and Denmark was launched.
-When the invasions had already begun a German memorandum was
-handed to the Governments of Norway and Denmark attempting to
-justify the German action; and I would like to draw the Court’s
-attention to Document TC-55, Exhibit GB-92. That is at the
-beginning of the book of documents—the sixth document of the
-book. I am not proposing to read the whole of that memorandum;
-I have no doubt the defending counsel will deal with any parts
-which they consider relevant to the defense. The Court will observe
-that it is alleged that England and France were guilty in their
-maritime warfare of breaches of international law and that Britain
-and France were making plans themselves to invade and occupy
-Norway and that the Government of Norway was prepared to
-acquiesce in such a situation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The memorandum states—and I would now draw the Court’s
-attention to Page 3 of the memorandum to the paragraph just
-below the middle of the page beginning “The German Troops”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The German troops, therefore, do not set foot on Norwegian
-soil as enemies. The German High Command does not intend
-to make use of the points occupied by German troops as bases
-for operations against England as long as it is not forced to
-do so by measures taken by England and France; German
-military operations aim much more exclusively at protecting
-the north against proposed occupation of Norwegian strong
-points by English-French forces.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In connection with that statement I would remind the Court
-that in his operation order of the 1st of March Hitler had then
-<span class='pageno' title='284' id='Page_284'></span>
-given orders to the Air Force to make use of Norwegian bases for
-air warfare against Britain. That is the 1st of March. And this is
-the memorandum which was produced as an excuse on the 9th of
-April. The last two paragraphs of the German memorandum to
-Norway and Denmark, the Court may think, are a classic Nazi
-combination of diplomatic hypocrisy and military threat. They read:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Reich Government thus expect that the Royal Norwegian
-Government and the Norwegian people will respond with
-understanding to the German measures and offer no resistance
-to them. Any resistance would have to be and would be
-broken by all possible means by the German forces employed,
-and would therefore lead only to absolutely useless bloodshed.
-The Royal Norwegian Government are therefore requested
-to take all measures with the greatest speed to ensure that
-the advance of the German troops can take place without
-friction and difficulty. In the spirit, of the good German-Norwegian
-relations that have always existed, the Reich
-Government declare to the Royal Norwegian Government
-that Germany has no intention of infringing by her measures
-the territorial integrity and political independence of the
-Kingdom of Norway now or in the future.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What the Nazis meant by the protection of the Kingdom of
-Norway was shown by their conduct on the 9th of April. I now
-refer the Court to Document TC-56, which will be Exhibit GB-93,
-which is a report by the Commander-in-Chief of the Royal
-Norwegian Forces. It is at the beginning of the document book,
- the last of the TC documents.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I will not trouble the Court with the first page of the report.
-If the Tribunal will turn to the second page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Germans, considering the long lines of communications
-and the threat of the British Navy, clearly understood the
-necessity of complete surprise and speed in the attack. In
-order to paralyze the will of the Norwegian people to defend
-their country and at the same time to prevent Allied intervention,
-it was planned to capture all the more important
-towns along the coast simultaneously. Members of the
-Government and Parliament and other military and civilian
-people occupying important positions were to be arrested
-before organized resistance could be put into effect and the
-King was to be forced to form a new government with
-Quisling as its head.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The next paragraph was read by the learned British Attorney
-General in his speech and I will only refer to the last paragraph
-but one:
-<span class='pageno' title='285' id='Page_285'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The German attack came as a surprise and all the invaded
-towns along the coast were captured according to plan with
-only slight losses. In the Oslofjord, however, the cruiser
-<span class='it'>Blücher</span>, carrying General Engelbrecht and parts of his
-division, technical staffs, and specialists who were to take
-over the control of Oslo, was sunk. The plan to capture
-the King and members of the Government and Parliament
-failed. In spite of the surprise of the attack resistance was
-organized throughout the country.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That is a brief picture of what occurred in Norway.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What happened in Denmark is described in a memorandum
-prepared by the Royal Danish Government, a copy of which I hand
-in as Exhibit GB-94 and an extract from which is in Document
-D-628, which follows the C documents.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Extracts from the memorandum concerning Germany’s
-attitude towards Denmark”—before and during the occupation—“prepared
-by the Royal Danish Government.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk526'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“On the 9th of April 1940 at 0420 hours”—in the morning
-that is—“the German Minister appeared at the private
-residence of the Danish Minister for Foreign Affairs accompanied
-by the Air Attaché of the Legation. The appointment
-had been made by a telephone call from the German Legation
-to the Secretary General of the Ministry for Foreign Affairs
-at 4 o’clock the same morning. The Minister said at once that
-Germany had positive proof that Great Britain intended to
-occupy bases in Denmark and Norway. Germany had to
-safeguard Denmark against this. For this reason German
-soldiers were now crossing the frontier and landing at various
-points in Zealand, including the port of Copenhagen; in a
-short time German bombers would be over Copenhagen;
-their orders were not to bomb until further notice. It was
-now up to the Danes to prevent resistance, as any resistance
-would have the most terrible consequences. Germany would
-guarantee Denmark territorial integrity and political
-independence. Germany would not interfere with the internal
-government of Denmark but wanted only to make sure of the
-neutrality of the country. For this purpose the presence of
-the German Wehrmacht in Denmark was required during the
-war .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk527'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Minister for Foreign Affairs declared in reply that the
-allegation concerning British plans to occupy Denmark was
-completely without foundation; there was no possibility of
-anything like that. The Minister for Foreign Affairs protested
-against the violation of Denmark’s neutrality which, according
-to the German Minister’s statement, was in progress. The
-<span class='pageno' title='286' id='Page_286'></span>
-Minister for Foreign Affairs declared further that he could
-not give a reply to the demands, which had to be submitted
-to the King and the Prime Minister, and further observed
-that the German Minister knew as everybody else that the
-Danish Armed Forces had orders to oppose violations of
-Denmark’s neutrality so that fighting presumably had already
-taken place. In reply the German Minister expressed that the
-matter was very urgent, not least to avoid air bombardment.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What happened thereafter is described in a dispatch from the
-British Minister in Copenhagen to the British Foreign Secretary,
-which the Tribunal will find in D-627, the document preceding
-the one which I have just read. That document, for the purposes
-of the record, will be GB-95. That dispatch reads:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The actual events of the 9th April have been pieced
-together by members of my staff, from actual eye-witnesses
-or from reliable information subsequently received and are
-given below. Early in the morning towards 5 o’clock three
-small German transports steamed into the approach to
-Copenhagen harbor while a number of airplanes circled
-overhead. The northern battery guarding the harbor
-approach fired a warning shot at these planes when it was
-seen that they carried German markings. Apart from this
-the Danes offered no further resistance, and the German
-vessels fastened alongside the quays in the Free Harbor.
-Some of these airplanes proceeded to drop leaflets over the
-town urging the population to keep calm and co-operate
-with the Germans. I enclose a specimen of this leaflet, which
-is written in a bastard Norwegian-Danish, a curiously un-German
-disregard of detail, together with a translation.
-Approximately 800 soldiers landed with full equipment and
-marched to Kastellet, the old fortress of Copenhagen
-and now barracks. The door was locked so the Germans
-promptly burst it open with explosives and rounded up all
-the Danish soldiers within together with the womenfolk
-employed in the mess. The garrison offered no resistance, and
-it appears that they were taken completely by surprise.
-One officer tried to escape in a motor car, but his chauffeur
-was shot before they could get away. He died in hospital
-2 days later. After seizing the barracks a detachment was
-sent to Amalienborg, the King’s palace, where they engaged
-the Danish sentries on guard wounding three, one of them
-fatally .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Meanwhile a large fleet of bombers flew over the
-city at low altitude.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then, the last paragraph of the dispatch reads:
-<span class='pageno' title='287' id='Page_287'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It has been difficult to ascertain exactly what occurred in
-Jutland .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. It is clear, however, that the enemy invaded
-Jutland from the south at dawn on the 9th of April and
-were at first resisted by the Danish forces, who suffered
-casualties .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. The chances of resistance were weakened by
-the extent to which the forces appear to have been taken by
-surprise. The chief permanent official of the Ministry of
-War, for instance, motored into Copenhagen on the morning
-of the 9th of April and drove blithely past a sentry who
-challenged him in blissful ignorance that this was not one of
-his own men. It took a bullet, which passed through the
-lapels of his coat, to disillusion him.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The German memorandum to the Norwegian and Danish
-Governments spoke of the German desire to maintain the territorial
-integrity and political independence of those two small countries.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I will close by drawing the Court’s attention to two documents
-which indicate the kind of territorial integrity and political
-independence the Nazi conspirators contemplated for the victims
-of their aggression. I will first draw the Court’s attention to an
-entry in Jodl’s diary, which is the last document in the book, on
-the last page of the book, the entry dated 19th April:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Renewed crisis. Envoy Brauer”—that is the German Minister
-to Norway—“is recalled. Since Norway is at war with us,
-the task of the Foreign Office is finished. In the Führer’s
-opinion force has to be used. It is said that Gauleiter
-Terboven will be given a post. Field Marshal”—which, as
-the Court will see from the other entries, is presumably a
-reference to the Defendant Göring—“is moving in the same
-direction. He criticizes as defect that we did not take
-sufficiently energetic measures against the civilian population,
-that we could have seized electrical plant, that the Navy did
-not supply enough troops. The Air Force cannot do everything.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Court will see from that entry and the reference to Gauleiter
-Terboven that already by the 19th of April rule by Gauleiter
-had replaced rule by Norwegians.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The final document is Document C-41, which will be Exhibit
-GB-96, which is a memorandum dated the 3rd of June 1940 signed
-by Fricke, who, of course, has no connection with the Defendant
-Frick. Fricke was at that date the head of the operations division
-of the German naval war staff, a key appointment in the very
-nerve center of German naval operations. That is why, as the
-Tribunal noticed, he came to be initialing the important naval
-documents.
-<span class='pageno' title='288' id='Page_288'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That memorandum is as I have said, dated 3rd June 1940 and
-relates to questions of territorial expansion and bases:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“These problems are pre-eminently of a political character
-and comprise an abundance of questions of a political type,
-which it is not the Navy’s province to answer, but they also
-materially affect the strategic possibilities open—according
-to the way in which this question is answered—for the
-subsequent use and operation of the Navy.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk528'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It is too well known to need further mention that Germany’s
-present position in the narrows of the Heligoland Bight and
-in the Baltic—bordered as it is by a whole series of states
-and under their influence—is an impossible one for the
-future of Greater Germany. If over and above this one
-extends these strategic possibilities to the point that Germany
-shall not continue to be cut off for all time from overseas
-by natural geographical facts, the demand is raised that
-somehow or other an end shall be put to this state of affairs
-at the end of the war.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk529'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The solution could perhaps be found among the following
-possibilities:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk530'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1) The territories of Denmark, Norway, and northern France
-acquired during the course of the war continue to be so
-occupied and organized that they can in the future be considered
-as German possessions.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk531'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“This solution will recommend itself for areas where the
-severity of the decision tells, and should tell, on the enemy
-and where a gradual germanizing of the territory appears
-practicable.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk532'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2) The taking over and holding of areas which have no
-direct connection with Germany’s main body and which, like
-the Russian solution in Hangö, remain permanently as an
-enclave in the hostile state. Such areas might be considered
-possible around Brest and Trondheim .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk533'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3) The power of Greater Germany in the strategic areas
-acquired in this war should result in the existing population
-of these areas feeling themselves and being politically,
-economically, and militarily completely dependent on
-Germany. If the following results are achieved—that
-expansion is undertaken (on a scale I shall describe later)
-by means of the military measures for occupation taken
-during the war, that French powers of resistance (popular
-unity, mineral resources, industry, armed forces) are so
-broken that a revival must be considered out of the question,
-that the smaller states such as the Netherlands, Denmark,
-<span class='pageno' title='289' id='Page_289'></span>
-and Norway are forced into a dependence on us which will
-enable us in any circumstances and at any time easily to
-occupy these countries again—then in practice the same,
-but psychologically much more, will be achieved.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then Fricke recommends:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The solution given in 3), therefore, appears to be the proper
-one—that is, to crush France, to occupy Belgium and part of
-northern and eastern France, to allow the Netherlands, Denmark,
-and Norway to exist on the basis indicated above.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then, the culminating paragraph of this report of Fricke reads
-as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Time will show how far the outcome of the war with England
-will make an extension of these demands possible.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The submission of the Prosecution is that that and other documents
-which have been submitted to the Court tear apart the veil
-of the Nazi pretenses. These documents reveal the menace behind
-the good-will of Göring; they expose as fraudulent the diplomacy
-of Ribbentrop; they show the reality behind the ostensible political
-ideology of tradesmen in treason like Rosenberg; and finally and
-above all, they render sordid the professional status of Keitel and
-of Raeder.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will now adjourn.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ROBERTS: May it please the Tribunal, it is my duty to
-present that part of Count Two which relates to the allegations
-with regard to Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg. In
-Charges II, III, IV, IX, XI, XIII, XIV, XVIII, XIX, and XXIII there
-are charges of violating certain treaties and conventions and violating
-certain assurances. So far as the treaties are concerned, some of
-them have been put in evidence already, and I will indicate that
-when I come to them. May I, before I come to the detail, remind
-the Tribunal of the history of these unfortunate countries, the
-Netherlands and Belgium; especially Belgium, which for so many
-centuries was the cockpit of Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The independence of Belgium was guaranteed as the Tribunal
-will remember, in 1839 by the great European powers. That guarantee
-was observed for 75 years until it was shamelessly broken in
-1914 by the Germans, who brought all the horrors of war to Belgium
-and all the even greater horrors of a German occupation of
-Belgium. History was to repeat itself in a still more shocking fashion
-some 25 years after in 1940 as the Tribunal already knows.
-<span class='pageno' title='290' id='Page_290'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The first treaty which was mentioned in these charges is the
-Hague Convention of 1907. That has been put in by my learned
-friend, Sir David, and I think I need say nothing about it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The second treaty is the Locarno Convention, the Arbitration
-and Conciliation Convention of 1925. My Lord, that was between
-Germany and Belgium. That was put in by Sir David. It is GB-15,
-and I think I need say nothing more about that.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Belgium’s independence and neutrality was guaranteed by Germany
-in that document.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lords, the next treaty is the Hague Arbitration Convention
-of May 1926 between Germany and the Netherlands. That Document
-I ought formally to put in. It is in the <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>,
-which perhaps I may call RGB in the future for brevity; and it,
-no doubt, will be treated as a public document. But in my bundle
-of documents, which goes in the order in which I propose to refer
-to them, I think it is more convenient for the presentation of my
-case. That is the second or third document, TC-16.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: It is Book 4, is it?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ROBERTS: It is Book 4, My Lord. This is the Convention
-of Arbitration and Conciliation between Germany and the Netherlands
-signed at The Hague in May 1926. Your Lordships have the
-document; perhaps I need read only Article I:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The contracting parties”—those are the Netherlands and the
-German Reich—“undertake to submit all disputes of any
-nature whatever which may arise between them which it has
-not been possible to settle by diplomacy and which have not
-been referred to the Permanent Court of International Justice
-to be dealt with by arbitration or conciliation as provided.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then, My Lords, there follow all the clauses which deal
-merely with the machinery of conciliation, which are unnecessary
-for me to read. May I just draw attention to the last article,
-Article 21, which provides that the Convention shall be valid for
-10 years, and then shall remain in force for successive periods of
-5 years until denounced by either party. And this treaty never was
-denounced by Germany at all.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I put that document in as Document TC-16, which will be Exhibit
-GB-97; and a certified copy is put in and a translation for the Court.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As the Tribunal already knows, in 1928 the Kellogg-Briand Pact
-was made at Paris, by which all the powers renounced recourse to
-war. That is put in as GB-18, and I need not, I think, put it in or
-refer to it again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then the last treaty—all of which, of course, belong to the days
-of the Weimar Republic—is the Arbitration Treaty between Germany
-and Luxembourg executed in 1929. That is Document TC-20
-<span class='pageno' title='291' id='Page_291'></span>
-in the bundle. It is two documents further on than the one the
-Tribunal has last referred to. That is the Treaty of Arbitration and
-Conciliation between Germany and Luxembourg signed at Geneva
-in 1929. May I just read the first few words of Article 1, which are
-familiar:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The contracting parties undertake to settle by peaceful
-means in accordance with the present treaty all disputes of
-any nature whatever which may arise between them and
-which it may not be possible to settle by diplomacy.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then there follow the clauses dealing with the machinery for
-peaceful settlement of disputes, which follow the common form.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, those were the treaty obligations. May I put in that
-last treaty, TC-20, which will be Exhibit GB-98.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, those were the treaty obligations between Germany
-and Belgium at the time when the Nazi Party came into power in
-1933; and as you have heard from my learned friend, Hitler adopted
-and ratified the obligations of Germany under the Weimar Republic
-with regard to the treaties which had been entered into. My Lord,
-nothing more occurred to alter the position of Belgium until in
-March 1936. Germany reoccupied the Rhineland, announced, of
-course, the resumption of conscription, and so on. And Hitler on
-the 7th of March 1936 purported in a speech to repudiate the obligations
-of the German Government under the Locarno Pact; the
-reason given being the execution of the Franco-Soviet Pact of 1935.
-Sir David has dealt with that and has pointed out that there was
-no legal foundation for this claim to be entitled to renounce obligations
-under the Locarno Pact. But Belgium was, of course, left
-in the air in the sense that it had entered itself into various obligations
-under the Locarno Pact in return for the liabilities which
-other nations acknowledged; and now one of those liabilities,
-namely, the liability of Germany to observe the pact, had been
-renounced.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And so My Lord, on the 30th of January 1937, perhaps because
-Hitler realized the position of Belgium and of the Netherlands, Hitler,
-in the next document in the bundle, TC-33 and 35, which I hand in
-and which will be Exhibit GB-99, gave the solemn assurance—he
-used the word “solemn”—to Belgium and to the Netherlands. That
-has already been read by the Attorney General and so I don’t want to
-read it again. But the Tribunal will see that it is a full guarantee. In
-April of 1937 in a document which is not before the Court, France
-and England released Belgium from her obligations under the
-Locarno Pact. It is a matter of history and it does occur in an
-exhibit, but it hasn’t been copied. Belgium, of course, gave guarantees
-of strict independence and neutrality; and France and England
-gave guarantees of assistance should Belgium be attacked. And it
-<span class='pageno' title='292' id='Page_292'></span>
-was because of that that Germany on the 13th of October 1937—in
-the next document—gave a very clear and unconditional guarantee
-to Belgium—Document TC-34, which I offer in evidence as Exhibit
-GB-100—the German declaration of the 13th of October 1937, which
-shows the minutes:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I have the honor on behalf of the German Government to
-make the following communication to Your Excellency:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk534'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The German Government have taken cognizance with particular
-interest of the public declaration in which the Belgian
-Government define the international position of Belgium. For
-their part they have repeatedly given expression, especially
-through the declaration of the Chancellor of the German
-Reich in his speech of the 30th of January 1937, to their own
-point of view. The German Government have also taken
-cognizance of the declaration made by the British and French
-Governments on the 24th of April 1937.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>That is a document to which I have previously referred.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Since the conclusion of a treaty to replace the Treaty of
-Locarno may still take some time and being desirous of
-strengthening the peaceful aspirations of the two countries,
-the German Government regard it as appropriate to define
-now their own attitude towards Belgium. To this end they
-make the following declaration:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk535'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“First: The German Government have taken note of the views
-which the Belgian Government have thought fit to express.
-That is to say, (a) of the policy of independence which they
-intend to exercise in full sovereignty; (b) of their determination
-to defend the frontiers of Belgium with all their
-forces against any aggression or invasion and to prevent
-Belgian territory from being used for purposes of aggression
-against another state as a passage or as a base of operation
-by land, by sea, or in the air, and to organize the defense of
-Belgium in an efficient manner to this purpose.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk536'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Second: The German Government consider that the inviolability
-and integrity of Belgium are common interests of the
-Western Powers. They confirm their determination that in no
-circumstances will they impair this inviolability and integrity,
-and that they will at all times respect Belgian territory
-except, of course, in the event of Belgium’s taking part in
-a military action directed against Germany in an armed
-conflict in which Germany is involved.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk537'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Third: The German Government, like the British and French
-Governments, are prepared to assist Belgium should she be
-subjected to an attack or to invasion.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='293' id='Page_293'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then, on the following page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Belgian Government have taken note with great satisfaction
-of the declaration communicated to them this day by
-the German Government. They thank the German Government
-warmly for this communication.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, may I pause there to emphasize that document. There
-in October of 1937 is Germany giving a solemn guarantee to this
-small nation of its peaceful aspiration towards her and its assertion
-that the integrity of the Belgian frontier was a common interest
-between her and Belgium and the other Western Powers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>You have before you to try the leaders of the German Government
-and the leaders of the German Armed Forces. One doesn’t
-have to prove, does one, that every one of those accused must have
-known perfectly well of that solemn undertaking given by his
-government? Every one of these accused in their various spheres
-of activity—some more actively than the others—were party to the
-shameless breaking of that treaty two and a half years afterwards,
-and I submit that on the ordinary laws of inference and justice all
-those men must be fixed as active participators in that disgraceful
-breach of faith which brought misery and death to so many millions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Presumably it will be contended on the part, for instance, of
-Keitel and Jodl that they were merely honorable soldiers carrying
-out their duty. This Tribunal, no doubt, will inquire what code of
-honor they observe which permits them to violate the pledged word
-of their country.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That this declaration of October 1937 meant very little to the
-leaders and to the High Command of Germany can be seen by the next
-document, which is Document PS-375 in the bundle. It is already
-an exhibit, USA-84, and has been referred to many times already.
-May I just refer—or remind the Tribunal—to one sentence or two.
-The document comes into existence on the 25th of August 1938 at
-the time when the Czechoslovakian drama was unfolding, and
-it was uncertain at that time whether there would be war with the
-Western Powers. It is top secret, prepared by the 5th section of the
-General Staff of the German Air Force. The subject: “Extended
-Case Green—Estimate of the Situation.” Probably the more correct
-words would be: “Appreciation of the Situation with Special Consideration
-of the Enemy.” Apparently some staff officer had been
-asked to prepare this appreciation. In view of the fact that it has
-been read before, I think I need only read the last paragraph which
-is Paragraph H and it comes at the bottom of Page 6, the last page
-but one of the document. Now H, “Requests to Armed Forces
-Supreme Command, Army and Navy”. This, you see, was an appreciation
-addressed by an Air Force staff officer. So these are requests
-<span class='pageno' title='294' id='Page_294'></span>
-to the Army and Navy. And then if one turns over the page,
-Number 4:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Belgium and the Netherlands would, in German hands,
-represent an extraordinary advantage in the prosecution of
-the air war against Great Britain as well as against France.
-Therefore it is held to be essential to obtain the opinion of
-the Army as to the conditions under which an occupation of
-this area could be carried out and how long it would take.
-And in this case it would be necessary to reassess the commitment
-against Great Britain.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The point that the Prosecution desires to make on that document
-is that it is apparently assumed by the staff officer who prepared
-this, and assumed quite rightly, that the leaders of the German
-nation and the High Command would not pay the smallest attention
-to the fact that Germany had given her word not to invade Holland
-or Belgium. They are recommending it as a militarily advantageous
-thing to do, strong in the knowledge that if the commanders and the
-Führer agree with that view treaties are to be completely ignored.
-Such, I repeat, was the honor of the German Government and of
-their leaders.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now in March of 1939 as has been proved, the remainder of
-Czechoslovakia was peacefully annexed; and then came the time for
-further guarantees in the next document, the assurances—TC-35
-and 39—which were given to Belgium and the Netherlands on the
-28th of April 1939.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Those have been read by my learned friend, Major Elwyn Jones.
-They bear the number GB-78. I need not read them again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There is also a guarantee to Luxembourg, which is on the next
-page, TC-42 (a). That was given in the same speech by Hitler in
-the Reichstag where Hitler was dealing with a communication from
-Mr. Roosevelt who was feeling a little uneasy on the other side of
-the Atlantic as to Hitler’s intentions. May I, before I read this
-document, say that I believe the Tribunal will be seeing a film of
-the delivery by Hitler of this part of this speech; and you will have
-the privilege of seeing Hitler in one of his jocular moods, because
-this was greeted and was delivered in a jocular vein. And you
-will see in the film that the Defendant Göring who sits above Hitler
-in the Reichstag appreciates very much the joke, the joke being
-this: That it is an absurd suggestion to make that Germany could
-possibly go to war with any of its neighbors—and that was the point
-of the joke that everybody appears to have appreciated very much.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, if I may read this document:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Finally Mr. Roosevelt demands the readiness to give him an
-assurance that the German fighting forces will not attack
-<span class='pageno' title='295' id='Page_295'></span>
-the territory or possessions of the following independent
-nations and above all that they will not march into them.
-And he goes on to name the following as the countries in
-question:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk538'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Norway, Sweden, Denmark,
-Holland, Belgium, Great Britain, Ireland, France, Portugal,
-Spain, Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Poland,
-Hungary, Romania, Yugoslavia, Russia, Bulgaria, Turkey,
-Iraq, Arabia, Syria, Palestine, Egypt, and Iran.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk539'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Answer: I started off by taking the trouble to find out in
-the case of the countries listed firstly, whether they feel
-themselves threatened and secondly, and particularly, whether
-this question Mr. Roosevelt has asked us was put as the result
-of a démarche by them or at least with their consent.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk540'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The answer was a general negative, which in some cases
-took the form of a blunt rejection. Actually this counter-question
-of mine could not be conveyed to some of the
-states and nations listed, since they are not at present in
-possession of their liberty (as for instance Syria) but are
-occupied by the military forces of democratic states and therefore
-deprived of all their rights.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk541'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Thirdly, apart from that, all the states bordering on Germany
-have received much more binding assurances and above
-all much more binding proposals than Mr. Roosevelt asked of
-me in his peculiar telegram.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>You will see that although that is sneering at Mr. Roosevelt, it
-is suggesting in the presence, certainly, of the accused Göring as
-being quite absurd that Germany should nurture any warlike feeling
-against her neighbors. But the hollow falsity of that and the preceding
-guarantee is shown by the next document. May I put this
-document, TC-42 (a) in as Exhibit GB-101.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The next document (L-79) which is Hitler’s conference of the
-23rd of May has been referred to many times and is Exhibit USA-27.
-Therefore I need only very shortly remind the Tribunal of two
-passages. First of all, on the first page it is interesting to see who
-was present: The Führer, Göring, Admiral Raeder, Brauchitsch,
-Colonel General Keitel, and various others who are not accused.
-Colonel Warlimont was there. He, I understand, was Jodl’s deputy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Well now, the purpose of the conference was an analysis of the
-situation. Then may I refer to the third page down at the bottom.
-The stencil number is 819:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“What will this struggle be like?”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>And then these words:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Dutch and Belgian air bases must be occupied by armed
-force. Declarations of neutrality must be ignored.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='296' id='Page_296'></span></p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Then, at the bottom:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Therefore, if England intends to intervene in the Polish war,
-we must occupy Holland with lightning speed. We must aim
-at securing a new defense line on Dutch soil up to the Zuyder
-Zee.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There is that decision made, “Declarations of neutrality must
-be ignored,” and there is the Grand Admiral present, and there is
-the Air Minister and Chief of the German Air Force, and there is
-General Keitel present. They all appear, and all their subsequent
-actions show that they acquiesced in that: Give your word and then
-break it. That is their code of honor. And you will see that at
-the end of the meeting, the very last page—the stencil number is
-823—Field Marshal Göring asked one or two questions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was the decision of the 23rd of May. Is it overstating the
-matter to submit that any syllable of guarantee, any assurance given
-after that is just purely hypocrisy, is just the action—apart from
-the multiplicity of the crimes here—of the common criminal?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Roberts, I think we would like you so
-far as possible to confine yourself to the document.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ROBERTS: Yes, My Lord, then we go to the 22d of August,
-798-PS. That has already been put in and is Exhibit USA-29. My
-Lord, that was Hitler’s speech of the 22d of August. It has been
-read and re-read. I, My Lord, refer only to one passage, and that
-is at the bottom of the second page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Attack from the west from the Maginot Line: I consider this
-impossible.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk542'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Another possibility is the violation of Dutch, Belgian, and
-Swiss neutrality. I have no doubts that all these states as
-well as Scandinavia will defend their neutrality by all available
-means.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>My Lord, I desire to emphasize the next sentence:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“England and France will not violate the neutrality of these
-countries.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then I desire to comment: I ask Your Lordship to bear that
-sentence in mind, that correct prophecy, when remembering the
-excuses given for the subsequent invasion of Belgium and the
-Netherlands.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, the next documents are TC-36, 40, and 42. Those are
-three assurances. Number 36 is by the Ambassador of Germany to
-the Belgian Government:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In view of the gravity of the international situation, I am
-expressly instructed by the head of the German Reich to
-transmit to Your Majesty the following communication:
-<span class='pageno' title='297' id='Page_297'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk543'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Though the German Government are at present doing everything
-in their power to arrive at a peaceful solution of the
-questions at issue between the Reich and Poland, they nevertheless
-desire to define clearly here and now the attitude
-which they propose to adopt towards Belgium should a conflict
-in Europe become inevitable.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk544'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The German Government are firmly determined to abide by
-the terms of the declaration contained in the German note of
-October 13, 1937. This provides in effect that Germany will
-in no circumstances impair the inviolability and integrity of
-Belgium and will at all times respect Belgian territory. The
-German Government renew this undertaking, however, in the
-expectation that the Belgian Government for their part will
-observe an attitude of strict neutrality and that Belgium will
-tolerate no violations on the part of a third power, but that
-on the contrary, she will oppose it with all the forces at her
-disposal. It goes without saying that if the Belgian Government
-were to adopt a different attitude the German Government
-would naturally be compelled to defend their interests
-in conformity with the new situation thus created.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, may I make one short comment on the last part of that
-document? I submit it is clear that the decision having been made
-to violate the neutrality, as we know, those last words were put
-in to afford some excuse in the future.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That document will be Exhibit GB-102.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, TC-40, the next document, is a similar document communicated
-to Her Majesty the Queen of the Netherlands on the
-same day, the 26th of August 1939. Subject to the Tribunal’s direction,
-I don’t think I need read it. It is a public document in the
-German document book, and it has exactly the same features.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That will be Exhibit GB-103.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then My Lords, TC-42, the next document (Exhibit GB-104) is
-a similar document relating to Luxembourg. That is dated the
-26th of August, the same day. I am not certain; it has two dates.
-I think it is the 26th of August. My Lords, that is in the same terms
-a complete guarantee with the sting in the tail as in the other two
-documents. Perhaps I need not read it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lords, as the Tribunal knows, Poland was occupied by
-means of the lightning victory; and in October German Armed
-Forces were free for other tasks. The first step that was taken so
-far as the Netherlands and Belgium are concerned is shown by the
-next document, which is, I think, in as GB-80; but the two central
-portions refer to Belgium and the Netherlands. It is the next document
-in Your Lordships’ bundle: Number 4.
-<span class='pageno' title='298' id='Page_298'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: TC-32?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ROBERTS: Yes. It begins with TC-32, and then if you go
-to the next one, My Lords will see TC-37 on the same page—and
-then TC-41; both 37 and 41 refer to this matter. Now, this is a German
-assurance on the 6th of October 1939:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Belgium.</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Immediately after I had taken over the affairs of the state
-I tried to create friendly relations with Belgium. I renounced
-any revision or any desire for revision. The Reich has not
-made any demands which would in any way be likely to be
-considered in Belgium as a threat.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, there is a similar assurance to the Netherlands—the
-next part of the document:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The new Reich has endeavored to continue the traditional
-friendship with the Netherlands. It has not taken over any
-existing differences between the two countries and has not
-created any new ones.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I submit it is impossible to overemphasize the importance of
-those assurances of Germany’s good faith.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, the value of that good faith is shown by the next
-document which is of the very next day, the 7th of October. Those
-two guarantees were the 6th of October. Now we come to Document
-2329-PS dated the 7th of October. It is from the Commander-in-Chief
-of the Army, Von Brauchitsch, and it is addressed to his
-Army groups. He said, third paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Dutch border between Ems and Rhine is to be observed
-only.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk545'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“At the same time Army Group B has to make all preparations
-according to special orders for immediate invasion of
-Dutch and Belgian territory if the political situation so
-demands.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“If the political situation so demands”—the day after the guarantee!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is quite clear from the next document. I put in the last
-document; that bears an original typewritten signature of Von
-Brauchitsch, and it will be Exhibit GB-105.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, the next document is in two parts. Both are numbered
-C-62. The first part is dated the 9th of October 1939, 2 days after
-the document I have read. My Lord, that was all read by the
-Attorney General in opening down to the bottom of Paragraph (b).
-Therefore, I won’t read it again. May I remind the Tribunal just
-of one sentence.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Preparations should be made for offensive action on the
-northern flank of the Western Front crossing the area of
-<span class='pageno' title='299' id='Page_299'></span>
-Luxembourg, Belgium, and the Netherlands. This attack must
-be carried out as soon and as forcefully as possible.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the next paragraph, may I just read six words:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The object of this attack is .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. to acquire as great an area
-of Holland, Belgium, and northern France as possible.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That document is signed by Hitler himself. It is addressed to
-the three accused: The Supreme Commander of the Army, Keitel;
-Navy, Raeder; and Air Minister, Commander-in-Chief of the Air
-Force, Göring. That appears from the distribution.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I will hold that document over and will put that other one in
-with it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, the next document is the 15th of October 1939. It is
-from the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces. It is signed by
-Keitel in what is to some of us his familiar red pencil signature,
-and it is again addressed to Raeder and Göring and to the General
-Staff of the Army.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now that also has been read by the Attorney General; may
-I just remind the Tribunal that at the bottom of the page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It must be the object of the Army’s preparations to occupy—on
-receipt of a special order—the territory of Holland in
-the first instance as far as the Grebbe-Maas”—or Meuse—“line”.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The second paragraph deals with taking possession of the West
-Frisian Islands.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is clear, in my submission, beyond discussion that from that
-moment the decision to violate the neutrality of these three countries
-had been made. All that remained was to work out the details,
-to wait until the weather became favorable, and in the meantime,
-to give no hint that Germany’s word was about to be broken again.
-Otherwise these small countries might have had some chance of
-combining among themselves and with their neighbors.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It will be Exhibit GB-106.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Well, the next document is a Keitel directive. It is Document
-440-PS (Exhibit GB-107). It, again, is sent to the Supreme Command
-of the Army, the Navy, and the Air Force; and it gives details
-of how the attack is to be carried out. I want to read only a very
-few selected passages. Paragraph 2 on the first page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Contrary to previously issued instructions, all action intended
-against Holland may be carried out without a special order
-when the general attack will start.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk546'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The attitude of the Dutch Armed Forces cannot be anticipated
-ahead of time.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='300' id='Page_300'></span></p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>And then may I comment here: Would Your Lordship note this as
-a German concession?</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Wherever there is no resistance the entry should carry the
-character of a peaceful occupation.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then Paragraph (b) of the next paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“At first the Dutch area including the West Frisian Islands
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. is to be occupied up to the Grebbe-Maas line.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The next two paragraphs, I need not read them, deal with action
-against the Belgian harbor; and in Paragraph 5):</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The 7th Airborne Division”—they were parachutists—“will
-be committed for the airborne operation after the possession
-of bridges across the Albert Canal”—which is in Belgium
-as the Court knows—“is assured.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then in Paragraph 6) (b) Luxembourg is mentioned. It
-is mentioned in Paragraph 5) as well. The signature is “Keitel,”
-but that is typed. It is authenticated by a staff officer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Is that document in?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ROBERTS: GB-107, My Lord.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then the next document is C-10 (Exhibit GB-108) and it is
-dated the 28th of November 1939. That is a signature of Keitel in
-his red pencil and it is addressed to the Army, Navy, and Air
-Force. It deals with the fact that if a quick break-through should
-fail north of Liége—I think, My Lord, only machinery for carrying
-out the attack.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Paragraph 2) shows clearly that the Netherlands is to be
-violated. It speaks of “the occupation of Walcheren Island and
-thereby Flushing,” and the “taking of one or more of the Meuse
-crossings between Namur and Dinant.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That will be 108.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, the documents show that from November until March
-of 1940 the High Command and the Führer were waiting for
-favorable weather before A-Day, as they called it. That was the
-attack on Luxembourg, Belgium, and the Netherlands.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, the next document, C-72, consists of 18 documents
-which range in date from the 7th of November until the 9th of
-May 1940. They are certified photostats I put in and they are all
-signed either by Keitel personally or by Jodl personally, and I
-don’t think it is necessary for me to read them. The Defense, I
-think, have all had copies of them, but they show that successively
-A-Day is being postponed for about a week, having regard to the
-weather reports. That will be Exhibit GB-109.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, on the 10th of January 1940, as the Attorney General
-informed the Tribunal, a German airplane made a forced landing
-<span class='pageno' title='301' id='Page_301'></span>
-in Belgium. The occupants endeavored to burn the orders of which
-they were in possession, but they were only partially successful.
-And the next document I offer is Document TC-58 (a); it will be
-Exhibit GB-110. The original is a photostat certified by the Belgian
-Government which, of course, came into possession of the original.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, I can summarize it. They are orders to the Commander
-of the 2d Air Force Fleet (Luftflotte) clearly for offensive
-action against France, Holland, and Belgium. One looks at the
-bottom of the first page. It deals with the disposition of the Belgian
-Army. The Belgian Army covers the Liége-Antwerp Line with its
-main force, its lighter forces in front of the Meuse-Schelde Canal.
-Then it deals with the disposition of the Dutch Army; and then
-if you turn over the page Number 3, you see that the German
-western army directs its attack between the North Sea and the
-Moselle with the strongest possible airforce support through the
-Belgian-Luxembourg region.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, I think I need read no more. The rest are operational
-details as to the bombing of the various targets in Belgium and
-in Holland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, the next document I think is rather out of place
-for my purpose. My learned friend, Major Elwyn Jones, put in
-Jodl’s diary, which is GB-88, and I desire to refer very, very
-briefly to some extracts which are printed first in bundle Number 4.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If one looks at the entry for the 1st of February 1940 and then
-some lines down .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: 1809-PS?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ROBERTS: Yes, that’s right, My Lord, and GB-88.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: We haven’t got the GB numbers on the
-documents.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ROBERTS: I am sorry, My Lord, it’s my mistake.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If Your Lordship will look about eight lines down it says,
-“1700 hours General Jeschonnek”—and then:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1) Behavior of parachute units. In front of The Hague they
-have to be strong enough to break in if necessary by sheer
-brute force. The 7th Division intends to drop units near the
-town.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk547'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2) Political mission contrasts to some extent with violent
-action against the Dutch Air Force.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>My Lord, I think the rest I need not read; it is operational detail.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“2d February”—I refer again to Jodl’s entry under “a” as to
-“landings can be made in the center of The Hague.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If Your Lordship will turn over the page—I omit February the
-5th—you come to 26th February:
-<span class='pageno' title='302' id='Page_302'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Führer raises the question whether it is better to undertake
-the Weser Exercise before or after Case Yellow.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then on the 3rd of March, the last sentence:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Führer decides to carry out Weser Exercise before Case
-Yellow with a few days’ interval.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then My Lord, there is an entry to which I desire to call
-Your Lordship’s attention, on May the 8th, that is, 2 days before
-the invasion—the top of the page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Alarming news from Holland, cancelling of furloughs,
-evacuations, road-blocks, other mobilization measures.
-According to reports of the intelligence service the British
-have asked for permission to march in, but the Dutch have
-refused.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>My Lord, may I make two short comments on that? The first is
-that the Germans are rather objecting because the Dutch are
-actually making some preparations to resist their invasion:
-“Alarming news” as they wrote. The second point is that Jodl is
-there recording that the Dutch according to their intelligence reports
-are still adhering properly to their neutrality. But I need not read
-any more of the diary extracts.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, that is the story except for the documents which were
-presented to Holland and to Belgium and to Luxembourg after the
-invasion was a <span class='it'>fait accompli</span>, because as history now knows at
-4:30 a.m. on the 10th of May these three small countries were
-violently invaded with all the fury of modern warfare. No warning
-was given to them by Germany and no complaint was made by
-Germany of any breaches of any neutrality before this action
-was taken.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Perhaps this will be a convenient place to
-break off until 2 o’clock.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ROBERTS: If Your Lordship pleases.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken until 1400 hours.</span>]</h3>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<h2><span class='pageno' title='303' id='Page_303'></span><span class='it'>Afternoon Session</span></h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ROBERTS: May it please the Tribunal, when the Court
-adjourned I had just come to the point at 4:30 a.m. on the 10th of
-May 1940 when the Germans invaded these three small countries
-without any warning—a violation which, the Prosecution submits, it
-is clear from the documents had been planned and decided upon
-months before.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, before I close this part of the case, may I refer to three
-documents in conclusion. My Lord, the invasion having taken place
-at 4:30 in the morning in each of the three countries, the German
-Ambassadors called upon representatives of the three governments
-some hours later and handed in a document which was similar in
-each case and which is described as a memorandum or an ultimatum.
-My Lord, an account of what happened in Belgium is set out in our
-Document TC-58, which is about five documents from the end of the
-bundle. It is headed, “Extract from Belgium—The Official Account
-of What Happened 1939-1940,” and I hand in an original copy,
-certified by the Belgian Government, which is Exhibit GB-111.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, might I read short extracts? I read the third paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“From 4:30 a.m. information was received which left no
-shadow of doubt: the hour had struck. Aircraft were first
-reported in the east. At 5 o’clock came news of the bombing
-of two Netherlands’ airdromes, the violation of the Belgian
-frontier, the landing of German soldiers at the Eben-Emael
-Fort, the bombing of the Jemelle station.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, then I think I can go to two paragraphs lower down:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“At 8:30 a.m. the German Ambassador came to the Ministry
-of Foreign Affairs. When he entered the Minister’s room, he
-began to take a paper from his pocket. M. Spaak”—that is
-the Belgian Minister—“stopped him: ‘I beg your pardon,
-Mr. Ambassador. I will speak first.’ And in an indignant
-voice, he read the Belgian Government’s protest: ‘Mr. Ambassador,
-the German Army has just attacked our country. This
-is the second time in 25 years that Germany has committed
-a criminal aggression against a neutral and loyal Belgium.
-What has just happened is perhaps even more odious than
-the aggression of 1914. No ultimatum, no note, no protest of
-any kind has ever been placed before the Belgian Government.
-It is through the attack itself that Belgium has learned
-that Germany has violated the undertakings given by her on
-October 13th 1937 and renewed spontaneously at the beginning
-of the war. The act of aggression committed by Germany
-for which there is no justification whatever will deeply shock
-<span class='pageno' title='304' id='Page_304'></span>
-the conscience of the world. The German Reich will be held
-responsible by history. Belgium is resolved to defend herself.
-Her cause, which is the cause of Right, cannot be vanquished.’ ”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then I think I shall omit the next paragraph: “The Ambassador
-read the note .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” And in the last paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the middle of this communication M. Spaak, who had by
-his side the Secretary-General, interrupted the Ambassador:
-‘Hand me the document,’ he said. ‘I should like to spare you
-so painful a task.’ After studying the note, M. Spaak confined
-himself to pointing out that he had already replied by the
-protest he had just made.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal would like you to read what
-the Ambassador read.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ROBERTS: I am sorry. I was thinking of the next document
-I was going to read. I read the last paragraph on the first page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Ambassador was then able to read the note he had
-brought:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk548'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“ ‘I am instructed by the Government of the Reich,’ he said,
-‘to make the following declaration:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk549'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“ ‘In order to forestall the invasion of Belgium, Holland, and
-Luxembourg, for which Great Britain and France have been
-making preparations clearly aimed at Germany, the Government
-of the Reich are compelled to ensure the neutrality of the
-three countries mentioned by means of arms. For this purpose
-the Government of the Reich will bring up an armed force
-of the greatest size so that resistance of any kind will be
-useless. The Government of the Reich guarantee Belgium’s
-European and colonial territory as well as her dynasty on
-condition that no resistance is offered. Should there be any
-resistance, Belgium will risk the destruction of her country
-and the loss of her independence. It is, therefore, in the interests
-of Belgium that the population be called upon to cease all
-resistance and that the authorities be given the necessary
-instructions to make contact with the German Military Command.’ ”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, the so-called ultimatum handed in some hours after
-the invasion had started is Document TC-57, which is the last document
-but three in the bundle. It is the document I handed in and
-it becomes Exhibit GB-112. My Lord, it is a long document and
-I will read to the Tribunal such parts as the Tribunal thinks advisable:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Reich Government”—it begins—“have for a long time
-had no doubts as to what was the chief aim of British and
-<span class='pageno' title='305' id='Page_305'></span>
-French war policy. It consists of the spreading of the war to
-other countries and of the misuse of their peoples as auxiliary
-and mercenary troops for England and France.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk550'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The last attempt of this sort was the plan to occupy Scandinavia
-with the help of Norway, in order to set up a new
-front against Germany in this region. It was only Germany’s
-last minute action which upset this project. Germany has
-furnished documentary evidence of this before the eyes of
-the world.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk551'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Immediately after the British-French action in Scandinavia
-miscarried, England and France took up their policy of war
-expansion in another direction. In this respect, while the
-retreat .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. from Norway was still going on, the English Prime
-Minister announced that, as a result of the altered situation
-in Scandinavia, England was once more in a position to go
-ahead with the transfer of the full weight of her Navy to
-the Mediterranean, and that English and French units were
-already on the way to Alexandria. The Mediterranean now
-became the center of English-French war propaganda. This
-was partly to gloss over the Scandinavian defeat and the big
-loss of prestige before their own people and before the world,
-and partly to make it appear that the Balkans had been
-chosen for the next theater of war against Germany.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk552'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In reality, however, this apparent shifting to the Mediterranean
-of English-French war policy had quite another purpose.
-It was nothing but a diversion maneuver in grand style
-to deceive Germany as to the direction of the next English-French
-attack. For, as the Reich Government have long been
-aware, the true aim of England and France is the carefully
-prepared and now immediately imminent attack on Germany
-in the West, so as to advance through Belgium and Holland
-to the region of the Ruhr.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk553'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Germany has recognized and respected the inviolability of
-Belgium and Holland, it being, of course, understood that these
-two countries in the event of a war of Germany against England
-and France would maintain the strictest neutrality.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk554'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Belgium and the Netherlands have not fulfilled this condition.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Roberts, do you think it is necessary to
-read this in full?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ROBERTS: No, I don’t. I was going to summarize these
-charges. If your Lordship would be good enough to look at the
-bottom of the first page, you will see the so-called ultimatum complaining
-of the hostile expressions in the Belgian and Netherlands
-<span class='pageno' title='306' id='Page_306'></span>
-press; and then, My Lord, in the second paragraph over the page
-there is an allegation of the attempts of the British Intelligence to
-bring a revolution in Germany with the assistance of Belgium and
-the Netherlands.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then, My Lord, in Paragraph 3 reference is made to military
-preparation of the two countries; and in Paragraph 4 it is pointed
-out that Belgium has fortified the Belgian-German frontier.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A complaint is made in regard to Holland in Paragraph 5 that
-British aircraft have flown over the Netherlands’ country.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There are, My Lord, other charges made against the neutrality
-of these two countries although no instances are given. I don’t think
-I need refer to anything on Page 3 of the document.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Page 4, My Lord—I would like, if I might, to read the middle
-paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In this struggle for existence, forced upon the German people
-by England and France, the Reich Government are not disposed
-to await submissively the attack by England and France
-and to allow them to carry the war over Belgium and the
-other Netherlands into German territory.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And, My Lord, I just emphasize this sentence and then I read
-no further:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“They have, therefore, now issued the command to German
-troops to ensure the neutrality of these countries by all the
-military means at the disposal of the Reich.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, it is unnecessary, in my submission, to emphasize the
-falsity of that statement. The world now knows that for months
-preparations had been made to violate the neutrality of these three
-countries. This document is saying the orders to do so have now
-been issued.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, a similar document, similar in terms altogether was
-handed to the representatives of the Netherlands Government; My
-Lord, TC-60—that will be GB-113, which is the last document but
-one in the bundle. My Lord, that is a memorandum to the Luxembourg
-Government, which enclosed with it a copy of the document
-handed to the Governments of Belgium and the Netherlands.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, I only desire to emphasize the second paragraph of
-TC-60:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In defense against the imminent attack the German troops
-have now received the order to safeguard the neutrality of
-these two countries .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, the last document, TC-59, which I formerly put in,
-that is GB-111.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My Lord, that is the dignified protest of the Belgian Government
-against the crime which was committed against her. My Lord, those
-<span class='pageno' title='307' id='Page_307'></span>
-are the facts supporting the charges of the violation of treaties and
-assurances against these three countries and supporting the allegation
-of the making of an aggressive war against them. My Lord,
-in the respectful submission of the Prosecution here the story is a
-very plain, a very simple one, a story of perfidy, dishonor, and
-shame.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COLONEL H. J. PHILLIMORE (Junior Counsel for the United
-Kingdom): May it please the Tribunal, it is my task to present the
-evidence on the wars of aggression and wars in breach of treaties
-against Greece and Yugoslavia. The evidence which I shall put
-in to the Tribunal has been prepared in collaboration with my
-American colleague, Lieutenant Colonel Krucker.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The invasion of Greece and Yugoslavia by the Germans, which
-took place in the early hours of the morning of the 6th of April
-1941, constituted direct breaches of the Hague Convention of 1899
-on the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes and of the
-Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928. Those breaches are charged, respectively,
-at Paragraphs I and XIII of Appendix C of the Indictment.
-Both have already been put in by my learned friend, Sir David
-Maxwell-Fyfe, who also explained the obligation of the German
-Government to the Governments of Yugoslavia and Greece under
-those pacts.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the case of Yugoslavia the invasion further constituted a
-breach of an express assurance by the Nazis, which is charged at
-Paragraph XXVI of Appendix C. This assurance was originally
-given in a German Foreign Office release made in Berlin on the
-28th of April 1938 but was subsequently repeated by Hitler himself
-on the 6th of October 1939 in a speech he made in the Reichstag, and
-it is in respect of this last occasion that the assurance is specifically
-pleaded in the Indictment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>May I ask the Tribunal to turn now to the first document in the
-document book, which is Book Number 5. The first document is
-2719-PS, which is part of the document which has already been put
-in as Exhibit GB-58. This is the text of the German Foreign Office
-release on the 28th of April 1938, and I would read the beginning
-and then the last paragraph but one on the page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Berlin, the 28th of April 1938. The State Secretary of the
-German Foreign Office to the German Diplomatic Representatives.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk555'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“As a consequence of the reunion of Austria with the Reich
-we have now new frontiers with Italy, Yugoslavia, Switzerland,
-Liechtenstein and Hungary. These frontiers are regarded
-by us as final and inviolable. On this point the following
-special declarations have been made .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='308' id='Page_308'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then to the last paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3. Yugoslavia. The Yugoslav Government have been informed
-by authoritative German quarters that German policy has no
-aims beyond Austria, and that the Yugoslav frontier would in
-any case remain untouched. In his speech made at Graz on
-the 3rd of April of that year the Führer and Chancellor
-stated that in regard to the reunion of Austria, Yugoslavia
-and Hungary had adopted the same attitude as Italy. We
-were happy to have frontiers there which relieved us of all
-anxiety about providing military protection for them.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then, if I may, I will pass to the second document in the book,
-TC-92, and offer that as Exhibit GB-114. This is an extract from a
-speech made by Hitler on the occasion of the dinner in honor of
-the Prince Regent of Yugoslavia on June 1, 1939. I will read the
-extract in full:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The German friendship for the Yugoslav nation is not only a
-spontaneous one. It gained depth and durability in the midst
-of the tragic confusion of the World War. The German soldier
-then learned to appreciate and respect his extremely brave
-opponent. I believe that this feeling was reciprocated. This
-mutual respect finds confirmation in common political, cultural,
-and economic interests. We therefore look upon your
-Royal Highness’ present visit as a living proof of the accuracy
-of our view, and at the same time, on that account we derive
-from it the hope that German-Yugoslav friendship may continue
-further to develop in the future and to grow ever closer.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk556'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the presence of your Royal Highness, however, we also
-perceive a happy opportunity for a frank and friendly
-exchange of views which—and of this I am convinced—in this
-sense can only be fruitful to our two peoples and States.
-I believe this all the more because a firmly established reliable
-relationship of Germany and Yugoslavia, now that owing
-to historical events we have become neighbors with common
-boundaries fixed for all time, will not only guarantee lasting
-peace between our two peoples and countries but can also
-represent an element of calm to our nerve-racked continent.
-This peace is the goal of all who are disposed to perform
-really constructive work.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As we now know this speech was made at the time when Hitler
-had already decided upon the European war. I think I am right in
-saying it was a week after the Reich Chancellery conference, known
-as the Schmundt note, to which the Tribunal has been referred more
-than once. The reference to “nerve-racked continent” might perhaps
-be attributed to the war of nerves which Hitler had himself been
-conducting for many months.
-<span class='pageno' title='309' id='Page_309'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now I pass to a document which is specifically pleaded at Paragraph
-XXVI as the assurance breached; it is the next document in
-the bundle, TC-43—German assurance to Yugoslavia of the 6th of
-October 1939. It is part of the document which has already been
-put in as Exhibit GB-80. This is an extract from the <span class='it'>Dokumente
-der Deutschen Politik</span>:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Immediately after the completion of the Anschluss I informed
-Yugoslavia that from now on the frontier with this country
-would also be an unalterable one and that we only desire to
-live in peace and friendship with her.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Despite the obligation of Germany under the Convention of 1899
-and the Kellogg-Briand Pact and under the assurances which I have
-read, the fate of both Greece and Yugoslavia had, as we now know,
-been sealed ever since the meeting between Hitler and the Defendant
-Ribbentrop and Ciano at Obersalzberg, on the 12th and 13th of
-August 1939.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We will pass to the next document in the bundle, which is TC-77.
-That document has already been put in as GB-48; and the passages
-to which I would draw Your Lordship’s attention already have been
-quoted, I think, by my learned friend, the Attorney General. Those
-passages are on Page 2 in the last paragraph from “Generally
-speaking .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” until “.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. neutral of this kind,” and then again on
-Pages 7 and 8, the part quoted by the Attorney General and
-emphasized particularly by Colonel Griffith-Jones at the foot of
-Page 7 on the second day of the meeting, the words beginning “In
-general, however, success by one of the Axis partners .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” to
-“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Italy and Germany would have their backs free for work
-against the West.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Both of those passages have been quoted before; and if I might
-sum up the effect of the meeting as revealed by the document as
-a whole, it shows Hitler and the Defendant Ribbentrop, only
-2 months after the dinner to the Prince Regent, seeking to persuade
-the Italians to make war on Yugoslavia at the same time that Germany
-commences hostilities against Poland, as Hitler had decided
-to do in the very near future. Ciano, while evidently in entire
-agreement with Hitler and Ribbentrop as to the desirability of
-liquidating Yugoslavia and himself anxious to secure Salonika,
-stated that Italy was not yet ready for a general European war.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Despite all the persuasion which Hitler and the Defendant
-Ribbentrop exerted at the meeting, it became necessary for the
-Nazi conspirators to reassure their intended victim, Yugoslavia,
-since in fact Italy maintained her position and did not enter the
-war when the Germans invaded Poland, while the Germans themselves
-were not yet ready to strike in the Balkans. It was just for
-this reason that on the 6th of October through Hitler’s speech they
-<span class='pageno' title='310' id='Page_310'></span>
-repeated the assurance they had given in April 1938. It is, of course,
-a matter of history that after the defeat of the Allied armies in May
-and June 1940 the Italian Government declared war on France and
-that subsequently at 3 o’clock in the morning of the 28th October
-1940 the Italian Minister at Athens presented the Greek Government
-with a 3 hours’ ultimatum upon the expiry of which Italian troops
-were already invading the soil of Greece.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If I may quote to the Tribunal the words in which His Majesty’s
-Minister reported that event, “The President of the Council has
-assured himself an outstanding .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: You have referred to a document?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COL. PHILLIMORE: It is not in any of my documents. It is
-merely carrying the story to the next document:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The President of the Council has assured himself an outstanding
-place in Greek history, and whatever the future may
-bring, his foresight in quietly preparing his country for war,
-and his courage in resisting without demur the Italian ultimatum
-when delivered in the small hours of that October
-morning will surely obtain an honorable mention in the story
-of European statecraft. He means to fight until Italy is completely
-defeated, and this reflects the purpose of the whole
-Greek nation.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I turn now to the next document in the bundle. That is 2762-PS,
-a letter from Hitler to Mussolini, which I put in as GB-115. Although
-not dated, I think it is clear from the contents that it was written
-shortly after the Italian invasion of Greece. It has been quoted in
-full by the Attorney General, but I think it would assist the Tribunal
-if I read just the last two paragraphs of the extract:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Yugoslavia must become disinterested if possible, however,
-from our point of view interested in co-operating in the liquidation
-of the Greek question. Without assurances from Yugoslavia,
-it is useless to risk any successful operation in the
-Balkans.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk557'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Unfortunately I must stress the fact that waging a war in
-the Balkans before March is impossible. Therefore any threatening
-move towards Yugoslavia would be useless since the
-impossibility of a materialization of such threats before March
-is well known to the Serbian General Staff. Therefore Yugoslavia
-must, if at all possible, be won over by other means
-and other ways.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>You may think the reference in the first two lines to his thoughts—having
-been with Mussolini for the last 14 days—probably indicates
-that it was written in about the middle of November, shortly
-after the Italian attack.
-<span class='pageno' title='311' id='Page_311'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Could you give us the date of the Italian
-attack?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COL. PHILLIMORE: 28th October 1940.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Thank you.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COL. PHILLIMORE: As the Tribunal will see from the succeeding
-document, it was at this time that Hitler was making his plans
-for the offensive in the spring of 1941, which included the invasion
-of Greece from the north. This letter shows that it was an integral
-part of those plans that Yugoslavia should be induced to co-operate
-in them or at least to maintain a disinterested attitude toward the
-liquidation of the other Balkan states.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I pass now to the next document in the bundle, 444-PS, which
-becomes Exhibit GB-116. It is a top-secret directive issued from
-the Führer’s headquarters, signed by Hitler, initialed by the Defendant
-Jodl, and dated the 12th of November 1940. I will read the first
-two lines and then pass to Paragraph 4 on the third page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Directive Number 18. The preparatory measures of Supreme
-Headquarters for the prosecution of the war in the near
-future are to be made along the following lines .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Omitting the serious dealings with operations against Gibraltar
-and an offensive against Egypt, I will read Paragraph 4 on the
-third page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Balkans .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. The Commander-in-Chief of the Army will make
-preparations for occupying the Greek mainland north of the
-Aegean Sea in case of need, entering through Bulgaria, and
-thus make possible the use of German Air Force units against
-targets in the eastern Mediterranean, in particular against
-those English air bases which are threatening the Romanian
-oil area.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk558'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In order to be able to face all eventualities and to keep Turkey
-in check, the use of an army group of an approximate
-strength of 10 divisions is to be the basis for the planning and
-the calculations of deployment. It will not be possible to
-count on the railway leading through Yugoslavia for moving
-these forces into position.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk559'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“So as to shorten the time needed for the deployment, preparations
-will be made for an early increase in the German
-Army mission in Romania, the extent of which must be submitted
-to me.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk560'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Commander-in-Chief of the Air Force will make preparations
-for the use of German Air Force units in the southeast
-Balkans and for aerial reconnaissance on the southern border
-of Bulgaria in accordance with the intended ground operations.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='312' id='Page_312'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I don’t think I need trouble the Tribunal with the rest. The next
-document in the bundle, 1541-PS, which I offer in evidence as
-Exhibit GB-117, is the directive issued for the actual attack on
-Greece. Before reading it, it might be convenient if I summarized
-the position of the Italian invading forces at that time as this is
-one of the factors mentioned by Hitler in the directive. I can put
-it very shortly. I again use the words in which His Majesty’s
-Minister reported:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The morale of the Greek Army throughout has been of the
-highest, and our own naval and land successes at Taranto
-and in the western desert have done much to maintain it.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk561'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“With relatively poor armaments and the minimum of equipment
-and modern facilities they have driven back or captured
-superior Italian forces more frequently than not at the point
-of the bayonet. The modern Greeks have thus shown that
-they are not unworthy of the ancient traditions of their
-country and that they, like their distant forefathers, are
-prepared to fight against odds to maintain their freedom.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In fact the Italians were getting the worst of it, and it was time
-that Hitler came to the rescue. Accordingly this directive was issued
-on 13 December 1940; it is top-secret Directive Number 20 for the
-Operation Marita. The distribution included, of course, the Commander
-of the Navy, that would, of course, be the Defendant Raeder;
-one to the Commander of the Air Force, which would be the Defendant
-Göring; one to the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces,
-Keitel; and one to the Command Staff, which I take it, would be
-the Defendant Jodl. I shall read the first two paragraphs and then
-summarize the next two, if I may:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The result in the battles of Albania is not yet decisive.
-Because of a dangerous situation in Albania it is doubly
-necessary that the British endeavor to create air bases under
-the protection of a Balkan front—which would be dangerous
-above all to Italy as well as to the Romanian oil fields—be
-foiled.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk562'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“My plan, therefore, is (a) to form a slowly increasing task
-force in southern Romania within the next months (b) after
-the setting in of favorable weather—probably in March—to
-send this task force for the occupation of the Aegean north
-coast by way of Bulgaria and, if necessary, to occupy the
-entire Greek mainland (Operation Marita). The support of
-Bulgaria is to be expected.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The next paragraph gives the forces for the operation, and
-Paragraph 4 deals with the Operation Marita itself. Paragraph 5
-states:
-<span class='pageno' title='313' id='Page_313'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The military preparations which will produce exceptional
-political results in the Balkans demand the exact control of
-all the necessary measures by the High Command. The transport
-through Hungary and the arrival in Romania will be
-reported step by step by the High Command of the Armed
-Forces and are to be explained at first as a strengthening of
-the German Army mission in Romania. Consultations with
-the Romanians or the Bulgarians which may point to our
-intentions as well as notification of the Italians are each subject
-to my consent, also the sending of scouting missions and
-advanced parties.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I think I need not trouble the Tribunal with the rest. The next
-document, 448-PS, which I put in as Exhibit GB-118, is again a top-secret
-directive carrying the plan a little further; it deals with
-decidedly different aspects, the direct support of the Italian forces
-in Albania. I read, if I may, the first short paragraph and then the
-paragraph at the foot of the page.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The situation in the Mediterranean theater of operations
-demands German assistance for strategical, political, and
-psychological reasons due to employment of superior forces
-by England against our allies.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And in Paragraph 3 after dealing with the forces to be transferred
-to Albania the directive sets out what the duties of the
-German forces will be:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“a) To serve in Albania for the time being as a reserve for
-an emergency case should new crises arise there.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk563'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“b) To ease the burden of the Italian Army group when later
-attacking with the aim:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk564'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“To tear open the Greek defense front on a decisive point for
-a far-reaching operation.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk565'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“To open up the straits west of Salonika from the back in
-order to support thereby the frontal attack of List’s army.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That directive was signed by Hitler and, as can be seen on the
-original which I have put in, it was initialed by both the Defendant
-Keitel and the Defendant Jodl. Here again, of course, a copy went
-to the Defendant Raeder, and I take it that the copy sent to foreign
-intelligence would probably reach the Defendant Ribbentrop.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I pass to C-134, the next document in the bundle, which becomes
-Exhibit GB-119. This records a conference which took place on the
-19th and 20th of January between the Defendant Keitel and the
-Italian General Guzzoni and which was followed by a meeting
-between Hitler and Mussolini at which the Defendants Ribbentrop,
-Keitel, and Jodl were present.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I need not trouble the Tribunal with the meeting with the Italians,
-but if you would pass to Page 3 of the document, there is
-<span class='pageno' title='314' id='Page_314'></span>
-a paragraph there in the speech, which the Führer made, which is
-perhaps just worth reading—the speech by the Führer on the
-20th of January 1941, in the middle of Page 3. It sets out that the
-speech was made after the conference with the Italians and then
-shows who was present.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the German side I would call your attention to the presence
-of the Minister for Foreign Affairs, the Chief of the Supreme Command
-of the Armed Forces, and the Chief of the Armed Forces
-Operational Staff. That is, of course, the Defendants Ribbentrop,
-Keitel and Jodl; and on the Italian side, the Duce, Ciano, and then
-three generals. It is the last paragraph that I would wish to read:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The massing of troops in Romania serves a threefold purpose:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk566'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“a. An operation against Greece;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk567'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“b. Protection of Bulgaria against Russia and Turkey;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk568'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“c. Safeguarding the guarantee to Romania.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk569'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Each of these tasks requires its own group of forces; altogether,
-therefore, very strong forces whose deployment far
-from our base requires a long time.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk570'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Desirable that this deployment is completed without interference
-from the enemy. Therefore disclose the game as late
-as possible. The tendency will be to cross the Danube at the
-last possible moment and to line up for attack at the earliest
-possible moment.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I pass to the next document, 1746-PS, which I offer as GB-120.
-That document is in three parts. It consists, in the first place, of a
-conference between Field Marshal List and the Bulgarians on the
-8th of February. The second part and the third part deal with later
-events, and I will, if I may, come back to them at an appropriate
-time. I would read the first and the last paragraphs on the first
-page of this document:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Minutes of questions discussed between the representatives
-of the Royal Bulgarian General Staff and the German High
-Command—General Field Marshal List—in connection with
-the possible movement of German troops through Bulgaria
-and their commitment against Greece and possibly against
-Turkey, if she should involve herself in the war.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then the last paragraph on the page shows the plan being
-concerted with the Bulgarians—Paragraph 3:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Bulgarian and the German General Staffs will take all
-measures in order to camouflage the preparation of the operations
-and to assure in this way the most favorable conditions
-for the execution of the German operations as planned.
-<span class='pageno' title='315' id='Page_315'></span></p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The representatives of the two general staffs consider it suitable
-to inform their governments that it will be advisable of
-necessity to take secrecy and surprise into consideration when
-the Three Power Treaty is signed by Bulgaria, in order to
-assure the success of the military operations.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I pass then to the next document, C-59. I offer that as Exhibit
-GB-121. It is a further top-secret directive of the 19th of February.
-I need not, I think, read it. All that is set out of importance is the
-date for the Operation Marita. It sets out that the bridge across the
-Danube is to be begun on the 28th of February, the river crossed
-on the 2d of March, and the final orders to be issued on the 26th of
-February at the latest.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is perhaps worth noting that on the original which I have put
-in, the actual dates are filled in in the handwriting of the Defendant
-Keitel.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is perhaps just worth setting out the position of Bulgaria at
-this moment. Bulgaria adhered to the Three Power Pact on the
-1st of March .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: What year?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COL. PHILLIMORE: In 1941, and on the same day the entry of
-German troops into Bulgaria began in accordance with the Plan
-Marita and the directives to which I have referred the Tribunal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The landing of British troops in Greece on the 3rd of March in
-accordance with the guarantee given in the spring of 1939 by His
-Majesty’s Government may have accelerated the movement of the
-German forces; but, as the Tribunal will have seen, the invasion of
-Greece had been planned long beforehand and was already in progress
-at this time.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I pass now to the next document in the bundle, C-167, which
-I put in as GB-122. I am afraid it is not a very satisfactory copy,
-but the original which I have put in shows that both the Defendants
-Keitel and Jodl were present at the interview with Hitler which
-this extract records. It is a short extract from a report by the
-Defendant Raeder on an interview with Hitler in the presence of
-the Defendants Keitel and Jodl. It is perhaps interesting as showing
-the ruthless nature of the German intention.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Commander-in-Chief of the Navy asks for confirmation
-that the whole of Greece will have to be occupied even in the
-event of a peaceful settlement.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk571'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Führer: The complete occupation is a prerequisite of any
-settlement.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>The above document .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Is it dated?
-<span class='pageno' title='316' id='Page_316'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COL. PHILLIMORE: It took place on the 18th of March at
-1600 hours.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Is that on the original document?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COL. PHILLIMORE: Yes, on the original document.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COL. PHILLIMORE: The document I have referred to shows,
-it is submitted, that the Nazi conspirators in accordance with their
-principle of liquidating any neutral who did not remain disinterested
-had made every preparation by the end of January and were
-at this date in the process of moving the necessary troops to ensure
-the final liquidation of Greece, which was already at war with and
-getting the better of their Italian allies.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They were not, however, yet ready to deal with Yugoslavia
-towards which their policy accordingly remained one of lulling the
-unsuspecting victim. On the 25th of March 1941 in accordance with
-this policy, the adherence of Yugoslavia to the Three Power Pact
-was secured. This adherence followed a visit on the 15th of February
-1941 by the Yugoslav Premier Cvetković and the Foreign Minister
-Cinkar-Markovic to the Defendant Ribbentrop at Salzburg and
-subsequently to Hitler at Berchtesgaden, after which these ministers
-were induced to sign the Pact at Vienna on the 25th of March. On
-this occasion the Defendant Ribbentrop wrote the two letters of
-assurance, which are set out in the next document in the bundle,
-2450-PS, which I put in as GB-123. If I might read from half-way
-down the page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Notes of the Axis Governments to Belgrade.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk572'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“At the same time when the protocol on the entry of Yugoslavia
-to the Tri-Partite Pact was signed, the Governments of
-the Axis Powers sent to the Yugoslavian Government the
-following identical notes:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk573'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“ ‘Mr. Prime Minister:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk574'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“ ‘In the name of the German Government and at their behest
-I have the honor to inform Your Excellency of the following:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk575'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“ ‘On the occasion of the Yugoslavian entry today into the
-Tri-Partite Pact the German Government confirm their determination
-to respect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of
-Yugoslavia at all times.’ ”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That letter was signed by the Defendant Ribbentrop, who you
-will remember, was present at the meeting in August of 1939 when
-he and Hitler tried to persuade the Italians to invade Yugoslavia.
-In fact it was 11 days after this letter was written that the Germans
-did invade Yugoslavia and 2 days after the letter was written that
-they issued the necessary order.
-<span class='pageno' title='317' id='Page_317'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If I might read the second letter:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:0em;margin-bottom:.5em;'>“Mr. Prime Minister:</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“With reference to the conversations that occurred in connection
-with the entry of Yugoslavia into the Tri-Partite Pact,
-I have the honor to confirm to Your Excellency herewith in
-the name of the Reich Cabinet”—Reichsregierung—“that in
-the agreement between the Axis Powers and the Royal Yugoslavian
-Government the Governments of the Axis Powers
-during this war will not direct a demand to Yugoslavia to
-permit the march or transportation of troops through Yugoslavian
-national territory.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The position at this stage, the 25th of March 1941, was therefore,
-that German troops were already in Bulgaria moving towards the
-Greek frontier, while Yugoslavia had, to use Hitler’s own term in
-his letter to Mussolini, “become disinterested” in the cleaning-up of
-the Greek question.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The importance of the adherence of Yugoslavia to the Three
-Power Pact appears very clearly from the next document in the
-bundle, 2765-PS, which I put in as GB-124. It is an extract from
-the minutes of a meeting between Hitler and Ciano, and if I might
-just read the first paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer first expressed his satisfaction with Yugoslavia’s
-joining the Tri-Partite Pact and the resulting definition of
-her position. This is of special importance in view of the proposed
-military action against Greece, for if one considers that
-for 350 to 400 kilometers the important line of communication
-through Bulgaria runs within 20 kilometers of the Yugoslav
-border, one can judge that with a dubious attitude of Yugoslavia
-an undertaking against Greece would have been militarily
-an extremely foolhardy venture.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Again it is a matter of history that on the night of the 26th of
-March, when the two Yugoslav Ministers returned to Belgrade,
-General Simovic and his colleagues effected their removal by a <span class='it'>coup
-d’état</span>; and Yugoslavia emerged on the morning of the 27th of March
-ready to defend, if need be, her independence. The Yugoslav people
-had found themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Nazis reacted to this altered situation with lightning rapidity,
-and the immediate liquidation of Yugoslavia was decided on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I ask the Tribunal to turn back to 1746-PS, which I put in as
-GB-120, to the second part on Page 3 of the document consisting
-of a record of a conference of Hitler and the German High Command
-on the situation in Yugoslavia dated 27th of March 1941.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It shows that those present included the Führer; the Reich Marshal,
-that is of course, the Defendant Göring; Chief, OKW, that is
-<span class='pageno' title='318' id='Page_318'></span>
-the Defendant Keitel; Chief of the Wehrmacht Führungsstab, that
-is the Defendant Jodl. Then over the page—“later on the following
-persons were added.” I call the Tribunal’s attention to the fact that
-those who came in later included the Defendant Ribbentrop.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If I might read the part of Hitler’s statement set out on Page 4:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer describes Yugoslavia’s situation after the <span class='it'>coup
-d’état</span>. Statement that Yugoslavia was an uncertain factor in
-regard to the coming Marita action and even more in regard
-to the Barbarossa undertaking later on. Serbs and Slovenes
-were never pro-Germans.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I think I can pass on to the second paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The present moment is for political and military reasons
-favorable for us to ascertain the actual situation in the country
-and the country’s attitude towards us. For if the overthrow
-of the government would have happened during the Barbarossa
-action, the consequences for us probably would have
-been considerably more serious.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then the next paragraph to which I would particularly draw
-the Tribunal’s attention:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer is determined, without waiting for possible
-loyalty declarations of the new government, to make all preparations
-in order to destroy Yugoslavia militarily and as a
-national unit. No diplomatic inquiries will be made nor ultimatums
-presented. Assurances of the Yugoslav Government
-which cannot be trusted anyhow in the future will be taken
-note of. The attack will start as soon as the means and troops
-suitable for it are ready.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk576'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It is important that actions will be taken as fast as possible.
-An attempt will be made to let the bordering states participate
-in a suitable way. An actual military support against
-Yugoslavia is to be requested of Italy, Hungary, and in certain
-respects of Bulgaria too. Romania’s main task is the protection
-against Russia. The Hungarian and the Bulgarian Ministers
-have already been notified. During the day a message
-will still be addressed to the Duce.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk577'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Politically it is especially important that the blow against
-Yugoslavia is carried out with unmerciful harshness and that
-the military destruction is done in a lightning-like undertaking.
-In this way Turkey would become sufficiently frightened
-and the campaign against Greece later on would be
-influenced in a favorable way. It can be assumed that the
-Croats will come to our side when we attack. A corresponding
-political treatment (autonomy later on) will be assured to
-them. The war against Yugoslavia should be very popular in
-<span class='pageno' title='319' id='Page_319'></span>
-Italy, Hungary, and Bulgaria, as territorial acquisitions are
-to be promised to these states; the Adriatic coast for Italy, the
-Banat for Hungary, and Macedonia for Bulgaria.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk578'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“This plan assumes that we speed up the schedule of all preparations
-and use such strong forces that the Yugoslav collapse
-will take place within the shortest time.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Well, of course, the Tribunal will have noted that in that third
-paragraph—2 days after the pact had been signed and the assurances
-given—because there has been a <span class='it'>coup d’état</span> and it is just possible
-that the operations against Greece may be affected, the destruction
-of Yugoslavia is decided upon without any question of taking the
-trouble to ascertain the views of the new government.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then there is one short passage on Page 5, the next page of the
-document, which I would like to read:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“5) The main task of the Air Force is to start as early as
-possible with the destruction of the Yugoslavian Air Force
-ground installations and to destroy the capital Belgrade in
-attacks by waves .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I pause there to comment; we now know, of course, how ruthlessly
-this bombing was done when the residential areas of Belgrade
-were bombed at 7 o’clock on the following Sunday morning, the
-morning of the 6th.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The 6th of April?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COL. PHILLIMORE: The 6th of April.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then again still in the same document, the last part of it, Part V
-at Page 5; a tentative plan is set out, drawn up by the Defendant
-Jodl and I would read one small paragraph at the top of the following
-page, Page 6:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the event that the political development requires an
-armed intervention against Yugoslavia, it is the German
-intention to attack Yugoslavia in a concentric way as soon
-as possible, to destroy her armed forces, and to dissolve her
-national territory.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I read that because the plan is issued from the office of the
-Defendant Jodl.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now passing to the next document in the bundle, C-127, I put
-that in as Exhibit GB-125. It is an extract from the order issued
-after the meeting from the minutes of which I have just read, that
-is the meeting of the 27th of March recorded in 1746-PS, Part II.
-It is worth reading the first paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The military Putsch in Yugoslavia has altered the political
-situation in the Balkans. Yugoslavia must, in spite of her
-protestations of loyalty, for the time being be considered as
-an enemy and therefore be crushed as speedily as possible.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='320' id='Page_320'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I pass to the next document, 1835-PS, which I put in evidence
-as GB-126. It is an original telegram containing a letter from Hitler
-to Mussolini forwarded through the German Ambassador in Rome
-by Hitler and the Defendant Ribbentrop. It is written to advise
-Mussolini of the course decided on and under the guise of somewhat
-fulsome language the Duce is given his orders. If I might read the
-first five paragraphs:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Duce, events force me to give you, Duce, by this the quickest
-means, my estimation of the situation and the consequences
-which may result from it.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk579'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(1) From the beginning I have regarded Yugoslavia as the
-most dangerous factor in the controversy with Greece. Considered
-from the purely military point of view, German intervention
-in the war in Thrace would not be at all justified as
-long as the attitude of Yugoslavia remains ambiguous, and
-she could threaten the left flank of the advancing columns on
-our enormous front.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk580'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(2) For this reason I have done everything and honestly
-have endeavored to bring Yugoslavia into our community
-bound together by mutual interests. Unfortunately these
-endeavors did not meet with success, or they were begun too
-late to produce any definite result. Today’s reports leave no
-doubt as to the imminent turn in the foreign policy of Yugoslavia.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk581'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(3) I do not consider this situation as being catastrophic, but
-nevertheless a difficult one, and we on our part must avoid
-any mistake if we do not want in the end to endanger our
-whole position.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk582'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(4) Therefore I have already arranged for all necessary measures
-in order to meet a critical development with necessary
-military means. The change in the deployment of our troops
-has been ordered also in Bulgaria. Now I would cordially
-request you, Duce, not to undertake any further operations in
-Albania in the course of the next few days. I consider it
-necessary that you should cover and screen the most important
-passes from Yugoslavia into Albania with all available
-forces.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk583'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“These measures should not be considered as designed for a
-long period of time, but as auxiliary measures designed to
-prevent for at least 14 days to 3 weeks a crisis arising.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk584'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I also consider it necessary, Duce, that you should reinforce
-your forces on the Italian-Yugoslav front with all available
-means and with utmost speed.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk585'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(5) I also consider it necessary, Duce, that everything which
-we do and order be shrouded in absolute secrecy and that
-<span class='pageno' title='321' id='Page_321'></span>
-only personalities who necessarily must be notified know anything
-about them. These measures will completely lose their
-value should they become known .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Then he goes on to emphasize further the importance of secrecy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I pass to R-95; the next document in the bundle, which I put in
-as Exhibit GB-127. It was referred to by my learned friend, the
-Attorney General. It is an operational order signed by General
-Von Brauchitsch which is merely passing to the armies the orders
-contained in Directive Number 25, which was the Document C-127,
-an extract of which I put in as Exhibit GB-125. I won’t trouble the
-Tribunal with reading it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I pass to TC-93, which has already been put in with TC-92 as
-GB-114. The invasion of Greece and Yugoslavia took place on this
-morning, the 6th of April, on which Hitler issued the proclamation
-from which this passage is an extract:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“From the beginning of the struggle it has been England’s
-steadfast endeavor to make the Balkans a theater of war. British
-diplomacy did, in fact, using the model of the World War,
-succeed in first ensnaring Greece by a guarantee offered to
-her and then finally in misusing her for Britain’s purposes.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk586'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The documents published today afford”—that refers to the
-<span class='it'>German White Book</span> which they published of all the documents
-leading up to the invasion—“The documents published
-today afford a glimpse of a practice which in accordance with
-very old British recipes is a constant attempt to induce others
-to fight and bleed for British interests.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk587'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the face of this I have always emphasized that: (1) The
-German people have no antagonism to the Greek people but
-that (2) we shall never as in the World War tolerate a power
-establishing itself on Greek territory with the object, at a
-given time, of being able to advance thence from the southeast
-into German living space. We have swept the northern
-flank free of the English; we are resolved not to tolerate such
-a threat in the south.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then the paragraph to which I would draw the Tribunal’s particular
-attention:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the interests of a genuine consolidation of Europe it has
-been my endeavor since the day of my assumption of power
-above all to establish a friendly relationship with Yugoslavia.
-I have consciously put out of mind everything that
-once took place between Germany and Serbia. I have not
-only offered the Serbian people the hand of the German
-people, but in addition have made efforts as an honest broker
-<span class='pageno' title='322' id='Page_322'></span>
-to assist in bridging all difficulties which existed between the
-Yugoslav State and various nations allied to Germany.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>One can only think that when he issued that proclamation Hitler
-must momentarily have forgotten the meeting with Ciano in August
-of 1939 and the meeting with the Defendant Ribbentrop and the
-others on 27th March a few days earlier.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I pass to the last document in the bundle. It is a document which
-has already been put in, L-172, and it was put in as Exhibit USA-34.
-It is a record of a lecture delivered by the Defendant Jodl on
-7th November 1943. At Page 4 there is a short passage which sets
-out his views two and a half years later on the action taken in April
-1941. I refer to Paragraph 11 on Page 4:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“What was, however, less acceptable was the necessity of
-affording our assistance as an ally in the Balkans in consequence
-of the ‘extra-turn’ of the Italians against Greece. The
-attack which they launched in the autumn of 1940 from
-Albania with totally inadequate means was contrary to all
-agreement but in the end led to a decision on our part which—taking
-a long view of the matter—would have become
-necessary in any case sooner or later. The planned attack on
-Greece from the north was not executed merely as an operation
-in aid of an ally. Its real purpose was to prevent the
-British from gaining a foothold in Greece and from menacing
-our Romanian oil area from that country.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If I might summarize the story:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The invasion of Greece was decided on at least as early as
-December or November 1940 and planned for the end of March or
-the beginning of April 1941. No consideration was at any time
-given to any obligations under treaties or conventions which might
-make such invasion a breach of international law. Care was taken
-to conceal the preparations so that the German forces might have
-an unsuspecting victim.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the meanwhile Yugoslavia, although to be liquidated in due
-course, was clearly better left for a later stage. Every effort was
-made to secure her co-operation for the offensive against Greece or
-at least to ensure that she would abstain from any interference.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The <span class='it'>coup d’état</span> of General Simovic upset this plan and it was
-then decided that irrespective of whether or not his government had
-any hostile intentions towards Germany, or even of supporting the
-Greeks, Yugoslavia must be liquidated.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was not worth while to take any steps to ascertain Yugoslavia’s
-intentions when it would be so little trouble now that the
-German troops were deployed to destroy her militarily and as a
-national unit. Accordingly in the early hours of Sunday morning,
-<span class='pageno' title='323' id='Page_323'></span>
-the 6th of April, German troops marched into Yugoslavia without
-warning and into Greece simultaneously with the formality of
-handing a note to the Greek Minister in Berlin informing him that
-the German forces were entering Greece to drive out the British.
-M. Koryzis, the Greek Minister, in replying to information of the
-invasion from the German Embassy, replied that history was
-repeating itself and that Greece was being attacked by Germany
-in the same way as by Italy. Greece returned, he said, the same
-reply as in the preceding October.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That concludes the evidence in respect of Greece and Yugoslavia.
-But as I have the honor to conclude the British case I would like,
-if the Tribunal would allow me, to draw their attention, very shortly
-indeed, to one common factor which runs through the whole of this
-aggression. I can do it, I think, in 5 minutes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is an element in the diplomatic technique of aggression which
-was used with singular consistency not only by the Nazis themselves
-but also by their Italian friends. Their technique was essentially
-based upon securing the maximum advantage from surprise
-even though only a few hours of unopposed military advance into
-the country of the unsuspecting victim could thus be secured. Thus
-there was, of course, no declaration of war in the case of Poland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The invasion of Norway and of Denmark began in the small
-hours of the night of April 8-9 and was well under way as a military
-operation before the diplomatic explanations and excuses were
-presented to the Danish Foreign Minister at 4:20 a.m. on the
-morning of the 9th and to the Norwegian Minister between half
-past 4 and 5 on that morning.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The invasion of Belgium, Luxembourg, and Holland began not
-later than 5 o’clock, in most cases earlier in the small hours of the
-10th of May, while the formal ultimatum delivered in each case
-with the diplomatic excuses and explanations was not presented
-until afterwards.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the case of Holland the invasion began between 3 and 4 in the
-morning. It was not until about 6 when The Hague had already
-been bombed that the German Minister asked to see M. Van Kleffens.
-In the case of Belgium where the bombing began at 5, the
-German Minister did not see M. Spaak until 8.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The invasion of Luxembourg began at 4 and it was at 7 when
-the German Minister asked to see M. Beck.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mussolini copied this technique. It was 3 o’clock on the morning
-of the 28th of October in 1940 when his Minister in Athens presented
-a 3-hour ultimatum to General Metaxas.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The invasions of Greece and Yugoslavia, as I have said, both
-began in the small hours of April 6, 1941. In the case of Yugoslavia
-<span class='pageno' title='324' id='Page_324'></span>
-no diplomatic exchange took place even after the event, but a
-proclamation was issued by Hitler—a proclamation from which
-I read an extract—at 5 o’clock that Sunday morning some 2 hours
-before Belgrade was bombed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the case of Greece, once again, it was at 20 minutes past 5
-that M. Koryzis was informed that German troops were entering
-Greek territory.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The manner in which this long series of aggressions was carried
-out is in itself further evidence of the essentially aggressive and
-treacherous character of the Nazi regime. Attack without warning
-at night to secure an initial advantage and proffer excuses or reasons
-afterwards. Their method of procedure is clearly the method of the
-barbarian, of the state which has no respect for its own pledged
-word nor for the rights of any people but its own.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>One is tempted to speculate whether this technique was evolved
-by the honest broker himself or by his honest clerk, the Defendant
-Ribbentrop.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Alderman, will you be ready to go on
-after a short adjournment? That’s what you were intending to do?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: We’ll adjourn for 10 minutes.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: May it please the Tribunal, before proceeding
-with the presentation of the evidence relating to the aggression
-against the Soviet Union, I shall take about 15 minutes to offer two
-further documents relating to the aggression against Austria.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>These two documents are stapled in a supplementary book,
-supplement to Document Book N. Both documents are correspondence
-of the British Foreign Office. They have been made available
-to us through the courtesy of our British colleagues.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>First I offer in evidence Document 3045-PS as Exhibit USA-127.
-This is in two parts. The first is a letter dated 12 March 1938, from
-Ambassador Nevile Henderson at the British Embassy, Berlin, to
-Lord Halifax. It reads:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:0em;margin-bottom:.5em;'>“My Lord:</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“With reference to your telegram Number 79 of March 11th,
-I have the honor to transmit to Your Lordship herewith a
-copy of a letter which I addressed to Baron Von Neurath in
-accordance with the instructions contained therein and which
-was delivered on the same evening.
-<span class='pageno' title='325' id='Page_325'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk588'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The French Ambassador addressed a similar letter to Baron
-Von Neurath at the same time.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The enclosure is the note of March 11th from the British Embassy
-to Defendant Von Neurath and it reads as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:0em;margin-bottom:.5em;'>“Dear Reich Minister:</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“My Government are informed that a German ultimatum
-was delivered this afternoon at Vienna demanding, <span class='it'>inter alia</span>,
-the resignation of the Chancellor and his replacement by the
-Minister of the Interior, a new Cabinet of which two-thirds
-of the members were to be National Socialists and the
-readmission of the Austrian Legion to the country with the
-duty of keeping order in Vienna.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk589'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I am instructed by my Government to represent immediately
-to the German Government that if this report is correct His
-Majesty’s Government in the United Kingdom feel bound to
-register a protest in the strongest terms against such use of
-coercion backed by force against an independent state in order
-to create a situation incompatible with its national independence.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk590'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“As the German Minister for Foreign Affairs has already been
-informed in London, such action is found to produce the
-greatest reactions of which it is impossible to foretell the
-issues.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now offer Document 3287-PS, as Exhibit Number USA-128.
-This consists of a transmittal from the British Embassy, Berlin, to
-the British Foreign Office of Defendant Von Neurath’s letter of
-response dated 12 March 1938. The letter is identified in the document
-with the letter “L”.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>First the Defendant Von Neurath objected to the fact that the
-British Government were undertaking the role of protector of
-Austria’s independence. I quote from the second paragraph of his
-letter:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the name of the German Government I must point out
-here that the Royal British Government have no right to
-assume the role of a protector of Austria’s independence. In
-the course of diplomatic consultations on the Austrian question,
-the German Government never left any doubt with the
-Royal British Government that the formation of relations
-between Germany and Austria could not be considered anything
-but the inner concern of the German people and that
-it did not affect a third power.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then in response to the assertions regarding Germany’s ultimatum,
-Von Neurath set out what he stated to be the true version
-of events. I quote the last two long paragraphs of the letter; in the
-English translation I start at the bottom of Page 1 of the letter:
-<span class='pageno' title='326' id='Page_326'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Instead, the former Austrian Chancellor announced on the
-evening of the 9th of March the surprising and arbitrary resolution
-decided on by himself to hold an election within a few
-days which, under the prevailing circumstances and especially
-according to the details provided for the execution of the
-election, could and was to have the sole purpose of oppressing
-politically the predominant majority of the population of
-Austria. As could have been foreseen, this procedure, being
-a flagrant violation of the agreement of Berchtesgaden, led to
-a very critical point in Austria’s internal situation. It was
-only natural that the members of the then Austrian Cabinet
-who had not taken part in the decision for an election protested
-very strongly against it. Therefore a crisis of the
-Cabinet occurred in Vienna which, on the 11th of March,
-resulted in the resignation of the former Chancellor and in
-the formation of a new Cabinet. It is untrue that the Reich
-used forceful pressure to bring about this development. Especially
-the assertion which was spread later by the former
-Chancellor that the German Government had presented the
-Federal President with a conditional ultimatum, is a pure
-invention; according to the ultimatum he had to appoint a
-proposed candidate as Chancellor and to form a Cabinet conforming
-to the proposals of the German Government otherwise
-the invasion of Austria by German troops was held in
-prospect. The truth of the matter is that the question of
-sending military or police forces from the Reich was only
-brought up when the newly formed Austrian Cabinet addressed
-a telegram, already published by the press, to the German
-Government urgently asking for the dispatch of German
-troops as soon as possible in order to restore peace and in
-order to avoid bloodshed. Faced with the immediately
-threatening danger of a bloody civil war in Austria, the
-German Government then decided to comply with the appeal
-addressed to it.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk591'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“This being the state of affairs, it is impossible that the attitude
-of the German Government as asserted in your letter
-could lead to some unforseeable reactions. A complete picture
-of the political situation is given in the proclamation which,
-at noon today, the German Reich Chancellor has addressed to
-the German people. Dangerous reactions to this situation can
-take place only if eventually a third party should try to exercise
-its influence contrary to the peaceful intentions and
-legitimate aims of the German Government on the shaping
-of events in Austria, which would be incompatible with the
-right of self-government of the German people.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='327' id='Page_327'></span></p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>That ends the quotation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now in the light of the evidence which has already been presented
-to the Tribunal, this version of the events given by the
-Defendant Von Neurath is a hollow mockery of the truth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We have learned, from the portions quoted from Document
-1780-PS, Exhibit Number USA-72, Jodl’s diary, the entry for March
-10, 1938, the fact that Von Neurath was taking over the duties of
-the Foreign Office while Ribbentrop was detained in London, that
-the Führer wished to send an ultimatum to the Austrian Cabinet,
-that he had dispatched a letter to Mussolini of his reasons for
-taking action, and that army mobilization orders were given.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We have seen the true facts about the ultimatum from two
-different documents. I refer to 812-PS, Exhibit Number USA-61,
-report of Gauleiter Rainer to Reichskommissar Bürckel, dated 6 July
-1939, which was transmitted to the Defendant Seyss-Inquart on
-22 August 1939. The portions reporting on the events of March 11
-have already been read to the Tribunal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I also refer to Document 2949-PS, Exhibit USA-76, the transcripts
-of Göring’s telephone conversations, relevant portions of which I
-have already read to the Tribunal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>These documents emphatically show and with unmistakable
-clarity, that the German Nazis did present an ultimatum to the
-Austrian Government that they would send troops across the border
-if Schuschnigg did not resign and if Defendant Seyss-Inquart were
-not appointed Chancellor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>These documents also show that the impetus of the famous telegram
-came from Berlin and not from Vienna, that Göring composed
-the telegram and Seyss-Inquart did not even have to send it, but
-merely said “agreed.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The transcript of Göring’s telephone call to Ribbentrop is indicated
-as Part W of that document. In it the formula was developed
-and recited for English consumption that there had been no ultimatum
-and that the German troops crossed the border in response
-only to the telegram.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now in this document from which I have just read we find
-the same bogus formula coming from the pen of the Defendant
-Von Neurath. He was at the meeting of November 5, 1937, of which
-we have the Hossbach minutes, Exhibit USA-25. And so he knew
-very well the firmly held Nazi ideas with respect to Austria and
-Czechoslovakia. And yet in the period after March 10, 1938 when
-he was handling the foreign affairs for this conspiracy and particularly
-after the invasion of Austria, he played out his part in
-making false representations. He gave an assurance to Mr. Mastny
-regarding the continued independence of Austria. I refer to the
-<span class='pageno' title='328' id='Page_328'></span>
-document introduced by Sir David Maxwell-Fyfe, Document TC-27,
-Exhibit GB-21.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And we see him here still handling foreign affairs, although
-using the letterhead of the Secret Cabinet Council as the exhibit
-shows, reciting this diplomatic fable with respect to the Austrian
-situation, a story also encountered by us in the transcript of the
-Göring-Ribbentrop telephone call, all in furtherance of the aims
-of what we call the conspiracy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, if the Tribunal please, it might have been fitting and
-appropriate for me to present the case on collaboration with Japan
-and the attack on the United States on this December 7, 1945, the
-fourth anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor. However, our
-plan was to proceed chronologically so that part of the case must
-wait its turn for the presentation next week.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We now come to the climax of this amazing story of wars of
-aggression, perhaps one of the most colossal mis-estimates in history,
-when Hitler’s intuition led him and his associates to launch an
-aggressive war against the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In my last appearance before the Tribunal I presented an account
-of the aggression against Czechoslovakia. In the meantime our
-British colleagues have given you the evidence covering the formulation
-of the plan to attack Poland and the preparations and initiation
-of actual aggressive war. In addition they have laid before
-the Tribunal the story of the expansion of the war into a general
-war of aggression involving the planning and execution of attacks
-on Denmark, Norway, Belgium and the Netherlands, Luxembourg,
-Yugoslavia, Greece; and in doing so the British Prosecution has
-marshalled and presented to the Court various international treaties,
-agreements, and assurances, and the evidence establishing the
-breaching of those treaties and assurances.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I should like to present to the Tribunal now the account of the
-last but one of the defendants’ acts of aggression, the invasion of
-the U.S.S.R. The section of the Indictment in which this crime is
-charged is Count One, Section IV (F), Paragraph 6, German invasion
-on 22 June 1941 of the U.S.S.R. territory in violation of the Non-Aggression
-Pact of 23 August 1939. The first sentence of this paragraph
-is the one with which we shall be concerned today. It reads:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“On 22 June 1941 the Nazi conspirators deceitfully denounced
-the Non-Aggression Pact between Germany and the U.S.S.R.
-and without any declaration of war invaded Soviet territory
-thereby beginning a war of aggression against the U.S.S.R.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The documents having a bearing on this phase of the case are
-contained in document book marked “P,” which we now hand to
-the Court.
-<span class='pageno' title='329' id='Page_329'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>First, if the Tribunal please, the inception of the plan. As a
-point of departure for the story of aggression against the Soviet
-Union, I should like to take the date 23 August 1939. On that date
-just a week before the invasion of Poland, the Nazi conspirators
-caused Germany to enter into the Treaty of Non-Aggression with
-the U.S.S.R. which is referred to in this section of the Indictment
-which I have just quoted. This treaty, Document Number TC-25,
-will be introduced in evidence by our British colleagues, but it contains
-two articles which I should like to bring to the attention of
-the Tribunal. Article I provides as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The two contracting parties undertake to refrain from any
-act of violence, any aggressive action, or any attack against
-one another, whether individually or jointly with other
-powers.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Article V provides that, should disputes or conflicts arise between
-the contracting parties regarding questions of any kind whatsoever,
-the two parties would clear away these disputes or conflicts solely
-by friendly exchanges of view or, if necessary, by arbitration commissions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is well to keep these solemn pledges in mind during the course
-of the story which is to follow. This treaty was signed for the
-German Government by the Defendant Ribbentrop. Its announcement
-came as somewhat of a surprise to the world since it appeared
-to constitute a reversal of the previous trend of Nazi foreign policy.
-The explanation for this about-face has been provided, however, by
-no less eminent a witness than the Defendant Ribbentrop himself
-in a discussion which he had with the Japanese Ambassador Oshima
-in Fuschl on 23 February 1941. A report of that conference was
-forwarded by Ribbentrop to certain German diplomats in the field
-for their strictly confidential and purely personal information. This
-report we now have. It is Number 1834-PS. I offer it in evidence
-as Exhibit USA-129, the original German document.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On Page 2 of the English translation, Ribbentrop tells Oshima
-the reason for the pact with the U.S.S.R. That is Page 2 of the
-German:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Then when it came to war the Führer decided on a compromise
-with Russia—as a necessity for avoiding a two-front
-war.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In view of the spirit of opportunism which motivated the Nazis
-in entering into this solemn pledge of arbitration and non-aggression,
-it is not very surprising to find that they regarded it as they
-did all treaties and pledges, as binding on them only so long as it
-was expedient for them to be bound. That they did so regard it is
-evidenced by the fact that even while the campaign in the West was
-<span class='pageno' title='330' id='Page_330'></span>
-still in progress they began to consider the possibility of launching
-a war of aggression against the U.S.S.R.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In a speech to Reichs- and Gauleiter at Munich in November 1943,
-which is set forth in our Document L-172 already in evidence as
-Exhibit Number USA-34, the Defendant Jodl admitted—and I shall
-read from Page 7 of the English translation, which is at Page 15
-of the original German text:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Parallel with all these developments realization was steadily
-growing of the danger drawing constantly nearer from the
-Bolshevik East—that danger which has been only too little
-perceived in Germany and of late, for diplomatic reasons, had
-deliberately to be ignored. However, the Führer himself has
-always kept this danger steadily in view and even as far back
-as during the Western campaign had informed me of his
-fundamental decision to take steps against this danger the
-moment our military position made it at all possible.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the time this decision was made, however, the Western campaign
-was still in progress, and so any action in the East necessarily
-had to be postponed for the time being. On 22 June 1940, however,
-the Franco-German armistice was signed at Compiègne, and the
-campaign in the West with the exception of the war against Britain
-came to an end. The view that Germany’s key to political and
-economic domination lay in the elimination of the U.S.S.R. as a
-political factor and in the acquisition of Lebensraum at her expense
-had long been basic in Nazi ideology. As we have seen, this idea
-had never been completely forgotten even while the war in the
-West was in progress. Now flushed with the recent success of their
-arms and yet keenly conscious of both their failure to defeat
-Britain and the needs of their armies for food and raw materials,
-the Nazis began serious consideration of the means for achieving
-their traditional ambition by conquering the Soviet Union.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The situation in which Germany now found herself made such
-action appear both desirable and practical. As early as August of
-1940 General Thomas received a hint from the Defendant Göring
-that planning for a campaign against the Soviet Union was already
-under way. Thomas at that time was the Chief of the “Wirtschaftsrüstungsamt”
-of the OKW.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I should, perhaps, mention that this office is generally referred
-to in the German documents by the abbreviation Wi Rü.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>General Thomas tells of receiving this information from Göring
-in his draft of a work entitled <span class='it'>Basic Facts for a History of German
-War and Armament Economy</span>, which he prepared during the summer
-of 1944. This book is our Document 2353-PS and has already been
-admitted into evidence as Exhibit USA-35. I am sorry, it was
-<span class='pageno' title='331' id='Page_331'></span>
-marked that for identification purposes. I now offer it in evidence
-as Exhibit Number USA-35.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On Pages 313 to 315 of this work Thomas discusses the Russo-German
-Trade Agreement of 1939 and relates how, since the Soviets
-were delivering quickly and well under this agreement and were
-requesting war materials in return, there was much pressure in
-Germany until early in 1940 for increased delivery on the part of
-the Germans. However, at Page 315 he has the following to say
-about the change of heart expressed by the German leaders in
-August of 1940. I read from Page 9 of the English translation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“On August 14 the Chief of the Wirtschaftsrüstungsamt during
-a conference with Reich Marshal Göring, was informed that
-the Führer desired punctual delivery to the Russians only
-until spring 1941. Later on we were to have no further
-interest in completely satisfying the Russian demands. This
-allusion moved the Chief of the Wirtschaftsrüstungsamt to
-give priority to matters concerning Russian war economy.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I shall refer to this statement again later when I discuss the
-preparation for the economic exploitation of Soviet territory expected
-to be captured. At that time, too, I shall introduce evidence which
-will show that in November of 1940 Göring informed Thomas that
-a campaign was planned against the U.S.S.R.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Preparations for so large an undertaking as an invasion of
-the Soviet Union necessarily entailed even these many months in
-advance of the date of execution, certain activity in the East in the
-way of construction projects and strengthening of forces. Such
-activity could not be expected to pass unnoticed by the Soviet
-Intelligence Service. Counter-intelligence measures were obviously
-called for.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In an OKW directive signed by the Defendant Jodl and issued
-to the counter-intelligence service abroad on 6 September 1940, such
-measures were ordered. This directive is our Number 1229-PS and
-I offer it in evidence as Exhibit USA-130, a photostat of the captured
-German document. This directive pointed out that the activity
-in the East must not be permitted to create the impression in the
-Soviet Union that an offensive was being prepared, and outlined the
-line for the counter-intelligence people to take to disguise this fact.
-The text of the directive indicates by implication the extent of the
-preparations already under way, and I should like to read it to the
-Tribunal:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Eastern territory will be manned stronger in the weeks
-to come. By the end of October the status shown on the
-enclosed map is supposed to be reached.</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“These regroupings must not create the impression in Russia
-that we are preparing an offensive in the East. On the other
-<span class='pageno' title='332' id='Page_332'></span>
-hand, Russia will realize that strong and highly trained German
-troops are stationed in the Government General, in the
-Eastern Provinces and in the Protectorate; she should draw
-the conclusion that we can at any time protect our interests—especially
-in the Balkans—with strong forces against Russian
-seizure.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk592'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“For the work of our own intelligence service as well as for
-the answer to questions of the Russian Intelligence Service,
-the following directives apply:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk593'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1) The respective total strength of the German troops in the
-East is to be veiled as far as possible by giving news about
-a frequent change of the army units there. This change is to
-be explained by movements into training camps, regroupings,
-<span class='it'>et cetera</span>.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk594'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2) The impression is to be created that the center of the
-massing of troops is in the southern part of the Government,
-in the Protectorate, and in Austria, and that the massing in
-the north is relatively unimportant.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk595'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3) When it comes to the equipment situation of the units,
-especially of the armored divisions, things are to be exaggerated,
-if necessary.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk596'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“4) By suitable news the impression is to be created that the
-antiaircraft protection in the East has been increased considerably
-after the end of the campaign in the West and that
-it continues to be increased with captured French material on
-all important targets.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk597'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“5) Concerning improvements on railroads, roads, airdromes,
-<span class='it'>et cetera</span>, it is to be stated that the work is kept within
-normal limits, is needed for the improvement of the newly
-won eastern territories, and serves primarily economical
-traffic.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk598'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Supreme Command of the Army (OKH) decides to what
-extent correct details, i.e., numbers of regiments, manning of
-garrisons, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>, will be made available to the defense
-for purposes of counter espionage.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk599'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Chief of the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces,
-by order of”—signed—“Jodl.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Early in November of 1940 Hitler reiterated his previous orders
-and called for a continuation of preparations, promising further and
-more definite instructions as soon as this preliminary work produced
-a general outline of the Army’s operational plan. This order was
-contained in a top-secret directive from the Führer’s headquarters,
-Number 18, dated 12 November 1940, signed by Hitler and initialed
-<span class='pageno' title='333' id='Page_333'></span>
-by Jodl. It is Number 444-PS in our numbered series and is already
-in evidence as Exhibit Number GB-116.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The directive begins by saying:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The preparatory measures of supreme headquarters for the
-prosecution of the war in the near future are to be made
-along the following lines .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It then outlines plans for the various theaters and the policy
-regarding relations with other countries and says regarding the
-U.S.S.R.—and I read now from Page 3, Paragraph Number 5 of the
-English translation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Political discussions have been initiated with the aim of
-clarifying Russia’s attitude for the time being. Irrespective
-of the results of these discussions all preparations for the East
-which have already been verbally ordered will be continued.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk600'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Instructions on this will follow as soon as the general outline
-of the Army’s operational plans have been submitted to, and
-approved by me.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 5th of December 1940 the Chief of the General Staff of
-the Army, at that time General Halder, reported to the Führer concerning
-the progress of the plans for the coming operation against
-the U.S.S.R. A report of this conference with Hitler is contained
-in captured Document Number 1799-PS. This is a folder containing
-many documents all labeled annexes and all bearing on Fall Barbarossa,
-the plan against the U.S.S.R. This folder was discovered in
-the War Diary of the Wehrmachtführungsstab and was apparently
-an enclosure to that diary.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The report I am here referring to is Annex Number 1 and is
-dated December 1940.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now offer in evidence Document Number 1799-PS as United
-States Exhibit Number 131. I should also like to read into the record
-a few sentences from the report of 5 December 1940 as they indicate
-the state of the planning for this act of aggression six and a half
-months before it occurred.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Report to the Führer on 5 December 1940.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk601'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Chief of the General Staff of the Army then reported
-about the planned operation in the East. He expanded at
-first on the geographical fundamentals. The main war industrial
-centers are in the Ukraine, in Moscow and in Leningrad.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Then skipping:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer declares that he has agreed with the discussed
-operational plans and adds the following:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk602'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The most important goal is to prevent the Russians from
-withdrawing on a closed front. The eastward advance should
-<span class='pageno' title='334' id='Page_334'></span>
-be combined until the Russian Air Force will be unable to
-attack the territory of the German Reich and on the other
-hand the German Air Force will be enabled to conduct raids
-to destroy Russian war industrial territory. In this way we
-should be able to achieve the annihilation of the Russian
-Army and to prevent its regeneration. The first commitment
-of the forces should take place in such a way as to make the
-annihilation of strong enemy units possible.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Then, skipping again:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It is essential that the Russians should not take up positions
-in the rear again. The number of 130 to 140 divisions as
-planned for the entire operation is sufficient.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Would that be a good time to break off?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: Very convenient, Sir.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Then we shall not sit in open session tomorrow.
-We will sit again on Monday at 10 o’clock.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>The Tribunal adjourned until 10 December 1945 at 1000 hours.</span>]</h3>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='335' id='Page_335'></span><h1>SIXTEENTH DAY<br/> <span style='font-size:smaller'>Monday, 10 December 1945</span></h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'><span class='it'>Morning Session</span></h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal has received a letter from
-Dr. Dix on behalf of the Defendant Schacht. In answer to that
-the Tribunal wishes the defendants’ counsel to know that they will
-be permitted to make one speech only in accordance with Article
-24 (h) of the Charter, and this speech will be at the conclusion of
-all the evidence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the conclusion of the case for the Prosecution, the defendants’
-counsel will be invited to submit to the Tribunal the evidence they
-propose to call; but they will be strictly confined to the names of
-the witnesses and the matters to which their evidence will be relevant,
-and this submission must not be in the nature of a speech. Is
-that clear? In case there should be any misunderstanding, what
-I have just said will be posted up on the board in the defendants’
-Counsel Room so that you can study it there.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: May it please the Tribunal, when the Tribunal
-rose Friday, I had just reached the point in my discussion of aggression
-against the U.S.S.R. where, with the campaign in the West at
-an end, the Nazi conspirators had begun the development of their
-plans to attack the Soviet Union. Preliminary high level planning
-and action was in progress. Hitler had indicated earlier in November
-that more detailed and definite instructions would be issued. These
-would be issued as soon as the general outline of the Army’s
-operational plans had been submitted to him and approved by him.
-We had thus reached the point in the story indicated on the outline
-submitted last Friday as Part 3 of the Plan Barbarossa.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By the 18th of December 1940, the general outline of the Army’s
-operational plan having been submitted to Hitler, the basic strategical
-directive to the High Command of the Army, Navy, and the
-Air Force for Barbarossa—Directive Number 21—was issued. This
-directive, which for the first time marks the plan to invade the
-Soviet Union, was specifically referred to in an order although the
-order was classified top secret. It also marked the first use of the
-code word Barbarossa to denote this operation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The directive is Number 446-PS, and was offered in evidence in
-the course of my opening statement as Exhibit USA-31. Since it
-was fully discussed at that time, it is, I believe, sufficient now
-<span class='pageno' title='336' id='Page_336'></span>
-merely to recall to the Tribunal two or three of the most significant
-sentences in that document. Most of these sentences appear on
-Page 1 of the English translation. One of the most significant,
-I believe, is this sentence with which the order begins:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The German Armed Forces must be prepared to crush Soviet
-Russia in a quick campaign even before the end of the war
-with England.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>On the same page it is stated:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Preparations requiring more time to start are, if this has not
-yet been done, to begin presently and are to be completed by
-15 May 1941. Great caution has to be exercised that the
-intention of the attack will not be recognized.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The directive then outlines the broad strategy on which the
-intended invasion was to proceed and the parts that the various
-services (Army, Navy, and Air Force) were to play therein, and
-calls for oral reports to Hitler by the commanders-in-chief, closing
-as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“V.”—that is on Page 2—“I am expecting the reports of
-the commanders-in-chief on their further plans based on this
-letter of instructions.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk603'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The preparations planned by all branches of the Armed
-Forces are to be reported to me through the High Command,
-also in regard to their time.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Signed by Hitler, and initialed by Jodl, Keitel, Warlimont, and one
-illegible name.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is perfectly clear both from the contents of the order itself as
-well as from its history, which I have outlined, that this directive
-was no mere planning exercise by the staff. It was an order to
-prepare for an act of aggression, which was intended to occur and
-which actually did occur.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The various services which received the order certainly understood
-it as an order to prepare for action, and did not view it as
-a hypothetical staff problem. This is plain from the detailed planning
-and preparation which they immediately undertook in order to
-implement the general scheme set forth in this basic directive.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So we come to the military planning and preparation for the
-implementation of Plan Barbarossa. The Naval War Diary for
-13 January 1941 indicates the early compliance of the OKM with
-that part of Directive Number 21 which ordered progress in preparation
-to be reported to Hitler through the High Command of the
-Armed Forces. This entry in the War Diary is Document C-35 in
-our numbered series, and I offer it in evidence as Exhibit USA-132.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This document contains a substantial amount of technical information
-concerning the Navy’s part in the coming campaign and the
-<span class='pageno' title='337' id='Page_337'></span>
-manner in which it was preparing itself to play the part. I feel,
-however, that it will be sufficient for the establishment of our point
-that the Navy was actively preparing for the attack at this early
-date, to read only a small portion of the entry into the record,
-beginning on Page 1 of the English translation, which is Page 401
-of the Diary itself. The entry reads:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“30 January 1941.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk604'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“7. Talk by Ia about the plans and preparations for the Barbarossa
-Case to be submitted to the High Command of Armed
-Forces.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I should note that “Ia” is in this case the abbreviation for a
-deputy chief of naval operations. Then follows a list of the Navy’s
-objectives in the war against Russia. Under the latter many tasks
-for the Navy are listed, but I think one is sufficiently typical to
-give the Tribunal an idea of all. I quote from the top of Page 2
-of the English translation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“II. Objectives of War Against Russia .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk605'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“d) To harass the Russian fleet by surprise blows as: 1) Lightning-like
-actions at the outbreak of the war by air force units
-against strong points and combat vessels in the Baltic, Black
-Sea, and Polar Sea.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The purpose of the offer of this document is merely that it
-indicates the detailed thinking and planning which was being carried
-out to implement Barbarossa almost six months before the
-operation actually got under way. It is but another piece in the
-mosaic of evidence which demonstrates beyond question of doubt
-that the invasion of the Soviet Union was one of the most cold-bloodedly
-premeditated attacks on a neighboring power in the history
-of the world. Similarly the Naval War Diary for the month of
-February contains at least several references to the planning and
-preparation for the coming campaign. Extracts of such references
-are contained in Document C-33, which I am now offering in evidence
-as Exhibit USA-133.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I think it will be sufficient to quote for the record as typical
-the entry for 19 February 1941, which appears at Page 3 of the
-English translation and at Page 248 of the Diary itself.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In regard to the impending operation Barbarossa for which
-all S-boats in the Baltic will be needed, a transfer can only
-be considered after conclusion of the Barbarossa operations.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 3rd of February 1941 the Führer held a conference to
-assess the progress thus far made in the planning for Barbarossa.
-The conference also discussed the plans for “Sonnenblume,” which
-was the code name for the North African operation—“Sunflower.”
-Attending this conference were, in addition to Hitler: The Chief
-<span class='pageno' title='338' id='Page_338'></span>
-of the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces, the Defendant
-Keitel; the Chief of the Armed Forces Operations Staff, the Defendant
-Jodl; the Commander-in-Chief of the Army, Brauchitsch; the Chief
-of the Army General Staff, Halder; as well as several others,
-including Colonel Schmundt, Hitler’s Adjutant.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A report of this conference is contained in our Document Number
-872-PS, which I now offer as Exhibit USA-134.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>During the course of this conference the Chief of the Army
-General Staff gave a long report about enemy strength as compared
-with their own strength and the general overall operational
-plans for the invasion. This report was punctuated at various intervals
-by comments from the Führer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At Page 4 of the English translation of the conference plan,
-which is at Page 5 of the German original, there is an interesting
-extract, which, although written in a semi-shorthand, is at least
-sufficiently clear to inform us that elaborate timetables had already
-been set out for the deployment of troops as well as for industrial
-operations. I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The proposed time schedule is charted on the map. First
-Deployment Echelon”—Aufmarschstaffel—“now being transferred,
-Front-Interior-East. Second Deployment Echelon from
-the middle of March gives 3 divisions for reinforcement in the
-West, but Army groups and Army High Commands are withdrawn
-from the West. In the East there are already considerable
-reinforcements though still in the rear area. From
-now on, ‘Attila’ ”—I might state here parenthetically that
-this was the code word for the operation for the occupation
-of unoccupied France—“Attila can be carried out only with
-difficulty. Economic traffic is hampered by transport movements.
-From the beginning of April, Hungary will be approached
-about the march-through. Third Deployment Echelon,
-from the middle of April. ‘Felix’ is now no longer possible,
-as the main part of the artillery has been shipped.”—Felix
-was the name for the proposed operation against Gibraltar.—“In
-industry the full capacity timetable is in force. No more
-camouflage. Fourth Deployment Echelon, from 25. IV to 15. V,
-withdraws considerable forces from the West (‘Seelöwe’ can
-no longer be carried out).”—“Seelöwe” (or Sea Lion) was a
-code word for the planned operation against England, and
-“Marita,” which we shall see a little later in the quotation, was
-the code word for the action against Greece.—“The concentration
-of troops in the East is clearly apparent. The full
-capacity timetable is maintained. The complete picture of
-the disposition of forces on the map shows 8 Marita divisions.
-<span class='pageno' title='339' id='Page_339'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk606'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Commander-in-Chief, Army, requests that he no longer have
-to assign 5 control divisions for this; but might hold them
-ready as reserves for commander in the West.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk607'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Führer: ‘When Barbarossa commences the world will hold
-its breath and make no comment.’ ”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This much, I believe, when read with the conference conclusions,
-which I shall read in a moment, is sufficient to show that the Army
-as well as the Navy regarded Barbarossa as an action directive and
-were far along with their preparations even as early as February
-1941—almost 5 months prior to 22 June, the date the attack was
-actually launched. The conference report summarized the conclusions
-of the conference, insofar as they affected Barbarossa, as
-follows; I am now reading from Page 6 of the English translation,
-which is on Page 7 of the German:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Conclusions:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk608'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. Barbarossa.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk609'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“a. The Führer on the whole is in agreement with the
-operational plan. When it is being carried out it must be
-remembered that the main aim is to gain possession of the
-Baltic States and Leningrad.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk610'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“b. The Führer desires that the operation map and the plan
-of the deployment of forces be sent to him as soon as
-possible.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk611'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“c. Agreements with neighboring states who are taking part
-may not be concluded until there is no longer any necessity
-for camouflage. The exception is Romania with regard to
-reinforcing the Moldau.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk612'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“d. It must, in any case, be possible to carry out Attila.
-(With the means available.)</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk613'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“e. The concentration for Barbarossa will be carried out as
-a feint for Sea Lion and the subsidiary measure Marita.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On 13th March 1941 the Defendant Keitel signed an operational
-directive to Führer Order Number 21, which was issued in the form
-of “Directives for Special Areas.” This detailed operational order
-is Number 447-PS in our numbered series, and I now offer it in
-evidence as Exhibit USA-135.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This order which was issued more than 3 months in advance of
-the attack indicates how complete were the plans on practically
-every phase of the operation. Section I of the directive is headed,
-“Area of Operations and Executive Power,” and outlines who was
-to be in control of what and where. It states that while the campaign
-is in progress in territory through which the Army is advancing,
-the Supreme Commander of the Army has the executive
-power. During this period, however, the Reichsführer SS is
-<span class='pageno' title='340' id='Page_340'></span>
-entrusted with “special tasks.” This assignment is discussed in
-Paragraph 2b, which appears on Page 1 of the English translation
-and reads as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“b) In the area of operations of the Army the Reichsführer
-SS is, on behalf of the Führer, entrusted with special tasks
-for the preparation of the political administration—tasks
-which result from the struggle which has to be carried out
-between two opposing political systems. Within the realm of
-these tasks the Reichsführer SS shall act independently and
-under his own responsibility. The executive power invested
-in the Supreme Commander of the Army (OKH) and in agencies
-determined by him shall not be affected by this. It is
-the responsibility of the Reichsführer SS that through the
-execution of his tasks military operations shall not be disturbed.
-Details shall be arranged directly through the OKH
-with the Reichsführer SS.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The order then states that in time political administration will
-be set up under Commissioners of the Reich, and discusses the
-relationship of these officials to the Army. This is contained in
-Paragraph 2c and Paragraph 3, parts of which I should like to read:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“c) As soon as the area of operations has reached sufficient
-depth, it is to be limited in the rear. The newly occupied
-territory in the rear of the area of operations is to be given
-its own political administration. For the present it is to be
-divided on the basis of nationality and according to the positions
-of the Army groups into North (Baltic countries), Center
-(White Russia), and South (Ukraine). In these territories the
-political administration is taken care of by Commissioners of
-the Reich who receive their orders from the Führer.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk614'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3) For the execution of all military tasks within the areas
-under the political administration in the rear of the area
-of operations, commanding officers who are responsible to the
-Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces (OKW) shall be in
-command.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk615'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The commanding officer is the supreme representative of
-the Armed Forces in the respective areas and the bearer of
-the military sovereign rights. He has the tasks of a territorial
-commander and the rights of a supreme Army commander
-or a commanding general. In this capacity he is responsible
-primarily for the following tasks:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk616'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“a) Close co-operation with the Commissioner of the Reich
-in order to support him in his political tasks; b) exploitation
-of the country and securing its economic values for use by
-German industry.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='341' id='Page_341'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The directive also outlines the responsibility for the administration
-of economy in the conquered territory, a subject I will develop
-more fully later in my presentation. This provision is also in
-Section I, Paragraph 4, which I shall read:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“4) The Führer has entrusted the uniform direction of the
-administration of economy in the area of operations and in
-the territories of political administration to the Reich Marshal,
-who has delegated the Chief of the ‘Wi Rü Amt’ with
-the execution of the task. Special orders on that will come
-from the OKW/Wi Rü Amt.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The second section deals with matters of personnel, supply,
-and .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Alderman, will you tell us at some time
-who these people are? Who is the Reich Marshal?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: The Reich Marshal is the Defendant Göring.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: And who was the Reichsführer of the SS
-at that time?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: Himmler.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Himmler?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The second section deals with matters of personnel, supply, and
-communication traffic, and I shall not read it here.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Section III of the order deals with the relations with certain
-other countries, and states in part as follows—I am reading from
-Page 3 of the English translation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“III. Regulations regarding Romania, Slovakia, Hungary, and
-Finland.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk617'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“9) The necessary arrangements with these countries shall
-be made by the OKW together with the Foreign Office and
-according to the wish of the respective high commands. In
-case it should become necessary during the course of the
-operations to grant special rights, applications for this purpose
-are to be submitted to the OKW.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The document closes with a section regarding Sweden, which is
-also on Page 3 of the English Translation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“IV. Directives regarding Sweden.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk618'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“12) Since Sweden can only become a transient area for
-troops, no special authority is to be granted to the commander
-of the German troops. However, he is entitled and
-compelled to secure the immediate protection of railroad
-transports against sabotage and attacks.
-<span class='pageno' title='342' id='Page_342'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk619'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Chief of the High Command of the Armed Forces,”—signed—</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk620'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Keitel.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As was hinted in the original Barbarossa order, Directive Number
-21, which I discussed earlier, the plan originally contemplated
-that the attack would take place about the 15th of May 1941. In
-the meantime, however, the Nazi conspirators found themselves
-involved in a campaign in the Balkans, and were forced to delay
-Barbarossa for a few weeks. Evidence of this postponement is found
-in a document, which bears our Number C-170. This document has
-been identified by the Defendant Raeder as a compilation of official
-extracts from the Naval War Staff War Diary. It was prepared by
-naval archivists who had access to the Admiralty files, and contains
-file references to the papers which were the basis for each entry.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I offer that document in evidence as Exhibit USA-136.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Although I shall refer to this document again later, I should
-like at present to read only an item which appears in the second
-paragraph of Item 142 on Page 19 of the English translation and
-which is in the text in a footnote on Page 26 in the German original.
-This item is dated 3 April 1941, and reads as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Balkan operation delay; Barbarossa now in about 5 weeks.
-All measures which can be construed as offensive actions are
-to be stopped according to the Führer’s order.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By the end of April, however, things were sufficiently straightened
-out to permit the Führer to definitely set D-Day as the 22d of
-June—more than 7 weeks away. Document Number 873-PS in our
-series is a top-secret report of a conference with the Chief of the
-Section “Landesverteidigung” of the “Wehrmacht Führungsstab” on
-April 30, 1941. I now offer that document in evidence as Exhibit
-USA-137.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I think it will be sufficient to read the first two paragraphs of
-this report:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1) Timetable Barbarossa. The Führer has decided:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk621'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Action Barbarossa begins on 22 June. From 23 May maximal
-troop movements performance schedule. At the beginning of
-operations the OKH reserves will have not yet reached the
-appointed areas.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk622'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2) Proportion of actual strength in the Plan Barbarossa:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk623'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Sector North, German and Russian forces approximately of
-the same strength; Sector Middle, great German superiority;
-Sector South, Russian superiority.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Early in June, practically 3 weeks before D-Day, preparations
-for the attack were so complete that it was possible for the High
-<span class='pageno' title='343' id='Page_343'></span>
-Command to issue an elaborate timetable showing in great detail
-the disposition and missions of the Army, Navy, and Air Force.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This timetable is Document Number C-39 in our series, and
-I offer it in evidence now as Exhibit USA-138.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This document was prepared in 21 copies, and the one offered
-here was the third copy which was given to the High Command
-of the Navy; Page 1 is in the form of a transmittal, and reads as
-follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Top secret; Supreme Command of the Armed Forces;
-Nr. 44842/41 top military secret WFSt/Abt. L (I Op.); Führer’s
-headquarters; for chiefs only, only through officer; 21 copies;
-I Op. 00845/41; received 6 June; no enclosures.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk624'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer has authorized the appended timetable as a
-foundation for further preparations for Plan Barbarossa. If
-alterations should be necessary during execution, the Supreme
-Command of the Armed Forces must be informed.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk625'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Chief of Supreme Command of the Armed Forces”—signed—
-“Keitel.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I shall not bother to read to you the distribution list which
-indicates where the 21 copies went.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Alderman, the Tribunal does not think
-it necessary that you should read all those preliminary matters at
-the head of these documents, “top secret,” “only through officer,”
-and then the various reference numbers and file information when
-you give identification of a document.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: Yes, Sir.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The next two pages of the document are in the form of a text
-outlining the state of preparations as of the 1st of June 1941. The
-outline is in six paragraphs covering the status on that date under
-six headings: General, Negotiations with friendly states, Army,
-Navy, Air Force, and Camouflage.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I think it unnecessary to read into the record any of this textual
-material. The remainder of the paper is in tabular form with seven
-columns headed from left to right at the top of each page: Date,
-Serial number, Army, Air Force, Navy, OKW, Remarks. Most
-interesting among the items appearing on this chart .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Alderman, will you read the first paragraph,
-for that seems to be important. There are two lines there.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The heading “General” on Page 2.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: Yes, Sir.
-<span class='pageno' title='344' id='Page_344'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. General. The timetable for the maximum massing of
-troops in the East will be put into operation on the 22d of
-May.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: Most interesting among the items appearing
-on this chart, in my opinion, are those appearing on Pages 9 and 10.
-These are at Page 8 of the German version. At the bottom of
-Page 9 it is provided in the columns for Army, Navy, and Air
-Force—and I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Up to 1300 hours is latest time at which operation can be
-cancelled.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Under the column headed OKW appears the note that—and again
-I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Cancelled by code word ‘Altona’ or further confirmation of
-start of attack by code word ‘Dortmund’.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>In the Remarks column appears the statement that:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Complete absence of camouflage of formation of Army point
-of main effort, concentration of armor and artillery must be
-reckoned with.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The second entry on Page 10 of the chart for the 22d of June,
-under Serial number 31, gives a notation which cuts across the
-columns for the Army, Air Force, Navy, and OKW, and provides
-as follows, under the heading:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Invasion Day. H-Hour for the start of the invasion by the
-Army and crossing of the frontier by the Air Forces: 0330
-hours.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>In the Remarks column, it states that:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Army assembly independent of any lateness in starting on
-the part of the Air Force owing to weather.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The other parts of the chart are similar in nature to those quoted
-and give, as I have said, great detail concerning the disposition and
-missions of the various components of the Armed Forces.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On 9 June 1941 the order of the Führer went out for final reports
-on Barbarossa to be made in Berlin on 14 June 1941, which was just
-8 days before D-Day. This order is signed by Hitler’s Adjutant,
-Schmundt, and is C-78 in our numbered series of documents. I offer
-it in evidence now as Exhibit USA-139.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I read from Page 1 the matter under the heading “Conference
-Barbarossa”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. The Führer and Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces
-has ordered reports on Barbarossa by the commanders of
-Army groups, armies, and naval and air commanders of equal
-rank.
-<span class='pageno' title='345' id='Page_345'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk626'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. The reports will be made on Saturday, 14 June 1941, at
-the Reich Chancellery, Berlin.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk627'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3. Timetable:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk628'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“a) 1100 hours, “Silver Fox”; b) 1200 hours-1400 hours, Army
-Group South; c) 1400 hours-1530 hours, lunch party for all
-participants in conference; d) from 1530 hours, Baltic, Army
-Group North, Army Group Center, in this order.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>It is signed by Schmundt.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There is attached a list of participants and the order in which
-they will report which I shall not read. The list includes, however,
-a large number of the members of the Defendant High Command
-and General Staff group as of that date. Among those to participate
-were, of course, the Defendants Göring, Keitel, Jodl, and Raeder.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I believe that the documents which I have introduced and quoted
-from are more than sufficient to establish conclusively the premeditation
-and cold-blooded calculation which marked the military
-preparations for the invasion of the Soviet Union. Starting almost
-a full year before the commission of the crime, the Nazi conspirators
-planned and prepared every military detail of their aggression
-against the Soviet Union with all of that thoroughness and meticulousness
-which has come to be associated with the German character.
-Although several of these defendants played specific parts
-in this military phase of the planning and preparation for the attack,
-it is natural enough that the leading roles were performed, as we
-have seen, by the military figures: the Defendants Göring, Keitel,
-Jodl, and Raeder.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Next, preparation for plunder—plans for the economic exploitation
-and spoliation of the Soviet Union.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Not only was there detailed preparation for the invasion from
-a purely military standpoint, but equally elaborate and detailed
-planning and preparation was undertaken by the Nazi conspirators
-to ensure that their aggression would prove economically profitable.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A little later in my presentation I shall discuss with the Tribunal
-the motives which led these conspirators to attack, without provocation,
-a neighboring power. I shall at that time show that the
-crime was motivated by both political and economic considerations.
-The economic basis, however, may be simply summarized at this
-point as the greed of the Nazi conspirators for the raw material,
-food, and other supplies which their neighbor possessed and which
-they conceived of themselves as needing for the maintenance of
-their war machine. To these defendants such a need was translated
-indubitably as a right, and they early began planning and preparing
-with typical care and detail to ensure that every bit of the plunder
-which it would be possible to reap in the course of their aggression
-would be exploited to their utmost benefit.
-<span class='pageno' title='346' id='Page_346'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I have already put into the record evidence showing that as
-early as August of 1940 General Thomas, the chief of the B Group
-Army, received a hint from the Defendant Göring about a possible
-attack on the U.S.S.R. which prompted him to begin considering
-the Soviet war economy. I also said at that time that I would later
-introduce evidence that in November 1940—8 months before the
-attack—Thomas was categorically informed by Göring of the planned
-operation in the East and preliminary preparations were commenced
-for the economic plundering of the territories to be occupied in the
-course of such operation. Göring, of course, played the overall
-leading role in this activity by virtue of his position at the head
-of the Four Year Plan.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thomas describes his receipt of the knowledge and this early
-planning at Page 369 of his draft, which is our Document 2353-PS
-introduced earlier as Exhibit USA-35; the part I shall read is at
-Pages 10 and 11 of the English translation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In November 1940 the Chief of Wi Rü together with Secretaries
-of State Körner, Neumann, Backe, and General Von
-Hanneken were informed by the Reich Marshal of the action
-planned in the East.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk629'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“By reason of these directives the preliminary preparations
-for the action in the East were commenced by the office of
-Wi Rü at the end of 1940.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk630'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The preliminary preparations for the action in the East
-included first of all the following tasks:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk631'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. Obtaining of a detailed survey of the Russian armament
-industry, its location, its capacity, and its associate industries.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk632'/>
-
-<hr class='tbk633'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. Investigation of the capacities of the different big armament
-centers and their dependency one on the other.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk634'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3. Determining the power and transport system for the industry
-of the Soviet Union.</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“4. Investigation of sources of raw materials and petroleum
-(crude oil).</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk635'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“5. Preparation of a survey of industries other than armament
-industries in the Soviet Union.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk636'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“These points were concentrated in one big compilation, ‘War
-Economy of the Soviet Union,’ and illustrated with detailed
-maps.”—I am still quoting.—“Furthermore a card index was
-made containing all the important factories in Soviet Russia
-and a lexicon of economy in the German-Russian language for
-the use of the German war economy organization.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk637'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“For the processing of these problems a task staff, ‘Russia,’
-was created, first in charge of Lieutenant Colonel Luther and
-later on in charge of Major General Schubert. The work was
-<span class='pageno' title='347' id='Page_347'></span>
-carried out according to the directives from the chief of the
-office, respectively”—I suppose—“by the group of departments
-for foreign territories”—Ausland—“with the co-operation
-of all departments, economy offices, and any other persons
-possessing information on Russia. Through these intensive
-preparative activities an excellent collection of material
-was made which proved of the utmost value later on for
-carrying out the operations and for administering the territories.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>That ends the quotation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By the end of February 1941 this preliminary planning had
-proceeded to a point where a broader plan of organization was
-needed, and so General Thomas held a conference with his subordinates
-on 28 February 1941 to call for such a plan. A memorandum
-of this conference, classified top secret and dated 1 March 1941,
-was captured, and is our Document 1317-PS. I now offer it in
-evidence as Exhibit USA-140. The text of this memorandum reads
-as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The general ordered that a broader plan of organization be
-drafted for the Reich Marshal.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk638'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Essential Points:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk639'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. The whole organization to be subordinate to the Reich
-Marshal. Purpose: Support and extension of the measures of
-the Four Year Plan.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk640'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. The organization must include everything concerning war
-economy, excepting only food which is said to be made
-already a special mission of State Secretary Backe.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk641'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3. Clear statement that the organization is to be independent
-of the military or civil administration. Close co-ordination,
-but instructions direct from the central office in Berlin.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk642'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“4. Scope of activities to be divided into two steps: a) Accompanying
-the advancing troops directly behind the front lines
-in order to avoid the destruction of supplies and to secure the
-removal of important goods; b) Administration of the occupied
-industrial districts and exploitation of economically complementary
-districts.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>And then, on the bottom of Page 1:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“5. In view of the extended field of activity the term ‘war
-economy inspection’ is to be used in preference to armament
-inspection.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk643'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“6. In view of the great field of activity the organization
-must be generously equipped and personnel must be correspondingly
-numerous. The main mission of the organization
-will consist of seizing raw materials and taking over all
-<span class='pageno' title='348' id='Page_348'></span>
-important exploitations. For the latter mission reliable persons
-from German concerns will be interposed suitably from
-the beginning, since successful operation from the beginning
-can only be performed by the aid of their experience. (For
-example: lignite, ore, chemistry, petroleum).</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk644'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“After the discussion of further details Lieutenant Colonel
-Luther was instructed to make an initial draft of such an
-organization within a week.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk645'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Close co-operation with the individual sections in the building
-is essential. An officer must still be appointed for the Wi
-and Rü with whom the operational staff can remain in constant
-contact. Wi is to give each section chief and Lieutenant
-Colonel Luther a copy of the new plan regarding Russia.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk646'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Lieutenant General Schubert is to be asked to be in Berlin
-the second half of next week. Also, the four officers who are
-ordered to draw up the individual armament inspections are
-to report to the office chief at the end of the week.—Signed—Hamann.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hamann, who signed the report, is listed among those attending
-as a captain and apparently the junior officer present, so presumably
-it fell naturally enough to Hamann to prepare the notes on the
-conference.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The authority and mission of this organization which Thomas
-was organizing at the direction of Göring was clearly recognized
-by Keitel in his operational order of 13 March 1941. This order is
-Number 447-PS, and I have already offered it in evidence earlier
-as Exhibit USA-135. At that time I quoted the paragraph in the
-order in which it was stated that the Führer had entrusted the uniform
-direction of the administration of economy in the areas of
-operation and political administration to the Reich Marshal who
-in turn had delegated his authority to the Chief of the Wi Rü Amt.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The organizational work called for by General Thomas at the
-meeting on 28 February apparently proceeded apace, and on 29 April
-1941 a conference was held with various branches of the Armed
-Forces to explain the organizational set-up of the Economic Staff
-“Oldenburg.” Oldenburg was the code name given to this economic
-counterpart of Plan Barbarossa. A report of this conference is captured
-Document Number 1157-PS, and I now offer it in evidence
-as Exhibit USA-141. Section 1 of this memorandum deals with the
-general organization of Economic Staff Oldenburg as it had developed
-by this time, and I should like to read most of that section
-into the record. The report begins:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Conference with the Branches of the Armed Forces at 1000
-hours on Tuesday, 29th April 1941.
-<span class='pageno' title='349' id='Page_349'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk647'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. Welcome. Purpose of the meeting: Introduction to the
-organizational structure of the economic section of the undertaking
-Barbarossa-Oldenburg.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk648'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“As already known, the Führer, contrary to previous procedure,
-has ordered for this drive the uniform concentration in
-one hand of all economic operations and has entrusted the
-Reich Marshal with the overall direction of the economic
-administration in the area of operations and in the areas
-under political administration.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk649'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Reich Marshal has delegated this function to an Economic
-General Staff working under the director of the Economic
-Armament Office (Chief, Wi Rü Amt).</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk650'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Under the Reich Marshal and the Economic General Staff
-the supreme central authority in the area of the drive itself
-is the”—and then a heading—“Economic Staff Oldenburg for
-special duties under the command of Lieutenant General
-Schubert. His subordinate authorities, geographically subdivided,
-are: 5 economic inspectorates, 23 economic commands,
-and 12 district offices which are distributed among
-important places within the area of the economic command.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk651'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“These offices are used in the military rear area. The idea
-is that in the territory of each army group an economic
-inspectorate is to be established at the seat of the commander
-of the military rear area, and that this inspectorate will
-supervise the economic exploitation of the territory.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk652'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A distinction must be made between the military rear area
-and the battle area proper on the one hand, and the rear area
-of the army on the other hand. In the latter, economic
-matters are dealt with by the Group IV Economy”—IV Wi—“of
-the Army Headquarters Command, that is, the liaison
-officer of the Economic Armament Office within the Supreme
-Command of the Armed Forces assigned to the Army Headquarters
-Command. For the battle area he has attached to
-him technical battalions, reconnaissance and recovery troops
-for raw materials, mineral oil, agricultural machinery, in particular,
-tractors and means of production.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk653'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the rear area of the Army situated between the battle
-and the military rear area, Group IV Economy with the various
-field commands are placed at the disposal of the liaison officer
-of the Economic Armament Office for the support of the
-specialists of the Army Headquarters Command, who are
-responsible for supplying the troops from the country’s
-resources and for preparing the subsequent general economic
-exploitation.
-<span class='pageno' title='350' id='Page_350'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk654'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“While these units move with the troops, economic inspectorates,
-economic commands and their sub-offices remain
-established in the locality.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk655'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The new feature inherent in the organization under the command
-of the Economic Staff Oldenburg is that it does not only
-deal with military industry but comprises the entire economic
-field. Consequently all offices are no longer to be designated
-as offices of the military industries or armaments but quite
-generally as economic inspectorates, economic commands,
-<span class='it'>et cetera</span>.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk656'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“This also corresponds with the internal organization of the
-individual offices which, from the Economic Staff Oldenburg
-down to the economic commands, requires a standard subdivision
-into three large groups, i. e. Group M, dealing with
-troop requirements, armaments, industrial transport organization;
-Group L, which concerns itself with all questions of
-feeding and agriculture, and Group W, which is in charge of
-the entire field of trade and industry, including raw materials
-and supplies; further, questions of forestry, finance and banking,
-enemy property, commerce and exchange of commodities,
-and manpower allocation.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk657'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Secretary of State Backe is appointed Commissioner for Food
-and Agriculture in the General Staff; the problems falling
-within the field of activities of Group W are dealt with by
-General Von Hanneken.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>The remainder of the document deals with local subdivisions, personnel
-and planning problems, and similar details, which I think
-it unnecessary to put into the record.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>These documents portray vividly the coldly calculated method
-with which those Nazis prepared months in advance to rob and loot
-their intended victim. They show that the conspirators not only
-planned to stage a wanton attack on a neighbor to whom they had
-pledged security, but they also intended to strip that neighbor of
-his food, his factories, and all his means of livelihood.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I shall point out more fully later when I discuss the question
-of motivation, these men made their plans for plunder being fully
-aware that to carry them out would necessarily involve ruin and
-starvation for millions of the inhabitants of the Soviet Union.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: This would be a good time to adjourn.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: May the Tribunal please, I have been informed
-by the interpreters that I have been speaking at a great
-speed this morning, so I shall try to temper the speed.
-<span class='pageno' title='351' id='Page_351'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Next, the politics of destruction; preparation for the political
-phase of the aggression. As I have already indicated and as I shall
-develop more fully later in this discussion, there were both economic
-and political reasons motivating the action of the conspirators in
-invading the Soviet Union. I have already discussed the extent of
-the planning and preparations for the economic side of the aggression.
-Equally elaborate planning and preparation were engaged in
-by the conspirators to ensure the effectuation of the political aims
-of their aggression. It is, I believe, sufficient at this point to describe
-that political aim as the elimination of the Union of Soviet Socialist
-Republics as a powerful political factor in Europe and the acquisition
-of Lebensraum.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For the accomplishment of this purpose the Nazi conspirators
-selected as their agent the Defendant Rosenberg. As early as the
-2d of April 1941 Rosenberg or a member of his staff prepared a
-memorandum on the U.S.S.R. This memorandum speculates on the
-possibility of a disagreement with the U.S.S.R. which would result
-in a quick occupation of an important part of that country. This
-memorandum then considers what the political goal of such occupation
-should be and suggests ways for reaching such a goal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The memorandum is Number 1017-PS in our series, and I offer
-it in evidence now as Exhibit USA-142.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Beginning with the second paragraph it reads, under the subject
-“U.S.S.R.”;</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A military conflict with the U.S.S.R. will result in an extraordinarily
-rapid occupation of an important and large section
-of the U.S.S.R. It is very probable that military action on our
-part will very soon be followed by the military collapse of
-the U.S.S.R. The occupation of these areas would then present
-not so many military as administrative and economic difficulties.
-Thus arises the first question:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk658'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Is the occupation to be determined by purely military or
-economic needs respectively, or is the laying of political
-foundations for a future organization of the area also a factor
-in determining how far the occupation shall be extended? If
-so, it is a matter of urgency to fix the political goal which is
-to be attained, for it will without doubt also have an effect
-on military operations.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk659'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“If the political overthrow of the eastern empire, in the weak
-condition it would be at the time, is set as the goal of military
-operations, one may conclude that:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk660'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1) The occupation must comprise areas of vast proportions.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk661'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2) From the very beginning the treatment of individual sections
-of territory should, in regard to administration as well
-<span class='pageno' title='352' id='Page_352'></span>
-as economics and ideology, be adapted to the political ends
-we are striving to attain.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk662'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3) Again, extraordinary questions concerning these vast
-areas such as, in particular, the ensuring of essential supplies
-for the continuation of war against England, the maintenance
-of production which this necessitates, and the great directives
-for the completely separate areas, should best be dealt with
-all together in one place.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk663'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It should again be stressed here that, in addition, all the
-arguments which follow only hold good, of course, once the
-supplies from the area to be occupied, which are essential to
-Greater Germany for the continuance of the war, have been
-assured.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk664'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Anyone who knows the East sees in a map of Russia’s population
-the following national or geographical units:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk665'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(a) Greater Russia, with Moscow as its center; (b) White
-Russia, with Minsk or Smolensk as its capital; (c) Estonia,
-Latvia, and Lithuania; (d) The Ukraine and the Crimea, with
-Kiev as its center; (e) The Don area, with Rostov as its
-capital; (f) The area of the Caucasus; (g) Russian Central Asia
-or Russian Turkestan.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The memorandum then proceeds to discuss each of the areas or
-geographical units in some detail, and I shall not read those pages.
-At the end of the paper, however, the writer sums up his thoughts
-and briefly outlines his plan. I should like to read that portion into
-the record. It is at the bottom of Page 4 of the English translation
-under the heading “Summary”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The following systematic constructional plan is evolved from
-the points briefly outlined here:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk666'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(1) The creation of a central department for the occupied
-areas of the U.S.S.R. to be confined more or less to war time.
-Working in agreement with the higher and supreme Reich
-authorities, it would be the task of this department:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk667'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(a) To issue binding political instructions to the separate
-administration areas, having in mind the situation existing at
-the time and the goal which is to be achieved;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk668'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(b) To secure for the Reich supplies essential to the war from
-all the occupied areas;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk669'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(c) To make preparations for, and to supervise the carrying
-out in main outline of, the primarily important questions for
-all areas, as for instance, those of finance and funds, transport,
-and the production of oil, coal, and food.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk670'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(2) The carrying out of sharply defined decentralization in
-the separate administration areas, grouped together by race
-<span class='pageno' title='353' id='Page_353'></span>
-or by reason of political economy for the carrying out of the
-totally dissimilar tasks assigned to them.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk671'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“As against this, an administrative department regulating
-matters in principle and to be set up on a purely economic
-basis, as is at present envisaged, might very soon prove to be
-inadequate and fail in its purpose. Such a central office would
-be compelled to carry out a common policy for all areas, dictated
-only by economic considerations, and this might impede
-the carrying out of the political task and, in view of its
-being run on purely bureaucratic lines, might possibly even
-prevent it.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk672'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The question therefore arises whether the opinions which
-have been set forth should not, purely for reasons of expediency,
-be taken into consideration from the very beginning
-when organizing the administration of the territory on a basis
-of war economy. In view of the vast spaces and the difficulties
-of administration which arise from that alone, and also in
-view of the living conditions created by Bolshevism, which
-are totally different from those of Western Europe, the whole
-question of the U.S.S.R. would require different treatment
-from that which has been applied in the individual countries
-of Western Europe.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE TRIBUNAL (Mr. Biddle): Is that signed?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: It is not signed. No, Sir.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE TRIBUNAL (Mr. Biddle): Is it in the Defendant Rosenberg’s
-handwriting?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: It was in the Rosenberg file.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE TRIBUNAL (Mr. Biddle): Is there anything to indicate
-that he wrote it?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: No. I said it was evidently prepared by
-Rosenberg or under his authority. We captured the whole set of
-Rosenberg files, which constitutes really a large library.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is evident that the “presently envisaged administration
-operating on a purely economic basis” to which this memorandum
-objects was the Economic Staff Oldenburg, which I have already
-described as having been set up under Göring and General Thomas.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Rosenberg’s statement—if this be his statement—of the political
-purpose of the invasion and his analysis of the achieving of it
-apparently did not fall on deaf ears. By a Führer order, dated
-20 April 1941, Rosenberg was named commissioner for the central
-control of questions connected with the east European region. This
-order is part of the correspondence regarding Rosenberg’s appointment,
-which has been given the Number 865-PS in our series. I ask
-<span class='pageno' title='354' id='Page_354'></span>
-that this file, all relating to the same subject and consisting of four
-letters, all of which I shall read or refer to, be admitted in evidence
-as Exhibit USA-143.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The order itself reads as follows—it is the first item on the English
-translation of 865-PS:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I name Reichsleiter Alfred Rosenberg as my commissioner
-for the central control of questions connected with the east
-European region. An office, which is to be furnished in
-accordance with his orders, is at the disposal of Reichsleiter
-Rosenberg for the carrying out of the duties thereby entrusted
-to him. The necessary money for this office is to be taken
-out of the Reich Chancellery Treasury in a lump sum.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk673'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Führer’s headquarters, 20th April 1941. The Führer, signed,
-Adolf Hitler; Reich Minister and Head of Reich Chancellery,
-signed, Dr. Lammers.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This particular copy of the Führer’s order was enclosed in a
-letter which Dr. Lammers wrote to the Defendant Keitel requesting
-his co-operation for Rosenberg and asking that Keitel appoint a
-deputy to work with Rosenberg. This letter reads as follows—it is
-on the stationery of the Reich Minister and the Head of the Reich
-Chancellery, Berlin, 21 April 1941. I omit the salutation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Herewith I am sending you a copy of the Führer’s decree of
-the 20th of this month by which the Führer appointed Reichsleiter
-Alfred Rosenberg as his commissioner for the central
-control connected with the east European region. In this
-capacity Reichsleiter Rosenberg is to make the necessary
-preparations for the probable emergency with all speed. The
-Führer wishes that Rosenberg shall be authorized for this
-purpose to obtain the closest co-operation of the highest Reich
-authorities, receive information from them, and summon the
-representatives of the highest Reich authorities to conferences.
-In order to guarantee the necessary secrecy of the commission
-and the measures to be undertaken, for the time being, only
-those of the highest Reich authorities should be informed on
-whose co-operation Reichsleiter Rosenberg will primarily
-depend. They are: The Commissioner for the Four Year Plan”—that
-is Göring—“the Reich Minister of Economics, and you
-yourself”—that is Keitel—“Therefore, may I ask you in
-accordance with the Führer’s wishes to place your co-operation
-at the disposal of Reichsleiter Rosenberg in the carrying out
-of the task imposed upon him. It is recommended in the
-interests of secrecy that you name a representative in your
-office with whom the office of the Reichsleiter can communicate
-and who, in addition to your usual deputy, should be the
-<span class='pageno' title='355' id='Page_355'></span>
-only one to whom you should communicate the contents of
-this letter.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk674'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I should be obliged if you would acknowledge the receipt of
-this letter.</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:0em;margin-top:.5em;'>“Heil Hitler, Yours very sincerely, signed, Dr. Lammers.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the next letter Keitel writes Lammers acknowledging receipt
-of his letter and telling of his compliance with the request. Keitel
-also writes Rosenberg telling him of the action he has taken. Now,
-the letter to Dr. Lammers—I shall read the text:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:0em;margin-bottom:.5em;'>“Dear Reich Minister:</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I acknowledge receipt of the copy of the Führer’s decree in
-which the Führer appointed Reichsleiter Alfred Rosenberg as
-his commissioner for the central control of questions connected
-with the east European region. I have named General of the
-Artillery Jodl, head of the Armed Forces Operational Staff,
-as my permanent deputy, and Major General Warlimont as
-his deputy to Reichsleiter Rosenberg.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And the letter to Reichsleiter Rosenberg on the same date:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The head of the Reich Chancellery has sent me a copy of the
-Führer’s decree, by which he has appointed you his commissioner
-for the central control of questions connected with the
-east European region. I have charged General of the Artillery
-Jodl, head of the Armed Forces Operational Staff, and his
-deputy, Major General Warlimont, with the solving of these
-questions as far as they concern the Supreme Command of
-the Armed Forces. Now I ask you, as far as your office is
-concerned, to deal with them only.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Immediately upon receipt of the order from Hitler Rosenberg
-began building his organization, conferring with the various ministries,
-issuing his instructions, and generally making the detailed
-plans and preparations necessary to carry out his assigned mission.
-Although Rosenberg’s files, which were captured intact, were
-crowded with documents evidencing both the extent of the preparation
-and its purpose, I believe that the citation of a small number
-which are typical should be sufficient for the Tribunal and the
-record. All of those I shall now discuss were found in the Defendant
-Rosenberg’s files.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Our document numbered 1030-PS is a memorandum, dated 8 May
-1941, entitled, “General Instructions for all Reich Commissioners
-in the Occupied Eastern Territories.” I offer that in evidence as
-Exhibit USA-144.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In these instructions to his chief henchmen Rosenberg outlines
-the political aims and purposes of the attack. In the second and third
-paragraphs of the English translation, which appear on Page 2 of
-the German, the following remarks appear:
-<span class='pageno' title='356' id='Page_356'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The only possible political goal of war can be the aim to
-free the German Reich from the ‘grossrussisch’ pressure for
-centuries to come. This does not only correspond with German
-interests but also with historical justice, for Russian
-imperialism was in a position to accomplish its policy of conquest
-and oppression almost unopposed, whilst it threatened
-Germany again and again. Therefore, the German Reich has
-to beware of starting a campaign against Russia with a
-historical injustice, meaning the reconstruction of a great
-Russian empire, no matter of what kind. On the contrary,
-all historical struggles of the various nationalities against
-Moscow and Leningrad have to be scrutinized for their
-bearing on the situation today. This has been done on the
-part of the National Socialist movement to correspond to the
-Leader’s political testament as laid down in his book, that
-now the military and political threat in the East shall be
-eliminated forever.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk675'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Therefore this huge area must be divided according to its
-historical and racial conditions into Reich commissions each
-of which bears within itself a different political aim. The
-Reich Commission Eastland”—Ostland—“including White
-Ruthenia, will have the task to prepare, by way of development
-into a Germanized protectorate, a progressively closer
-cohesion with Germany. The Ukraine shall become an independent
-state in alliance with Germany, and Caucasia with
-the contiguous northern territories a federal state with a
-German plenipotentiary. Russia proper must put her own
-house in order for the future. These general viewpoints are
-explained in the following instructions for each Reich commissioner.
-Beyond that there are still a few general considerations
-which possess validity for all Reich commissioners.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The fifth paragraph of the English translation, Page 7 of the
-German, presents a fascinating rationalization of a contemplated
-robbery. It reads:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The German people have achieved, in the course of centuries,
-tremendous accomplishments in the eastern European
-area. Nearly all its land and houses were confiscated without
-indemnification; hundreds of thousands (in the south on the
-Volga) starved or were deported or, as in the Baltic territories,
-deprived of the fruits of their cultural work during
-the past 700 years. The German Reich must proclaim the
-principle that after the occupation of the Eastern Territories
-the former German assets are the property of the people of
-Greater Germany, irrespective of the consent of the former
-<span class='pageno' title='357' id='Page_357'></span>
-individual proprietors, where the German Reich may reserve
-the right (assuming that it has not already been done during
-resettlement) to arrange a just settlement. The manner of
-compensation and restitution of this national property will be
-subject to different treatment by each Reich commission.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Document Number 1029-PS in our series is an “Instruction for
-a Reich Commissioner Ostland.” It is typical of the type of instruction
-which was issued to each of the appointed commissioners (or
-Kommissars), and is amazingly frank in outlining intentions of the
-Nazi conspirators toward the country they intended to occupy in
-the course of their aggression. I offer this document in evidence as
-Exhibit USA-145. I should like to read into the record the first
-three paragraphs. It begins:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“All the regions between Narva and Tilsit have constantly
-been in close relationship with the German people. A 700-year-old
-history has moulded the inner sympathies of the
-majority of the races living there in a European direction
-and has in spite of all Russian threats added this region to
-the living space of Greater Germany.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk676'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The aim of a Reich commissioner for Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania,
-and White Ruthenia”—last words added in pencil—“must
-be to strive to achieve the form of a German Protectorate
-and then transform the region into part of the
-Greater German Reich by germanizing racially possible elements,
-colonizing Germanic races, and banishing undesirable
-elements. The Baltic Sea must become a Germanic inland sea
-under the guardianship of Greater Germany.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk677'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“For certain cattle-raising products the Baltic region was a
-land of surplus; and the Reich commissioner must endeavor
-to make this surplus once more available to the German
-people and, if possible, to increase it. With regard to the
-process of germanizing or resettling, the Estonian people are
-strongly germanized to the extent of 50 percent by Danish,
-German, and Swedish blood, and can be considered as a
-kindred nation. In Latvia the section capable of being assimilated
-is considerably smaller than in Estonia. In this
-country stronger resistance will have to be reckoned with
-and banishment on a larger scale will have to be envisaged.
-A similar development may have to be reckoned with in
-Lithuania, for here too the immigration of racial Germans is
-called for in order to promote very extensive germanization
-(on the East Prussian border).”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Skipping a paragraph, the next paragraph is also interesting
-and reads as follows:
-<span class='pageno' title='358' id='Page_358'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The task of a Reich commissioner with his seat of office in
-Riga will therefore largely be an extraordinarily positive one.
-A country which 700 years ago was captured by German
-Knights, built up by the Hanseatic League, and by reason of
-a constant influx of German blood together with Swedish
-elements was a predominantly germanized land, is to be
-established as a mighty German borderland. The preliminary
-cultural conditions are available everywhere; and the German
-Reich will be able to guarantee the right to a later settlement
-to all those who have distinguished themselves in this
-war, to the descendants of those who gave their lives during
-the war, and also to all who fought in the Baltic campaign,
-never once lost courage, fought on in the hour of despair,
-and delivered Baltic civilization from Bolshevism. For the
-rest the solution of the colonization problem is not a Baltic
-question but one which concerns Greater Germany, and it
-must be settled on these lines.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>These two directives are, I think, sufficiently typical of the lot
-to show the Tribunal the extent of the planning and preparation
-for this phase of the aggression as well as the political purpose it
-was hoped would be achieved thereby. However, on 28 June 1941,
-less than a week after the invasion, Rosenberg himself prepared
-a full report of his activities since his appointment on the 20th of
-April. One might almost think he had so meticulously recorded his
-activities in order to be of assistance to this prosecution.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This report is numbered 1039-PS, and I now offer it in evidence
-as Exhibit USA-146. To me the most interesting things about this
-report are its disclosures concerning the number of these defendants
-who worked with and assisted Rosenberg in the planning and
-preparation for this phase of the aggression and the extent to which
-practically all of the ministries and offices of both state and Party
-are shown to have been involved in this operation. The report was
-found in the Defendant Rosenberg’s files; and although it is rather
-long, it is of sufficient importance in implicating persons, groups,
-and organizations, that it must, I believe, be read in full in order
-that it may be made part of the record. It is headed, “Report on
-the Preparatory Work in Eastern European Territories”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Immediately after the notification of individual supreme
-Reich offices regarding the Führer’s Decree of 20.4.41 a conference
-with the Chief of the OKW”—Armed Forces High
-Command—“took place”—That is the Defendant Keitel—“After
-presentation of the various political aims in the proposed
-Reich commissions and presentation of personal requirements
-for the East, the chief of the OKW explained that
-reservation”—UK-Stellung—“would be too complicated in
-<span class='pageno' title='359' id='Page_359'></span>
-this case and that this matter could be carried out best by
-direct assignment”—Abkommandierung—“by command of
-the Chief of the OKW. General Field Marshal Keitel then
-issued an appropriate command which established the basis
-for the coming requirements. He named as deputy and liaison
-officer General Jodl and Major General Warlimont. The
-negotiations which then commenced relative in all questions
-of the Eastern territory including personal needs”—relative
-to, I suppose it is—“were carried on by the gentlemen of the
-OKW in collaboration with officials of my office.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk678'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A conference took place with Admiral Canaris to the effect
-that under the given confidential circumstances my office
-could in no way deal with any representatives of the people
-of the east European area. I asked him to do this insofar as
-the military intelligence required it and then to name persons
-to me who could count as political personalities, over and
-above the military intelligence, in order to arrange for their
-eventual commitment later. Admiral Canaris said that naturally
-also my wish not to recognize any political groups among
-the emigrants would be considered by him and that he was
-planning to proceed in accordance with my indications.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk679'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Later on I informed General Field Marshal Von Brauchitsch
-and Grossadmiral Raeder about the historical and political
-conceptions of the Eastern problem. In further conferences
-we agreed to appoint a representative of my office to the
-Supreme Commander of the Army, respectively to the Chief
-Quartermaster, and to the Army groups for questions relative
-to political configuration and requests of the OKW. In the
-meantime this has been done.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk680'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Already at the outset there was a discussion with Minister
-of Economics”—Reichswirtschaftsminister—“Funk”—the Defendant
-Funk—“who appointed as his permanent deputy
-Ministerial Director Dr. Schlotterer. Almost daily conferences
-were then held with Dr. Schlotterer with reference to
-the war economic intentions of the Economic Operational
-Staff East. In this connection I had conferences with General
-Thomas, State Secretary Körner, State Secretary Backe,
-Ministerial Director Riecke, General Schubert, and others.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk681'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Far-reaching agreement was reached in the eastern questions
-as regards direct technical work now and in the future. A
-few problems regarding the general relationship of the proposed
-Reich ministry toward the Four Year Plan are still open
-and will be subject, after submission, to the decision of the
-Führer. In principle I declared that I in no way intended to
-found an economic department in my office; economics would
-<span class='pageno' title='360' id='Page_360'></span>
-rather be handled substantially and practically by the Reich
-Marshal”—that is the Defendant Göring—“and the persons
-appointed by him. However, the two responsible department
-heads, namely, Ministerial Director Dr. Schlotterer for industrial
-economy and Ministerial Director Riecke for food economy,
-would be placed in my office as permanent liaison men
-to co-ordinate here political aims with the economic necessities
-in a department which would still have to unite with
-other persons for such co-ordinating work, depending on
-labor conditions as they may arise later on (political leadership
-of labor unions, construction, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>).</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk682'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“After notification of the Reich Foreign Minister, the latter
-appointed Geheimrat Grosskopf as permanent liaison man to
-my office. For the requested representation in the political
-department of my office (headed by Reichsamtsleiter Dr. Leibbrandt),
-the Foreign Ministry released Consul General
-Dr. Bräutigam, who is known to me for many years, speaks
-Russian, and worked for years in Russia. Negotiations, which
-if necessary will be placed before the Führer, are under way
-with the Foreign Office regarding its wishes for the assignment
-of its representatives to the future Reich commissioners
-(or Kommissars).</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk683'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Propaganda Ministry”—that is Goebbels—“appointed
-State Secretary Gutterer as permanent liaison man, and a
-complete agreement was reached to the effect that the decisions
-on all political and other essays, speeches, proclamations,
-<span class='it'>et cetera</span>, would be made in my office; a great number of
-substantial works for propaganda would be delivered and the
-papers prepared by the Propaganda Ministry would be modified
-here, if necessary. The whole practical employment of
-propaganda will undisputedly be subject to the Reich Ministry
-of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda. For the sake of
-closer co-operation the Propaganda Ministry assigns yet
-another person directly under my department, ‘Enlightenment
-and Press,’ and in addition appoints a permanent press
-liaison man. All these activities have been going on for some
-time, and without attracting attention to my office in any
-way this co-ordination on contents and terminology takes
-place continually every day.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk684'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Thorough discussions took place with Reich Minister Ohnesorge
-concerning future transmission of communication and
-setting up of all technical necessities in future occupied territories;
-with Reich Minister Seldte on the supply of labor
-forces, with Reich Minister Frick”—that is the Defendant
-Frick—“(State Secretary Stuckart) in detailed form on the
-<span class='pageno' title='361' id='Page_361'></span>
-assignment of numerous necessary officials for the commissions.
-According to the present estimate there will be four
-Reich commissions as approved by the Führer. I shall propose
-to the Führer for political and other reasons to set up
-a suitable number of general commissions (24), main commissions
-(about 80), and regional commissions (over 900). A
-general commission would correspond to a former general
-government; a main commission to a main government.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk685'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A regional commission contains three or four districts”—Kreise—“In
-view of the huge spaces that is the minimum
-number which appears necessary for a future civil government
-or administration. A portion of the officials has already
-been requested on the basis of the above-named command of
-the Chief of the OKW.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Alderman, speaking for myself I don’t
-understand why it is necessary to read this document in full. You
-have already shown that there was a plan for dividing Russia up
-into a number of commissions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: Quite true. I should like merely to point out
-two of three other individual defendants who are referred to in
-this document and as to whom the document shows that they were
-in immediate complicity with this whole scheme. The first of those,
-about three paragraphs further down, the Reich Youth Leader—that
-is the Defendant Baldur Von Schirach. Then of course Gruppenführer
-SS Heydrich, about the next paragraph .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Well, he is not a defendant.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: No, Sir. His organization is, however, if the
-Tribunal please, charged as a criminal organization.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the next paragraph, the Defendant Ministerial Director
-Fritzsche, who worked under Goebbels.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Without a long discussion of further evidence I might summarize
-the individual implication in this fashion. Those of the individual
-defendants now on trial which this report personally involves are
-Keitel, Jodl, Raeder, Funk, Göring, Ribbentrop, Frick, Schirach, and
-Fritzsche. The organizations involved by this report include the
-following:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>OKW, OKH, OKM, Ministry of the Interior, Ministry of Economics,
-Reich Foreign Ministry, Propaganda Ministry, Ministry of
-Labor, Ministry of Communications, the Reich Physicians’ Union,
-Ministry of Munitions and Armaments, Reich Youth Leadership,
-Reich Organization Leadership, German Labor Front, the SS, the
-SA, and the Reich Press Chief.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At a later stage in the Trial, and in other connections, I should
-like to ask the Tribunal to consider that that document with which
-<span class='pageno' title='362' id='Page_362'></span>
-I have just been dealing be considered a part of the record to the
-extent that it involves these individuals.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I think you can treat it as all being in
-evidence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: At a later stage in the Trial and in other
-connections, evidence will be introduced concerning the manner in
-which all of this planning and preparation for the elimination of
-the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics as a political factor was
-actually carried out. The planned execution of intelligentsia and
-other Russian leaders was, for example, but a part of the actual
-operation of the program to destroy the Soviet Union politically
-and make impossible its early resurrection as a European power.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Having thus elaborately prepared on every side for the invasion
-of the Soviet Union, the Nazi conspirators proceeded to carry out
-their plans; and on 22 June 1941 hurled their armies across the
-borders of the U.S.S.R. In announcing this act of perfidy to the
-world Hitler issued a proclamation on the day of the attack. The
-text of this statement has already been brought to the Tribunal’s
-attention by my British colleagues, and I should like merely to refer
-to it in passing here by quoting therefrom this one sentence, “I
-have therefore today decided to give the fate of Europe again into
-the hands of our soldiers.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This announcement told the world that the die had been cast—the
-plans darkly conceived almost a full year before and secretly
-and continuously developed since then, had now been brought to
-fruition. These conspirators, having carefully and completely
-planned and prepared this war of aggression, now proceeded to
-initiate and wage it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That brings us to the consideration of the motives for the attack.
-Before going into the positive reasons I should like first to point
-out that not only was Germany bound by a solemn covenant not
-to attack the U.S.S.R., but throughout the entire period from August
-1939 to the invasion in 1941 the Soviet Union was faithful to its
-agreements with Germany and displayed no aggressive intentions
-toward territories of the German Reich. General Thomas, for
-example, points out in his draft of “Basic Facts for a History of
-the German War and Armaments Economy,” which is our Document
-Number 2353-PS and which I put in evidence earlier as Exhibit
-USA-35, that insofar as the German-Soviet Trade Agreement of
-11 August 1939 was concerned, the Soviets carried out their deliveries
-thereunder up to the very end.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thomas points out that deliveries by the Soviets were usually
-made quickly and well; and since the food and raw materials being
-thus delivered were considered essential to the German economy,
-<span class='pageno' title='363' id='Page_363'></span>
-efforts were made to keep up their side too. However, as preparations
-for the campaign proceeded, the Nazis cared less about complying
-with their obligations under that agreement. At Page 315
-of his book Thomas says, and I read from Page 9 of the English
-translation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Later on the urgency of the Russian deliveries diminished,
-as preparations for the campaign in the East were already
-under way.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>By that, clearly he speaks of German deliveries to Russia, not as
-to what the Russians delivered.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Russians carried out their deliveries as planned right
-up to the start of the attack; even during the last few days
-transports of india-rubber from the Far East were completed
-by express transit trains.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Again at Page 404 this author brings this point out even more
-forcefully when he states—and I shall read the first paragraph on
-Page 14 of the English translation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In addition to the Italian negotiations until June 1941, the
-negotiations with Russia were accorded a great deal of attention.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk686'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer issued the directive that, in order to camouflage
-German troop movements, the orders Russia has placed in
-Germany must be filled as promptly as possible. Since the
-Russians only made grain deliveries when the Germans delivered
-orders placed by the Russians and since, in the case of
-the individual firms, these deliveries to Russia made it impossible
-for them to fill orders for the German Armed Forces,
-it was necessary for the Wi Rü office to enter into numerous
-individual negotiations with German firms in order to co-ordinate
-Russian orders with those of the Germans from the
-standpoint of priority. In accordance with the wishes of the
-Foreign Office German industry was instructed to accept all
-Russian orders even if it were impossible to fill them within
-the limits of the time set for manufacture and delivery. Since,
-in May especially, large deliveries had to be made to the
-Navy, the firms were instructed to allow the equipment to
-go through the Russian Acceptance Commission, then however,
-to make such a detour during its transportation as to
-make it impossible for it to be delivered over the frontier
-prior to the beginning of the German attack.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Not only was the Soviet Union faithful to the treaty obligations
-with Germany but the evidence shows that she had no aggressive
-intentions toward any German territory. Our Document Number
-C-170, which is in evidence as Exhibit USA-136, is as I have previously
-stated, a file on Russo-German relations found in the files
-<span class='pageno' title='364' id='Page_364'></span>
-of the Naval High Command covering the entire period from the
-treaty to the attack. The entries in this file demonstrate conclusively
-the point I have just stated. It will, I think, be sufficient to read
-to the Tribunal a few entries which include reports from the German
-Ambassador in Moscow as late as June 1941. I shall read the
-first entry, 165 on Page 21 of the English translation; that is 4 June:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Outwardly, no change in the relationship Germany-Russia;
-Russian deliveries continue to full satisfaction. Russian
-Government is endeavoring to do everything to prevent a
-conflict with Germany.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In entry 167 on Page 22 of the English translation, it says:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“6 June. Ambassador in Moscow reports .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Russia will
-only fight if attacked by Germany. Situation is considered in
-Moscow much more serious than up to now. All military
-preparations have been made quietly—as far as can be
-recognized, only defensive. Russian policy still strives as
-before to produce the best possible relationship to Germany.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The next one is entry 169, also on Page 22; the date, 7 June:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“From the report of the Ambassador in Moscow .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. all observations
-show that Stalin and Molotov, who alone are responsible
-for Russian foreign policy, are doing everything to avoid
-a conflict with Germany. The entire behavior of the Government
-as well as the attitude of the press, which reports all
-events concerning Germany in a factual, indisputable manner,
-support this view. The loyal fulfillment of the economic
-treaty with Germany proves the same thing.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Now, that is the German Ambassador talking to you.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The reasons, therefore, which led to the attack on the Soviet
-Union could not have been self-defense or treaty breaches. In truth,
-no doubt, as has been necessarily implied from the materials presented
-on planning and preparation, more than one motive entered
-into the decision of the Nazi conspirators to launch their aggression
-against the U.S.S.R. All of them, however, appear to blend into
-one grand motive of Nazi policy. The pattern into which these
-various reasons impelling the decision to attack may be said to fall
-is the traditional Nazi ambition for expansion to the East at the
-expense of the U.S.S.R. This Nazi version of an earlier imperial
-imperative—the “Drang nach Osten” (or the drive to the East)—had
-been a cardinal principle of the Nazi Party almost since its
-birth and rested on the twin bases of political strategy and economic
-aggrandizement. Politically such action meant the elimination
-of the powerful country to the east, which might constitute a threat
-to German ambitions, and acquisition of Lebensraum; while on the
-economic side, it offered magnificent opportunities for the plunder
-of vast quantities of food, raw materials, and other supplies, going
-<span class='pageno' title='365' id='Page_365'></span>
-far beyond any legitimate exploitation under the Geneva Convention
-principles for military purpose. Undoubtedly the demands of
-the German war economy for food and raw material served to
-revive the attractiveness on the economic side of this theory while
-the difficulties Germany was experiencing in defeating England
-reaffirmed for the Nazi conspirators the temporarily forgotten Nazi
-political imperative of eliminating, as a political factor, their one
-formidable opponent on the continent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As early as 1923 Hitler outlined this theory in some detail in
-<span class='it'>Mein Kampf</span> where he stated, and I quote from Page 641 of the
-Houghton Mifflin English edition, as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“There are two reasons which induce me to submit to a special
-examination the relation of Germany to Russia: (1) Here
-perhaps we are dealing with the most decisive concern of
-all German foreign affairs; and (2) this question is also the
-touchstone for the political capacity of the young National
-Socialist movement to think clearly and to act correctly.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And again at Page 654 of the same edition:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“And so we National Socialists consciously draw a line
-beneath the foreign policy tendency of our pre-war period.
-We take up where we broke off 600 years ago. We stop the
-endless German movement to the south and west, and turn
-our gaze toward the land in the East. At long last we break
-off the colonial and commercial policy of the pre-war period
-and shift to the soil policy of the future.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk687'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“If we speak of soil in Europe today, we can primarily have
-in mind only Russia and her vassal border states.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The political portion of this economy or purpose is clearly
-reflected in the stated purposes of the organization which the
-Defendant Rosenberg set up to administer the Occupied Eastern
-Territories. I have already discussed this material and need not
-repeat it now. In a speech, however, which he delivered 2 days
-before the attack to the people most interested in the problem of
-the East, Rosenberg re-stated in his usual somewhat mystic fashion
-the political basis for the campaign and its inter-relationship with
-the economic goal. I should like to read a short extract from that
-speech, which is Document Number 1058-PS and which I now offer
-in evidence as Exhibit USA-147. The part I read is from Page 9
-of the German text:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The job of feeding the German people stands this year,
-without a doubt, at the top of the list of Germany’s claims
-in the East; and here the southern territories and the northern
-Caucasus will have to serve as a balance for the feeding of
-the German people. We see absolutely no reason for any obligation
-on our part to feed also the Russian people with the
-<span class='pageno' title='366' id='Page_366'></span>
-products of that surplus territory. We know that this is a
-harsh necessity, bare of any feelings. A very extensive
-evacuation will be necessary, without any doubt, and it is
-sure that the future will hold very hard years in store for
-the Russians. A later decision will have to determine to what
-extent industries can still be maintained there (wagon factories,
-<span class='it'>et cetera</span>). The consideration and execution of this
-policy in the Russian area proper is for the German Reich
-and its future a tremendous and by no means negative task,
-as might appear, if one takes only the harsh necessity of the
-evacuation into consideration. The conversion of Russian
-dynamics towards the East is a task which requires the
-strongest characters. Perhaps this decision will also be
-approved by a coming Russia later, not in 30 but in a
-100 years.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I have indicated, the failure of the Nazi conspirators to defeat
-Great Britain had served to strengthen them further in their belief
-of the political necessity of eliminating the Soviet Union as a
-European factor before Germany could completely achieve her role
-as the master of Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The economic motive for the aggression was brought out clearly
-in our discussion of the organization set up under Göring and
-General Thomas to carry out the economic exploitation of the
-territories they occupied. The purely materialistic basis for the
-attack was unmistakable; and if any doubt existed that at least
-one of the main purposes of the invasion was to steal the food and
-raw material needed for the Nazi war machine regardless of the
-horrible consequences such robbery would entail, that doubt is
-dispelled by a memorandum, which bears our Number 2718-PS and
-which I introduced earlier during my opening statement as Exhibit
-USA-32, showing clear and conscious recognition that these Nazi
-plans would no doubt result in starving to death millions of people
-by robbing them of their food.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Along the similar line, on June 20, 1941 General Thomas wrote
-a memorandum in which he stated that General Keitel had confirmed
-to him Hitler’s present conception of the German economic
-policy concerning raw material. This policy expressed the almost
-unbelievably heartless theory that less manpower would be used
-in the conquest of sources of raw materials than would be necessary
-to produce synthetics in lieu of such raw materials. This is
-our Document Number 1456-PS, and I offer it in evidence as Exhibit
-USA-148. I should like to read the first two paragraphs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Perhaps we better do that after the adjournment.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken until 1400 hours.</span>]</h3>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<h2><span class='pageno' title='367' id='Page_367'></span><span class='it'>Afternoon Session</span></h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I understand that the Defendant Kaltenbrunner
-is now in court. Will you stand up, please?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>[<span class='it'>The Defendant Kaltenbrunner rose in the dock.</span>]</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: In accordance with Article 24 of the Charter,
-you must now plead either guilty or not guilty.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>ERNST KALTENBRUNNER: I plead not guilty. I do not believe
-that I have made myself guilty.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: May it please the Tribunal, I had just put
-in evidence our Document 1456-PS as Exhibit USA-148. I now read
-from that document on Page 17:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The following is a new conception of the Führer, which
-Minister Todt has explained to me and which has been confirmed
-later on by Field Marshal Keitel:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk688'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I. The course of the war shows that we went too far in our
-autarkical endeavors. It is impossible to try to manufacture
-everything we lack by synthetic procedures or other measures.
-For instance, it is impossible to develop our motor fuel economy
-to a point where we can entirely depend on it. All
-these autarkical endeavors demand a tremendous amount of
-manpower, and it is simply impossible to provide it. One has
-to choose another way. What one does not have but needs,
-one must conquer. The commitment of men which is necessary
-for one single action will not be as great as the one that
-is currently needed for the running of the synthetic factories
-in question. The aim must therefore be to secure all territories
-which are of special interest to us for the war economy
-by conquering them.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk689'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“At the time the Four Year Plan was established I issued a
-statement in which I made it clear that a completely autarkical
-economy is impossible for us because the need of men will
-be too great. My solution, however, has always been directed
-to securing the necessary reserves for missing stocks by concluding
-economic agreements which would guarantee delivery
-even in wartime.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On this macabre note I come to the end of the story of this
-aggression. We have seen these conspirators as they planned, prepared,
-and finally initiated their wanton attack upon the Soviet
-Union. Others will carry on the tale and describe the horrible
-manner in which they waged this war of aggression and the countless
-crimes they committed in its wake. When I consider the solemn
-pledge of non-aggression, the base and sinister motives involved,
-<span class='pageno' title='368' id='Page_368'></span>
-the months of secret planning and preparation, and the unbelievable
-suffering intentionally and deliberately wrought—when I consider
-all of this, I feel fully justified in saying that never before—and,
-God help us, never again—in the history of relations between sovereign
-nations has a blacker chapter been written than the one which
-tells of this unprovoked invasion of the territory of the Soviet
-Union. For those responsible—and they are here before you, the
-defendants in this case—it might be just to let the punishment fit
-the crime.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now turn to the final phase of the detailed presentation of the
-aggressive-war part of the case: German collaboration with Italy
-and Japan, and aggressive war against the United States. The relevant
-portions of the Indictment are set forth in Subsection 7 under
-Section IV (F) of Count One, appearing at Pages 9 and 10 of the
-printed English text of the Indictment. The materials relating to
-this unholy alliance of the three fascist powers and to the aggressive
-war against the United States have been gathered together in a
-document book, marked with the letter “Q,” which I now submit
-to the Tribunal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Before moving on to the subject matter of this tripartite collaboration,
-I should like to invite the attention of the Tribunal to
-the significance of this phase. In the course of the joint presentation
-by the British and American Prosecution in the past several days,
-we have seen the swastika carried forward by force of arms from
-a tightly controlled and remilitarized Germany to the four corners
-of Europe. The elements of a conspiracy that I am now about to
-discuss project the Nazi plan upon a universal screen, involving the
-older world of Asia and the new world of the United States of
-America. As a result, the wars of aggression that were planned in
-Berlin and launched across the frontiers of Poland ended some six
-years later, almost to the day, in surrender ceremonies upon a
-United States battleship riding at anchor in the Bay of Tokyo.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The first formal alliance between Hitler’s Germany and the
-Japanese Government was the Anti-Comintern Pact signed in Berlin
-on 25 November 1936. This agreement, on its face, was directed
-against the activities of the Communist International. It was subsequently
-adhered to by Italy on 6 November 1937.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I ask the Tribunal to take judicial notice of these official state
-documents in accordance with Article 21 of the Charter. The German
-text of these treaties—the original German-Japanese Anti-Comintern
-Pact and the subsequent Protocol of Adherence by Italy—is
-to be found in Volumes 4 and 5 of the <span class='it'>Dokumente der Deutschen
-Politik</span>, respectively. The English translation of the German-Japanese
-Anti-Comintern Pact of 25 November 1936 is contained
-in our Document 2508-PS; the English translation of the Protocol
-<span class='pageno' title='369' id='Page_369'></span>
-of Adherence by Italy of 6 November 1937 is contained in our
-Document 2506-PS. Both of these documents are included in the
-document books which have just been handed up to the Tribunal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is an interesting fact, especially in the light of the evidence
-I shall submit regarding the Defendant Ribbentrop’s active participation
-in collaboration with the Japanese, that Ribbentrop signed
-the Anti-Comintern Pact for Germany at Berlin even though at
-that time, November 1936, Ribbentrop was not the German Foreign
-Minister but simply Hitler’s special Ambassador Plenipotentiary.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On 27 September 1940 some four years after the Anti-Comintern
-Pact was signed and one year after the initiation of war in Europe,
-the German, Italian, and Japanese Governments signed another pact
-at Berlin, a 10-year military-economic alliance. Again I note that
-the Defendant Ribbentrop signed for Germany, this time in his
-capacity as Foreign Minister. The official German text of this pact,
-as well as the Japanese and Italian texts together with an English
-translation, is contained in our Document 2643-PS, which has been
-certified by the signature and seal of the United States Secretary
-of State. I now offer in evidence Document 2643-PS as Exhibit
-USA-149.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tripartite Pact pledged Germany, Italy, and Japan to
-support of, and collaboration with, one another in the establishment
-of a New Order in Europe and East Asia. I should like to
-read into the record parts of this far-reaching agreement:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Governments of Germany, Italy, and Japan consider it
-as a condition precedent of a lasting peace, that each nation
-of the world be given its own proper place. They have,
-therefore, decided to stand together and to co-operate with
-one another in their efforts in Greater East Asia and in the
-regions of Europe, wherein it is their prime purpose to
-establish and maintain a new order of things calculated to
-promote the prosperity and welfare of the peoples there.
-Furthermore, it is the desire of the three Governments to
-extend this co-operation to such nations in other parts of the
-world as are inclined to give to their endeavors a direction
-similar to their own, in order that their aspirations towards
-world peace as the ultimate goal may thus be realized.
-Accordingly, the Governments of Germany, Italy, and Japan
-have agreed as follows:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk690'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Article 1. Japan recognizes and respects the leadership of
-Germany and Italy in the establishment of a New Order in
-Europe.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk691'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Article 2. Germany and Italy recognize and respect the
-leadership of Japan in the establishment of a New Order in
-Greater East Asia.
-<span class='pageno' title='370' id='Page_370'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk692'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Article 3. Germany, Italy, and Japan agree to co-operate in
-their efforts on the aforesaid basis. They further undertake
-to assist one another with all political, economic, and military
-means, if one of the three contracting parties is attacked by
-a power at present not involved in the European war or in
-the Chinese-Japanese conflict.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now skip to the first sentence of Article 6.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The present pact shall come into force immediately upon
-signature and remain in force for 10 years from the date of
-its coming into force.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tripartite Pact of 27 September 1940 thus was a bold
-announcement to the world that the fascist leaders of Germany,
-Japan, and Italy had cemented a full military alliance to achieve
-world domination and to establish a New Order presaged by the
-Japanese invasion of Manchuria in 1931, the ruthless Italian conquest
-of Ethiopia in 1935, and the Nazi overflow into Austria early
-in 1938. I might also comment that this fact introduces the Führerprinzip
-into world politics.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I should like to read in this connection a statement by Cordell
-Hull, Secretary of State of the United States, at the time of the
-signing of this Tripartite Pact. This statement appears in the official
-United States publication, <span class='it'>Peace and War, United States Foreign
-Policy, 1931-1941</span>, which has already been put in evidence as Exhibit
-USA-122. Mr. Hull’s statement is Number 184 therein. It is also
-our Document Number 2944-PS, and both the English text and a
-German translation thereof are included in the document books.
-I now quote a statement by the Secretary of State, 27 September
-1940:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The reported agreement of alliance does not, in view of the
-Government of the United States, substantially alter a situation
-which has existed for several years. Announcement of
-the alliance merely makes clear to all a relationship which
-has long existed in effect, and to which this Government have
-repeatedly called attention. That such an agreement has been
-in process of conclusion has been well known for some time,
-and that fact has been fully taken into account by the
-Government of the United States, in the determining of this
-country’s policies.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>That ends the quotation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I shall not attempt here to trace the relationships and negotiations
-leading up to the Tripartite Pact of 27 September 1940. I
-shall note, however, one example of the type of German-Japanese
-relationship existing before the formalization of the Tripartite Pact.
-This is the record of the conversation of 31 January 1939 between
-Himmler and General Oshima, Japanese Ambassador at Berlin, which
-<span class='pageno' title='371' id='Page_371'></span>
-was referred to by the United States Chief of Counsel in his opening
-address. This document, which is signed by Himmler in crayon,
-is our Document Number 2195-PS. I offer it in evidence as Exhibit
-USA-150. I now quote the file memorandum:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Today I visited General Oshima. The conversation ranged
-over the following subjects:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk693'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1) The Führer speech, which pleased him very much, especially
-because it has been spiritually well founded in every
-respect.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk694'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2) We discussed the conclusion of a treaty to consolidate the
-triangle Germany-Italy-Japan into an even firmer mold. He
-also told me that, together with German counter-espionage”—Abwehr—“he
-was undertaking long-range projects aimed
-at the disintegration of Russia and emanating from the Caucasus
-and the Ukraine. However, this organization was to
-become effective only in case of war.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk695'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3) Furthermore, he had succeeded up to now in sending
-10 Russians with bombs across the Caucasian frontier. These
-Russians had the mission to kill Stalin. A number of additional
-Russians whom he had also sent across had been shot
-at the frontier.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Whatever the beginning and the course of development of the
-fascist triplice, the Nazi conspirators, once their military and economic
-alliance with Japan had been formalized, exhorted the
-Japanese to aggression against those nations with whom they were
-at war and those with whom they contemplated war. In this the
-conspirators pursued a course strikingly parallel to that followed in
-their relationship with the other member of the European Axis.
-On 10 June 1940 in fulfillment of her alliance with Germany, Italy
-had carried out her “stab in the back” by declaring war against
-France and Great Britain. These Nazi conspirators set about to
-induce similar action by Japan on the other side of the world.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I shall show, the nations against whom the German-Japanese
-collaboration was aimed at various times were the British Commonwealth
-of Nations, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, and the
-United States of America. I shall deal with each of these nations
-in the order named.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At least as early as 23 February 1941—on the basis of documents
-available to us—these conspirators undertook to exploit their alliance
-with Japan by exhortations to commit aggression against the
-British Commonwealth. Again the figure of the Defendant Ribbentrop
-appears. On that date, 23 February 1941, he held a conference
-with General Oshima, the Japanese Ambassador to Berlin, at which
-he urged that the Japanese open hostilities against the British in
-the Far East as soon as possible.
-<span class='pageno' title='372' id='Page_372'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The report of that conference, our Document 1834-PS, has already
-been offered in connection with the presentation of the case on
-aggression against the Soviet Union as Exhibit USA-129. A part of
-it has already been read into the record and I now intend to read
-other portions. I shall again come back to this document when
-dealing with the German-Japanese collaboration as regards the
-United States.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As can be seen on the cover page of the English translation,
-Ribbentrop on 2 March sent copies of an extract of the record of
-this conference to his various ambassadors and ministers for their
-strictly confidential and purely personal information with the
-further note that—and I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“These statements are of fundamental significance for orientation
-in the general political situation facing Germany in
-early spring 1941.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I shall now quote from the top of Page 2 of the English translation
-of 1834-PS, to the end of the first paragraph on that page,
-and then skip to the last three sentences of the second paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Extract from the report of the conference of the Reich
-Foreign Minister with Ambassador Oshima in Fuschl on
-13 February 1941.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk696'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“After particularly cordial mutual greetings the RAM (Reich
-Foreign Minister) declared that Ambassador Oshima had been
-proved right in the policy he had pursued regarding Germany
-in the face of the many doubters in Japan. By Germany’s victory
-in the West these policies had been fully vindicated. He (the
-RAM)”—that is Ribbentrop—“regretted that the alliance
-between Germany and Japan, for which he had been working
-with the ambassador for many years already, had come into
-being only after various detours; but public opinion in Japan
-had not been ripe for it earlier. The main thing was, however,
-that they are together now.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then, skipping:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Now that the German-Japanese alliance has been concluded,
-Ambassador Oshima is the man who gets credit for it from
-the Japanese side. After conclusion of the alliance the question
-of its further development now stands in the foreground.
-How is the situation in this respect?”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Ribbentrop, thereafter in the conference, proceeded to shape the
-argument for Japanese intervention against the British. First outlining
-the intended air and U-boat warfare by Germany against
-England, he said—and I now quote the last two sentences in Paragraph
-4, on Page 2, of the English translation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Thereby England’s situation would take catastrophic shape
-overnight. The landing in England is prepared; its execution,
-<span class='pageno' title='373' id='Page_373'></span>
-however, depends on various factors, above all on weather
-conditions.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then skipping and picking up at the first full paragraph
-on Page 3 of the English translation, I quote the Defendant Ribbentrop
-again:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer will beat England wherever he encounters her.
-Besides, our strength is not only equal but superior to a combined
-English-American air force at any time. The number
-of pilots at our disposal is unlimited. The same is true of our
-airplane production capacity. As far as quality is concerned,
-ours always has been superior to the English—to say nothing
-about the American—and we are on the way to enlarge even
-this lead. Upon order of the Führer the antiaircraft defense,
-too, will be greatly reinforced. Since the Army has been
-supplied far beyond its requirements and enormous reserves
-have been piled up—the ammunitions plants have been
-slowed down because of the immense stock of material—production
-now will be concentrated on submarines, airplanes,
-and antiaircraft guns.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk697'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Every eventuality had been provided for; the war has been
-won today, militarily, economically, and politically. We have
-the desire to end the war quickly, and to force England to
-sue for peace soon. The Führer is vigorous and healthy, fully
-convinced of victory, and determined to bring the war as
-quickly as possible to a victorious close. To this end the cooperation
-with Japan is of importance. However, Japan, in
-her own interest, should come in as soon as possible. This
-would destroy England’s key position in the Far East. Japan,
-on the other hand, would thus secure her position in the Far
-East, a position which she could acquire only through war.
-There were three reasons for quick action:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk698'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1) Intervention by Japan would mean a decisive blow against
-the center of the British Empire (threat to India, cruiser warfare,
-<span class='it'>et cetera</span>). The effect upon the morale of the British
-people would be very serious and this would contribute
-toward a quick ending of the war.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk699'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2) A surprise intervention by Japan is bound to keep
-America out of the war. America, which at present is not
-yet armed and would hesitate greatly to expose her Navy to
-any risks west of Hawaii, could then less likely do this. If
-Japan would otherwise respect the American interests, there
-would not even be the possibility for Roosevelt to use the
-argument of lost prestige to make war plausible to the
-Americans. It is very unlikely that America would declare
-war if she then would have to stand by helplessly while
-<span class='pageno' title='374' id='Page_374'></span>
-Japan takes the Philippines without America being able to
-do anything about it.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk700'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3) In view of the coming New World Order it seems to be
-in the interest of Japan also to secure for herself, even during
-the war, the position she wants to hold in the Far East at the
-time of a peace treaty. Ambassador Oshima agreed entirely
-with this line of thought and said that he would do everything
-to carry through this policy.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I should like to note at this point the subtlety of Ribbentrop’s
-argument. First he told the Japanese Ambassador that Germany
-had already practically won the war by herself. Nevertheless he
-suggested that the war could be successfully terminated more
-quickly with Japan’s aid and that the moment was propitious for
-Japan’s entry. Then referring to the spoils of the conquest, he
-indicated that Japan would be best advised to pick up by herself
-during the war the positions she wanted, implying that she would
-have to earn her share of the booty, which is reminiscent of that
-statement I read to you earlier from the Führer, that “those who
-wished to be in on the meal must take a part in the cooking.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Continuing Ribbentrop’s argument to show the real nature of the
-German-Japanese alliance, I shall now read the top two paragraphs
-on Page 5 of the English translation of 1834-PS:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Reich Foreign Minister continued by saying that it was
-Japan’s friendship which had enabled Germany to arm after
-the Anti-Comintern Pact was concluded. On the other hand,
-Japan had been able to penetrate deeply into the English
-sphere of influence in China. Germany’s victory on the continent
-has brought now, after the conclusion of the Three
-Power Pact, great advantages for Japan. France, as a power,
-was eliminated in the Far East (Indo-China). England, too,
-was considerably weakened; Japan had been able to close
-unsteadily on Singapore. Thus, Germany had already contributed
-enormously to the shaping of the future fate of the
-two nations. Due to our geographical situation, we should
-have to carry the main burden of the final battle in the future,
-too. If an unwanted conflict with Russia should arise, we
-should have to carry the main burden also in this case. If
-Germany should ever weaken, Japan would find herself confronted
-by a world coalition within a short time. We would
-all be in the same boat. The fate of both nations would be
-determined for centuries to come. The same was true for
-Italy. The interests of the three countries would never intersect.
-A defeat of Germany would also mean the end of the
-Japanese imperialistic idea.
-<span class='pageno' title='375' id='Page_375'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk701'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Ambassador Oshima definitely agreed with these statements
-and emphasized the fact that Japan was determined to keep
-her imperial position. The Reich Foreign Minister then discussed
-the great problems which would arise after the war
-for the parties of the Three Power Pact from the shaping of
-a new order in Europe and East Asia. The problems arising
-then would require a bold solution. Thereby no over-centralization
-should take place; but a solution should be found
-on a basis of parity, particularly in the economic realm. In
-regard to this the Reich Foreign Minister advanced the principle
-that a free exchange of trade should take place between
-the two spheres of influence on a liberal basis. The European-African
-hemisphere under the leadership of Germany and
-Italy, and the East Asian sphere of interest under the leadership
-of Japan. As he conceived it, for example, Japan would
-conduct trade and make trade agreements directly with the
-independent states in the European hemisphere as heretofore,
-while Germany and Italy would trade directly and make
-trade agreements with the independent countries within the
-Japanese orbit of power, such as China, Thailand, Indo-China,
-<span class='it'>et cetera</span>. Furthermore, as between the two economic spheres,
-each should fundamentally grant the other preferences with
-regard to third parties. The Ambassador expressed agreement
-with this thought.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the document I have just quoted from we have seen the
-instigation to war by the Defendant Ribbentrop, the German
-Foreign Minister. I shall return to him again in this connection.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now wish to show, however, the participation of the so-called
-military representatives in the encouragement and provocation of
-further wars of aggression. I therefore offer in evidence our Document
-Number C-75 as Exhibit USA-151.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This document is a top-secret order signed by the Defendant
-Keitel as Chief of the OKW and entitled, “Basic Order Number 24
-regarding Collaboration with Japan.” It is dated 5 March 1941,
-about a week and a half after Ribbentrop’s conference with Oshima
-that I have just discussed. It was distributed in 14 copies to the
-highest commands of the Army, Navy, and Air Force as well as
-to the Foreign Office. We have turned up two copies of this order,
-identical except for handwritten notations, presumably made by the
-recipients. C-75, the document I have introduced, is copy Number 2
-of the order distributed to the naval war staff of the Commander-in-Chief
-of the Navy, the OKM. We also have Copy number 4,
-designed for the Wehrmacht Führungsstab (the Operations Staff of
-the High Command of the Armed Forces). The head of this
-Operations Staff was the Defendant Jodl. Copy Number 4 was
-<span class='pageno' title='376' id='Page_376'></span>
-found in the OKW files at Flensburg. It is our Document Number
-384-PS, and was referred to by the United States Chief of Counsel
-in his opening address. I shall not burden the Tribunal and the
-record by introducing two identical copies of the same order.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Basic Order Number 24 was the authoritative Nazi policy on
-collaboration with Japan. I shall, therefore, propose to read it in
-its entirety, some two pages of English translation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer has issued the following order regarding collaboration
-with Japan:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk702'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. It must be the aim of the collaboration based on the Three
-Power Pact to induce Japan, as soon as possible, <span class='it'>to take active
-measures in the Far East</span>”—The underscoring is in the original
-document—“Strong British forces will thereby be tied down,
-and the center of gravity of the interests of the United States
-of America will be diverted to the Pacific. The sooner she
-intervenes, the greater will be the prospects of success for
-Japan in view of the still undeveloped preparedness for war
-on the part of her adversaries. The Barbarossa operation will
-create particularly favorable political and military prerequisites
-for this.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Then there is a marginal note, “Slightly exaggerated.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Do you have any idea when that marginal
-notation was put in?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: I assume that was written by the recipient
-of this copy of the order.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: By whom?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: By the recipient of this particular copy of
-the order, which was the naval war staff.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. To prepare the way for the collaboration it is essential to
-strengthen the Japanese military potential with all means
-available. For this purpose the High Commands of the
-branches of the Armed Forces will comply in a comprehensive
-and generous manner with Japanese desires for information
-regarding German war and combat experience, and
-for assistance in military economics and in technical matters.
-Reciprocity is desirable, but this factor should not stand in
-the way of negotiations. Priority should naturally be given
-to those Japanese requests which would have the most immediate
-application in waging war. In special cases the Führer
-reserves the decisions for himself.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk703'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3. The harmonizing of the operational plans of the two parties
-is the responsibility of the Naval High Command. This
-will be subject to the following guiding principles:
-<span class='pageno' title='377' id='Page_377'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk704'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“a. The common aim of the conduct of war is to be stressed
-as forcing England to the ground quickly and thereby keeping
-the United States out of the war. Beyond this Germany has
-no political, military, or economic interests in the Far East
-which would give occasion for any reservations with regard
-to Japanese intentions.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk705'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“b. The great successes achieved by Germany in mercantile
-warfare make it appear particularly suitable to employ strong
-Japanese forces for the same purpose. In this connection
-every opportunity to support German mercantile warfare
-must be exploited.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk706'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“c. The raw material situation of the pact powers demands
-that Japan should acquire possession of those territories
-which it needs for the continuation of the war, especially if
-the United States intervenes. Rubber shipments must be
-carried out even after the entry of Japan into the war, since
-they are of vital importance to Germany.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk707'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“d. The seizure of Singapore as the key British position in
-the Far East would mean a decisive success for the entire
-conduct of war of the three powers.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk708'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In addition, attacks on other systems of bases of British
-naval power—extending to those of American naval power
-only if the entry of the United States into the war cannot
-be prevented—will result in weakening the enemy’s
-system of power in that region and also, just like the attack
-on sea communications, in tying down substantial forces of
-all kinds (Australia). A date for the beginning of operational
-discussions cannot yet be fixed.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk709'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“4. In the military commissions to be formed in accordance
-with the Three Power Pact, only such questions are to be
-dealt with as equally concern the three participating powers.
-These will include primarily the problems of economic warfare.
-The working out of the details is the responsibility of
-the main commission with the co-operation of the Armed
-Forces High Command.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk710'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“5. The Japanese must not be given any intimation of the
-Barbarossa operations.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>It is signed by Keitel as Chief of the Armed Forces High Command.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If the Tribunal will glance at the distribution list, you will see
-that it went to the heads of all the Armed Forces, Armed Forces
-High Command: Joint Operation Staff, Intelligence divisions, and
-to the chief of foreign affairs, simultaneously for the Foreign Office.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It appears from what I have just read that the Nazis’ cardinal
-operational principle in collaboration with Japan was, as early as
-<span class='pageno' title='378' id='Page_378'></span>
-March 1941, the inducement of Japan to aggression against Singapore
-and other British far eastern bases. I shall pass over, for the
-moment, other references to the United States in Basic Order
-Number 24 and take up that point later.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now wish to refer to our Document Number C-152, which
-has already been introduced by the British prosecution as Exhibit
-GB-122. This document is the top-secret record of a meeting on
-18 March 1941, about 2 weeks after the issuance of Basic Order
-Number 24; a meeting attended by Hitler, the Defendant Raeder,
-the Defendant Keitel, and the Defendant Jodl. We are concerned
-only with Paragraph 11 in this phase, where Raeder, then Commander-in-Chief
-of the Navy, is speaking. I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Japan must take steps to seize Singapore as soon as possible,
-since the opportunity will never again be as favorable (tie-up
-of the whole English Fleet; unpreparedness of U.S.A. for
-war against Japan; inferiority of the United States Fleet
-in comparison with the Japanese). Japan is indeed making
-preparations for this action; but according to all declarations
-made by Japanese officers, she will only carry it out if
-Germany proceeds to land in England. Germany must,
-therefore, concentrate all her efforts on spurring Japan to
-act immediately. If Japan has Singapore, all other East
-Asiatic questions regarding the U.S.A. and England are
-thereby solved (Guam, Philippines, Borneo, Dutch East Indies).</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk711'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Japan wishes, if possible, to avoid war against the U.S.A.
-She can do so if she determinedly takes Singapore as soon
-as possible.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The fact clearly appears from these minutes that military staff
-conferences had already been held with the Japanese to discuss
-the activation of Japanese military support against the British
-and to urge their immediate attack on Singapore. I quote again
-the second sentence in that paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Japan is indeed making preparations for this action; but
-according to all declarations made by Japanese officers, she
-will carry it out only if Germany proceeds to land in England.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Apparently the Nazis were subsequently able to persuade the
-Japanese to eliminate this condition precedent to their performance
-under the contract.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now turn to further efforts by the Defendant Ribbentrop to
-induce the Japanese to aggression against the British Commonwealth.
-On the 29th of March 1941 he met with the Japanese
-Foreign Minister, Matsuoka, who was then in Berlin. A report
-of their conversations found in the German Foreign Office archives
-<span class='pageno' title='379' id='Page_379'></span>
-is contained in our Document 1877-PS, which I now offer in
-evidence as Exhibit USA-152.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Relevant portions of this document have been translated into
-English. I shall now read from the top of Page 1 of the English
-translation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The RAM”—that is Ribbentrop—“resumed, where they had
-left off, the preceding conversation with Matsuoka about the
-latter’s impending talks with the Russians in Moscow. He
-expressed the opinion that it would probably be best, in
-view of the whole situation, not to carry the discussions with
-the Russians too far. He did not know how the situation
-would develop. One thing was certain, however, namely
-that Germany would strike immediately, should Russia ever
-attack Japan. He was ready to give Matsuoka this positive
-assurance so that Japan could push forward to the south
-on Singapore without fear of possible complications with
-Russia. The largest part of the German Army was on the
-Eastern frontiers of the Reich anyway and fully prepared
-to open the attack at any time. He (the RAM), however,
-believed that Russia would try to avoid developments
-leading to war. Should Germany, however, enter into a
-conflict with Russia, the U.S.S.R. would be finished off
-within a few months. In this case Japan would have, of
-course, even less reason to be afraid than ever, if she wants
-to advance on Singapore. Consequently, she need not refrain
-from such an undertaking because of possible fears of Russia.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk712'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“He could not know, of course, just how things with Russia
-would develop. It was uncertain whether or not Stalin
-would intensify his present unfriendly policy against
-Germany. He (the RAM) wanted to point out to Matsuoka
-in any case that a conflict with Russia was at least within
-the realm of possibility. In any case, Matsuoka could not
-report to the Japanese Emperor, upon his return, that a
-conflict between Russia and Germany was impossible. On
-the contrary, the situation was such that such a conflict,
-even if it were not probable, would have to be considered
-possible.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now skip five pages of the German text and continue directly
-with the English translation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Next, the RAM turned again to the Singapore question. In
-view of the fears expressed by the Japanese of possible
-attacks by submarines based on the Philippines, and of the
-intervention of the British Mediterranean and home fleets,
-he had again discussed the situation with Grossadmiral
-Raeder. The latter had stated that the British Navy during
-<span class='pageno' title='380' id='Page_380'></span>
-this year would have its hands so full in the English home
-waters and in the Mediterranean that it would not be able
-to send even a single ship to the Far East. Grossadmiral
-Raeder had described the United States submarines as so poor
-that Japan need not bother about them at all.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk713'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Matsuoka replied immediately that the Japanese Navy had
-a very low estimate of the threat from the British Navy.
-It also held the view that, in case of a clash with the
-American Navy, it would be able to smash the latter without
-trouble. However, it was afraid that the Americans would
-not take up the battle with their fleet; thus the conflict with
-the United States might perhaps be dragged out to 5 years.
-This possibility caused considerable worry in Japan.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk714'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The RAM replied that America could not do anything
-against Japan in the case of the capture of Singapore.
-Perhaps for this reason alone, Roosevelt would think twice
-before deciding on active measures against Japan. For while
-on the one hand he could not achieve anything against Japan,
-on the other hand there was the probability of losing the
-Philippines to Japan; for the American President, of course,
-this would mean a considerable loss of prestige, and because
-of the inadequate rearmament, he would have nothing to
-offset such a loss.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk715'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In this connection Matsuoka pointed out that he was doing
-everything to reassure the English about Singapore. He acted
-as if Japan had no intention at all regarding this key
-position of England in the East. Therefore it might be
-possible that his attitude toward the British would appear
-to be friendly in words and in acts. However, Germany
-should not be deceived by that. He assumed this attitude
-not only in order to reassure the British, but also in order
-to fool the pro-British and pro-American elements in Japan
-just so long, until one day he would suddenly open the
-attack on Singapore.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk716'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In this connection Matsuoka stated that his tactics were
-based on the certain assumption that the sudden attack
-against Singapore would unite the entire Japanese nation
-with one blow. (‘Nothing succeeds like success,’ the RAM
-remarked.) He followed here the example expressed in the
-words of a famous Japanese statesman addressed to the
-Japanese Navy at the outbreak of the Russo-Japanese war:
-‘You open fire, then the nation will be united.’ The
-Japanese need to be shaken up to awaken. After all, as
-an Oriental, he believed in the fate which would come,
-whether you wanted it or not.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='381' id='Page_381'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I then skip again in the German text, and continue with
-what appears in the English translation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Matsuoka then introduced the subject of German assistance
-in the blow against Singapore, a subject which had been
-broached to him frequently, and mentioned the proposal of
-a German written promise of assistance.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk717'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The RAM replied that he had already discussed these
-questions with Ambassador Oshima. He had asked him to
-procure maps of Singapore in order that the Führer—who
-probably must be considered the greatest expert on military
-questions at the present time—could advise Japan on the
-best method of attack against Singapore. German experts on
-aerial warfare, too, would be at her disposal; they could
-draw up a report, based on their European experiences, for
-the Japanese on the use of dive-bombers from airfields in
-the vicinity against the British Fleet in Singapore. Thus,
-the British Fleet would be forced to disappear from
-Singapore immediately.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk718'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Matsuoka remarked that Japan was less concerned with the
-British Fleet than with the capture of the fortifications.</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The RAM replied that here, too, the Führer had developed
-new methods for the German attacks on strongly fortified
-positions, such as the Maginot Line and Fort Eben-Emael,
-which he could make available to the Japanese.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk719'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Matsuoka replied in this connection that some of the younger
-expert Japanese Naval officers, who were close friends of
-his, were of the opinion that the Japanese Naval forces
-would need 3 months until they could capture Singapore.
-As a cautious Foreign Minister, he had doubled this estimate.
-He believed he could stave off any danger which threatened
-from America for 6 months. If, however, the capture of
-Singapore required still more time and if the operations
-would perhaps even drag out for a year, the situation with
-America would become extremely critical; and he did not
-know as yet how to meet it.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk720'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“If at all avoidable, he would not touch the Netherlands
-East Indies, since he was afraid that in case of a Japanese
-attack on this area, the oil fields would be set afire. They
-could be brought into operation again only after 1 or 2 years.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk721'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The RAM added that Japan would gain decisive influence
-over the Netherlands East Indies simultaneously with the
-capture of Singapore.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 5th of April, about a week after the conference from
-whose minutes I have just quoted, Ribbentrop again met with
-Matsuoka and again pushed the Japanese another step along the
-<span class='pageno' title='382' id='Page_382'></span>
-road to aggressive war. The notes of this conference, which were
-also found in the German Foreign Office archives, are contained
-in our Document 1882-PS, which I now offer as Exhibit USA-153.
-I shall read a few brief extracts from these notes, starting with
-the third paragraph on Page 1 of the English translation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In answer to a remark by Matsuoka that Japan was
-now awakened and, according to the Japanese temperament,
-would take action quickly after the previous lengthy
-deliberation, the Reich Foreign Minister replied that it was
-necessary, of course, to accept a risk in this connection just
-as the Führer had done successfully with the occupation of
-the Rhineland, with the proclamation of sovereignty of
-armament and with the resignation from the League of
-Nations.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now skip several pages of the German text and continue
-on with the English translation.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Reich Foreign Minister replied that the new German
-Reich would actually be built up on the basis of the ancient
-traditions of the Holy Roman Empire of the German nation,
-which in its time was the only dominant power on the
-European continent.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk722'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In conclusion, the Reich Foreign Minister once again
-summarized the points he wanted Matsuoka to take back to
-Japan with him from his trips:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk723'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1) Germany had already won the war. With the end of
-this year, the world would realize this. Even England would
-have to concede it, if she had not collapsed before then, and
-America would also have to resign herself to this fact.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk724'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2) There were no conflicting interests between Japan and
-Germany. The future of both countries could be regulated
-for the long run on the basis that Japan should predominate
-in the Far East, Italy and Germany in Europe and Africa.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk725'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3) Whatever might happen, Germany would win the war.
-But it would hasten victory if Japan would enter the war.
-Such an entry into the war was undoubtedly more in the
-interest of Japan than in that of Germany, for it offered a
-unique opportunity, which would hardly ever return, for the
-fulfillment of the national objectives of Japan—a chance which
-would make it possible for her to play a really leading role
-in East Asia.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Here again, in the portion just quoted, we see Ribbentrop pursuing
-the same track I have previously noted. Germany has already
-won the war for all practical purposes. Japan’s entry will hasten
-the inevitable end. But Japan had better get the positions she
-wants during the war.
-<span class='pageno' title='383' id='Page_383'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I also invite the Tribunal’s attention to Ribbentrop’s assurances,
-expressed in the quotation I read from 1877-PS previously, that
-Japan likewise had nothing to fear from the Soviet Union if Japan
-entered the conflict. The references to the weaknesses of the United
-States, scattered throughout the quotations I have read, were also
-an ingredient in this brew which was being so carefully prepared
-and brought to a boil.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I should like to introduce one more document on the part of the
-case dealing particularly with exhortation of the Japanese to aggression
-against the British Commonwealth. This is our Document
-1538-PS, which I now offer as Exhibit USA-154. This document is
-a top-secret report, dated 24 May 1941, from the German Military
-Attaché in Tokyo to the Intelligence Division of the OKW. I wish
-merely to call attention, at this point, to the last sentence in the
-paragraph numbered 1, wherein it is stated—I quote: “The preparations
-for attack on Singapore and Manila stand.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I shall return to this document later. I point out here, however,
-the fact which appears from the sentence I have just read, that the
-German military were keeping in close touch with the Japanese
-operational plans against Singapore, which the Nazi conspirators
-had fostered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Next, exhortations by the Nazis to Japanese aggression against
-the U.S.S.R.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I invite the Tribunal’s attention, at this point, to the language
-of the Indictment on Page 10 of the English edition. I quote,
-beginning with the eighth line from the top of the page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Nazi conspirators conceived that Japanese aggression
-would weaken and handicap those nations with whom they
-were at war and those with whom they contemplated war.
-Accordingly, the Nazi conspirators exhorted Japan to seek a
-‘new order of things’.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The evidence I have just adduced showed the Nazi exhortations
-with particular reference to the British Commonwealth of Nations.
-We now turn to their efforts to induce the Japanese to commit a
-“stab in the back” on the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Here
-again the Defendant Ribbentrop appears as the central figure.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For some months prior to the issuance of Basic Order Number 24
-regarding collaboration with Japan, the conspirators had been preparing
-Fall Barbarossa, the plan for the attack on the U.S.S.R. Basic
-Order Number 24 decreed, however, that the Japanese “must not
-be given any intimation of the Barbarossa operation.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In his conference with the Japanese Foreign Minister Matsuoka,
-on 29 March 1941, almost 3 weeks after the issuance of Basic Order
-Number 24, Ribbentrop nevertheless hinted at things to come. The
-<span class='pageno' title='384' id='Page_384'></span>
-report of this conference, contained in 1877-PS, has already been
-introduced as Exhibit USA-152 and read into the record. I wish to
-invite the Tribunal’s attention again to the first two paragraphs
-of the English translation of 1877-PS, where Ribbentrop assured
-Matsuoka that the largest part of the German Army was on the
-eastern frontiers of the Reich fully prepared to open the attack at
-any time. Ribbentrop then added that although he believed that the
-U.S.S.R. would try to avoid developments leading to war, nevertheless
-a conflict with the Soviet Union, even if not probable, would
-have to be considered possible.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Whatever conclusion the Japanese Ambassador drew from these
-remarks in April of 1941 can only be conjectured. Once the Nazis
-had unleashed their aggression against the U.S.S.R. in June of 1941,
-the tenor of Ribbentrop’s remarks left no room for doubt. On
-10 July 1941 Ribbentrop dispatched a coded telegram to Ott, the
-German Ambassador in Tokyo. The telegram is our Document
-2896-PS, which I now introduce as Exhibit USA-155. I quote from
-numbered Paragraph 4 of that telegram, which is the first paragraph
-of the English translation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Please take this opportunity to thank the Japanese Foreign
-Minister for conveying the cable report of the Japanese Ambassador
-in Moscow. It would be convenient if we could keep
-on receiving news from Russia this way. In summing up,
-I should like to say I have now, as in the past, full confidence
-in the Japanese policy and in the Japanese Foreign Minister;
-first of all because the present Japanese Government would
-really act inexcusably toward the future of their nation if
-they would not take this unique opportunity to solve the
-Russian problem, as well as to secure for all time its expansion
-to the south and settle the Chinese matter. Since Russia,
-as reported by the Japanese Ambassador in Moscow, is in
-effect close to collapse—a report which coincides with our
-own observations as far as we are able to judge the present
-war situation—it is simply impossible that Japan should not
-settle the matter of Vladivostok and the Siberian area as soon
-as her military preparations are completed.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Skipping now to the middle of the second paragraph on Page 1
-of the English translation—the sentence beginning “However .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“However, I ask you to employ all available means in further
-insisting upon Japan’s entry into the war against Russia at
-the earliest possible date, as I have mentioned already in my
-note to Matsuoka. The sooner this entry is effected, the better.
-The natural objective still remains that we and Japan join
-hands on the trans-Siberian railroad before winter starts.
-After the collapse of Russia, however, the position of the
-<span class='pageno' title='385' id='Page_385'></span>
-Three-Power-Pact States in the world will be so gigantic that
-the question of England’s collapse or the total destruction of
-the British Isles will be only a matter of time. An America
-totally isolated from the rest of the world would then be
-faced with our taking possession of the remaining positions
-of the British Empire which are important for the Three-Power-Pact
-countries. I have the unshakeable conviction that
-a carrying through of the New Order as desired by us will
-be a matter of course, and there would be no insurmountable
-difficulties if the countries of the Three Power Pact stand
-close together and encounter every action of the Americans
-with the same weapons. I ask you to report in the near
-future, as often as possible and in detail, on the political
-situation there.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We have Ott’s reply to this telegram, dated 13 July 1941. This
-is our Document Number 2897-PS, which I offer in evidence as
-Exhibit USA-156. After reading the heading, I shall skip to the
-last paragraph on Page 3 of the German text, which is the paragraph
-appearing in the English translation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Telegram; secret cipher system”—Sent 14 July from Tokyo;
-arrived 14 July 1941—“As fast as possible.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk726'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I am trying with all means to work toward Japan’s entry
-into the war against Russia as soon as possible, especially
-using arguments of personal message of Foreign Minister and
-telegram cited above to convince Matsuoka personally, as
-well as the Foreign Office, military elements, nationalists,
-and friendly businessmen. I believe that according to military
-preparations, Japanese participation will soon take place. The
-greatest obstacle to this against which one has to fight is the
-disunity within the activist group which, without unified command,
-follows various aims and only slowly adjusts itself to
-the changed situation.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On subsequent occasions Ribbentrop repeated his exhortations
-to induce the Japanese to aggression against the U.S.S.R. I shall
-present three documents covering July of 1942 and March and April
-of 1943. The first is our Document 2911-PS which contains notes
-of a discussion between Ribbentrop and Oshima, Japanese Ambassador
-to Berlin, on 9 July 1942. As a matter of background I note
-that at this time German armies were sweeping forward in the
-U.S.S.R. and the fall of Sevastopol had just been announced.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now offer our Document 2911-PS as Exhibit USA-157, and
-I quote the relevant extracts appearing in the English translation
-thereof:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“He, the German Minister, had asked to see the Ambassador
-at this time, when the situation was as described, because
-<span class='pageno' title='386' id='Page_386'></span>
-now a question of fateful importance had arisen concerning
-the joint conduct of the war. If Japan felt herself sufficiently
-strong militarily, the moment for Japan to attack Russia was
-probably now. He thought it possible that if Japan attacked
-Russia at this time, it would lead to her (Russia) final moral
-collapse; at least it would hasten the collapse of her present
-system. In any case, never again would Japan have such an
-opportunity as existed at present to eliminate once and for
-all the Russian colossus in eastern Asia.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk727'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“He had discussed this question with the Führer, and the
-Führer was of the same opinion; but he wanted to emphasize
-one point right away: Japan should attack Russia only if she
-felt sufficiently strong for such an undertaking. Under no
-circumstances should Japanese operations against Russia be
-allowed to bog down at the half-way mark, and we do not
-want to urge Japan into an action that is not mutually profitable.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn now, for 10 minutes.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: May it please the Tribunal, I now offer in
-evidence our Document Number 2954-PS as Exhibit USA-158. This
-is a record of a conference between Ribbentrop and Ambassador
-Oshima on 6 March 1943.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I note again for background that the strategic military situation
-in the broad expanses of the U.S.S.R. had changed somewhat.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the previous month, February 1943, the Soviet armies had
-completely defeated the German forces at Stalingrad and inflicted
-very severe losses. Further north and west their winter offensive had
-removed large areas from the hands of the invader. Combined
-United States and British forces had already landed in North Africa.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>You will remark as I read that the tone of Ribbentrop’s argument
-at this time reflects the changed military situation. The familiar
-Japanese refrain of “So sorry, please,” likewise appears to have
-crept in.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I note in this record that the month of February 1943 had also
-seen the end of the organized Japanese resistance on the Island of
-Guadalcanal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now quote the relevant extracts from the minutes of the discussion
-between Ribbentrop and Oshima on 6 March 1943, which
-appear in the English translation in the document book:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Ambassador Oshima declared that he received a telegram
-from Tokyo, and he is to report by order of his Government
-to the Reich Minister for Foreign Affairs the following: The
-<span class='pageno' title='387' id='Page_387'></span>
-suggestion of the German Government to attack Russia was
-the subject of a common conference between the Japanese
-Government and the Imperial headquarters during which the
-question was discussed in detail and investigated exactly. The
-result is the following: The Japanese Government absolutely
-recognize the danger which threatens from Russia and completely
-understand the desire of their German ally that Japan
-on her part will also enter the war against Russia. However,
-it is not possible for the Japanese Government, considering the
-present war situation, to enter into the war. They are rather
-of the conviction that it would be in the common interest not
-to start the war against Russia now. On the other hand, the
-Japanese Government would never disregard the Russian
-question.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk728'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Japanese Government have the intention to become
-aggressive again in the future on other fronts.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk729'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The RAM brought up the question, after the explanation by
-the Ambassador, how the continued waging of the war is
-envisaged in Tokyo. At present Germany wages the war
-against the common enemies, England and America, mostly
-alone, while Japan mostly behaves more defensively. However,
-it would be more correct that all powers allied in the
-Three Power Pact would combine their forces not only to
-defeat England and America, but also Russia. It is not good
-when one part must fight alone. One cannot overstrain the
-German national strength. He was inwardly concerned about
-certain forces at work in Tokyo, who were of the opinion, and
-propagated the same, that doubtless, Germany could emerge
-from the battle victoriously and that Japan should proceed
-to consolidate her forces before she should further exert herself
-to the fullest extent.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now skip several pages in the German text and resume the
-quotation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Then the RAM again brought up the question of the attack
-on Russia by Japan and he declared that, after all, the fight
-on the Burma front as well as in the south is actually more
-of a maritime problem; and on all fronts except those in
-China at best very few ground forces are stationed. Therefore
-the attack on Russia is primarily an Army affair, and
-he asked himself if the necessary forces for that would be
-available.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Ribbentrop kept on trying. He held another conference with
-Oshima about 3 weeks later on 18 April 1943. The top-secret notes
-of this conference are contained in our Document 2929-PS, which
-I now offer as Exhibit USA-159. I shall quote only one sentence:
-<span class='pageno' title='388' id='Page_388'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Reich Minister for Foreign Affairs then stressed again
-that, without any doubt, this year presented the most favorable
-opportunity for Japan, if she felt strong enough and had
-sufficient anti-tank weapons at her disposal, to attack Russia,
-which certainly would never again be as weak as she was at
-the moment.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now wish to come to that aspect of this conspiracy which is
-in a large measure responsible for the appearance of millions of
-Americans in uniform all over the world.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Nazi preparations and collaboration with the Japanese
-against the United States, as noted by the United States Chief of
-Counsel in his opening statement, present a two-fold aspect; one
-of preparations by the Nazis themselves for an attack from across
-the Atlantic, and the other of fomenting war in the Pacific.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the course of my presentation of the Nazi exhortations to the
-Japanese to war against the British Commonwealth and the U.S.S.R.,
-I have referred to some documents and quoted some sentences
-relating to the United States. I shall take those documents up again
-in their relevant passages to show their particular application. I
-have also, in the treatment of Ribbentrop’s urging the Japanese to
-war against the U.S.S.R., gone beyond the dates of 7 December and
-11 December 1941, when the Japanese and German Governments
-respectively initiated and declared aggressive war against the United
-States.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Apart from the advantage and convenience of presentation, these
-documents have indicated the Nazi awareness and acceptance of the
-direction in which their actions were leading, as well as the universal
-aspects of their conspiracy and of their alliance with the
-Japanese. Their intentions against the United States must be viewed
-in the focus of both their over-all plan and their immediate commitments
-elsewhere. That their over-all plan involved ultimate aggressive
-war against the United States was intimated by the Defendant
-Göring in a speech on 8 July 1938, when these conspirators had
-already forcibly annexed Austria and were perfecting their plans
-against Czechoslovakia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This speech was delivered to representatives of the aircraft
-industry, and the copy that we have was transmitted as the enclosure
-to a secret memorandum from Göring’s adjutant to General
-Udet, who was then in charge of experimental research for the
-Luftwaffe. It is contained in our Document R-140, which I now
-offer as Exhibit USA-160.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I invite the Tribunal’s attention to the statement in the covering
-memorandum that the enclosure is a copy of the shorthand minutes
-of the conference. I shall not go through the long speech in which
-Göring called for increased aircraft production and pointed to the
-<span class='pageno' title='389' id='Page_389'></span>
-necessity for full mobilization of German industrial capacity. I wish
-to quote just two sentences, which appear on Page 33 of the German
-text and Page 11 of the English translation. Quoting from the second
-full paragraph on Page 11 of the English translation, starting with
-the third sentence from the end of the paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I still lack these rocket-motors which could make such flights
-possible. I completely lack the bombers capable of round-trip
-flights to New York with a 5-ton bomb load. I would be
-extremely happy to possess such a bomber which would at
-last stuff the mouth of arrogance across the sea.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Göring’s fervent hope, of course, was not capable of realization
-at that time, either technically or in the fact of the Nazi conspirators’
-schedule of aggression that has been outlined here in the past
-several days.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>During the period of their preparation for and the waging of
-aggressive war in Europe, up to the launching of the campaign
-against the U.S.S.R., it is only reasonable to believe that these conspirators
-were not disposed to involve the United States in war at
-that time. Nevertheless, even in the fall of 1940 the prosecution of
-war against the United States of America at a later date was on
-the military agenda. This is clearly shown in a document which we
-have found in the files of the OKL, the German Air Force files.
-It is Document 376-PS, which I now offer as Exhibit Number
-USA-161. This document is a memorandum marked “Chefsache,”
-the German designation for top secret, from a Major Von Falkenstein
-to an unspecified general, presumably a Luftwaffe general.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Falkenstein, who was a major of the General Staff, was at that
-time the Luftwaffe liaison officer with the Operations Staff of the
-OKW, which was the staff headed by the Defendant Jodl. His memorandum,
-which he characterizes as a “brief résumé on the military
-questions current here,” is dated the 29th of October 1940. It covers
-several questions. I shall quote to you numbered Paragraph 5,
-which appears at the bottom of the first page of the English translation
-and carries over to the reverse side of the one-sheet document:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“5) The Führer is at present occupied with the question of the
-occupation of the Atlantic islands with a view to the prosecution
-of a war against America at a later date. Deliberations
-on this subject are being embarked upon here. Essential conditions
-are at the present:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk730'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(a) No other operational commitment; (b) Portuguese neutrality;
-(c) support of France and Spain.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk731'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A brief assessment of the possibility of seizing and holding
-air bases and of the question of supply is needed from the
-GAF.”—or the German Air Force.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='390' id='Page_390'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Nazis’ military interest in the United States is further
-indicated by Paragraph 7 which I read:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“General Bötticher has made repeated reference, especially
-in his telegram 2314, dated 26th of October, to the fact that
-in his opinion too many details of our knowledge of American
-aircraft industry are being published in the German press.
-The matter has been discussed at Armed Forces Supreme
-Command. I pointed out that the matter was specifically a
-GAF one but have taken the liberty of referring the matter
-to you on its own merits.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Again, in July 1941, in his first flush of confidence resulting from
-early gains in the aggression against the U.S.S.R., the Führer signed
-an order for further preliminary preparations for the attack on the
-United States. This top-secret order, found in the files of the German
-Navy, is our Document C-74, which I now offer as Exhibit
-USA-162. I read from the first paragraph of that text just preceding
-the paragraph numbered (1):</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“By virtue of the intentions announced in Directive Number
-32, for the further conduct of the war, I lay down the
-following principles to govern the strength of personnel and
-of material supplies:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk732'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(1) In general:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk733'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The military domination of Europe after the defeat of Russia
-will enable the strength of the Army to be considerably
-reduced in the near future. As far as the reduced strength
-of the Army will allow, the armored units will be greatly
-increased.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk734'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Naval armament must be restricted to those measures which
-have a direct connection with the conduct of the war against
-England and, should the case arise, against America.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk735'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The main effort in armament will be shifted to the Air
-Force, which must be greatly increased in strength.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From these documents it appears that the Nazi conspirators were
-making at least preliminary plans of their own against the United
-States. The Nazis’ over-all plan with regard to the United States
-was, however, a complex one involving, in addition, collaboration
-with the Japanese. In the course of their repeated representations
-to the Japanese to undertake an assault against British possessions
-in the Pacific Far East, they again considered war against the United
-States.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now refer again to Basic Order Number 24, regarding collaboration
-with Japan. This is our Document C-75, which I have put
-in as Exhibit USA-151. I have read it in its entirety into the record.
-The Tribunal will recall that in that basic order, which was issued
-<span class='pageno' title='391' id='Page_391'></span>
-on 5 March 1941, the Nazi policy was stated in Subparagraph (3) (a)
-as “forcing England to the ground quickly and thereby keeping the
-United States out of the war.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nevertheless, the Nazi conspirators clearly contemplated, within
-the framework of that policy, the possibility of the United States’
-entry into the Far Eastern conflict which the Nazis were then
-instigating. This could result from an attack by Japan on possessions
-of the United States practically simultaneously with the assault
-on the British Empire, as actually happened. Other possibilities
-of involvement of the United States were also discussed. This Basic
-Order Number 24 stated—and I am referring to Subparagraph (3) (c),
-on the top of Page 2 of the Document C-75:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(c) The raw material situation of the pact powers demands
-that Japan should acquire possession of those territories which
-it needs for the continuation of the war, especially if the
-United States intervenes. Rubber shipments must be carried
-out even after the entry of Japan into the war, since they are
-of vital importance to Germany.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The order continues in an unnumbered paragraph, immediately
-below Subparagraph (3) (d):</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In addition, attacks on other systems of bases of British
-naval power—extending to those of American naval power
-only if the entry of the United States into the war cannot be
-prevented—will result in weakening the enemy’s system of
-power in that region and also, just like the attack on sea
-communications, in tying down substantial forces of all kinds
-(Australia).”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In these passages there is a clear envisagement of United States
-involvement, as well as a clear intent to attack. The vital threat to
-United States interests, if Japan were to capture Singapore, was
-also envisaged by the Defendant Raeder in his meeting of 18 March
-1941 with Hitler and the Defendants Keitel and Jodl. These minutes
-are contained in our Document C-152, which has already been put
-in as Exhibit GB-122. I wish now to repeat the four sentences of
-Item 11 of the minutes of that conference, contained on Page 1 of
-the English translation. I am quoting the Defendant Raeder:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Japan must take steps to seize Singapore as soon as possible,
-since the opportunity will never again be so favorable (tie-up
-of the whole English Fleet; unpreparedness of the U.S.A. for
-war against Japan, inferiority of the United States Fleet in
-comparison with the Japanese). Japan is indeed making
-preparations for this action, but according to all declarations
-made by Japanese officers, she will carry it out only if Germany
-proceeds to land in England. Germany must, therefore,
-concentrate all her efforts on spurring Japan to act
-<span class='pageno' title='392' id='Page_392'></span>
-immediately. If Japan has Singapore, all other East Asiatic
-questions regarding the U.S.A. and England are thereby
-solved (Guam, the Philippines, Borneo, and the Dutch East
-Indies).</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk736'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Japan wishes, if possible, to avoid war against the U.S.A.
-She can do so if she determinedly takes Singapore as soon
-as possible.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Ribbentrop also recognized the possibility of
-United States involvement as a result of the course of aggression that
-he was urging on the Japanese. I refer again to his meeting of
-23 February 1941 with the Japanese Ambassador Oshima, the notes
-of which are contained in our Document 1834-PS, which is in evidence
-as Exhibit USA-129.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal will recall that in a passage I have already read,
-Subparagraph (2) near the bottom of Page 3 of the English translation,
-Ribbentrop assured Matsuoka that a surprise by Japan was
-bound to keep the United States out of the war since she was
-unarmed and could not risk either her fleet or the possibility of
-losing the Philippines as the result of a declaration of war. Two
-paragraphs later Ribbentrop practically dropped the pretense that
-the United States would not be involved. I quote here from the
-last paragraph at the bottom of Page 3 of the English translation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Reich Foreign Minister mentioned further that if
-America should declare war because of Japan’s entry into the
-war, this would mean that America had the intention to
-enter the war sooner or later anyway. Even though it would
-be preferable to avoid this, the entry into the war would, as
-explained above, be by no means decisive and would not
-endanger the final victory of the countries of the Three
-Power Pact. The Foreign Minister further expressed his belief
-that a temporary lift of the British morale caused by America’s
-entry into the war would be canceled by Japan’s entry
-into the war. If, however, contrary to all expectations, the
-Americans should be careless enough to send their navy, in
-spite of all, beyond Hawaii and to the Far East, this would
-represent the biggest chance for the countries of the Three
-Power Pact to bring the war to an end with the greatest
-rapidity. He—the Foreign Minister—is convinced that the
-Japanese Fleet would then do a complete job. Ambassador
-Oshima replied to this that unfortunately he does not think
-the Americans would do it, but he is convinced of a victory
-of his fleet in Japanese waters.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the paragraphs that follow, some of which have already
-been read into the record, Ribbentrop again stressed the mutual
-<span class='pageno' title='393' id='Page_393'></span>
-inter-dependence of the Tripartite Pact powers and suggested co-ordinated
-action.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I want to quote now only the last paragraph on Page 5, a difficult
-bit of Nazi cynicism which by now is quite familiar.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Reich Foreign Minister then touched upon the question,
-explicitly designated as theoretical, that the contracting
-powers might be required, on the basis of new affronts by
-the U.S.A., to break off diplomatic relations. Germany and
-Italy were fundamentally determined on this. After signing
-of the Three Power Pact, we should proceed, if the occasion
-arises, also jointly in this matter. Such a lesson should open
-the eyes of the people in the United States, and under certain
-conditions swing public opinion towards isolation. Naturally
-a situation had to be chosen in which America found herself
-entirely in the wrong. The common step of the signatory
-powers should be exploited correspondingly in propaganda.
-The question, however, was in no way acute at the time.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Again, on 29 March 1941, Ribbentrop, this time in a conference
-with the Japanese Foreign Minister Matsuoka, discussed the possible
-involvement of the United States. Notes of this conference are contained
-in our Document 1877-PS, which I have already introduced
-as Exhibit USA-152; and I have read it into the record. The relevant
-statements appear in the bottom two paragraphs of Page 1
-and the first full paragraph on Page 2 of the English translation.
-I shall not take the Tribunal’s time to read them again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I should like to refer to one more document to show that the
-Nazi conspirators knew that the aggressive war they were urging
-the Japanese to undertake both threatened the vital interests of the
-United States and could lead to the United States’ involvement in
-the contemplated Far Eastern conflict. This document is our 1881-PS,
-report of the conference between Hitler and the Japanese Foreign
-Minister Matsuoka in Berlin on 4 April 1941. I have already offered,
-in my opening statement to the Tribunal 2 weeks ago, Document
-1881-PS as Exhibit USA-33; and I read at that time a considerable
-portion of it into the record. Unless the Court prefers that I do not
-do so, it seems to me desirable at this point to re-read a few brief
-passages.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I think we might treat it as being in evidence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ALDERMAN: I wish to emphasize, however, that the passages
-which I read 2 weeks ago and which I had expected to re-read
-at this point show not only a realization of the probable involvement
-of the United States in the Far Eastern conflict that the Nazis
-were urging, but also a knowledge on their part that the Japanese
-<span class='pageno' title='394' id='Page_394'></span>
-Army and Navy were actually preparing war plans against the
-United States. Furthermore, we have a document that shows the
-Nazis knew at least a part of what those war plans were.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now refer again to Document Number 1538-PS, which has been
-offered in evidence as Exhibit USA-154, the secret telegram from
-the German Military Attaché in Tokyo, dated 24 May 1941. He talks
-about the conferences he has had regarding Japan’s entry in the
-war in the event Germany should become involved in war with
-the United States.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the paragraph numbered 1 this sentence also appears—I quote
-the last sentence in numbered Paragraph Number 1, “Preparations
-for attack on Singapore and Manila stand.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>May I at this point review the Nazi position with regard to the
-United States at this time, the spring of 1941. In view of their
-pressing commitments elsewhere and their aggressive plans against
-the U.S.S.R. set for execution in June of 1941, their temporary
-strategy was naturally a preference that the United States not be
-involved in the war at that time. Nevertheless, they had been
-considering their own preliminary plan against the United States,
-as seen in the Atlantic island document which I offered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They were repeatedly urging the Japanese to aggression against
-the British Commonwealth just as they would urge them to attack
-the U.S.S.R. soon after the launching of the Nazi invasion of the
-Soviet Union. They were aware that the course along which they
-were pushing the Japanese in the Far East would probably lead to
-involvement of the United States. Indeed, the Japanese Foreign
-Minister had told Hitler this in so many words, and their own
-military men had fully realized the implications of the move against
-Singapore. They also knew that the Japanese Army and Navy were
-preparing operation plans against the U.S. They knew at least part
-of those plans.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Nazi conspirators not only knew all these things; they
-accepted the risk of the aggressive course they were urging on
-the Japanese and pushed their eastern allies still further along
-that course.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In April 1941 Hitler told the Japanese Foreign Minister that
-in the event Japan would have become involved in the war with
-the United States, Germany would immediately take the consequences
-and strike without delay.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I refer to our Document 1881-PS, the notes of the Hitler-Matsuoka
-conference in Berlin on 4 April 1941, which has already
-been introduced as Exhibit Number USA-33. I refer particularly
-to the first four paragraphs on Page 2 of the English translation.
-I think that has been read to you at least twice, and I perhaps
-need not repeat it.
-<span class='pageno' title='395' id='Page_395'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then, skipping two paragraphs, we see Hitler then encouraging
-Matsuoka in his decision to strike against the United States; and
-I invite your attention to the fourth paragraph on Page 2, which
-you have heard several times and which I shall not re-read.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Here in those passages were assurance, encouragement, and
-abetment by the head of the German State, the leading Nazi co-conspirator,
-in April 1941. But the Nazi encouragement and promise
-of support did not end there.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now offer our Document 2898-PS as Exhibit Number USA-163.
-This is another telegram from the German Ambassador in Tokyo
-regarding his conversation with the Japanese Foreign Minister. It
-is dated the 30th of November 1941, exactly 1 week before Pearl
-Harbor. I will read from the first four paragraphs on Page 2 of
-the German text, which is the first paragraph of the English
-translation; and this passage, I am sure, has not been read to the
-Tribunal. No part of this document has been read.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The progress of the negotiations so far confirms his viewpoint
-that the difference of opinion between Japan and the
-U.S. is very great. The Japanese Government, since they
-sent Ambassador Kurusu, have taken a firm stand as he
-told me. He is convinced that this position is in our favor,
-and makes the United States think that her entry into the
-European war would be risky business. The new American
-proposal of 25 November showed great divergencies in the
-viewpoints of the two nations. These differences of opinion
-concern, for example, the further treatment of the Chinese
-question. The biggest”—and then the German text has the
-legend “one group missing,” indicating that one group of
-the secret code was garbled on transmission. It would
-appear from the text that the missing words are “difference
-of opinion”—“The biggest (one group missing), however,
-resulted from the United States attempt to make the three-power
-agreement ineffective. The United States suggested to
-Japan that she conclude treaties of non-aggression with the
-United States, the British Empire, the Soviet Union, and
-other countries in order to prevent Japan’s entry into the
-war on the side of the Axis Powers. Japan, however, insisted
-upon maintaining her treaty obligations, and for this reason
-American demands are the greatest obstacles for adjusting
-Japanese-American relations. He avoided discussing concessions
-promised by the United States and merely mentioned
-that grave decisions were at stake.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk737'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The United States is seriously preparing for war and is
-about to operate a considerable part of its navy from southern
-Pacific bases. The Japanese Government are busy working
-<span class='pageno' title='396' id='Page_396'></span>
-out an answer in order to clarify their viewpoint. But he
-has no particulars at that moment. He thinks the American
-proposals as a whole unacceptable.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk738'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Japan is not afraid of a breakdown of negotiations, and she
-hopes that if occasion arises Germany and Italy, according
-to the Three Power Pact, would stand at her side. I answered
-that there could be no doubt about Germany’s future position.
-The Japanese Foreign Minister thereupon stated that he
-understood from my words that Germany, in such a case,
-would consider her relationship to Japan as that of a union
-by fate. I answered, according to my opinion, Germany was
-certainly ready to have mutual agreement between the two
-countries over this situation.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk739'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Minister of Foreign Affairs answered that it was
-possible that he would come back to this point soon. The
-conversation with the Minister of Foreign Affairs confirmed
-the impression that the United States note, in fact, is very
-unsatisfactory even for the compromise-seeking politicians
-here. For these circles America’s position, especially in the
-China question, is very disappointing. The emphasis upon
-the Three Power Pact as being the main obstacle between
-successful Japanese-United States negotiations seems to point
-to the fact that the Japanese Government are becoming
-aware of the necessity of close co-operation with the Axis
-Powers.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The time is now fast approaching for that day of infamy.
-I offer our Document 2987-PS as Exhibit USA-166. This document
-consists of extracts from the handwritten diary of Count Galeazzo
-Ciano during the period 3 December to 8 December 1941. It consists
-of notes he jotted down in the course of his daily business as
-Foreign Minister of Italy. The Italian has been translated into both
-English and German, and copies of both the English and the
-German are in the document books.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now quote from the beginning of the entry of 3 December,
-Wednesday:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Sensational move by Japan. The Ambassador asks for an
-audience with the Duce and reads him a long statement on
-the progress of the negotiations with America, concluding
-with the assertion that they have reached a dead end. Then
-invoking the appropriate clause in the Tripartite Pact, he
-asks that Italy declare war on America immediately after
-the outbreak of hostilities and proposes the signing of an
-agreement not to conclude a separate peace. The interpreter
-translating this request was trembling like a leaf. The Duce
-gave fullest assurances, reserving the right to confer with
-<span class='pageno' title='397' id='Page_397'></span>
-Berlin before giving a reply. The Duce was pleased with
-the communication and said, ‘We are now on the brink of
-the inter-continental war which I predicted as early as
-September 1939.’ What does this new event mean? In any
-case it means that Roosevelt has succeeded in his maneuver.
-Since he could not enter the war immediately and directly,
-he entered it indirectly by letting himself be attacked by
-Japan. Furthermore, this event also means that every
-prospect of peace is becoming further and further removed
-and that it is now easy—much too easy—to predict a long
-war. Who will be able to hold out longest? It is on this
-basis that the problem must be considered. Berlin’s answer
-will be somewhat delayed because Hitler has gone to the
-southern Front to see General Kleist, whose armies continue
-to give way under the pressure of an unexpected Soviet
-offensive.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then December 4, Thursday—that is 3 days before Pearl
-Harbor:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Berlin’s reaction to the Japanese move is extremely
-cautious. Perhaps they will accept because they cannot get
-out of it, but the idea of provoking America’s intervention
-pleases the Germans less and less. Mussolini, on the other
-hand, is pleased about it.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And December 5, Friday:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A night interrupted by Ribbentrop’s restlessness. After
-delaying 2 days, now he cannot wait a minute to answer the
-Japanese; and at three in the morning he sent Mackensen
-to my house to submit a plan for a triple agreement relative
-to Japanese intervention and the pledge not to make a
-separate peace. He wanted me to awaken the Duce, but I did
-not do so, and the latter was very glad I had not.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It appears from the last entry I have read, that of December 5,
-that some sort of an agreement was reached.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On Sunday, 7 December 1941, Japan, without previous warning
-or declaration of war, commenced an attack against the United
-States at Pearl Harbor and against the British Commonwealth
-of Nations in the Southwest Pacific. On the morning of 11 December,
-4 days after the Japanese assault in the Pacific, the German
-Government declared war on the United States, committing the
-last act of aggression which was to seal their doom. This declaration
-of war is contained in Volume IX of the <span class='it'>Dokumente der Deutschen
-Politik</span>, of which I now ask the Tribunal to take judicial notice
-as Exhibit USA-164. An English translation is contained in our
-document book, and for the convenience of the Tribunal is Number
-2507-PS.
-<span class='pageno' title='398' id='Page_398'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The same day, 11 December, the fourth anniversary of which
-is tomorrow, the Congress of the United States resolved:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“That the state of war between the United States and the
-Government of Germany which has thus been thrust upon
-the United States, is hereby formally declared.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This declaration is contained as Document 272 in the official
-publication <span class='it'>Peace and War</span>, of which the Tribunal has already
-taken judicial notice as Exhibit USA-122. The declaration itself
-has been reproduced for the document books as our Document
-2945-PS.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It thus appears that, apart from their own aggressive intentions
-and declaration of war against the United States, the Nazi conspirators
-in their collaboration with Japan incited and kept in
-motion a force reasonably calculated to result in an attack on the
-United States. While maintaining their preference that the United
-States not be involved in war at the time, they nevertheless
-foresaw the distinct possibility, even probability, of such involvement
-as a result of the action they were encouraging. They were
-aware that the Japanese had prepared plans for attack against the
-United States, and they accepted the consequences by assuring
-the Japanese that they would declare war on the United States
-should a United States-Japanese conflict result.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In dealing with captured documents of the enemy the
-completeness of the plan is necessarily obscured, but those documents
-which have been discovered and offered in evidence before
-this Tribunal show that the Japanese attack was the proximate
-and foreseeable consequence of their collaboration policy and that
-their exhortations and encouragement of the Japanese as surely
-led to Pearl Harbor as though Pearl Harbor itself had been
-mentioned.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I should like to read the Ciano diary entry for 8 December,
-the day after Pearl Harbor:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A night telephone call from Ribbentrop. He is overjoyed
-about the Japanese attack on America. He is so happy about
-it that I am happy with him, though I am not too sure about
-the final advantages of what has happened. One thing is now
-certain, that America will enter the conflict and that the conflict
-will be so long that she will be able to realize all her
-potential forces. This morning I told this to the King who
-had been pleased about the event. He ended by admitting
-that, in the long run, I may be right. Mussolini was happy,
-too. For a long time he has favored a definite clarification of
-relations between America and the Axis.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The final document consists of the top-secret notes of a conference
-between Hitler and Japanese Ambassador Oshima on 14 December
-<span class='pageno' title='399' id='Page_399'></span>
-1941, from 1300 to 1400 hours, in the presence of the Reich Foreign
-Minister Ribbentrop. It is our Document 2932-PS, which I now
-offer as Exhibit USA-165. The immediate subject matter is the Pearl
-Harbor attack, but the expressions therein typify Nazi technique.
-I quote from the second paragraph of the English translation which
-has not been previously read:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“First the Führer presents Ambassador Oshima with the
-Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the German Eagle in
-gold. With cordial words he acknowledges his services in the
-achievement of German-Japanese co-operation, which has
-now obtained its culmination in a close brotherhood of arms.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk740'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“General Oshima expresses his thanks for the great honor
-and emphasizes how glad he is that this brotherhood of arms
-has now come about between Germany and Japan.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk741'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer continues: ‘You gave the right declaration of
-war.’ This method is the only proper one. Japan pursued it
-formerly and it corresponds with his own system, that is, to
-negotiate as long as possible. But if one sees the other is
-interested only in putting one off, in shamming and humiliating
-one, and is not willing to come to an agreement, then
-one should strike as hard as possible, indeed, and not waste
-time declaring war. It was heart-warming to him to hear of
-the first operations of the Japanese. He himself negotiated
-with infinite patience at times, for example, with Poland and
-also with Russia. When he then realized that the other did
-not want to come to an agreement, he struck suddenly and
-without formality. He would continue to go on this way in
-the future.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If the Tribunal please, that ends my presentation of the various
-phases of aggressive warfare charged as Crimes against Peace in
-Count One of the Indictment. As I conclude this phase I hope the
-Tribunal will allow me to express my deep sense of obligation to
-Commander Sidney J. Kaplan, section chief, and to the members of
-his staff, who did the yeoman work necessary to assemble and
-prepare these materials that I have presented. These members of
-that staff, in the order in which the materials were presented, are:
-Major Joseph Dainow, Lieutenant Commander Harold Leventhal,
-Lieutenant John M. Woolsey, Lieutenant James A. Gorrell, Lieutenant
-Roy H. Steyer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Commander Kaplan and his staff have fully measured up to the
-famous motto of his branch of the armed services, the United States
-Coast Guard, “Semper Paratus” (Always Prepared).</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will now adjourn.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>The Tribunal adjourned until 11 December 1945 at 1000 hours.</span>]</h3>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='400' id='Page_400'></span><h1>SEVENTEENTH DAY<br/> <span style='font-size:smaller'>Tuesday, 11 December 1945</span></h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'><span class='it'>Morning Session</span></h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COL. STOREY: If the Tribunal please, the United States next
-offers in evidence some captured moving pictures through Commander
-Donovan, who had charge of taking them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COMMANDER JAMES BRITT DONOVAN (Assistant Trial
-Counsel for the United States): May it please the Tribunal, the
-United States now offers in evidence Document Number 3054-PS,
-United States Exhibit Number 167, the motion picture entitled <span class='it'>The
-Nazi Plan</span>. This document contains several affidavits with exhibits,
-copies of which have been furnished to Defense Counsel. I ask the
-Tribunal whether it believes it to be necessary that I formally read
-the affidavits at this time. Since the motion pictures themselves will
-be presented to the Tribunal and thereafter be in its permanent
-record, I respectfully submit that the reading be waived.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the past 3 weeks the Prosecution has presented to this Tribunal
-a vast amount of evidence concerning the nature of the Nazi conspiracy
-and what we contend to be its deliberate planning, launching,
-and waging of wars of aggression. That evidence has consisted of
-documentary and some oral proof, but the Nazi conspirators did
-more than leave behind such normal types of evidence. German
-proficiency in photography has been traditional. Its use as a propaganda
-instrument was especially well known to these defendants,
-and as a result the United States in 1945 captured an almost complete
-chronicle of the rise and fall of National Socialism as documented
-in films made by the Nazis themselves. It is from excerpts
-of this chronicle that we have compiled the motion picture now
-presented, entitled <span class='it'>The Nazi Plan</span>, which in broad outline sums up
-the case thus far presented under Counts One and Two of the
-Indictment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The motion picture has been divided into four parts. This
-morning we first offer to the Tribunal Parts 1 and 2, respectively
-entitled “The Rise of the NSDAP, 1921 to 1933,” and “Acquiring
-Totalitarian Control of Germany, 1933 to 1935.” These will be concluded
-by 11:20, at which time we assume the Tribunal will order
-its customary morning adjournment. At 11:30 we shall present Part 3,
-entitled “Preparation for Wars of Aggression, 1935 to 1939.” This
-will be concluded shortly before 1 o’clock. At 2 p.m. we will offer
-<span class='pageno' title='401' id='Page_401'></span>
-Part 4, “Wars of Aggression, 1939 to 1944,” and this will be concluded
-by 3 p.m.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Parts 1 and 2 now to be presented, enable us to re-live those
-years in which the Nazis fought for and obtained the power to rule
-all life in Germany. We see the early days of terrorism and propaganda
-bearing final fruit in Hitler’s accession to the Chancellery in
-1933, then the consolidation of power within Germany, climaxed
-by the Parteitag of 1934, in which the Nazis proclaimed to the
-nation their plans for totalitarian control. It is in simple and
-dramatic form the story of how a nation forsook its liberty.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I wish again to emphasize that all film now presented to the
-Tribunal, including, for example, pictures of early Nazi newspapers,
-is the original German film, to which we have added only the title
-in English. And now, if it please the Tribunal, we shall present
-Parts 1 and 2 of <span class='it'>The Nazi Plan</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: It may be convenient for the United States
-Prosecutor to know that the Tribunal propose to rise this afternoon
-at 4 o’clock instead of 5.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>The film, The Nazi Plan, was then shown in the court room until 1125 hours, at which time a recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COMMANDER DONOVAN: May it please the Tribunal, in the
-films which have just been shown to the Tribunal we have watched
-the Nazi rise to power. In Part 3 of our documentary motion picture
-now to be presented, we see the use they made of that power and
-how the German nation was led by militaristic regimentation to
-preparation for aggressive war as an instrument of national policy.
-Part 3, “Preparation for Wars of Aggression, 1935-1939; 1935—Von
-Schirach urges Hitler Youth to follow principles of <span class='it'>Mein Kampf</span>.”</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>The showing of the film then continued and at the end a recess was taken until 1400 hours.</span>]</h3>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<h2><span class='pageno' title='402' id='Page_402'></span><span class='it'>Afternoon Session</span></h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COMMANDER DONOVAN: This morning we presented photographic
-evidence of the history of National Socialism from 1921 to
-September 1939. We saw the dignity of the individual in Germany
-destroyed by men dedicated to perverted nationalism, men who set
-forth certain objectives and then preached to a regimented people
-the accomplishment of those objectives by any necessary means,
-including aggressive war.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In September 1939 the Nazis launched the first of a series of
-catastrophic wars, terminated only by the military collapse of Germany.
-It is this final chapter in the history of National Socialism
-that the Prosecution now presents.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>May I again remind the Tribunal that all film presented and all
-German narration heard is in the original form as filmed by the
-Nazis.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>The showing of the film, part 4, then continued.</span>]</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COMMANDER DONOVAN: The Prosecution has concluded its
-presentation of the photographic summation entitled <span class='it'>The Nazi Plan</span>.
-We shall deliver for the permanent records of the Tribunal, as soon
-as possible, the original films projected today.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COL. STOREY: If the Tribunal please, just a brief announcement
-about the presentation that shall follow. The rest of the week
-will be consumed in the presentation of War Crimes and Crimes
-against Humanity, starting with exploitation of forced labor, concentration
-camps, persecution of the Jews, and Germanization and
-spoliation in occupied countries. We should like to call the Tribunal’s
-attention to the fact that many of these crimes will be
-crimes attributed to the criminal organizations which will follow.
-The program following will be the criminal organizations, beginning
-with the Leadership Corps of the Nazi Party, the Reich Cabinet,
-the SA, the SS, and finally, the SD and Gestapo.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Dodd will now present “Exploitation of Forced Labor.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. THOMAS J. DODD (Executive Trial Counsel for the United
-States): May it please the Tribunal, we propose to submit during
-the next several days, as Colonel Storey has said a moment ago,
-evidence concerning the conspirators’ criminal deportation and
-enslavement of foreign labor, their illegal use of prisoners of war,
-their infamous concentration camps, and their relentless persecution
-of the Jews. We shall present evidence regarding the general aspects
-of these programs, and our French and Soviet colleagues will present
-evidence of the specific application of these programs in the West
-and the East respectively.
-<span class='pageno' title='403' id='Page_403'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>These crimes were committed both before and after Nazi Germany
-had launched her series of aggressions. They were committed
-within Germany and in foreign countries as well. Although separated
-in time and space, these crimes had, of course, an inter-relationship
-which resulted from their having a common source in Nazi ideology;
-for we shall show that within Germany the conspirators had made
-hatred and destruction of the Jews an official philosophy and a
-public duty, that they had preached the concept of the master race
-with its corollary of slavery for others, that they had denied and
-destroyed the dignity and the rights of the individual human being.
-They had organized force, brutality, and terror into instruments of
-political power and had made them commonplaces of daily existence.
-We propose to prove that they had placed the concentration camp
-and a vast apparatus of force behind their racial and political
-myths, their laws, and their policies. As every German Cabinet
-minister or high official knew, behind the laws and decrees in the
-<span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span> was not the agreement of the people or their
-representatives but the terror of the concentration camps and the
-police state. The conspirators had preached that war was a noble
-activity and that force was the appropriate means of resolving
-international differences; and having mobilized all aspects of German
-life for war, they plunged Germany and the world into war.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We say this system of hatred, savagery, and denial of individual
-rights, which the conspirators erected into a philosophy of government
-within Germany or into what we may call the Nazi constitution,
-followed the Nazi armies as they swept over Europe. For the
-Jews of the occupied countries suffered the same fate as the Jews
-of Germany, and foreign laborers became the serfs of the “master
-race,” and they were deported and enslaved by the million. Many
-of the deported and enslaved laborers joined the victims of the
-concentration camps, where they were literally worked to death in
-the course of the Nazi program of extermination through work. We
-propose to show that this Nazi combination of the assembly line,
-the torture chamber, and the executioner’s rack in a single institution
-has a horrible repugnance to the twentieth century mind.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We say that it is plain that the program of the concentration
-camp, the anti-Jewish program, and the forced labor program are
-all parts of a larger pattern, and this will become even more plain
-as we examine the evidence regarding these programs, and then
-test their legality by applying the relevant principles of international
-law.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The evidence relating to the Nazi slave labor program has been
-assembled in a document book bearing the letter “R”; and in addition,
-there is an appendix to the document book consisting of certain
-photographs contained in a manila folder. Your Honors will
-observe that on some of the books we have placed some tabs, so
-<span class='pageno' title='404' id='Page_404'></span>
-that it would be easier for the Tribunal to locate the documents.
-Unfortunately, we did not have a sufficient number of tabs to do
-the work completely, and that would account for tabs which are
-missing on some of the document books.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It may illuminate the specific items of evidence which will be
-offered later if we first describe in rather general terms the elements
-of the Nazi foreign labor policy. It was a policy of mass
-deportation and mass enslavement, as I said a minute ago, and it
-was also carried out by force, by fraud, by terror, by arson, by
-means unrestrained by the laws of war and laws of humanity, or
-the considerations of mercy. This labor policy was a policy as well
-of underfeeding and overworking foreign laborers, of subjecting
-them to every form of degradation, brutality, and inhumanity. It
-was a policy which compelled foreign workers and prisoners of war
-to manufacture armaments and to engage in other operations of
-war directed against their own countries. It was a policy, as we
-propose to establish, which constituted a flagrant violation of the
-laws of war and of the laws of humanity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We shall show that the Defendants Sauckel and Speer are principally
-responsible for the formulation of the policy and for its
-execution: that the Defendant Sauckel, the Nazis’ Plenipotentiary
-General for Manpower, directed the recruitment, deportation, and
-the allocation of foreign civilian labor, that he sanctioned and
-directed the use of force as the instrument of recruitment, and that
-he was responsible for the care and the treatment of the enslaved
-millions; that the Defendant Speer, as Reich Minister for Armament
-and Munitions, Director of the Organization Todt, and member of
-the Central Planning Board, bears responsibility for the determination
-of the numbers of foreign slaves required by the German
-war machine, was responsible for the decision to recruit by force
-and for the use under brutal, inhumane, and degrading conditions
-of foreign civilians and prisoners of war in the manufacture of
-armaments and munitions, the construction of fortifications, and in
-active military operations.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We shall also show in this presentation that the Defendant
-Göring, as Plenipotentiary General for the Four Year Plan, is
-responsible for all of the crimes involved in the Nazi slave labor
-program. Finally, we propose to show that the Defendant Rosenberg,
-as Reich Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories, and
-the Defendant Frank, as Governor of the Government General of
-Poland, and the Defendant Seyss-Inquart, as Reich Commissar for
-the occupied Netherlands, and the Defendant Keitel, as Chief of
-the OKW, share responsibility for the recruitment by force and
-terror and for the deportation to Germany of the citizens of the
-areas overrun or subjugated by the Wehrmacht.
-<span class='pageno' title='405' id='Page_405'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The use of vast numbers of foreign workers was planned before
-Germany went to war and was an integral part of the conspiracy
-for waging aggressive war. On May 23, 1939 a meeting was held
-in Hitler’s study at the Reich Chancellery. Present were the Defendants
-Göring, Raeder, and Keitel.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now refer to Document L-79, which has already been entered
-in evidence as Exhibit USA-27. The document presents the minutes
-of this meeting at which Hitler stated, as Your Honors will recall,
-that he intended to attack Poland at the first suitable opportunity;
-but I wish to quote from Page 2 of the English text starting with
-the 13th paragraph as follows. In the German text, by the way,
-the passage appears at Page 4, Paragraphs 6 and 7. Quoting directly
-from the English text:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“If fate brings us into conflict with the West, the possession
-of extensive areas in the East will be advantageous. We shall
-be able to rely upon record harvests even less in time of war
-than in peace.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk742'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The population of non-German areas will perform no military
-service and will be available as a source of labor.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We say the slave labor program of the Nazi conspirators was
-designed to achieve two purposes, both of which were criminal.
-The primary purpose, of course, was to satisfy the labor requirements
-of the Nazi war machine by compelling these foreign workers,
-in effect, to make war against their own countries and their allies.
-The secondary purpose was to destroy or weaken peoples deemed
-inferior by the Nazi racialists or deemed potentially hostile by the
-Nazi planners of world supremacy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>These purposes were expressed by the conspirators themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I wish to refer at this point and to offer in evidence Document
-016-PS, which is Exhibit USA-168. This document was sent by the
-Defendant Sauckel to the Defendant Rosenberg on the 20th of April
-1942, and it describes Sauckel’s labor mobilization program. I wish
-to quote now from Page 2 of the English text, starting with the
-sixth paragraph; and in the German text, again, it appears at Page 2
-of the second paragraph. Quoting from the text directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The aim of this new, gigantic labor mobilization is to use
-all the rich and tremendous sources, conquered and secured
-for us by our fighting Armed Forces under the leadership of
-Adolf Hitler, for the armament of the Armed Forces and also
-for the nutrition of the homeland. The raw materials as well
-as the fertility of the conquered territories and their human
-labor power are to be used completely and conscientiously to
-the profit of Germany and her allies.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The theory of the master race underlay the conspirators’ labor
-policy in the East as well.
-<span class='pageno' title='406' id='Page_406'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now refer to Document Number 1130-PS, which is marked
-Exhibit USA-169. This document consists of a statement made by
-one Erich Koch, Reich Commissar for the Ukraine, on the 5th day
-of March 1943 at a meeting of the National Socialist Party in Kiev.
-I quote from the first page of the English text, starting with the first
-paragraph—and in the German text it appears at Page 2, Paragraph
-1. Quoting directly again from the English text Koch said:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. We are the master race and must govern hard but just .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk743'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. I will draw the very last out of this country. I did not
-come to spread bliss. I have come to help the Führer. The
-population must work, work, and work again .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. for some
-people are getting excited that the population may not get
-enough to eat. The population cannot demand that. One has
-only to remember what our heroes were deprived of in
-Stalingrad .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. We definitely did not come here to give out
-manna. We have come here to create the basis for victory.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk744'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3. We are a master race, which must remember that the
-lowliest German worker is racially and biologically a thousand
-times more valuable than the population here.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At this point I should like to offer in evidence Document Number
-1919-PS, which is Exhibit USA-170. This is a document which
-contains a speech delivered by Himmler, the Reichsführer SS, to a
-group of SS Generals on the 4th day of October 1943 at Posen;
-and I am referring to the first page of the English text, starting
-with the third paragraph. For the benefit of the interpreters, in the
-German text it appears at Page 23 in the first paragraph. Quoting
-directly again from this document on the first page, starting with
-the third paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“What happens to the Russians, to the Czechs, does not
-interest me in the slightest. What the nations can offer in
-the way of good blood of our type we will take, if necessary,
-by kidnapping their children and raising them here with us.
-Whether the other nations live in prosperity or starve to
-death interests me only insofar as we need them as slaves
-for our culture; otherwise, it is of no interest to me. Whether
-10,000 Russian females fall down from exhaustion while
-digging an anti-tank ditch or not interests me only insofar
-as the anti-tank ditch for Germany is finished.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Who is the author of that document?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: The author of that quotation is the Reichsführer SS,
-Heinrich Himmler.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The next document to which I make reference is Number 031-PS,
-which is Exhibit USA-71. This document is a top-secret memorandum
-prepared for the Ministry of the Occupied Eastern Territories
-on the 12th of June 1944 and approved by the Defendant Rosenberg;
-<span class='pageno' title='407' id='Page_407'></span>
-and from it I wish to quote, from the English text starting with the
-first paragraph, and in the German text it appears at the first paragraph
-of Page 2. Quoting directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Army group center has the intention to apprehend
-40,000-50,000 youths at the ages of 10 to 14 who are in the
-Army territory and to transport them to the Reich.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I wish to pass now to line 21 of Paragraph 1. Quoting directly
-I read as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It is intended to allot these juveniles primarily to the German
-trades as apprentices to be used as skilled workers after
-2 years’ training. This is to be arranged through the Organization
-Todt which is especially equipped for such a task by
-means of its technical and other set-ups. This action is being
-greatly welcomed by the German trade since it represents
-a decisive measure for the alleviation of the shortage of
-apprentices.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Passing a little further on in that document, I wish to call to
-the attention of the Tribunal Paragraph 1 on Page 2, and to quote
-it directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“This action is aimed not only at preventing a direct reinforcement
-of the enemy’s military strength but also at a
-reduction of his biological potentialities as viewed from the
-perspective of the future. These ideas have been voiced not
-only by the Reichsführer SS but also by the Führer. Corresponding
-orders were given during last year’s withdrawals
-in the southern sector .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I call to Your Honor’s attention particularly that the approval
-of the Defendant Rosenberg is noted on Page 3 of the document.
-It is a note in ink on the original. I quote it:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Obergruppenführer Berger has received another memorandum
-on June 14, according to which the Reich Minister now
-has approved the action.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, did you mean to leave out the
-sentence at the bottom of Page 1?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: No, Your Honor, I did not, but I did not want to
-refer to it at this time. I will refer to it a little later on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Isn’t it really a part of what follows at the
-top of Page 2, which you did read, “Following are the arguments
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Yes, I did omit that. I thought you were referring
-to the sentence above. I’m sorry.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Following are the arguments against this decision of the
-minister.”—and then quoting—“This action is not only aimed
-at preventing direct reinforcement of any military .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='408' id='Page_408'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes and you were telling us how you showed
-that the Defendant Rosenberg was implicated.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Yes. On the last page of that document, the original
-bears a note in ink, and in the mimeographed copy it is typewritten:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Obergruppenführer Berger has received another memorandum
-on June 14, according to which the Reich Minister now
-has approved the action.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>One page back on that same document, from the first paragraph,
-four sentences down, the sentence begins:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Minister has approved the execution of the ‘Hay Action’
-in the Army territories under the conditions and provisions
-arrived at in talks with Army group center.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The purposes of the slave labor program which we have just
-been describing, namely the strengthening of the Nazi war machine
-and the destruction or the weakening of peoples deemed inferior by
-the Nazi conspirators, were achieved, we repeat, by the impressment
-and the deportation of millions of persons into Germany for
-forced labor. It involved the separation of husbands from their
-wives, and children from their parents, and the imposition of conditions
-unfit for human existence, with the result that countless
-numbers were killed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Poland was the first victim. The Defendant Frank, as Governor
-of the Government General of Poland, announced that under his
-program 1 million workers were to be sent to Germany; and he
-recommended that police surround Polish villages and seize the
-inhabitants for deportation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I wish to refer to Document Number 1375-PS, which is Exhibit
-USA-172. This document is a letter from the Defendant Frank to
-the Defendant Göring and it is dated the 25th day of January 1940;
-and I wish to quote from the first page of the English text, starting
-with the first paragraph, and in the German text, again, it appears
-at Page 1 of the first paragraph. Quoting directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. In view of the present requirements of the Reich for the
-defense industry, it is at present fundamentally impossible to
-carry on a long-term economic policy in the Government
-General. Rather, it is necessary so to steer the economy of
-the Government General that it will, in the shortest possible
-time, accomplish results representing the maximum that can
-be secured out of the economic strength of the Government
-General for the immediate strengthening of our capacity for
-defense.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk745'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. In particular the following performances are expected of
-the total economy of the Government General .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='409' id='Page_409'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I wish to pass on a little bit in this text to the second page and
-particularly to Paragraph g in the English text. In the German
-text, the same passage appears on Page 3 in Paragraph g. I am
-quoting directly again:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Supply and transportation of at least 1 million male and
-female agricultural and industrial workers to the Reich—among
-them at least 750,000 agricultural workers of which
-at least 50 percent must be women—in order to guarantee
-agricultural production in the Reich and as a replacement
-for industrial workers lacking in the Reich.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The methods by which these workers were to be supplied were
-considered by the Defendant Frank, as revealed in another document
-to which we now refer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is an entry in the Defendant Frank’s own diary, to which
-we have assigned our Document Number 2233(a)-PS and which we
-offer as Exhibit USA-173. The portion which I shall read is the
-entry for Friday, the 10th of May 1940. It appears in the document
-book as 2233(a)-PS, on the third page in the center of the page.
-Just above it are the words “Page 23, Paragraph 1” to the left:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Then the Governor General deals with the problem of the
-compulsory labor service of the Poles. Upon the pressure
-from the Reich it has now been decreed that compulsion
-may be exercised in view of the fact that sufficient manpower
-was not voluntarily available for service inside the German
-Reich. This compulsion means the possibility of arrest of
-male and female Poles. Because of these measures a certain
-disquietude had developed which, according to individual
-reports, was spreading very much and might produce
-difficulties everywhere. General Field Marshal Göring some
-time ago pointed out, in his long speech, the necessity to
-deport into the Reich a million workers. The supply so far
-was 160,000. However, great difficulties had to be overcome
-here. Therefore it would be advisable to co-operate with the
-district and town chiefs in the execution of the compulsion,
-so that one could be sure from the start that this action
-would be reasonably expedient. The arrest of young Poles
-when leaving church service or the cinema would bring
-about an ever increasing nervousness of the Poles. Generally
-speaking, he had no objections at all to the rubbish, capable
-of work yet often loitering about, being snatched from the
-streets. The best method for this, however, would be the
-organization of a raid; and it would be absolutely justifiable
-to stop a Pole in the street and to question him as to what
-he was doing, where he was working, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='410' id='Page_410'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I should like to refer to another entry in the diary of the
-Defendant Frank, and I offer in evidence an extract from the
-entry made on the 16th day of March 1940, which appears in the
-document book as 2233(b)-PS, and it is Exhibit USA-174. I wish
-particularly to quote from the third page of the English text:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Governor General remarks that he had long negotiations
-in Berlin with the representatives of the Reich Ministry
-for Finance and the Reich Ministry for Food. Urgent demands
-have been made there that Polish farm workers should be
-sent to the Reich in greater numbers. He has made the
-statement in Berlin that he, if it is demanded from him,
-could of course exercise force in some such manner: he
-could have the police surround a village and get the men
-and women in question out by force, and then send them to
-Germany. But one can also work differently, besides these
-police measures, by retaining the unemployment compensation
-of these workers in question.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The instruments of force and terror used to carry out this
-program reached into many phases of Polish life. German labor
-authorities raided churches and theaters, seized those present, and
-shipped them back to Germany. And this appears in a memorandum
-to Himmler, which we offer in evidence as Document
-Number 2220-PS, and it bears Exhibit Number USA-175. This
-memorandum is dated the 17th day of April 1943; and it was
-written by Dr. Lammers, the Chief of the Reich Chancellery, and
-deals with the situation in the Government General of Poland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SERVATIUS: I should like to call the attention of the
-Tribunal to the fact that the last three documents, which have
-just been read, were not made available to me beforehand. They
-do not appear on the original list of documents, nor have I been
-able to find them on the later list.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I therefore request that the reading of these documents be held
-in abeyance until I have had an opportunity to read them and
-to discuss them with my client.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Perhaps I may, at the same time, lodge an additional complaint.
-I received some interrogation records in English the day before
-yesterday. I consulted my client about them and he told me that
-they are not the actual transcripts of his words in the interrogation,
-because he was interrogated in German; an interpreter translated
-his statements into English, and then they were taken down.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>These documents cannot have any evidential value since they
-were not presented to the defendant for certification; he did not
-sign them, nor were they read to him. They are transcripts in
-English, a language of which the defendant understands little or
-nothing.
-<span class='pageno' title='411' id='Page_411'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I also discovered that another interrogation record on the
-Defendant Speer contains statements which incriminate my client
-but which are apparently also incorrect, as I established in consultation
-with the Defendant Speer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I should like to have an opportunity of discussing the matter
-with the representative of the Prosecution and of clearing up
-these differences—to decide to what extent I can agree to the
-use of these documents. They were to be presented by the
-Prosecution today or tomorrow at the latest, but for the time
-being I must object to their use.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: As I understand it, you said to us that the
-last three documents were not available to you and that they
-were not in the original list. Is that right?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SERVATIUS: Not up to now. I want to have an opportunity
-of reading these documents in advance. They are being read
-here without my having seen them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: And then you went on to deal with the
-interrogations which have not been put into evidence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SERVATIUS: Yes, I wanted to take the opportunity of
-saying that I wished to discuss these documents with the Prosecution
-before they are submitted to the Tribunal tomorrow, or
-probably even today. Meanwhile I must object to their being
-used as evidence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, do you know what the circumstances
-are about these three documents which have not been
-supplied?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: I do not, Your Honor. They have been placed in
-the defendants’ Information Center and they partly have been
-in the information list. It may be that through some oversight
-these entries of this diary were neglected.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SERVATIUS: I have these documents before me now; they
-are not numbered; the document concerning Sauckel begins on
-Page 10—question and answer on Pages 11 and 12. The record
-is not continuous; it consists of fragments of a transcript, which
-I want to trace to its origin.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Counsel for the Prosecution will supply you
-with these documents at the adjournment this afternoon. With
-reference to the interrogation, if they propose to use any interrogation
-in the Trial tomorrow, they can also supply you with
-any documents which are material to that interrogation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SERVATIUS: Thank you.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: I believe I was referring to Document Number
-2220-PS.
-<span class='pageno' title='412' id='Page_412'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: That is right. You have not begun to read
-it yet.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: I propose to read from the fourth page of the
-English text, Paragraph 2 at the top of the page, particularly
-the last two sentences of the paragraph; and in the German text
-the passage is found in Page 10, Paragraph 1. Quoting directly, it
-is as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“As things were, the recruiting of manpower had to be
-accomplished by means of more or less forceful methods,
-such as the instances when certain groups appointed by the
-labor offices caught church and movie-goers indiscriminately
-and transported them into the Reich. That such methods
-only undermine the people’s willingness to work and the
-people’s confidence to such a degree that it cannot be checked
-even with terror, is just as clear as the consequences brought
-about by a strengthening of the political resistance movement.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That is the end of the quotation. We say that Polish farmland
-was confiscated with the aid of the SS and was distributed to
-German inhabitants or held in trust for the German community,
-and the farm owners were employed as laborers or transported
-to Germany against their will. We refer to Document Number
-1352-PS, which bears Exhibit Number USA-176. This document
-is a report of the SS, and it bears the title “Achievement of
-Confiscations of Polish Agricultural Enterprises with the Purpose
-of Transferring the Poles to the Old Reich and Employing them as
-Agricultural Workers.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I wish to read from the first page of the English text beginning
-with the fifth paragraph; and in the German text it appears on
-Page 9, Paragraph 1 on that page. Quoting:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It is possible without difficulty to accomplish the confiscation
-of small agricultural enterprises in the villages in
-which larger agricultural enterprises have been already
-confiscated and are under the management of the East
-German Corporation for Agricultural Development.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>And then passing down three sentences, there is this statement
-which I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The former owners of Polish farms together with their families
-will be transferred to the Old Reich by the employment
-offices for employment as farm workers. In this way many
-hundreds of Polish agricultural workers can be placed at the
-disposal of agriculture in the Old Reich in the shortest and
-simplest manner. In this way, to begin with, the most
-pressing shortage now felt in a very disagreeable manner,
-especially in the root-crop districts, will be quickly removed.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='413' id='Page_413'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Pursuant to the directions of the Defendant Sauckel, his agents
-and the SS men deported Polish men to Germany without their
-families, thereby accomplishing one of the basic purposes of the
-program, the supplying of labor for the German war effort, and
-at the same time, weakening the reproductive potential of the
-Polish people.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I wish to refer directly to Document L-61, which bears Exhibit
-Number USA-177. This document is a letter from the Defendant
-Sauckel to the presidents of the land labor offices. It is dated
-the 26th day of November 1942, and I want to read from the
-first paragraph of that letter which states as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In agreement with the Chief of the Security Police and the
-SD, these Jews who are still in employment are also, from
-now on, to be evacuated from the territory of the Reich and
-are to be replaced by Poles, who are being evacuated from
-the Government General.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And passing to the third paragraph of that same letter, we
-find this statement. Quoting:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Poles who are to be evacuated as a result of this
-measure will be put into concentration camps and put to
-work, insofar as they are criminal or asocial elements. The
-remaining Poles, so far as they are suitable for labor, will
-be transported—without family—into the Reich, particularly
-to Berlin, where they will be put at the disposal of the
-labor allocation offices to work in armament factories instead
-of the Jews who are to be replaced.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Who is the Chief of the Security Police,
-mentioned in the second paragraph?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: The Chief of the Security Police was Heinrich
-Himmler. He was also the Reichsführer of the SS.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SERVATIUS: May I say something with regard to this
-document. The Defendant Sauckel denies knowledge of it and says
-that the place of dispatch, not mentioned during the reading of
-this document, is of importance. The document, according to its
-letterhead, was written at 96 Saarland Strasse, which was not the
-office of the Defendant Sauckel. The second point is that this
-document, contrary to the statement in the document list classifying
-it as an original letter of Sauckel, was not signed by him.
-Moreover the certification of the signature, customary on all
-documents, is missing. May I ask the prosecutor to read this into
-the record, so that I can come back to it later.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: If the procedure which the Tribunal has laid
-down has been carried out, either the original document or a
-photostat copy will be in your Information Center; and you can
-<span class='pageno' title='414' id='Page_414'></span>
-then compare or show to your client either the photostat or the
-original.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SERVATIUS: I have done that and only object now to
-the fact that from the reading of this document parts which I
-consider important are being omitted. If this letter is being read
-here it must be read in its entirety, including the parts which I
-consider important, namely, the letterhead and the type of
-signature.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Will you repeat that.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SERVATIUS: I am asking that if it is to be used as
-evidence, the letter should be read in its entirety, including its
-complete heading and the signature as it appears, namely, “signed
-Sauckel.” The certification of the signature is missing, a fact from
-which my client draws certain conclusions in his favor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: You will have an opportunity after adjournment
-of seeing this document; and you have been told already
-that you can refer, when your turn comes to present your defense,
-to the whole of any document. It is inconvenient to the Tribunal
-to have many interruptions of this sort; and if you wish to refer
-to the whole document, you will be able to do so at a later stage.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SERVATIUS: I must assume then, Mr. President, that it
-is admissible to read parts of a document instead of the whole.
-Did I understand correctly?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes, certainly. You can put in a part or
-the whole of the document when your turn comes. We will adjourn
-now; but, Mr. Dodd, you will satisfy this counsel for the Defense
-as to the reason why he had not got these documents.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SERVATIUS: Yes, I understand, Mr. President.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Yes, I will.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: And you will make them available to him
-and insure that he has an opportunity of seeing the original of this
-document so that he can check the signature.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: We will, and I will see that the original is available
-to him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: All right, we will adjourn now.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>The Tribunal adjourned until 12 December 1945 at 1000 hours.</span>]</h3>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='415' id='Page_415'></span><h1>EIGHTEENTH DAY<br/> <span style='font-size:smaller'>Wednesday, 12 December 1945</span></h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'><span class='it'>Morning Session</span></h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will adjourn this morning at
-12:30 for a closed session and sit again at 2:00 o’clock.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: May it please the Tribunal, I should like to report
-to the Tribunal this morning with reference to the questions which
-arose yesterday afternoon concerning three documents.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After adjournment we found that Document 2220-PS was in the
-defendants’ Information Center in photostatic form, and that the
-two other documents, being respectively two entries from the Frank
-diary, were also there but in a different form. The Frank diary
-consists of some 40-odd volumes which we, of course, were not able
-to photostat, so we had placed instead in the defendants’ room the
-excerpts. As a matter of fact, we had placed the entire document
-book there.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. ALFRED SEIDL (Counsel for the Defendant Frank): Yesterday
-the Prosecution submitted documents concerning the Defendant
-Frank; the numbers are 2233(a)-PS and 2233(b)-PS, which were
-presented as Exhibits USA-173 and USA-174. These are not ordinary
-documents, but excerpts from the diary of Frank. Six weeks
-ago I applied in writing to have this diary, which consists of
-42 heavy, thick volumes, submitted to me. I made this request for
-the first time on the 2d of September, the second time on the 16th of
-November, the third time on the 18th of November, and the fourth
-time on the 3rd of December.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Unfortunately, I have not so far received this diary, and I should
-like to ask the Tribunal that it be submitted to me as soon as
-possible, not least because this material was surrendered by the
-Defendant Frank himself to the officers who arrested him and was
-to be used as evidence for his defense.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I am of course not in a position to work through all this material
-in a few days, and I should like to ask the Tribunal that this diary
-be put at my disposal without delay.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In this connection I should like to call the attention of the
-Tribunal to another matter. The Tribunal has already approved
-that the four long speeches which the Defendant Frank delivered
-in Germany in 1942 and which led to his dismissal by Hitler from
-<span class='pageno' title='416' id='Page_416'></span>
-all his offices should be put at my disposal as evidence. The General
-Secretary of the Tribunal informed me of this on the 4th of
-December, but unfortunately I have not so far received copies of
-these speeches. I should be very grateful, therefore, if the Tribunal
-will ensure that its decisions are carried out and that the documents
-are submitted to me without delay.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will look into these matters
-with the General Secretary of the Tribunal, and doubtless it will
-be able to arrange that you should have these documents submitted
-to you in the defendants’ counsel Information Center.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SEIDL: Thank you.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes, Mr. Dodd.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: May I refer briefly to the discussion that we were
-engaged in yesterday in order to take up the train of thought.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I wish to remind the Tribunal that we were discussing or had
-just completed a discussion of Document L-61, which had to do
-with a letter written by the Defendant Sauckel to the presidents
-of the “Länder” labor offices. I had read two excerpts from that
-letter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Referring to the letter, we say that the Nazi campaign of force
-and terror and abduction was described in another letter to the
-Defendant Frank, which we wish to refer to as Document Number
-1526-PS.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Before you pass from that, Mr. Dodd, has
-either the original or the photostatic copy been shown to Sauckel’s
-counsel?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Oh, yes, Sir. A photostatic copy was in the defendants’
-Information Center, and after adjournment yesterday we got
-the original and handed it to him here in this room.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: And he saw it?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Yes, Sir.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Very well.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: This document, Number 1526-PS, USA-178, is a
-letter written by the chairman of the Ukrainian Main Committee
-at Kraków in February 1943. I wish to read from the third page of
-the English text, beginning with the second paragraph; the same
-passage in the German text at Page 2, Paragraph 5. I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The general nervousness is still further increased by the
-wrong methods of labor mobilization which have been used
-more and more frequently in recent months.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk746'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The wild and ruthless manhunt as practiced everywhere in
-towns and country, in streets, squares, stations, even in
-<span class='pageno' title='417' id='Page_417'></span>
-churches, as well as at night in homes, has shaken the feeling
-of security of the inhabitants. Every man is exposed to the
-danger of being seized suddenly and unexpectedly, anywhere
-and at any time, by the police, and brought into an assembly
-camp. None of his relatives knows what has happened to him,
-and only weeks or months later one or another gives news of
-his fate by a postcard.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I wish to turn to Enclosure 5 on Page 8 of this document, which
-I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In November of last year an inspection of all males of the
-age-classes born 1910 to 1920 was ordered in the area of
-Zaleszczyti (district of Czortkow). After the men had appeared
-for inspection, all those who were selected were
-arrested at once, loaded into trains, and sent to the Reich.
-Similar recruitment of laborers for the Reich also took place
-in other areas of this district. Following some interventions,
-the action was then stopped.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The resistance of the Polish people to this enslavement program
-and the necessity for increased force were described by the
-Defendant Sauckel’s deputy, one Timm, at a meeting of the Central
-Planning Board, which was, by the way, Hitler’s wartime planning
-agency. It was made up of the Defendant Speer, Field Marshal
-Milch, and State Secretary Körner. The Central Planning Board was
-the highest level economic planning agency, exercising production
-controls by allocating raw materials and labor to industrial users.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, Document R-124, Exhibit USA-179. This document consists
-of excerpts from minutes of the meetings of this Central Planning
-Board and minutes of conferences between the Defendant Speer and
-Hitler. Only the excerpts, of course, from these minutes upon which
-we rely are being offered in evidence. I would say to the Tribunal,
-however, that the balance of the minutes are available—can be
-made available—if the Tribunal so desires.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This deputy of Sauckel, his name being Timm, made a statement
-at the 36th conference of the Central Planning Board; and it
-appears on Page 14, Paragraph 2 of the English text of Document
-R-124, and on Page 10, Paragraph 2 of the German text:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Especially in Poland the situation at the moment is extraordinarily
-serious. It is known that violent battles have
-occurred just because of these actions. The resistance against
-the administration established by us is very strong. Quite a
-number of our men have been exposed to increased dangers;
-and just in the last 2 or 3 weeks some of them have been
-shot dead, for example, the head of the Labor Office of Warsaw,
-who was shot in his office 14 days ago, and yesterday
-another man again. This is how matters stand at present; and
-<span class='pageno' title='418' id='Page_418'></span>
-the recruiting itself even if done with the best will, remains
-extremely difficult unless police reinforcements are at hand.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Deportation and enslavement of civilians reached unprecedented
-levels in the so-called Eastern Occupied Territories. These wholesale
-deportations resulted directly from labor demands made by the
-Defendant Sauckel on the Defendant Rosenberg, who was the Reich
-Minister for the Eastern Occupied Territories, and his subordinates,
-and also on the Armed Forces—a demand made directly on the
-Armed Forces by the Defendant Sauckel.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 5th of October 1942, for example, the Defendant Sauckel
-wrote to the Defendant Rosenberg, stating that 2 million foreign
-laborers were required and that the majority of these would have
-to be drafted from the recently occupied Eastern territories and
-especially from the Ukraine.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I wish to refer at this point to Document 017-PS, which bears
-Exhibit Number USA-180. This letter from the Defendant Sauckel
-to the Defendant Rosenberg I wish to quote in full. It begins by
-saying:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer has worked out new and most urgent plans for
-armament which require the quick mobilization of two million
-more foreign workers. The Führer therefore has granted
-me, for the execution of his decree of 21 March 1942, new
-powers for my new duties, and has especially authorized me
-to take whatever measures I think are necessary in the Reich,
-the Protectorate, the Government General, as well as in the
-occupied territories, in order to assure, at all costs, an orderly
-mobilization of labor for the German armament industry.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk747'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The additional required labor forces will have to be drafted,
-for the most part, from the recently occupied Eastern Territories,
-especially from the Reichskommissariat Ukraine. Therefore,
-the Reichskommissariat Ukraine must furnish 225,000
-workers by 31 December 1942 and 225,000 more by 1 May 1942.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk748'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I ask you to inform Reich Commissioner, Gauleiter, Party
-Member Koch at once about the new situation and requirements
-and especially to see that he supports personally in
-every possible way the execution of this new order.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk749'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I intend to visit Party Member Koch shortly and I would be
-grateful if he could inform me as to where and when I could
-meet him for a personal discussion. Just now though, I ask
-that the recruiting be taken up at once with all energy and
-the use of every factor, especially the experts of the labor
-offices. All directives which temporarily limited the procurement
-of Eastern Workers are annulled. The Reich procurement
-for the next months must be given priority over all
-other measures .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-<span class='pageno' title='419' id='Page_419'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk750'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I do not ignore the difficulties which exist for the execution
-of this new order, but I am convinced that with the ruthless
-use of all resources and with the full co-operation of all
-concerned the execution of the new demands can be accomplished
-by the date fixed. I have already communicated the
-new demands directly to the Reich Commissioner for the
-Ukraine by teletype. In reference to our phone-call of today,
-I will send you the text of the Führer’s decree at the beginning
-of next week.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I should like to remind the Tribunal that we have referred
-previously, yesterday afternoon, to this Reichskommissar, Gauleiter,
-Party Member Koch; and we quoted him as stating, the
-Tribunal will recall, “We are the master race. We must be hard,”
-and so forth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 17th day of March 1943, the Defendant Sauckel wrote
-again to the Defendant Rosenberg; and on this occasion he demanded
-the importation of another 1 million men and women from the
-Eastern Territories within the following 4 months. I wish to refer
-at this point to Document Number 019-PS, which bears Exhibit
-Number USA-181. Quoting that letter in full:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“After a protracted illness, my deputy for labor allocation in
-the Occupied Eastern Territories, State Councillor Peuckert,
-is going there to regulate the allocation of labor both for Germany
-and the territories themselves.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk751'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I ask you sincerely, dear Party Member Rosenberg, to assist
-him to your utmost on account of the pressing urgency of
-Peuckert’s mission. I may thank you already at this moment
-for the good reception accorded to Peuckert up to this time.
-He himself has been charged by me to co-operate fully and
-unreservedly with all bureaus of the Eastern Territories.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk752'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Especially the labor allocation for German agriculture and
-likewise the most urgent armament production programs
-ordered by the Führer, make the fastest importation of
-approximately 1 million men and women from the Eastern
-Territories within the next 4 months, a necessity. Starting
-15 March the daily shipment must reach 5,000 female or male
-workers, while from the beginning of April this number has
-to be stepped up to 10,000, if the most urgent programs and
-the spring tillage and other agricultural tasks are not to
-suffer to the detriment of food and of the Armed Forces.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk753'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I have provided for the allotment of the draft quotas for the
-individual territories, in agreement with your experts for
-labor supply, as follows:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk754'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Daily quota starting 15 March 1943: From General kommissariat,
-White Ruthenia—500 people; Economic Inspection,
-<span class='pageno' title='420' id='Page_420'></span>
-Center—500 people; Reichskommissariat, Ukraine—3,000
-people; Economic Inspection, South—1,000 people; total—5,000
-people.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk755'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Starting 1 April 1943, the daily quota is to be doubled corresponding
-to the doubling of the entire quota. I hope to
-visit personally the Eastern Territories towards the end of
-the month, and ask you once more for your kind support.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Sauckel did travel to the East. He travelled to
-Kovno in Lithuania to press his demands. We offer in evidence
-Document Number 204-PS, which bears Exhibit Number USA-182.
-This document is a synopsis of a report of the City Commissioner
-of Kovno and minutes of a meeting in which the Defendant Sauckel
-participated. I wish to read from the second page of the English
-text, beginning with the first paragraph. The same passage appears
-in the German text at Page 5, Paragraph 2. Quoting directly as
-follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In a lecture which the Plenipotentiary General for the
-Allocation of Labor, Gauleiter Sauckel, gave on 18 July 1943
-in Kovno, and in an official conference following it between
-Gauleiter Sauckel and the General Commissioner, the precarious
-labor situation in the Reich was again urgently presented
-for discussion. Gauleiter Sauckel again demanded that Lithuanian
-labor be furnished in greater volume for the purposes
-of the Reich.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Who was the General Commissar? Rosenberg?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: The Plenipotentiary for the Arbeitseinsatz?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: No, the General Commissar.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: His name is not known to us. He was apparently
-a local functionary in the Party.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Very well.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: The Defendant Sauckel also visited Riga, in Latvia,
-to assert his demands; and the purpose of this visit is described in
-Document Number 2280-PS, bearing Exhibit Number USA-183. This
-document is a letter from the Reich Commissar for the Ostland to
-the Commissioner General in Riga, and it is dated the 3rd of May
-1943. I wish to read from Page 1 of the English text, beginning
-with the first paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Following the basic statements of the Plenipotentiary General
-for Allocation of Labor, Gauleiter Sauckel, on the occasion
-of his visit to Riga on the 21st of April 1943, it was
-decided, in view of the critical situation and in disregard of
-all adverse considerations, that a total of 183,000 workers
-would have to be supplied from the Ostland to the Reich
-<span class='pageno' title='421' id='Page_421'></span>
-territory. This task absolutely must be accomplished within
-the next 4 months and at the latest must be completed by
-the end of August.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Here again we are not informed as to the name and identity
-of the Reich Commissar for the Ostland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sauckel asked the German Army for assistance in the recruitment
-and deportation of civilian labor from the Eastern Territories.
-We refer now to Document Number 3010-PS, which bears Exhibit
-Number USA-184.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, were you saying that it was not
-known from whom that document emanated?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: No, Sir. We say it is a letter from the Reichskommissar
-for the Ostland to the Commissioner General in Riga, but
-we don’t know their names specifically at the time of the writing
-of the letter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: You don’t know who the Reichskommissar of
-the Eastern Territories was?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: We don’t know him by that title, “The Reichskommissar
-for the Ostland.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Very well.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Lohse, I am now informed, was his name. I understood
-that we did not know it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: All right.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Referring to this Document 3010-PS, this document
-is a secret operational order of the Army Group South dated the
-17th day of August 1943. I wish to read from the first page of the
-English text, the first two paragraphs, as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Plenipotentiary General for Allocation of Labor, in
-Decree Az. VI A 5780.28, a copy of which is enclosed (Enclosure
-1), has ordered the mustering and calling-up of two
-complete age classes for the whole newly occupied Eastern
-Territory. The Reich Minister for Armament and Munitions
-has approved this order.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk756'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“According to this order by the Plenipotentiary General for
-Allocation of Labor”—GBA—“you have to recruit and to
-transport to the Reich immediately all labor forces in your
-territory born during 1926 and 1927. The decree of 6 February
-1943 relative to labor duty and labor employment in the
-theater of operations of the newly occupied Eastern Territory
-and the executive orders issued on this subject are the
-authority for the execution of this measure. Enlistment must
-be completed by 30 September 43 at the latest.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='422' id='Page_422'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We say it is clear that the demands made by the Defendant
-Sauckel resulted in the deportation of civilians from the Occupied
-Eastern Territories. The Defendant Speer has recorded conferences
-with Hitler on 10, 11, and 12 August 1942; and this record is contained
-in Document R-124, which is already in as Exhibit USA-179.
-I now wish to quote from Page 34 of that same document in Paragraph
-1 of the English text. In the German text it appears at
-Page 23, Paragraph 2. Quoting directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Gauleiter Sauckel promises to make Russian labor available
-for the fulfillment of the iron and coal program and reports
-that, if required, he will supply a further million Russian
-laborers for the German armament industry up to and including
-October 1942. So far he has already supplied 1,000,000
-for industry and 700,000 for agriculture. In this connection
-the Führer states that the problem of providing labor can be
-solved in all cases and to any extent. He authorizes Gauleiter
-Sauckel to take all necessary measures. He would agree to
-any compulsory measures in the East as well as in the Occupied
-Western Territories if this question could not be solved
-on a voluntary basis.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In order to meet these demands of 1,700,000—100,000 here and
-there—the Nazi conspirators made terror and violence and arson,
-as we said yesterday, fundamental instruments of their labor
-enslavement policy. Twenty days after the Defendant Sauckel’s
-demands of the 5th of October 1942, a top official in the Defendant
-Rosenberg’s Ministry described the measures taken to meet these
-demands. I wish to refer now to Document Number 294-PS, which
-is Exhibit Number USA-185. This document is a top-secret memorandum,
-dated the 25th of October 1942, signed by one Bräutigam.
-I wish to quote from Page 4 of the English text starting with the
-last paragraph, as follows—in the German text it appears at Page 8,
-Paragraph 2—quoting directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“We now experienced the grotesque picture of having to
-recruit, precipitately, millions of laborers from the Occupied
-Eastern Territories, after prisoners of war had died of hunger
-like flies, in order to fill the gaps that have formed within
-Germany. Now suddenly the food question no longer existed.
-In the customary limitless disregard for the Slavic people,
-‘recruiting’ methods were used which probably have their
-precedent only in the blackest periods of the slave trade.
-A regular manhunt was inaugurated. Without consideration
-of health or age, the people were shipped to Germany where
-it turned out immediately that more than 100,000 had to be
-sent back because of serious illness and other incapability for
-work.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='423' id='Page_423'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Rosenberg wrote, himself, concerning these brutalities,
-to the instigator of them, the Defendant Sauckel; and we
-refer now to Document Number 018-PS, which bears Exhibit Number
-USA-186.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, from where did that top-secret
-document come?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: It came from the files of the Defendant Rosenberg.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This document, 018-PS, is a letter from the Defendant Rosenberg
-to the Defendant Sauckel; and it is dated the 21st day of
-December 1942, with attachments. I wish to quote from Page 1 of
-the English text, starting at the middle of the second paragraph
-which reads as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The reports I have received show that the increase of the
-guerilla bands in the Occupied Eastern Territories is largely
-due to the fact that the methods used for procuring laborers
-in these regions are felt to be forced measures of mass
-deportations, so that the endangered persons prefer to escape
-their fate by withdrawing into the woods or going to the
-guerilla bands.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Passing now to Page 4 of the same English text, there is an
-attachment to Rosenberg’s letter consisting of parts excerpted from
-letters of residents of the Occupied Eastern Territories—excerpted
-by Nazi censors apparently. In the German text it appears at
-Page 6, Paragraphs 1 and 2. Starting the quotation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“At our place, new things have happened. People are being
-taken to Germany. On October 5 some people from the
-Kowkuski district were scheduled to go, but they did not
-want to and the village was set on fire. They threatened to
-do the same thing in Borowytschi, as not all who were
-scheduled to depart wanted to go. Thereupon three truckloads
-of Germans arrived and set fire to their houses. In
-Wrasnytschi 12 houses and in Borowytschi 3 houses were
-burned.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk757'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“On October 1 a new conscription of labor forces took place.
-Of what happened, I will describe the most important to you.
-You cannot imagine the bestiality. You probably remember
-what we were told about the Soviets during the rule of the
-Poles. At that time we did not believe it and now it seems
-just as incredible. The order came to supply 25 workers, but
-no one reported. All had fled. Then the German police came
-and began to ignite the houses of those who had fled. The
-fire burned furiously, since it had not rained for 2 months.
-In addition the grain stacks were in the farm yards. You can
-imagine what took place. The people who had hurried to the
-<span class='pageno' title='424' id='Page_424'></span>
-scene were forbidden to extinguish the flames, were beaten
-and arrested, so that six homesteads were burned down. The
-policemen meanwhile ignited other houses. The people fall
-on their knees and kiss their hands, but the policemen beat
-them with rubber truncheons and threaten to burn down the
-whole village. I do not know how this would have ended if
-Sapurkany had not intervened. He promised that there would
-be laborers by the next morning. During the fire the police
-went through the adjoining villages, seized the laborers, and
-brought them under arrest. Wherever they did not find any
-laborers, they detained the parents until the children
-appeared. That is how they raged throughout the night in
-Bielosersk .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk758'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The workers who had not yet appeared by then were to be
-shot. All schools were closed and the married teachers were
-sent to work here, while the unmarried ones go to work in
-Germany. They are now catching humans as the dogcatchers
-used to catch dogs. They are already hunting for 1 week and
-have not yet enough. The imprisoned workers are locked in
-the schoolhouse. They cannot even go to perform their natural
-functions, but have to do it like pigs in the same room.
-People from many villages went on a certain day to a pilgrimage
-to the Poczajów Monastery. They were all arrested,
-locked in, and will be sent to work. Among them there are
-lame, blind, and aged people.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Despite the fact that the Defendant Rosenberg wrote this letter
-with this attachment, we say he nevertheless countenanced the use
-of force in order to furnish slave labor to Germany and admitted
-his responsibility for the “unusual and hard measures” that were
-employed. I refer to excerpts from the transcript of an interrogation
-under oath of the Defendant Rosenberg on the 6th of
-October 1945, which is Exhibit USA-187, and I wish to quote from
-Page 1 of the English text starting with the ninth paragraph.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: You haven’t given us the PS number.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: It has no PS number.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I beg your pardon. Has a copy of it been
-given to Rosenberg’s counsel?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Yes, it has been. It is at the end of the document
-book, if Your Honors please, the document book the Tribunal has.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. ALFRED THOMA (Counsel for the Defendant Rosenberg):
-In the name of my client, I object to the reading of this document
-for the following reasons:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the preliminary hearings my client was questioned several
-times on the subject of employment of labor from the eastern
-European nations. He stated: that the Defendant Sauckel, by virtue
-<span class='pageno' title='425' id='Page_425'></span>
-of the authority he received from the Führer and by order of the
-Delegate for the Four Year Plan, had the right to give him instructions;
-that he (the Defendant Rosenberg) nevertheless demanded
-that recruiting of labor be conducted on a voluntary basis; that this
-was in fact carried out; and that Sauckel agreed, provided that the
-quota could be met. Rosenberg further stated that on several
-occasions in the course of joint discussions his Ministry demanded
-that the quota be reduced and that in part it was, in fact, reduced.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This document which is now going to be presented does not
-mention all these statements, it only contains fragments of them.
-In order to make it possible both for the Tribunal and the Defense
-to obtain a complete picture, I ask the Tribunal that the Prosecution
-be requested to present the entire records of the statements
-and, before submitting the document officially, to discuss the retranslation
-with the Defense so as to avoid misunderstandings.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I am not sure that I understand your objection.
-You say, as I understood it, that Sauckel had authority from
-Hitler. Is that right?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. THOMA: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: And that Rosenberg was carrying out that
-authority.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. THOMA: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: But all that counsel for the Prosecution is
-attempting to do at the moment is to put in evidence an interrogation
-of Rosenberg. With reference to that, you ask that he
-should put in the whole interrogation?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. THOMA: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Well, we don’t know yet whether he intends
-to put in the whole interrogation or a part of it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. THOMA: I know only one thing: I already have in my hand
-the document which the Prosecution wishes to submit and I can
-see from it that it contains only fragments of the whole interrogation.
-What in particular it does not contain is the fact that Rosenberg
-always insisted on voluntary recruiting only and that he
-continually demanded a reduction of the quota. That is not contained
-in the document to be submitted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: If counsel for the Prosecution reads a part
-of the interrogation, and you wish to refer to another part of the
-interrogation in order that the part he has read should not be misleading,
-you will be at liberty to do so when he has read his part
-of the interrogation. Is that clear?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. THOMA: Yes. But then I request the Tribunal to ask
-counsel for the Prosecution if the document which he intends to
-submit contains the whole of Rosenberg’s statement.
-<span class='pageno' title='426' id='Page_426'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, were you going to put in the
-whole of Rosenberg’s interrogation?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: No, Your Honor, I was not prepared to put in
-the whole of Rosenberg’s interrogation, but only certain parts
-of it. These parts are available, and have been for some time, to
-counsel. The whole of the Rosenberg interrogation in English was
-given to Sauckel’s counsel, however, and he has the entire text of
-it, the only available copy that we have.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Has counsel for Rosenberg not got the entire
-document?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: He has only the excerpt that we propose to read
-into the record here at this time.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. THOMA: May I say something?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, the Tribunal considers that if you
-propose to put in a part of the interrogation, the whole interrogation
-ought to be submitted to the defendant’s counsel, that then you may
-read what part you like of the interrogation, and then defendant’s
-counsel may refer to any other part of the interrogation directly if it
-is necessary for the purpose of explaining the part which has been
-read by counsel for the Prosecution. So before you use this interrogation,
-Rosenberg’s counsel must have a copy of the whole interrogation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: I might say, Your Honor, that we turned over the
-whole interrogation to counsel for the Defendant Sauckel; and we
-understood that he would make it available to all other counsel for
-the Defense. Apparently, that did not happen.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. THOMA: Thank you, Mr. President.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. SERVATIUS: I received these documents from the Prosecution
-last night. They were in English; that is sufficient for me,
-but counsel for the other defendants are not all in a position to
-follow the English text, so that certain difficulties arise, and I must
-find time to interpret the document to my colleagues. But it would
-be desirable if the Prosecution could give us the German text, for
-the interrogation took place in German and was translated into
-English, so that the original German text should be available.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Those are the difficulties, and I would like to suggest that the
-German text be also handed to us as soon as possible.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: With reference to the so-called German text, the
-original is an English text. These interrogations were made through
-an interpreter and they were transcribed in English so that the
-original text is an English text, and that is what was turned over
-to the attorney for the Defendant Sauckel with the understanding
-that it would be made available to all other counsel.
-<span class='pageno' title='427' id='Page_427'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: But of course that doesn’t quite meet their
-difficulties because they don’t all of them speak English, or are not
-all able to read English, so I am afraid you must wait until Rosenberg’s
-counsel has got a copy of the entire interrogation in his own
-language.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Very well.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Passing on beyond the document to which we have just referred—which
-we now withdraw in view of the ruling—and which we
-will offer at a later date after we have complied with the ruling
-of the Court, we have a letter dated the 21st of December 1942,
-which is Document 018-PS, and which bears Exhibit Number USA-186—which,
-by the way, is a letter from the Defendant Rosenberg
-to the Defendant Sauckel—and I wish to quote from Page 1, Paragraph
-3 of the English text. In the German text it appears at
-Page 3, Paragraph 1. Quoting directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Even if I in no way deny that the numbers demanded by the
-Reich Minister for Armament and Munitions as well as by
-the agricultural economy justify unusual and severe measures,
-I must, because I am answerable for the Occupied
-Eastern Territories, emphatically request that, in filling the
-quota demanded, measures be excluded the consequences and
-our toleration of which will some day be held against me and
-my collaborators.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the Ukraine area, arson was indeed used as a terror instrument
-to enforce these conscription measures; and we refer now to
-Document Number 254-PS, which is Exhibit USA-188. This document
-is from an official of the Rosenberg Ministry and was also
-found in the Rosenberg file. It is dated June 29, 1944 and encloses
-a copy of a letter from one Paul Raab, a district commissioner in
-the territory of Wassilkov, to the Defendant Rosenberg. I wish to
-quote from Raab’s letter, Page 1, starting with Paragraph 1 of the
-English text which reads as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“According to a charge by the Supreme Command of the
-Army, I burned down several houses .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. in the territory of
-Wassilkov, Ukraine, belonging to insubordinate people ordered
-to labor service—this accusation is true.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Passing now to the third paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“During the year of 1942 the conscription of workers was
-accomplished nearly exclusively by way of propaganda. Only
-rarely was force necessary. But in August 1942, measures
-had to be taken against two families in the villages of Glevenka
-and Soliony-Shatior, each of which were to supply one
-person for labor. Both had been requested in June for the
-first time but had not obeyed, although requested repeatedly.
-They had to be brought in by force, but succeeded twice in
-<span class='pageno' title='428' id='Page_428'></span>
-escaping from the collecting camp in Kiev or while in transit.
-Before the second arrest, the fathers of both of the workers
-were taken into custody as hostages to be released only when
-their sons appeared. When, after the second escape, the
-re-arrest of both the young men and the fathers was ordered,
-the police patrols detailed to do this, found the houses empty.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Passing to Paragraph 4, it is stated, and I quote directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“At that time I decided at last to take measures to show the
-increasingly rebellious Ukrainian youth that our orders have
-to be followed. I ordered the burning of the houses of the two
-fugitives.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Would Your Honor like to have the rest of that paragraph?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I think you should read the next few lines.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>MR. DODD: “The result was that in the future people obeyed,
-willingly, orders concerning labor obligations. However, the
-practice of burning houses has not become known for the first
-time by my actions, but was suggested in a secret letter from
-the Reich Commissioner for Allocation of Labor specifically
-as a coercive measure in case other measures should fail.
-This harsh punishment was acceptable to the local population .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE TRIBUNAL (Mr. Biddle): The Commissioner for Labor,
-Mr. Dodd—you just said, “an order from the Commissioner of
-Labor.” Who was that?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Well, we have discussed this matter previously to
-our appearance here today. The document does not identify him by
-name. We are not sure. The Defendant Sauckel was called Plenipotentiary
-General for Labor, and we think we can’t go much
-further, and say we don’t know. It just does not appear.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE TRIBUNAL (Mr. Biddle): Thank you.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Reading that last sentence again:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“This harsh punishment was acceptable to the local population
-because previous to this step both families had ridiculed
-on every hand the duty-conscious people who sent their
-children partly voluntarily to the labor allocation.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Turning to Paragraph 2 on Page 2, beginning about two-thirds
-of the way through the paragraph, I wish to read as follows—in the
-German text it appears at Page 3, Paragraph 1:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“After initial successes, a passive resistance of the population
-started, which finally forced me to turn again to arrests,
-confiscations, and transfers to labor camps. After a whole
-transport of conscripted laborers overcame the police at the
-<span class='pageno' title='429' id='Page_429'></span>
-railroad station in Wassilkov and escaped, I saw again the
-necessity for strict measures. A few ring-leaders, who of
-course had long since escaped, were located in Plissezkoje
-and in Mitnitza. After repeated attempts to get hold of them,
-their houses were burned down.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And finally, I wish to pass to the last paragraph on Page 3 of
-that same document. In the German text it appears at Page 5,
-Paragraph 7. Quoting from that last paragraph on the third page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“My actions toward fugitive labor draftees were always
-reported to District Commissioner Döhrer, of the Wassilkov
-office, and to the Commissioner General in Kiev. Both of
-them knew the circumstances and agreed with my measures
-because of their success.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>That is the end of that part of the quotation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That Generalkommissar in Kiev, as we indicated yesterday and
-again this morning, was the man Koch—we quoted his statement
-about the master race.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Another document confirms arson as an instrument of enforcing
-this labor program in the village of Bielosersk in the Ukraine in
-cases of resistance to forced labor recruitment. Atrocities committed
-in this village are related in Document Number 018-PS, which is
-already in evidence as Exhibit USA-186. But in addition there is
-Document Number 290-PS, which bears Exhibit Number USA-189.
-This document consists of correspondence originating within the
-Rosenberg ministry, which was, of course, the office headquarters of
-the Defendant Rosenberg; and it is dated the 12th day of November
-1943. I wish to quote from Page 1 of the English text, starting with
-the last line, as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“But even if Müller had been present at the burning of houses
-in connection with the Reich conscription in Bielosersk, this
-should by no means lead to the removal of Müller from
-office. It is mentioned specifically in a directive of the Commissioner
-General in Luck, of 21 September 1942, referring to
-the extreme urgency of national conscription, that farms of
-those who refuse to work are to be burned and their relatives
-are to be arrested as hostages and brought to forced labor
-camps.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The SS troops were directed to participate in the abduction of
-these forced laborers and also in the raids on villages, burning of
-villages, and were directed to turn the entire population over for
-slave labor in Germany.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We refer to Document Number 3012-PS, which bears Exhibit
-Number USA-190. This document is a secret SS order and it is
-dated the 19th day of March 1943. I wish to quote from Page 3 of
-<span class='pageno' title='430' id='Page_430'></span>
-the English text starting with the third paragraph. In the German
-text it appears at Page 2, Paragraph 3. It says, and I quote it:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The activity of the labor offices, that is, of recruiting commissions,
-is to be supported to the greatest extent possible.
-It will not be possible always to refrain from using force.
-During a conference with the chief of the labor allocation
-staffs, it was agreed that whatever prisoners could be released
-should be put at the disposal of the commissioner of the labor
-office. When searching villages or when it becomes necessary
-to burn down villages, the whole population will be put at
-the disposal of the commissioner by force.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Shouldn’t you read Number 4 which follows
-it?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Number 4 says:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“As a rule, no more children will be shot.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I might say to Your Honor that parts of these documents are
-going to be relied on for other purposes later and it sometimes may
-appear to the Tribunal that we are overlooking some of these
-excerpts, but nevertheless I am grateful to have them called to our
-attention because they are most pertinent to these allegations as
-well.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From the community of Zhitomir where the Defendant Sauckel
-appealed for more workers for the Reich, the Commissioner General
-reported on the brutality of the conspirator’s program, which he
-described as a program of coercion and slavery. And I now refer
-to Document Number 265-PS, which is Exhibit USA-191. This
-document is a secret report of a conference between the Commissioner
-General of Zhitomir and the Defendant Rosenberg in the
-community of Vinnitza on the 17th of June 1943. The report itself
-is dated the 30th of June 1943 and is signed by Leyser. I wish to
-quote from Page 1 of the English text, beginning with the last
-paragraph; and in the German text it appears at Page 2, Paragraph
-3. Quoting it directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The symptoms created by the recruiting of workers are,
-no doubt, well known to the Reich Minister through reports
-and his own observations. Therefore I shall not repeat them.
-It is certain that a recruitment of labor in the true sense
-of the word can hardly be spoken of. In most cases it is
-nowadays a matter of actual conscription by force.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Passing now to Page 2 of that same document, and to Paragraph
-1, line 11—in the German text it appears at Page 3, Paragraph
-2—it says; and I quote it directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“But as the Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of
-Labor explained to us the gravity of the situation, we had
-<span class='pageno' title='431' id='Page_431'></span>
-no alternative. I consequently have authorized the commissioners
-of the areas to apply the severest measures in order
-to achieve the imposed quota. That a lowering of morale is
-coupled with this needs no further proof. It is nevertheless
-essential to win the war on this front too. The problem of
-labor mobilization cannot be handled with gloves.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The recruitment measures which we have been discussing
-enslaved so many citizens of occupied countries that whole areas
-were depopulated.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now wish to refer to our Document Number 3000-PS, which is
-Exhibit USA-192. This document is a partial translation of a report
-from the chief of Main Office III with the High Command in Minsk,
-and it is dated the 28th day of June 1943. It was sent to Ministerialdirektor
-Riecke, who was a top official in the Rosenberg Ministry.
-I wish to read from Page 1 of the English text, starting with the
-second paragraph, as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Thus recruitment of labor for the Reich, however necessary,
-had disastrous effects, for the recruitment measures in the
-last months and weeks were absolute manhunts, which have
-an irreparable political and economic effect .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. From .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-White Ruthenia approximately 50,000 people have been obtained
-for the Reich so far. Another 130,000 are to be taken.
-Considering the 2,400,000 total population .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. the fulfillment of
-these quotas is impossible.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Owing to the sweeping drives
-of the SS and police in November 1942, about 115,000 hectares
-of farmland .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. are not used, as the population is not there
-and the villages have been razed.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We have already referred to the conspirators’ objective of permanently
-weakening the enemy through the enslavement of labor
-and the breaking up of families; and we invite the Tribunal’s
-attention to Document 031-PS, which is in evidence as Exhibit
-USA-171, for we desire to emphasize that the policy was applied
-in the Eastern Occupied Territories with the Defendant Rosenberg’s
-approval of a plan for the apprehension and deportation of 40,000
-to 50,000 youths of the ages of 10 to 14. Now the stated purpose
-of this plan was to prevent a reinforcement of the enemy’s military
-strength and to reduce the enemy’s biological potentialities. We
-have already quoted from Page 3 of the English text of that document
-to establish that the Defendant Rosenberg approved that
-plan, the so-called Hay Action plan. We referred to it yesterday
-afternoon.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Further evidence of the conspirators’ plan to weaken their
-enemies, in utter disregard of the rules of international law, is
-contained in Document Number 1702-PS, which bears Exhibit
-Number USA-193. This document is a secret order, issued by a
-<span class='pageno' title='432' id='Page_432'></span>
-rear area military commandant to the district commissar at
-Kasatin, dated the 25th of December 1943. I quote from Page 3
-of the English text at Paragraph 1. In the German text it appears
-at Page 12, Paragraph 1.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The able-bodied male population between 15 and 65 years
-of age and the live stock are to be shipped back from the
-district east of the line Belilovka-Berditchev-Zhitomir (exclusive
-of these places).”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This program, which we have been describing, and the brutal
-measures that it employed were not limited to Poland and the
-Occupied Eastern Territories but covered and cursed Western
-Europe as well. Frenchmen, Dutchmen, Belgians, Italians, all came
-to know the yoke of slavery and the brutality of their slavemasters.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In France these slavemasters intensified their program in the
-early part of 1943, pursuant to instructions which the Defendant
-Speer telephoned to the Defendant Sauckel at 8 o’clock in the
-evening on the 4th day of January 1943 from Hitler’s headquarters.
-I now refer to Document Number 556(13)-PS, which is Exhibit
-USA-194. This document, incidentally, is a note for his own files,
-signed by the Defendant Sauckel, dated the 5th of January 1943.
-I wish to quote from Page 1 of the English text, Paragraph 1 as
-follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“On 4 January 1943 at 8 p.m. Minister Speer telephones
-from the Führer’s headquarters and communicates that on
-the basis of the Führer’s decision, it is no longer necessary
-to give special consideration to Frenchmen in the further
-recruiting of specialists and helpers in France. The recruiting
-can proceed with vigor and with sharpened measures.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To overcome resistance to his slave labor program, the Defendant
-Sauckel improvised new impressment measures which were applied
-to both France and Italy by his own agents and which he himself
-labelled as grotesque. I now refer to Document Number R-124,
-which is Exhibit USA-179, and particularly Page 2 and Paragraph 2
-of the English text; in the German text it appears at Page 8,
-Paragraph 1. Quoting directly from that page and that paragraph
-a statement made by Sauckel on 1 March 1944 at a meeting of
-the Central Planning Board:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The most abominable point against which I have to fight
-is the claim that there is no organization in these districts
-properly to recruit Frenchmen, Belgians, and Italians and to
-dispatch them to work. So I have even proceeded to employ
-and train a whole staff of French and Italian agents of both
-sexes who for good pay, just as was done in olden times
-for ‘shanghaiing,’ go hunting for men and dupe them, using
-<span class='pageno' title='433' id='Page_433'></span>
-liquor as well as persuasion in order to dispatch them to
-Germany.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk759'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Moreover, I have charged several capable men with founding
-a special labor allocation organization of our own, and
-this by training and arming, under the aegis of the Higher
-SS and Police Führer, a number of indigenous units; but I
-still have to ask the munitions ministry for arms for these
-men. For during the last year alone several dozens of high-ranking
-labor allocation officials of great ability have been
-shot. All these means must be used, grotesque as it may
-sound, to refute the allegation that there is no organization
-to bring labor to Germany from these countries.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This same slave labor hunt proceeded in Holland, as it did in
-France, with terror and abduction. I now refer to Document Number
-1726-PS, which is Exhibit USA-195. This document is entitled,
-“Statement of the Netherlands Government in View of the Prosecution
-and Punishment of the German Major War Criminals.”
-I wish to quote from enclosure “h,” entitled “Central Bureau for
-Statistics—The Deportation of Netherlands’ Workmen to Germany.”
-It is Page 1 of the English text, starting with the first paragraph;
-and in the German text it appears at Page 1, also Paragraph 1.
-Quoting it directly, it reads as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Many big and medium-size large business concerns, especially
-in the metal industry, were visited by German commissions
-who selected workmen for deportation. This combing-out
-was called the ‘Sauckel action,’ so named after its leader,
-who was charged with the procurement, of foreign workmen
-for Germany.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk760'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The employers had to cancel the contracts with the selected
-workmen; and the latter were forced to register at the
-labor offices, which then took charge of the deportation
-under supervision of German ‘Fachberater.’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk761'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Workmen who refused—relatively few—were prosecuted by
-the Sicherheitsdienst—the SD. If captured by this service,
-they were mostly lodged for some time in one of the infamous
-prisoners’ camps in the Netherlands and eventually put to
-work in Germany.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk762'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In these prosecutions the Sicherheitsdienst was supported
-by the German police service, which was connected with the
-labor offices and was composed of members of the NSB
-and the like.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk763'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“At the end of April 1942 the deportation of workers started
-on a grand scale. Consequently, in the months of May and
-June, the number of deportees amounted to not less than
-<span class='pageno' title='434' id='Page_434'></span>
-22,000 and 24,000 respectively, of which many were metal
-workers.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk764'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“After that the action slackened somewhat, but in October
-1942 another peak was reached (2,600). After the big concerns,
-the smaller ones had, in their turn, to give up their
-personnel.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk765'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“This changed in November 1944. The Germans then started
-a ruthless campaign for manpower, passing by the labor
-offices. Without warning they lined off whole quarters of
-the towns, seized people in the streets or in the houses and
-deported them.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk766'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In Rotterdam and Schiedam where these raids took place
-on 10 and 11 November, the number of people thus deported
-was estimated at 50,000 and 5,000, respectively.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk767'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In other places where the raids were held later, the numbers
-were much lower, because one was forewarned by the
-events. The exact figures are not known as they have
-never been published by the occupants.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk768'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The people thus seized were put to work partly in the
-Netherlands, partly in Germany.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A document found in the OKH files furnishes further evidence
-of the seizure of workers in Holland; and I refer to Document
-Number 3003-PS, which is Exhibit USA-196. This document is a
-partial translation of the text of a lecture, delivered by one Lieutenant
-Haupt of the German Wehrmacht, concerning the situation
-of the war economy in the Netherlands. I wish to quote from Page 1
-of the English text, starting with the fourth line of Paragraph
-1—quoting that directly, which reads as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“There had been some difficulties with the Arbeitseinsatz,
-that is, during the man-catching action, which became very
-noticeable because it was unorganized and unprepared.
-People were arrested in the streets and taken out of their
-homes. It has been impossible to carry out a uniform exemption
-procedure in advance, because for security reasons
-the time for the action had not been previously announced.
-Certificates of exemption, furthermore, were to some extent
-not recognized by the officials who carried out the action.
-Not only workers who had become available through the
-stoppage of industry, but also those who were employed
-in our installations producing things for our immediate need
-were apprehended or did not dare to go into the streets. In
-any case it proved to be a great loss to us.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I might say to the Tribunal, that the hordes of people displaced
-in Germany today indicate, to a very considerable extent, the
-length to which the conspirators’ labor program succeeded. The
-<span class='pageno' title='435' id='Page_435'></span>
-best available Allied and German data reveal that, as of January
-1945, approximately 4,795,000 foreign civilian workers had been
-put to work for the German war effort in the Old Reich; and
-among them were forced laborers of more than 14 different
-nationalities. I now refer to Document Number 2520-PS, Exhibit
-USA-197, which is an affidavit executed by Edward L. Deuss, an
-economic analyst.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the top of the first page there are tables setting forth the
-nationality and then the numbers of the various nationals and
-other groupings or prisoners of war and politicals, so-called. The
-workers alone total, according to Mr. Deuss who is an expert in
-the field, the 4,795,000 figure to which I have just referred. In
-the second paragraph of this statement of Deuss, I should like
-to read for the record and quote directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I, Edward L. Deuss, for 3 years employed by the Foreign
-Economic Administration, Washington, as an economic analyst
-in London, Paris, and Germany, specializing in labor and
-population problems of Germany during the war, do hereby
-certify that the figures of foreign labor employed in the
-Old Reich have been compiled on the basis of the best
-available German and Allied sources of material. The
-accompanying table represents a combination of German
-official estimates of foreigners working in Germany in
-January 1945, and of American, British, and French figures
-of the number of foreigners actually discovered in the Old
-Reich since 10 May 1945.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Only a very small proportion of these imported laborers came
-to Germany on a voluntary basis. At the March 1, 1944 meeting of
-this same Central Planning Board, to which we have made reference
-before, the Defendant Sauckel himself made clear the vast scale on
-which free men had been forced into this labor slavery. He made
-the statement, and I quote from Document Number R-124, which
-is in evidence as Exhibit USA-179 and from which I have quoted
-earlier this morning. I wish to refer to Page 11 of that document,
-the middle paragraph, Paragraph 3. In the German text it appears
-at Page 4, Paragraph 2—the Defendant Sauckel speaking—and I
-quote directly from that document:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Out of 5 million foreign workers who arrived in Germany,
-not even 200,000 came voluntarily.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Nazi conspirators were not satisfied just to tear 5 million
-odd persons from their children, from their homes, from their
-native land. But in addition, these defendants, who sit today in
-this courtroom, insisted that this vast number of wretched human
-beings who were in the so-called Old Reich as forced laborers must
-<span class='pageno' title='436' id='Page_436'></span>
-be starved, given less than sufficient to eat, often beaten and maltreated,
-and permitted to die wholesale for want of food, for want
-of even the fundamental requirements of decent clothing, for the
-want of adequate shelter or indeed sometimes just because they
-produced too little.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now these conditions of deportation are vividly described in
-Document Number 054-PS, which is a report made to the Defendant
-Rosenberg concerning the treatment of Ukrainian labor. I wish to
-refer to Document Number 054-PS, which bears the Exhibit Number
-USA-198. Before quoting from it directly—according to this
-report the plight of these hapless victims was aggravated because
-many were dragged off without opportunity to collect their possessions.
-Indeed, men and women were snatched from bed and lodged
-in cellars pending deportation. Some arrived in night clothing.
-Brutal guards beat them. They were locked in railroad cars for
-long periods without any toilet facilities at all, without food,
-without water, without heat. The women were subjected to physical
-and moral indignities and indecencies during medical examinations.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I refer how specifically to this Document Number 054-PS, which
-consists of a covering letter to the Defendant Rosenberg, first of
-all, and is signed by one Theurer, a 1st lieutenant in the Wehrmacht,
-to which is attached a copy of a report by the commandant
-of the collecting center for Ukrainian specialists at Kharkov; and
-it also consists of a letter written by one of the specialists in the
-Rosenberg office—no, by one of the workers, not in the Rosenberg
-office, but one of the specialists they were recruiting, by the name
-of Grigori. I wish to quote from the report at Page 2, starting at
-Paragraph 4 of the English text—and in the German text it appears
-at Page 3, Paragraph 4. Quoting directly from that page of the
-English text:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The <span class='it'>starosts</span>, that is village elders, are frequently corruptible;
-they continue to have the skilled workers, whom they
-drafted, dragged from their beds at night to be locked up in
-cellars until they are shipped. Since the male and female
-workers often are not given any time to pick up their luggage
-and so forth, many skilled workers arrive at the collecting
-center for skilled workers with equipment entirely insufficient
-(without shoes or change of clothing, no eating and drinking
-utensils, no blankets, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>). In particularly extreme cases,
-therefore, new arrivals have to be sent back again immediately
-to get the things most necessary for them. If people
-do not come along at once, threatening and beating of skilled
-workers by the above-mentioned local militia become a daily
-occurrence and are reported from most of the communities.
-In some cases women were beaten until they could no longer
-<span class='pageno' title='437' id='Page_437'></span>
-march. One bad case in particular was reported by me to the
-commander of the civil police here (Colonel Samek) for severe
-punishment (village of Sozolinkov, district of Dergatchi). The
-encroachments of the <span class='it'>starosts</span> and the militia are of a particularly
-grave nature because they usually justify themselves
-by claiming that all that is done in the name of the German
-Armed Forces. In reality, the latter have conducted themselves
-throughout in a highly understanding manner toward
-the skilled workers and the Ukrainian population. The same,
-however, cannot be said of some of the administrative agencies.
-To illustrate this, be it mentioned that a woman once
-arrived dressed with barely more than a shirt.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Passing now to Page 4 of this same document, starting with the
-10th line of the third paragraph, and in the German text it appears
-at Page 5, Paragraph 2. Quoting directly again:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“On the basis of reported incidents, attention must be called
-to the fact that it is inexcusable to keep workers locked in the
-cars for many hours, so that they cannot even take care of
-the calls of nature. It is evident that the people of a transport
-must be given an opportunity from time to time, to get
-drinking water, to wash, and to relieve themselves. Cars have
-been shown in which people had made holes so that they
-could attend to the calls of nature. When nearing bigger
-stations, persons should, if possible, relieve themselves far
-from these stations.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Turning to Page 5 of the same document, Paragraph 12—in the
-German text it appears at Page 6, Paragraph 1:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The following abuses were reported from the delousing
-stations:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk769'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the women’s and girls’ shower rooms, services were partly
-performed by men, or men would mingle around or even help
-with the soaping, and vice versa there were female personnel
-in the men’s shower rooms. Men also for some time
-were taking photographs in the women’s shower rooms. Since
-mainly Ukrainian peasants were transported in the last
-months, as far as the female portion of these are concerned,
-they were mostly of a high moral standard and used to strict
-modesty; they must have considered such a treatment as a
-national degradation. The above-mentioned abuses have been,
-according to our knowledge, settled by the intervention of
-the transport commanders. The reports of the photographing
-were made from Halle; the reports about the former were
-made from Kiwerce. Such incidents, altogether unworthy of
-the dignity and prestige of the Greater German Reich may
-still occur here or there.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='438' id='Page_438'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sick and infirm people of the occupied countries were taken
-indiscriminately with the rest. Those who managed to survive the
-trip into Germany but who arrived too sick to work were returned
-like cattle together with those who fell ill at work, because they
-were of no further use to the Germans. The return trip took place
-under the same terrible conditions as the initial journey, and without
-any kind of medical supervision. Death came to many and their
-corpses were unceremoniously dumped out of the cars, with no
-provision for burial.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I quote from Page 3, Paragraph 3 of Document Number 054-PS.
-In the German text it appears at Page 2, Paragraph 3. Quoting
-directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Very depressing for the morale of the skilled workers and
-the population is the effect of those persons shipped back
-from Germany who had become disabled or had been
-unfit for employment from the very beginning.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk770'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Several times already transports of skilled workers on their
-way to Germany have crossed returning transports of such
-disabled persons and have stood on the tracks alongside
-of each other for a long period of time. These returning
-transports are insufficiently cared for. Nothing but sick,
-injured, or weak people, mostly 50 to 60 in a car usually
-escorted by 3 to 4 men. There is neither sufficient care nor
-food. The returnees made frequently unfavorable—if also
-surely exaggerated—statements relative to their treatment in
-Germany and on the way. As a result of all this and of what
-the people could see with their own eyes, a psychosis of fear
-was evoked among the skilled workers, that is, the whole
-transport to Germany. Several transport leaders, of the 62d
-and 63d transports, in particular, reported on it in detail.
-In one case the leader of the transport of skilled workers
-observed with his own eyes how a person who had died of
-hunger was unloaded from a returning transport on the side
-track (1st Lieutenant Hofmann of the 63rd Transport Station,
-Darniza). Another time it was reported that three dead had
-to be deposited by the side of the tracks on the way and had
-to be left behind unburied by the escort. It is also regrettable
-that these disabled persons arrive here without any identification.
-From the reports of the transport commanders, one
-gets the impression that these unemployable persons are
-assembled, penned into the wagons, and sent off provided
-only by a few men escorts and without special care for food
-and medical or other attendance. The labor office at the place
-of arrival as well as the transport commanders confirm this
-impression.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='439' id='Page_439'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Incredible as it may seem, mothers in the throes of childbirth
-shared cars with those infected with tuberculosis or venereal
-diseases. Babies, when born, were hurled out of these car windows;
-and dying persons lay on the bare floors of freight cars without
-even the small comfort of straw.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I refer to Document Number 084-PS, which is Exhibit USA-199.
-This document is an interdepartmental report, prepared by Dr. Gutkelch,
-in the Defendant Rosenberg’s Ministry, and it is dated the
-30th of September 1942. I wish to quote from Page 10 of the English
-text, starting with the fourth line from the top of the page.
-In the German text it appears at Page 22, Paragraph 1. Quoting
-directly from that paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How necessary this interference was is shown by the fact
-that this train with returning laborers had stopped at the
-same place where a train with newly recruited Eastern Workers
-had stopped. Because of the corpses in the trainload of
-returning laborers, a catastrophe might have been precipitated
-had it not been for the mediation of Mrs. Miller. In this
-train women gave birth to babies who were thrown out of the
-windows during the journey, people having tuberculosis and
-venereal diseases rode in the same car, dying people lay in
-freight cars without straw, and one of the dead was thrown
-on the railway embankment. The same must have occurred
-in other returning transports.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Some aspects of the Nazi transport were described by the
-Defendant Sauckel himself in a decree which he issued on the
-20th of July 1942; and I refer specifically to Document Number
-2241(2)-PS, which is Exhibit USA-200. I ask that the Tribunal take
-judicial notice of the original decree, which is published in Section
-BIa, at Page 48e of a book entitled <span class='it'>Die Beschäftigung von ausländischen
-Arbeitskräften in Deutschland</span>. I quote from Page 1,
-Paragraph 2, of the English text; and I am quoting directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“According to reports of transportation commanders”—Transportleiter—“presented
-to me, the special trains provided by
-the German railway have frequently been in a really broken-down
-condition. Numerous window panes have been missing
-in the coaches. Old French coaches without lavatories have
-been partly employed so that the workers had to fit up an
-emptied compartment as a lavatory. In other cases, the
-coaches were not heated in winter so that the lavatories
-quickly became unusable because the water system was
-frozen and the flushing apparatus was therefore without
-water.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal will unquestionably have noticed or observed that
-a number of the documents which we have referred to—and which
-<span class='pageno' title='440' id='Page_440'></span>
-we have offered—consist of complaints by functionaries of the
-Defendant Rosenberg’s Ministry, or by others, concerning the conditions
-under which foreign workers were recruited and lived. I
-think it is appropriate to say that these documents have been
-presented by the Prosecution really for two purposes, or for a dual
-purpose; to establish, first, the facts recited therein, of course, but
-also to show that these conspirators had knowledge of these conditions
-and that notwithstanding their knowledge of these conditions,
-these conspirators continued to countenance and assist in
-this enslavement program of a vast number of citizens of occupied
-countries.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Once within Germany, slave laborers were subjected to almost
-unbelievable brutality and degradation by their captors; and the
-character of this treatment was in part made plain by the conspirators’
-own statements, as in Document Number 016-PS, which is in
-evidence as Exhibit USA-168; and I refer to Page 12, Paragraph 2
-of the English text. In the German text it appears at Page 17,
-Paragraph 4. Quoting directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“All the men must be fed, sheltered, and treated in such a
-way that they produce to the highest possible extent at the
-lowest conceivable degree of expenditure.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Force and brutality as instruments of production found a ready
-adherent in the Defendant Speer who, in the presence of the
-Defendant Sauckel, said at a meeting of the Central Planning
-Board—and I refer to Document Number R-124, which is already
-in evidence and which has been referred to previously. It bears
-the Exhibit Number USA-179. I refer particularly to Page 42 of
-that Document R-124, and Paragraph 2 of that Page 42. The
-Defendant Speer, speaking at that meeting, stated:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“We must also discuss the slackers. Ley has ascertained that
-the side list decreased at once to one-fourth or one-fifth in
-factories where doctors are on the staff who examine the sick
-men. There is nothing to be said against SS and police taking
-drastic steps and putting those known as slackers into concentration
-camps. There is no alternative. Let it happen
-several times and the news will soon go around.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At a later meeting of the Central Planning Board, Field Marshal
-Milch agreed that so far as workers were concerned—and again
-I refer to Document Number R-124 and to Page 26, Paragraph 2, in
-the English text, and in the German text at Page 17, Paragraph 1.
-Field Marshal Milch, speaking at a meeting of the Central Planning
-Board when the Defendant Speer was present, stated; and I am
-quoting directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The list of the shirkers should be entrusted to Himmler .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='441' id='Page_441'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Milch made particular reference to foreign workers again in this
-Document Number R-124 at Page 26, Paragraph 3—in the German
-text it appears at Page 18, Paragraph 3—when he said; and I am
-quoting him directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It is therefore not possible to exploit fully all the foreigners
-unless we compel them by piece-work wages and have the
-possibility of taking measures against foreigners who are not
-doing their bit.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The policy as actually executed was even more fearful than the
-policy as expressed by the conspirators. Indeed, these impressed
-workers were underfed and overworked; and they were forced to
-live in grossly overcrowded camps where they were held as virtual
-prisoners, and were otherwise denied adequate shelter, adequate
-clothing, adequate medical care and treatment. As a consequence,
-they suffered from many diseases and ailments. They were generally
-forced to work long hours, up to and beyond the point of
-exhaustion. They were beaten and subjected to all manner of
-inhuman indignities.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>An example of this maltreatment is found in the conditions
-which prevailed in the Krupp factories. Foreign laborers at the
-Krupp works were given insufficient food to enable them to perform
-the work required of them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I refer to Document Number D-316, which is Exhibit USA-201.
-This document was found in the Krupp files. It is a memorandum
-upon the Krupp stationery to a Herr Hupe, a director of the Krupp
-locomotive factory in Essen, Germany, dated the 14th of March
-1942. I wish to refer to Page 1 of the English text, starting with
-Paragraph 1, as follows; and I am quoting directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“During the last few days we established that the food for
-the Russians employed here is so miserable that the people
-are getting weaker from day to day.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk771'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Investigations showed that single Russians are not able to
-place a piece of metal for turning into position, for instance,
-because of lack of physical strength. The same conditions exist
-in all other places of work where Russians are employed.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The condition of foreign workers in Krupp workers’ camps is
-described in detail in an affidavit executed in Essen, Germany, by
-Dr. Wilhelm Jäger, who was the senior camp doctor. It is Document
-Number D-288, which is Exhibit USA-202.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I, Dr. Wilhelm Jäger, am a general practitioner in Essen,
-Germany, and its surroundings. I was born in Germany on
-2 December 1888 and now live at Kettwig, Sengenholz 6,
-Germany.
-<span class='pageno' title='442' id='Page_442'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk772'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I make the following statement of my own free will. I have
-not been threatened in any way and I have not been promised
-any sort of reward.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk773'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“On the 1st of October 1942, I became senior camp doctor in
-the Krupp’s workers’ camps for foreigners and was generally
-charged with the medical supervision of all Krupp’s workers’
-camps in Essen. In the course of my duties it was my responsibility
-to report upon the sanitary and health conditions of
-the workers’ camps to my superiors in the Krupp works.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk774'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It was a part of my task to visit every Krupp camp which
-housed foreign civilian workers, and I am therefore able to
-make this statement on the basis of my personal knowledge.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk775'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“My first official act as senior camp doctor was to make a
-thorough inspection of the various camps. At that time, in
-October 1942, I found the following conditions:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk776'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Eastern Workers and Poles who worked in the Krupp
-works at Essen were kept at camps at Seumannstrasse, Grieperstrasse,
-Spenlestrasse, Heegstrasse, Germaniastrasse, Kapitän-Lehmannstrasse,
-Dechenschule, and Krämerplatz.”—When
-the term “Eastern Workers” is hereinafter used, it is to be
-taken as including Poles.—“All of the camps were surrounded
-by barbed wire and were closely guarded.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk777'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Conditions in all of these camps were extremely bad. The
-camps were greatly overcrowded. In some camps there were
-twice as many people in a barrack as health conditions permitted.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk778'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“At Krämerplatz the inhabitants slept in treble-tiered bunks,
-and in the other camps they slept in double-tiered bunks.
-The health authorities prescribed a minimum space between
-beds of 50 centimeters, but the bunks in these camps were
-separated by a maximum of 20 to 30 centimeters.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk779'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The diet prescribed for the Eastern Workers was altogether
-insufficient. They were given 1,000 calories a day less than
-the minimum prescribed for any German. Moreover, while
-German workers engaged in the heaviest work received 5,000
-calories a day, the Eastern Workers with comparable jobs
-received only 2,000 calories. The Eastern Workers were given
-only two meals a day and their bread ration. One of these
-two meals consisted of a thin, watery soup. I had no assurance
-that the Eastern Workers, in fact, received the minimum
-which was prescribed. Subsequently, in 1943, I undertook
-to inspect the food prepared by the cooks; I discovered
-a number of instances in which food was withheld from the
-workers.
-<span class='pageno' title='443' id='Page_443'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk780'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The plan for food distribution called for a small quantity of
-meat per week. Only inferior meats rejected by the veterinary,
-such as horse meat or tuberculin-infested, was permitted
-for this purpose. This meat was usually cooked into
-a soup .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk781'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The percentage of Eastern Workers who were ill was twice
-as great as among the Germans. Tuberculosis was particularly
-widespread among the Eastern Workers. The tuberculosis
-rate among them was four times the normal rate (Eastern
-Workers, 2 percent; German, 0.5 percent). At Dechenschule
-approximately 2.5 percent of the workers suffered from open
-tuberculosis. The Tartars and Kirghises suffered most; as soon
-as they were overcome by this disease they collapsed like
-flies. The cause was bad housing, the poor quality and insufficient
-quantity of food, overwork, and insufficient rest.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk782'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“These workers were likewise afflicted with spotted fever.
-Lice, the carrier of this disease, together with countless fleas,
-bugs, and other vermin, tortured the inhabitants of these
-camps. As a result of the filthy conditions of the camps
-nearly all Eastern Workers were afflicted with skin disease.
-The shortage of food also caused many cases of Hunger-Oedema,
-Nephritis and Shiga-Kruse.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk783'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It was the general rule that workers were compelled to go
-to work unless a camp doctor had certified that they were
-unfit for work. At Seumannstrasse, Grieperstrasse, Germaniastrasse,
-Kapitän-Lehmannstrasse, and Dechenschule there
-was no daily sick call. At these camps the doctors did not
-appear for 2 or 3 days. As a consequence workers were
-forced to go to work despite illness.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk784'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I undertook to improve conditions as much as I could. I
-insisted upon the erection of some new barracks in order to
-relieve the overcrowded conditions of the camps. Despite this,
-the camps were still greatly overcrowded but not as much
-as before. I tried to alleviate the poor sanitary conditions in
-Krämerplatz and Dechenschule by having some emergency
-toilets installed; but the number was insufficient, and the
-situation was not materially altered .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk785'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“With the onset of heavy air raids in March 1943, conditions
-in the camps greatly deteriorated. The problem of housing,
-feeding, and medical attention became more acute than ever.
-The workers lived in the ruins of their former barracks.
-Medical supplies which were used up, lost, or destroyed were
-difficult to replace. At times the water supply at the camps
-was completely shut off for periods of 8 to 14 days. We
-<span class='pageno' title='444' id='Page_444'></span>
-installed a few emergency toilets in the camps, but there
-were far too few of them to cope with the situation.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk786'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“During the period immediately following the March 1943
-raids many foreign workers were made to sleep at the Krupp
-factories in the same rooms in which they worked. The day
-workers slept there at night, and the night workers slept
-there during the day, despite the noise which constantly
-prevailed. I believe that this condition continued until the
-entrance of American troops into Essen.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk787'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“As the pace of air raids was stepped up, conditions became
-progressively worse. On 28 July 1944 I reported to my
-superiors that:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk788'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“ ‘The sick barracks in camp Rabenhorst are in such a bad
-condition one cannot speak of a sick barracks any more. The
-rain leaks through in every corner. The housing of the sick
-is therefore impossible. The necessary labor for production
-is in danger because those persons who are ill cannot recover.’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk789'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“At the end of 1943 or the beginning of 1944—I am not
-completely sure of the exact date—I obtained permission for
-the first time to visit the prisoner-of-war camps. My inspection
-revealed that conditions at these camps were worse than
-those I had found at the camps of the Eastern Workers in
-1942. Medical supplies at such camps were virtually non-existent.
-In an effort to cure this intolerable situation, I contacted
-the Wehrmacht authorities whose duty it was to
-provide medical care for the prisoners of war. My persistent
-efforts came to nothing. After remonstrating with them over
-a period of 2 weeks, I was given a total of 100 aspirin tablets
-for over 3,000 prisoners of war.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk790'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The French prisoner-of-war camp in Nöggerathstrasse had
-been destroyed in an air raid attack and its inhabitants were
-kept for nearly half a year in dog kennels, urinals, and in
-old bakehouses. The dog kennels were 3 feet high, 9 feet
-long, and 6 feet wide. Five men slept in each of them. The
-prisoners had to crawl into these kennels on all fours. The
-camp contained no tables, chairs, or cupboards. The supply
-of blankets was inadequate. There was no water in the camp.
-Such medical treatment as there was, was given in the open.
-Many of these conditions were reported to me in a report by
-Dr. Stinnesbeck, dated 12 June 1944, in which he said:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk791'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“ ‘.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. There are still 315 prisoners in the camp. One hundred
-seventy of these are no longer in barracks but in the tunnel
-in Grunertstrasse under the Essen-Mülheim railway line.
-This tunnel is damp and is not suitable for continued accommodation
-of human beings. The rest of the prisoners are
-<span class='pageno' title='445' id='Page_445'></span>
-accommodated in 10 different factories in the Krupp works.
-The medical attention is given by a French military doctor
-who takes great pains with his fellow countrymen. Sick
-people from Krupp factories must be brought to sick call.
-This inspection is held in the lavatory of a burned-out public
-house outside the camp. The sleeping accommodation of the
-four French orderlies is in what was the men’s room. In the
-sick bay there is a double-tier wooden bed. In general the
-treatment takes place in the open. In rainy weather it is held
-in the above-mentioned small room. These are insufferable
-conditions. There are no chairs, tables, cupboards, or water.
-The keeping of a register of sick people is impossible. Bandages
-and medical supplies are very scarce, although the
-badly wounded from the factory are very often brought here
-for first aid and have to be bandaged here before being transported
-to the hospital. There are many loud and lively complaints
-about food which the guard personnel confirms as
-being justified. Illness and loss of manpower must be reckoned
-with under these conditions .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk792'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In my report to my superiors at Krupps, dated 2 September
-1944, I stated .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk793'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Camp Humboldtstrasse has been inhabited by Italian military
-internees. After it had been destroyed by an air raid,
-the Italians were removed and 600 Jewish females from
-Buchenwald concentration camp were brought to work at the
-Krupp factories. Upon my first visit at Camp Humboldtstrasse,
-I found these persons suffering from open festering
-wounds and other ailments.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk794'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I was the first doctor they had seen for at least a fortnight.
-There was no doctor in attendance at the camp. There were
-no medical supplies in the camp. They had no shoes and
-went about in their bare feet. The sole clothing of each consisted
-of a sack with holes for their arms and head. Their
-hair was shorn. The camp was surrounded by barbed wire
-and closely guarded by SS guards.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk795'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The amount of food in the camp was extremely meager and
-of very poor quality. The houses in which they lived consisted
-of the ruins of former barracks and they afforded no
-shelter against rain and other weather conditions. I reported
-to my superiors that the guards lived and slept outside their
-barracks as one could not enter them without being attacked
-by 10, 20, and up to 50 fleas. One camp doctor employed by
-me refused to enter the camp again after he had been bitten
-very badly. I visited this camp with Mr. Gröne on two occasions
-and both times we left the camp badly bitten. We had
-<span class='pageno' title='446' id='Page_446'></span>
-great difficulty in getting rid of the fleas and insects which
-had attacked us. As a result of this attack by insects of this
-camp I got large boils on my arms and the rest of my body.
-I asked my superiors at the Krupp works to undertake the
-necessary steps to delouse the camp so as to put an end
-to this unbearable vermin-infested condition. Despite this
-report, I did not find any improvement in sanitary conditions
-at the camp on my second visit a fortnight later.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk796'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“When foreign workers finally became too sick to work or
-were completely disabled, they were returned to the labor
-exchange in Essen and from there they were sent to a camp
-at Friedrichsfeld. Among persons who were returned to
-the labor exchange were aggravated cases of tuberculosis,
-malaria, neurosis, cancer which could not be treated by
-operation, old age, and general feebleness. I know nothing
-about conditions at this camp because I have never visited
-it. I only know that it was a place to which workers were
-sent who were no longer of any use to Krupp.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk797'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“My colleagues and I reported all of the foregoing matters
-to Mr. Ihn, director of Friedrich Krupp AG.; Dr. Wiele, personal
-physician of Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach;
-senior camp leader Kupke; and sometimes to the Essen
-health department. Moreover, I know that these gentlemen
-personally visited the camps.”—signed—“Dr. Wilhelm Jäger.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn now until 2 o’clock.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken until 1400 hours.</span>]</h3>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<h2><span class='pageno' title='447' id='Page_447'></span><span class='it'>Afternoon Session</span></h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: May it please the Tribunal, we had just completed
-the reading of the affidavit executed by Dr. Wilhelm Jäger at the
-noon recess. The conditions which were described in this affidavit
-were not confined to the Krupp factories alone but existed throughout
-Germany; and we turn to a report of the Polish Main Committee
-made to the Administration of the General Government of Poland,
-Document Number R-103, Exhibit Number USA-204. This document
-is dated the 17th of May 1944 and describes the situation of the
-Polish workers in Germany, and I wish to refer particularly to
-Page 2 of the English translation, starting with Paragraph 2; in the
-German text it appears at Page 2, Paragraph 2 also. In quoting
-from the document, it reads:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The state of cleanliness of many overcrowded camp rooms
-is contrary to the most elementary requirements. Often there
-is no opportunity to obtain warm water for washing; therefore,
-the cleanest parents are unable to maintain even the
-most primitive standard of hygiene for their children or often
-even to wash their only set of underclothing. A consequence
-of this is the spreading of scabies which cannot be eradicated
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk798'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“We receive imploring letters from the camps of Eastern
-Workers and their prolific families beseeching us for food.
-The quantity and quality of camp rations mentioned therein—the
-so-called class 4—is absolutely insufficient to compensate
-the energy spent in heavy work. Three and one half kilograms
-of bread weekly and a thin soup at lunch time, cooked
-with kohlrabi or other vegetables without any meat or fat,
-with a meager addition of potatoes now and then, is a starvation
-ration for a heavy worker.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk799'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“When, on top of that, starvation is sometimes inflicted as
-punishment—for refusal to wear the badge ‘East’, for
-example—the result is that workers faint at their work
-(Klosterteich Camp, Grünheim, Saxony). The consequence
-is complete exhaustion, an ailing state of health, and tuberculosis.
-The spreading of tuberculosis among the Polish
-factory workers is due to the deficient food rations meted
-out in the community camps which are insufficient to restore
-the energy spent in heavy work .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk800'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The call for help which reaches us brings to light privation
-and hunger, severe stomach and intestinal trouble, especially
-in the case of children, resulting from the insufficiency of
-food which does not take into consideration the needs of
-<span class='pageno' title='448' id='Page_448'></span>
-children. Proper medical treatment or care for the sick is
-not available in the mass camps.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We now refer to Page 3 of this same document and particularly
-to the first paragraph. In the German text it appears at Page 5,
-Paragraph 1:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In addition to these bad conditions, there is lack of systematic
-occupation for and supervision of these hosts of children
-which affects the life of prolific families in the camps. The
-children, left to themselves without schooling or religious
-care, must run wild and grow up illiterate. Idleness in rough
-surroundings may and will create undesirable results in these
-children .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. An indication of what these awful conditions
-may lead to is given by the fact that in the camps for Eastern
-Workers (‘Waldlust,’ Lauf, post office, Pegnitz) there are cases
-of 8-year-old, delicate, and undernourished children put to
-forced labor and perishing from such treatment .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk801'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The fact that these bad conditions dangerously affect the
-state of health and the vitality of the workers is proved by
-the many cases of tuberculosis found in very young people
-returning from the Reich to the General Government as unfit
-for work. Their state of health is usually so bad that recovery
-is out of the question. The reason is that a state of
-exhaustion resulting from overwork and a starvation diet is
-not recognized as an ailment until the illness betrays itself
-by high fever and fainting spells.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk802'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Although some hostels for unfit workers have been provided
-as a precautionary measure, one can only go there when
-recovery may no longer be expected (Neumarkt in Bavaria).
-Even there the incurables waste away slowly, and nothing is
-done even to alleviate the state of the sick by suitable food
-and medicines. There are children there with tuberculosis
-whose cure would not be hopeless and men in their prime
-who, if sent home in time to their families in rural districts,
-might still be able to recover .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. No less suffering is caused
-by the separation of families when wives and mothers of
-small children are away from their families and sent to the
-Reich for forced labor.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And finally, from Page 4 of the same document, starting with
-the first paragraph—in the German text it appears at Page 7, Paragraph
-4:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“If, under these conditions, there is no moral support such
-as is normally based on regular family life, then at least such
-moral support which the religious feelings of the Polish population
-require should be maintained and increased. The elimination
-of religious services, religious practices, and religious
-<span class='pageno' title='449' id='Page_449'></span>
-care from the life of the Polish workers, the prohibition of
-church attendance when there is a religious service for other
-people, and other measures show a certain contempt for the
-influence of religion on the feelings and opinions of the
-workers.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Can you tell us who the Polish Central Committee
-were—or, I mean, how they were founded?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Well, insofar as we are aware, it was a committee
-apparently set up by the Nazi State when it occupied Poland
-to work in some sort of co-operation with it during the days of the
-occupation. We don’t know the names of the members, and we
-haven’t any more specific information.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Is it a captured document?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: It is a captured document, yes, Sir. All of the
-documents that I am presenting in connection with this case are,
-excepting the Netherlands Government’s report and one or two
-other official reports, the Deuss affidavit and such other matters,
-are captured documents. That particular document, it has just been
-called to my attention, was captured by the United States 3rd Army.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Particularly harsh and brutal treatment was reserved for workers
-imported from the conquered Eastern territories. As we have
-illustrated, they did indeed live in bondage, and they were subjected
-to almost every form of degradation, quartered in stables
-with animals, denied the right of free worship and the ordinary
-pleasures of human society.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Illustrative of this treatment is Document EC-68, bearing Exhibit
-Number USA-205. This document, EC-68, bears the title, “Directives
-on the Treatment of Foreign Farm Workers of Polish Nationality,”
-issued by the Minister for Finance and Economy of Baden,
-Germany, on the 6th of March 1941. And we don’t know his name,
-nor have we been able to ascertain it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Quoting from the English text of this document from the beginning:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The agencies of the Baden State Peasant Association of the
-Reich Food Administration, have received the result of the
-negotiations with the Higher SS and Police Führer in Stuttgart
-on 14 February 1941 with great satisfaction. Appropriate
-memoranda have already been turned over to the District
-Peasants Associations. Below I promulgate the individual
-regulations as they have been laid down during the conference
-and the manner in which they are now to be applied:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk803'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. On principle, farm workers of Polish nationality are no
-longer granted the right to complain, and thus no complaints
-may be accepted by any official agency.
-<span class='pageno' title='450' id='Page_450'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk804'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. The farm workers of Polish nationality may no longer
-leave the localities in which they are employed, and have a
-curfew from 1 October to 31 March from 2000 hours to
-0600 hours and from 1 April to 30 September from 2100 hours
-to 0500 hours.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk805'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3. The use of bicycles is strictly prohibited. Exceptions are
-possible for riding to the place of work in the field if a relative
-of the employer or the employer himself is present.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk806'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“4. The visit to churches, regardless of faith, is strictly prohibited,
-even when there is no service in progress. Individual
-spiritual care by clergymen outside of the church is permitted.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk807'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“5. Visits to theaters, motion pictures, or other cultural entertainment
-are strictly prohibited for farm workers of Polish
-nationality.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk808'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“6. The visit to restaurants is strictly prohibited to farm
-workers of Polish nationality, except for one restaurant in
-the village, which will be selected by the Regional Commissioner’s
-Office”—Landratsamt—“and then only 1 day per
-week. The day which is allowed for visiting the restaurant
-will also be determined by the Landratsamt. This regulation
-does not change the curfew regulation mentioned above
-under ‘2’.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk809'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“7. Sexual intercourse with women and girls is strictly prohibited;
-and wherever it is discovered, it must be reported.</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“8. Gatherings of farm workers of Polish nationality after
-work is prohibited, whether it is on other farms, in the
-stables, or in the living quarters of the Poles.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk810'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“9. The use of railroads, buses, or other public conveyances
-by farm workers of Polish nationality is prohibited.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk811'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“10. Permits to leave the village may be granted only in very
-exceptional cases by the local police authority (mayor’s office).
-However, in no case may it be granted if a Pole wishes to
-visit a public agency on his own authority, whether it is a
-labor office or the District Peasants Association, or if he wants
-to change his place of employment.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk812'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“11. Unauthorized change of employment is strictly prohibited.
-The farm workers of Polish nationality have to work
-daily as long as it is to the interests of the enterprise and is
-demanded by the employer. There are no limits to the working
-hours.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk813'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“12. Every employer has the right to give corporal punishment
-to farm workers of Polish nationality if persuasion and
-reprimand fail. The employer may not be held accountable
-in any such case by an official agency.
-<span class='pageno' title='451' id='Page_451'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk814'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“13. Farm workers of Polish nationality should, if possible,
-be removed from the household; and they can be quartered
-in stables <span class='it'>et cetera</span>. No consideration whatever should restrict
-such action.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk815'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“14. Report to the authorities of all crimes committed by
-farm workers of Polish nationality which sabotage industry
-or slow down work—for instance, unwillingness to work,
-impertinent behavior—is compulsory even in minor cases.
-An employer who loses a Pole sentenced to a long prison
-sentence because of such a compulsory report will upon
-request, have preference for the assignment of another Pole
-from the competent labor office.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk816'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“15. In all other cases, only the State Police is still competent.
-For the employer himself, severe punishment is provided
-if it is established that the necessary distance has not
-been kept from farm workers of Polish nationality. The same
-applies to women and girls. Extra rations are strictly prohibited.
-Noncompliance with the Reich tariffs for farm workers
-of Polish nationality will be punished by the competent
-labor office by the taking away of the workers.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The women of the conquered territories were led away against
-their will to serve as domestics, and the Defendant Sauckel described
-this program in his own words, which appear in Document Number
-016-PS, already offered in evidence as Exhibit USA-168, 016-PS,
-and particularly Page 7, fourth paragraph of the English text. In
-the German text it appears on Page 10, Paragraph 1, and I quote
-directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In order to relieve considerably the German housewife,
-especially the mother with many children and the extremely
-busy farmwoman, and in order to avoid any further danger
-to their health, the Führer also has charged me with the
-procurement of 400,000 to 500,000 selected, healthy, and strong
-girls from the territories of the East for Germany.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Once captured, once forced to become laborers in Germany, or
-workers in Germany, these Eastern women, by order of the slavemaster,
-Defendant Sauckel, were bound to the household to which
-they were assigned, permitted at the most 3 hours of freedom a
-week, and denied the right to return to their homes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now refer to Document Number 3044(b)-PS. That is Exhibit
-Number USA-206. The document is a decree issued by the Defendant
-Sauckel containing instructions for housewives concerning
-Eastern household workers; and I ask that the Court take judicial
-notice of the original decree which appears on Pages 592 and 593
-of the second volume of a publication of the Zentralverlag of the
-NSDAP, entitled <span class='it'>Verfügungen, Anordnungen und Bekanntgaben</span>,
-<span class='pageno' title='452' id='Page_452'></span>
-and I quote from the first paragraph of the English translation of
-a portion of the decree as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“There is no claim for free time. Female domestic workers
-from the East may, on principle, leave the household only to
-take care of domestic tasks. As a reward for good work,
-however, they may be given the opportunity to stay outside
-the home without work for 3 hours once a week. This leave
-must end with the onset of darkness, at the latest at 2000
-hours. It is prohibited to enter restaurants, movies or other
-theaters, and similar establishments provided for German or
-foreign workers. Attending church is also prohibited. Special
-events may be arranged for Eastern domestics in urban homes
-by the German Workers’ Front, for Eastern domestics in rural
-homes by the Reich Food Administration in cooperation with
-the German Women’s League. Outside the home, the Eastern
-domestic must always carry her work card as a personal pass.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk817'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Vacations and return to homes are not granted as yet. The
-recruiting of Eastern domestics is for an indefinite period.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Always over these enslaved workers was the shadow of the
-Gestapo and the concentration camps. Like other major programs
-of the Nazi conspirators, the guards of the SS and Himmler’s
-methods of dealing with people were the instruments employed for
-enforcement.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the subject of the slave laborers, a secret order dated
-20 February 1942 issued by Reichsführer SS Himmler to SD and
-Security Police officers concerning Eastern Workers spells out the
-violence which was applied against them. It is our Document
-3040-PS, which is Exhibit Number USA-207, and I ask this Court
-to take judicial notice of the original order, which is published in
-the <span class='it'>Allgemeine Erlass-Sammlung</span> Part II, Section 2-A, III, f, Pages 15
-to 24. I wish to quote from Page 3 of the English text, starting with
-Paragraph III—in the German text it appears in Section 2-A, III, f,
-at Page 19 of the publication—as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“III. Combatting violations against discipline. (1) In keeping
-with the equal status of laborers from the original Soviet
-Russian territory with prisoners of war, a strict discipline
-must be maintained in quarters and in workshops. Violations
-against discipline, including refusal to work and loafing at
-work, will be dealt with exclusively by the secret state police.
-The less serious cases will be settled by the leader of the
-guard according to instructions from the state police headquarters
-with measures as provided for in the appendix. To
-break acute resistance, the guards shall be permitted to use
-also physical compulsion against the laborers. But this may
-be done only for a cogent reason. The laborers should always
-<span class='pageno' title='453' id='Page_453'></span>
-be informed that they will be treated decently when conducting
-themselves with discipline and accomplishing good
-work. In serious cases, that is, in such cases where the measures
-at the disposal of the leader of the guard do not suffice,
-the state police is to step in. In such instances, as a rule,
-severe measures will be taken, that is, transfer to a concentration
-camp or special treatment. The transfer to a concentration
-camp is made in the usual manner. In especially
-serious cases special treatment is to be recommended at the
-Reich Security Main Office; personal data and the exact facts
-must be given. Special treatment is hanging. It should not
-take place in the immediate vicinity of the camp. A certain
-number of laborers from the original Soviet Russian territory
-should attend the special treatment; at that time they are to
-be advised of the circumstances which lead to this special
-treatment. Should special treatment be required within the
-camp for exceptional reasons of camp discipline, this must
-be applied for.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And I turn now to Page 4 of the text, Paragraph VI; in the German
-text it appears at Section 2-A, III, f, on Page 20:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“VI. Sexual intercourse. Sexual intercourse is forbidden to
-laborers of the original Soviet Russian territory. Owing to
-their closely confined quarters they have no opportunity for
-it .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. For every case of sexual intercourse with German men
-or women application for special treatment is to be made for
-male labor from the original Soviet Russian territory, transfer
-to a concentration camp for female labor.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And finally from Page 5 of the same document, Paragraph VIII;
-and in the German text it appears at Section 2-A, III, f, at Page 21:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“VIII. Search. Fugitive workers from the original Soviet
-Russian territory are to be announced on principle in the
-German search book. Furthermore, search measures are to
-be decreed locally. When caught the fugitive must in principle
-be proposed for special treatment.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We have said to this Tribunal more than once that the primary
-purpose of the entire slave labor program was, of course, to compel
-the people of the occupied countries to work for the German war
-economy. The decree by which Defendant Sauckel was appointed
-Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor reveals that the
-purpose of the appointment was to facilitate acquisition of the manpower
-required for German war industries, and in particular the
-armaments industry, by centralizing under Sauckel responsibility
-for the recruitment and allocation of foreign labor and prisoners
-of war in these industries. I refer to the document bearing our
-Number 1666-PS—Exhibit USA-208. This document is a decree
-<span class='pageno' title='454' id='Page_454'></span>
-signed by Hitler, Lammers, and the Defendant Keitel—and it is
-dated 21 March 1942—appointing the Defendant Sauckel the Plenipotentiary
-General for the Allocation of Labor. I ask that the Court
-take judicial notice of the original decree, which is published at
-Page 179, Part I, of the 1942 <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>; referring to the
-English text starting at Paragraph 1, as follows, and quoting
-directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In order to secure the manpower requisite for war industries
-as a whole and particularly for armaments, it is necessary
-that the utilization of all available manpower, including that
-of workers recruited abroad and of prisoners of war, should
-be subject to a uniform control directed in a manner appropriate
-to the requirements of war industry, and further that
-all still incompletely utilized manpower in the Greater German
-Reich, including the Protectorate as well as in the
-Government General and in the Occupied Territories, should
-be mobilized. Reichsstatthalter and Gauleiter Fritz Sauckel
-will carry out this task within the framework of the Four
-Year Plan, as Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of
-Labor. In that capacity he will be directly responsible to the
-Delegate for the Four Year Plan. Section III (Wages) and
-Section V (Utilization of Labor) of the Reich Labor Ministry
-together with their subordinate authorities, will be placed at
-the disposal of the Plenipotentiary General for the accomplishment
-of his task.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sauckel’s success can be measured from a letter which he himself
-wrote to Hitler on 15 April 1943 and which contained his report
-on 1 year of his activities. We refer to the Document as Number
-407(VI)-PS, which bears Exhibit Number USA-209. I wish to quote
-from Paragraphs 6 and 9 on Page 1 of the English text; in the
-German text it appears at Page 2, Paragraphs 1 and 2:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“After 1 year’s activity as Plenipotentiary for the Allocation
-of Labor, I can report that 3,638,056 new foreign workers
-were given to the German war economy from 1 April of last
-year to 31 March of this year .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk818'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The 3,638,056 are distributed amongst the following branches
-of the German war economy: Armament, 1,568,801 .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Still further evidence of this steady use of enslaved foreign
-labor is found again in a report of the Central Planning Board, to
-which we have referred so many times this morning and yesterday.
-Another meeting of this Central Planning Board was held on the
-16th day of February 1944; and I refer to our Document Number
-R-124, which contains the minutes of this meeting of the Central
-Planning Board and which has been offered in evidence already as
-Exhibit Number USA-179. And I want, to refer particularly to
-<span class='pageno' title='455' id='Page_455'></span>
-Page 26, Paragraph 1 of the English text of Document Number
-R-124. It is at Page 16, in Paragraph 2, of the German text:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The armament industry employs foreign workmen to a large
-extent; according to the latest figures—40 percent.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Moreover, our Document Number 2520-PS, which is in evidence
-as Exhibit Number USA-197, records that, according to Speer Ministry
-tabulations, as of 31 December 1944, approximately 2 million
-civilian foreign workers were employed directly in the manufacture
-of armaments and munitions (finished products or parts). That, the
-bulk of these workers had been forced to come to Germany against
-their will is made clear by Sauckel’s statement, which I previously
-quoted from Paragraph 3 of Page 11 of Document Number R-124.
-We quoted it this morning, the statement being that of 5 million
-foreign workers only 200,000, or less than 200,000, came voluntarily.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Defendants Sauckel, Speer, and Keitel succeeded in forcing
-foreign labor to construct military fortifications. Thus, citizens of
-France, Holland, and Belgium were compelled against their will
-to engage in the construction of the “Atlantic Wall”; and we refer
-to our Document Number 556(2)-PS, which is Exhibit Number USA-194.
-This is a Hitler order dated the 8th of September 1942, and
-it is initialled by the Defendant Keitel. Quoting the order directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The extensive coastal fortifications which I have ordered to
-be erected in the area of Army Group West make it necessary
-that in the occupied territory all available workers be
-assigned and give the fullest extent of their productive capacities
-to this task. The previous allotment of workers originating
-from these countries is insufficient. In order to increase
-it I order the introduction of compulsory labor and the
-prohibition of changing the place of employment without permission
-of the authorities in the occupied territories. Furthermore,
-the distribution of food and clothing ration cards to
-those subject to labor draft should in the future depend on
-the possession of a certificate of employment. Refusal to
-accept an assigned job, as well as leaving the place of work
-without the consent of the authorities in charge, will result
-in the withdrawal of the food and clothing ration cards. The
-GBA”—Deputy General for Arbeitseinsatz—“in agreement
-with the military commander, as well as the Reich Commissioner,
-will issue the appropriate decrees.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Indeed, the Defendant Sauckel boasted to Hitler concerning the
-contribution of the forced labor program to the construction of the
-Atlantic Wall by the Defendant Speer’s Organization Todt. And we
-refer to Document 407(VIII)-PS, which is Exhibit Number USA-210.
-This document is a letter from the Defendant Sauckel to Hitler,
-<span class='pageno' title='456' id='Page_456'></span>
-dated the 17th day of May 1943. And I refer to the second and last
-paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In addition to the labor allotted to the total German economy
-by the Arbeitseinsatz since I took office, the Organization
-Todt was supplied with new labor continually .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-Thus the Arbeitseinsatz has done everything to help make
-possible the completion of the Atlantic Wall.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Similarly, Russian civilians were forced into labor battalions
-and compelled to build fortifications to be used against their own
-countrymen. In Document 031-PS, in evidence as Exhibit Number
-USA-171, which is a memorandum of the Rosenberg Ministry, it
-is stated in Paragraph 1 at Page 1 of that document:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The men and women in the theaters of operations have been
-and will be conscripted into labor battalions to be used in the
-construction of fortifications.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In addition, the conspirators compelled prisoners of war to
-engage in operations of war against their own country and its
-allies. At a meeting of the Central Planning Board, again held on
-February 19, 1943, attended by the Defendant Speer and the
-Defendant Sauckel and Field Marshal Milch, the following conversation
-occurred and is recorded in our Document R-124, at Page 32,
-Paragraph 5, of the English text. It is Page 20, the last paragraph,
-of the German text. And I quote it, the Defendant Sauckel speaking:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Sauckel: ‘If any prisoners are taken, they will be needed
-there.’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk819'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Milch: ‘We have made a request for an order that a certain
-percentage of men in the antiaircraft artillery must be
-Russians. Fifty thousand will be taken altogether, thirty
-thousand are already employed as gunners. It is an amusing
-thing that Russians must work the guns.’ ”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We refer now to Documents Numbers 3027-PS and 3028-PS.
-They are, respectively, Exhibit USA-211 for 3027 and USA-212 for
-3028. They will be found at the very back, I believe, of the document
-book, in a separate manila folder. They are official German
-Army photographs; and, if Your Honors will examine Document
-3027-PS, the caption states that Russian prisoners of war are acting
-as ammunition bearers during the attack upon Tschedowo. Document
-3028-PS consists of a series of official German Army photographs
-taken in July and August 1941 showing Russian prisoners
-of war in Latvia and the Ukraine being compelled to load and
-unload ammunition trains and trucks and being required to stack
-ammunition, all, we say, in flagrant disregard of the rules of international
-law, particularly Article 6 of the regulations annexed to
-the Hague Convention Number IV of 1907, which provides that the
-<span class='pageno' title='457' id='Page_457'></span>
-tasks of prisoners of war shall have no connection with the operations
-of war. The use of prisoners of war in the German armament
-industry was as widespread and as extensive almost as the use of
-the forced foreign civilian labor. We refer to Document Number
-3005-PS, which is Exhibit USA-213. This document is a secret
-letter from the Reich Minister of Labor to the presidents of the
-regional labor exchange offices, which refers to an order of the
-Defendant Göring to the effect that—I quote now from Paragraph 1
-of that document—I am quoting it directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Upon personal order of the Reich Marshal, 100,000 men are
-to be taken from among the French prisoners of war not yet
-employed in armament industry and are to be assigned to the
-armament industry (airplane industry). Gaps in manpower
-supply resulting therefrom will be filled by Soviet prisoners
-of war. The transfer of the above-named French prisoners
-of war is to be accomplished by 1 October.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Reich Marshal referred to in that quotation is of course the
-Defendant Göring.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A similar policy was followed with respect to Russian prisoners
-of war. The Defendant Keitel directed the execution of Hitler’s
-order to use prisoners of war in the German war economy. And
-I now make reference to our Document EC-194, which has Exhibit
-Number USA-214. This document is also a secret memorandum,
-according to its label, issued from Hitler’s headquarters on the
-31st of October 1941; and I read from Page 1, Paragraphs 1 and 2,
-quoting it directly as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The lack of workers is becoming an increasingly dangerous
-hindrance for the future German war and armament industry.
-The expected relief through releases from the Armed Forces
-is uncertain as to the extent and date; its probable extent will
-by no means correspond to expectations and requirements in
-view of the great demand.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk820'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer has now ordered that even the manpower of the
-Russian prisoners of war should be utilized to a large extent
-by large-scale assignments for the requirements of the war
-industry. The prerequisite for production is adequate nourishment.
-Also very small wages to provide a few every-day
-necessities must be offered with additional premiums for special
-effort, as the case may be.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And quoting now from the same document, Paragraph 2, II and
-III—I am quoting directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“II. Construction and armament industry.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk821'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(a) Work units for construction of all kinds, particularly for
-the fortification of coastal defenses (concrete workers, unloading
-units for essential war plants).
-<span class='pageno' title='458' id='Page_458'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk822'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(b) Suitable armament factories which are to be selected in
-such a way that their personnel will consist in the majority
-of prisoners of war under guidance and supervision (upon
-withdrawal and other employment of the German workers).</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk823'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“III. Other war industries.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk824'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(a) Mining as under II (b).</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk825'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(b) Railroad construction units for building tracks, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk826'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(c) Agriculture and forestry in closed units. The utilization
-of Russian prisoners of war is to be regulated on the basis
-of the above examples:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk827'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“To I. The Armed Forces.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk828'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“To II. The Reich Minister for Armament and Munitions and
-the Inspector General for the German Road System in agreement
-with the Reich Minister for Labor and Supreme Commander
-of the Armed Forces (Economic Armament Office).
-Deputies of the Reich Minister for Armament and Munitions
-are to be admitted to the prisoner-of-war camps to assist in
-the selection of skilled workers.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Göring, at a conference at the Air Ministry on
-the 7th day of November 1941, also discussed the use of prisoners
-of war in the armament industry. And we refer now to our Document
-Number 1206-PS, which bears Exhibit Number USA-215. This
-document consists of top-secret notes on Göring’s instructions as
-to the employment and treatment of prisoners of war in many
-phases of the German war industry. And I wish to quote from
-Paragraph 1 of Page 1 and Paragraph 4 of Page 2 of the English
-text and from Paragraph 1, Page 1, and Paragraph 1, Page 3 of the
-German text, as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer’s point of view as to employment of prisoners of
-war in war industries has changed basically. So far a total of
-5 million prisoners of war—employed so far 2 million.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And on Page 2:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the interior and the Protectorate it would be ideal if
-entire factories could be manned by Russian prisoners of war
-except the employees necessary for directing. For employment
-in the interior and the Protectorate the following are to
-have priority:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk829'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(a) At the top, the coal mining industry. Order by the
-Führer to investigate all mines as to suitability for employment
-of Russians, in some instances manning the entire plant
-with Russian laborers.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk830'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(b) Transportation (construction of locomotives and cars,
-repair shops, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>). Railroad-repair and factory workers
-<span class='pageno' title='459' id='Page_459'></span>
-are to be sought out from the prisoners of war. Rail is the
-most important means of transportation in the East.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk831'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(c) Armament industries. Preferably factories of armor and
-guns. Possibly also construction of parts for aircraft engines.
-Suitable complete sections of factories to be manned exclusively
-by Russians if possible. For the remainder, employment
-in groups. Use in factories of tool machinery, production of
-farm tractors, generators, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>. In emergency, erect in
-some places barracks for casual workers who are used in
-unloading units and for similar purposes. (Reich Minister of
-the Interior through communal authorities.)</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk832'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“OKW/AWA is competent for procuring Russian prisoners of
-war. Employment through Planning Board for employment
-of all prisoners of war. If necessary, offices of Reich commissariats.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk833'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“No employment where danger to men or supply exists, that
-is, factories exposed to explosives, waterworks, powerworks,
-<span class='it'>et cetera</span>. No contact with German population, especially no
-‘solidarity.’ German worker as a rule is foreman of Russians.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk834'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Food is a matter of the Four Year Plan. Procurement of
-special food (cats, horses, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>).</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk835'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Clothes, billeting, messing somewhat better than at home
-where part of the people live in caves.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk836'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Supply of shoes for Russians; as a rule wooden shoes, if
-necessary install Russian shoe repair shops.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk837'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Examination of physical fitness in order to avoid importation
-of diseases.</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Clearing of mines as a rule by Russians; if possible by
-selected Russian engineer troops.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Göring was not the only one of these defendants
-who sponsored and applied the policy of using prisoners of war in
-the armament industry. The Defendant Speer also sponsored and
-applied this same policy of using prisoners of war in the armament
-industry. And we refer to the document bearing our Number 1435-PS,
-which also carries Exhibit Number USA-216. This document is
-a speech to the Nazi Gauleiter delivered by the Defendant Speer
-on the 24th day of February of 1942, and I wish to read from Paragraph
-2 of that document, and I quote as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I therefore proposed to the Führer at the end of December
-that all my labor force, including specialists, be released for
-mass employment in the East. Subsequently the remaining
-prisoners of war, about 10,000, were put at the disposal of
-the armament industry by me.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He also reported at the 36th meeting of the Central Planning
-Board, held on the 22d day of April 1943, that only 30 percent of
-<span class='pageno' title='460' id='Page_460'></span>
-the Russian prisoners of war were engaged in the armament industry.
-This the Defendant Speer found unsatisfactory. And referring
-again to Document R-124, the minutes of the Central Planning
-Board, and particularly to Page 17 of that document, Paragraph 10
-of the English text, and Page 14, Paragraph 7 of the German text,
-we find this statement by the Defendant Speer, quoting directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“There is a detailed statement showing in what sectors the
-Russian prisoners of war have been distributed. This statement
-is quite interesting. It shows that the armaments industry
-received only 30 percent. I constantly complained about
-this.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And at Page 20 of the same document, R-124—Paragraph 1 on
-Page 20 of the English text and Page 14, the last paragraph of the
-German text—the Defendant Speer stated, and I quote from the
-paragraph directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The 90,000 Russian prisoners of war employed in the whole
-of the armament industry are for the greatest part skilled
-men.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Sauckel, who was appointed Plenipotentiary General
-for the utilization of labor for the express purpose, among
-others, of integrating prisoners of war into the German war industry,
-made it plain that prisoners of war were to be compelled to
-serve the German armament industry. His labor mobilization program,
-which is Document 016-PS, already marked Exhibit USA-168,
-contains this statement on Page 6, Paragraph 10 of the English
-text and Page 9, Paragraph 1, of the German text:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“All prisoners of war now in Germany, from the territories
-of the West as well as of the East, must be completely incorporated
-into the German armament and food industries.
-Their production must be brought to the highest possible
-level.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I wish to turn now from the exploitation of foreign labor in
-general to a rather special point of the Nazi program which appears
-to us to have combined the brutality and the purposes of the slave
-labor program with those of the concentration camp. The Nazis
-placed all Allied nationals in concentration camps and forced them,
-along with the other inmates of the concentration camps, to work
-under conditions which were set actually to exterminate them. This
-was what we call the Nazi program of extermination through work.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the spring of 1942 these conspirators turned to the concentration
-camps as a further source of slave labor for the armament
-industry. I refer to a new Document Number R-129, bearing Exhibit
-Number USA-217. This document is a letter to Himmler, the Reichsführer
-SS—and it is dated the 30th day of April 1942—from one
-<span class='pageno' title='461' id='Page_461'></span>
-of his subordinates, an individual named Pohl, SS Obergruppenführer
-and General of the Waffen-SS; and I wish to quote from
-the first page of that document. Quoting directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Today I report about the present situation of the concentration
-camps and about measures I have taken to carry out
-your order of the 3rd of March 1942.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then moving on from paragraphs numbered 1, 2, and 3 on Page 2
-of the English text and at Page 1 of the German text, I quote as
-follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. The war has brought about a marked change in the structure
-of the concentration camps and has changed their duties
-fundamentally with regard to the employment of the prisoners.
-The custody of prisoners for the sole reasons of security,
-education, or as a preventive measure is no longer the
-main consideration. The importance now lies in the economic
-side. The mobilization of all prisoner labor for purposes of
-the war (increase of armament) now, and for purposes of construction
-in the forthcoming peace, is coming more and more
-to the foreground.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk838'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. From this knowledge necessary measures result which
-require a gradual transformation of the concentration camps
-from their former one-sided political character into an organization
-adapted to economic tasks.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk839'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3. For this reason I called together all the leaders of the
-former inspectorate of concentration camps, all camp commanders,
-and all managers and supervisors of work, on the
-23rd and 24th of April 1942 and explained personally to them
-this new development. I have compiled, in the order attached,
-the essential points which have to be brought into effect with
-the utmost urgency if the commencement of work for the
-purposes of the armament industry is not to be delayed.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now the order referred to in that third paragraph set the framework
-for a program of relentless exploitation, providing in part as
-follows—and I now refer to the enclosure appended to the quoted
-letter which is also a part of Document R-129, found at Page 3,
-Paragraphs numbered 4, 5, and 6 of the English text, and Page 3
-of the German text:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“4. The camp commander alone is responsible for the utilization
-of the manpower available. This utilization must be,
-in the true meaning of the word, complete, in order to obtain
-the greatest measure of performance. Work is allotted only
-centrally and by the Chief of the Department D. The camp
-commanders themselves may not accept on their own initiative
-work offered by third parties and may not negotiate about it.
-<span class='pageno' title='462' id='Page_462'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk840'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“5. There is no limit to working hours. Their duration depends
-on the kind of working establishments in the camps and the
-kind of work to be done. They are fixed by the camp commanders
-alone.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk841'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“6. Any circumstances which may result in a shortening of
-working hours (for example, meals, roll-calls, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>), have
-therefore to be restricted to an irreducible minimum. Time-wasting
-walks and noon intervals, only for the purpose of
-taking meals, are forbidden.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The armament production program we have just described was
-not merely a scheme for mobilizing the manpower potential of the
-camps. It actually was integrated directly into the larger Nazi program
-of extermination; and I wish to refer, at this point, to our
-document bearing Number 654-PS and Exhibit Number USA-218.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Do you think it will be convenient to break
-off now for a few minutes?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Very well.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: At the recess time I had made reference to Document
-Number 654-PS, which has the Exhibit Number USA-218. This
-document is a memorandum of an agreement between Himmler,
-Reichsführer SS, and the Minister of Justice, Thierack. It is dated
-the 18th of September 1942. The concept of extermination to which
-I referred shortly before the recess was embodied in this document
-and I wish to quote from Page 1, Paragraph 2:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. Transfer of asocial elements from prison to the Reichsführer
-SS for extermination through work. To be transferred without
-exception are persons under protective arrest, Jews, Gypsies,
-Russians and Ukrainians, Poles with more than 3-year
-sentences, Czechs, and Germans with more than 8-year sentences,
-according to the decision of the Reich Minister for
-Justice. First of all the worst asocial elements amongst those
-just mentioned are to be handed over. I shall inform the
-Führer of this through Reichsleiter Bormann.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now this agreement further provided, in Paragraph 12 on Page 2
-of the English text and Page 3, Paragraph 14, of the German text,
-as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“14. It is agreed that, in consideration of the intended aims
-of the Government for the clearing up of the Eastern
-problems, in the future, Jews, Poles, Gypsies, Russians, and
-Ukrainians are no longer to be tried by the ordinary courts,
-so far as punishable offenses are concerned; but are to be
-<span class='pageno' title='463' id='Page_463'></span>
-dealt with by the Reichsführer SS. This does not apply to
-civil lawsuits, nor to Poles whose names are reported or
-entered in the German racial lists.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, in September of 1942, the Defendant Speer made arrangements
-to bring this new source of labor within his jurisdiction.
-Speer convinced Hitler that significant production could be obtained
-only if the concentration camp prisoners were employed in factories
-under the technical control of the Speer Ministry instead of the
-control in the camps. In fact, without Defendant Speer’s cooperation,
-we say it would have been most difficult to utilize the prisoners on
-any large scale for war production, since he would not allocate to
-Himmler the machine tools and other necessary equipment. Accordingly,
-it was agreed that the prisoners were to be exploited in factories
-under the Defendant Speer’s control. To compensate Himmler
-for surrendering this jurisdiction to Speer, the Defendant Speer
-proposed and Hitler agreed, that Himmler would receive a share of
-the armaments output, fixed in relation to the man-hours contributed
-by his prisoners. In the minutes of the Defendant Speer’s
-conference with Hitler on the 20th, 21st, and the 22d September
-1942—Document Number R-124, which is Exhibit Number USA-179—I
-wish to refer particularly to Page 34 of the English text. These
-are the Defendant Speer’s minutes on this conference. I am quoting
-from Page 34, Paragraph 36, beginning at the middle of the page;
-and it is at the top of Page 26 in the German text:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I pointed out to the Führer that, apart from an insignificant
-amount of work, no possibility exists of organizing armament
-production in the concentration camps, because: (1) the
-machine tools required are missing; (2) there are no suitable
-premises. Both these assets would be available in the armament
-industry, if use could be made of them by a second
-shift.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk842'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer agrees to my proposal that the numerous factories
-set up outside towns for reasons of air raid protection
-should release their workers to supplement the second shift
-in town factories and should in return be supplied with labor
-from the concentration camps—also two shifts.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk843'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I pointed out to the Führer the difficulties which I expect
-to encounter if Reichsführer SS Himmler should be able, as
-he requests, to exercise authoritative influence over these factories.
-The Führer, too, does not consider such an influence
-necessary.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk844'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer, however, agrees that Reichsführer SS Himmler
-should derive advantage from making his prisoners available;
-he should get equipment for his division.
-<span class='pageno' title='464' id='Page_464'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk845'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I suggest giving him a share in kind (war equipment) in
-ratio to the man-hours contributed by his prisoners. A 3 to
-5 percent share is being discussed, the equipment also being
-calculated according to man-hours. The Führer would agree
-to such a solution.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk846'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer is prepared to order the additional allocation of
-this equipment and weapons to the SS, upon submission of
-a list.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After a demand for concentration-camp labor had been created
-and after a mechanism had been set up by the Defendant Speer for
-exploiting this labor in armament factories, measures were evolved
-for increasing the supply of victims for extermination through work.
-A steady flow was assured by an agreement between Himmler and
-the Minister of Justice mentioned above, which was implemented
-by such programs as the following—and I refer to Document L-61,
-Exhibit Number USA-177; and I wish to quote from Paragraph 3.
-That document, the Tribunal will recall, is the Defendant Sauckel’s
-letter, dated the 26th of November 1942, to the presidents of the
-Länder employment offices; and I wish to quote from Paragraph 3
-of that letter:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Poles who are to be evacuated as a result of this measure
-will be put into concentration camps and put to work insofar
-as they are criminal or asocial elements.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>General measures were supplemented by special drives for persons
-who would not otherwise have been sent to concentration
-camps.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Didn’t you read that this morning?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Yes, I did, Your Honor. I was reading it again with
-particular reference to this feature of the proof.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For example, for “reasons of war necessity” Himmler ordered
-that at least 35,000 prisoners qualified for work should be transferred
-to concentration camps. I now offer in evidence Document
-Number 1063(d)-PS, which is Exhibit Number USA-219. This document
-is a Himmler order dated the 17th of December 1942. The
-order provides, and I quote in part, beginning with the first paragraph
-of that document:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“For reasons of war necessity not to be discussed further here,
-the Reichsführer SS and Chief of the German Police, on the
-14th of December 1942, has ordered that by the end of
-January 1943 at least 35,000 prisoners fit for work are to be
-sent to the concentration camps. In order to reach this number,
-the following measures are required:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk847'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(1) As of now, to begin with, until 1 February 1943, all
-Eastern Workers or foreign workers who have been fugitives
-<span class='pageno' title='465' id='Page_465'></span>
-or who have broken contracts and who do not belong to allied,
-friendly, or neutral states .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. are to be brought by the
-quickest means to the nearest concentration camps .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk848'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(2) The commanders and the commandants of the Security
-Police and the Security Service, and the chiefs of the state
-police headquarters will check immediately on the basis of
-a close and strict rule: (a) the prisons, and (b) the labor
-reformatory camps.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk849'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“All prisoners fit for work, if it is practically and humanly
-possible, will be committed at once to the nearest concentration
-camp, according to the following instructions, even
-for example, those who are about to be brought to trial.
-Only such prisoners can be left there who, in the interest
-of further investigations, are to remain absolutely in solitary
-confinement.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk850'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Every single laborer counts!”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Measures were also adopted to insure that this extermination
-through work was practiced with maximum efficiency. Subsidiary
-concentration camps were established near important war plants.
-The Defendant Speer has admitted that he personally toured Upper
-Austria and selected sites for concentration camps near various
-munitions factories in the area. I am about to refer to the transcript
-of an interrogation under oath of the Defendant Albert Speer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, do you understand the last document
-you read, 1063-PS, to refer to prisoners of war, or prisoners
-in ordinary prisons, or what?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: We understood it to refer to prisoners in ordinary
-prisons.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In view of the Tribunal’s ruling this morning, I think I should
-state that, with respect to this interrogation of Defendant Speer,
-we had provided the defendants’ counsel with the entire text in
-German. It happens to be a brief interrogation, and so we were
-able to complete that translation, and it has been placed in their
-Information Center.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. HANS FLÄCHSNER (Counsel for Defendant Speer): In
-reference to the transcript of the interrogation, the reading of which
-the prosecutor has just announced, I should like to say the following:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is true that we have received the German transcript of the
-English protocol, if one may call it a protocol. A comparison of
-the English text with the German transcript shows that there are,
-both in the English text and in the German transcript, mistakes
-which change the meaning and which I believe are to be attributed
-to misunderstandings on the part of the certifying interpreter. I
-<span class='pageno' title='466' id='Page_466'></span>
-believe, therefore, that the so-called protocol and the English text
-do not actually give the contents of what Defendant Speer tried
-to express during the interrogation. It would, therefore, not further
-the establishment of the truth should this protocol ever be used.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, when was the German translation
-given to counsel for the defendant?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: About 4 days ago, Your Honor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, is there any certification by the
-interrogator as to the English translation?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: There is, Your Honor. There is a certification at
-the end of the interrogation by the interrogator and by the interpreter
-and by the reporter as well. There are three certifications.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I think the best course will be, in these circumstances,
-to receive the interrogation now. You will have an
-opportunity, by calling the defendant, to show in what way he
-alleges, or you allege, that the interrogation is inaccurately translated.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. FLÄCHSNER: Thank you, Sir.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: May I respectfully refer, Your Honor, to the last
-document in the document book, 4 pages from the end?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Which page do you refer to?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: I refer to the page bearing the Number 16 of the
-English text of the transcript of the interrogation and Page 21 of
-the German text. The answer quoted is:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The fact was that we were anxious to use workers from concentration
-camps in factories and to establish small concentration
-camps near factories, in order to use the manpower
-that was then available there. But it did not come up only
-in connection with this trip .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>That is, Speer’s trip to Austria. (Exhibit USA-220)</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I think I ought to say to defendant’s counsel
-that if he had waited until he heard that piece of evidence read,
-he would have seen that it was quite unnecessary to make any
-objection.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Defendant Göring endorsed this use of concentration
-camp labor and asked for more. We refer to our Document
-1584-PS, Part 1, which is Exhibit Number USA-221. This document
-is a teletype message from Göring to Himmler, dated 14th of
-February 1944. I quote from the document beginning with the
-second sentence:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“At the same time, I ask you to put at my disposal as great
-a number of KZ”—concentration-camp—“convicts as possible
-<span class='pageno' title='467' id='Page_467'></span>
-for air armament, as this kind of manpower proved to be
-very useful according to previous experience. The situation
-of the air war makes subterranean transfer of industry
-necessary. For work of this kind KZ convicts can be
-especially well concentrated at work and in the camp.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Defendant Speer subsequently assumed responsibility for this
-program; and Hitler promised Speer that if the necessary labor for
-the program could not be obtained, a hundred thousand Hungarian
-Jews would be brought in by the SS.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Speer recorded his conferences with Hitler on April 6 and
-April 7, 1944 in Document R-124, which is Exhibit Number USA-179,
-already in evidence. I quote from Page 36 of the English text,
-Page 29 of the German text as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Suggested to the Führer that, due to lack of builders and
-equipment, the second big building project should not be set
-up in German territory but in close vicinity to the border
-on a suitable site (preferably on gravel base and with transport
-facilities) in French, Belgian, or Dutch territory. The
-Führer agrees to this suggestion if the works could be set
-up behind a fortified zone. The strongest argument for setting
-up this plant in French territory is the fact that it would be
-much easier to procure the necessary workers. Nevertheless,
-the Führer asks that an attempt be made to set up the second
-factory in a safer area, namely the Protectorate. If it should
-prove impossible there, too, to get hold of the necessary
-workers, the Führer himself will contact the Reichsführer SS
-and will give an order that the required 100,000 men are to
-be made available by bringing in Jews from Hungary.
-Stressing the fact that in the case of the Industriegemeinschaft
-Schlesien the building organization was a failure, the
-Führer demands that these works must be built by the OT
-exclusively, and that the workers should be made available
-by the Reichsführer SS. He wants to hold a meeting shortly
-in order to discuss details with all the men concerned.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The unspeakably brutal, inhumane, and degrading treatment
-inflicted on Allied nationals and other victims of concentration
-camps, while they were indeed being literally worked to death, is
-described in Document L-159, which is not in the document book.
-It is an official report prepared by a U.S. Congressional committee,
-U.S. Senate Document Number 47. This Congressional committee
-had inspected the liberated camps at the request of General Eisenhower.
-It bears Exhibit Number USA-222. I would like to quote
-from the document briefly, first from Page 14, the last paragraph,
-and from Page 15, the first two paragraphs, of the English text:
-<span class='pageno' title='468' id='Page_468'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The treatment accorded to these prisoners in the concentration
-camps was generally as follows: They were herded
-together in some wooden barracks not large enough for one-tenth
-of their number. They were forced to sleep on wooden
-frames covered with wooden boards in tiers of two, three,
-and even four, sometimes with no covering, sometimes with
-a bundle of dirty rags serving both as pallet and coverlet.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk851'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Their food consisted generally of about one-half of a pound
-of black bread per day and a bowl of watery soup for noon
-and night, and not always that. Owing to the great numbers
-crowded into a small space and to the lack of adequate
-sustenance, lice and vermin multiplied, disease became
-rampant, and those who did not soon die of disease or torture
-began the long, slow process of starvation. Notwithstanding
-the deliberate starvation program inflicted upon these
-prisoners by lack of adequate food, we found no evidence
-that the people of Germany, as a whole, were suffering from
-any lack of sufficient food or clothing. The contrast was so
-striking that the only conclusion which we could reach was
-that the starvation of the inmates of these camps was
-deliberate.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk852'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Upon entrance into these camps, newcomers were forced to
-work either at an adjoining war factory or were placed ‘in
-commando’ on various jobs in the vicinity, being returned
-each night to their stall in the barracks. Generally a German
-criminal was placed in charge of each ‘block’ or shed in which
-the prisoners slept. Periodically he would choose the one
-prisoner of his block who seemed the most alert or intelligent
-or showed most leadership qualities. These would report to
-the guards’ room and would never be heard from again. The
-generally accepted belief of the prisoners was that these were
-shot or gassed or hanged and then cremated. A refusal to
-work or an infraction of the rules usually meant flogging and
-other types of torture, such as having the fingernails pulled
-out, and in each case usually ended in death after extensive
-suffering. The policies herein described constituted a calculated
-and diabolical program of planned torture and extermination
-on the part of those who were in control of the
-German Government .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I quote next from Page 11 of the English text beginning with
-the second sentence of Paragraph 2, a description of Camp Dora at
-Nordhausen, Page 12, Paragraph 1 of the German text, quoting as
-follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“On the whole, we found this camp to have been operated
-and administered much in the same manner as Buchenwald
-<span class='pageno' title='469' id='Page_469'></span>
-had been operated and managed. When the efficiency of the
-workers decreased as a result of the conditions under which
-they were required to live, their rations were decreased as
-punishment. This brought about a vicious circle in which the
-weak became weaker and were ultimately exterminated.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Such was the cycle of work, torture, starvation, and death for
-concentration-camp labor—labor which the Defendant Göring, while
-requesting that more of it be placed at his disposal, said had proved
-very useful; labor which the Defendant Speer was “anxious” to use
-in the factories under his control.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The policy underlying this program, the manner in which it was
-executed, and the responsibility of the conspirators in connection
-with it has been dwelt upon at length. Therefore, we should like,
-at this point, to discuss the special responsibility of the Defendant
-Sauckel.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Sauckel’s appointment as Plenipotentiary General
-for manpower is explained probably first of all by his having been
-an old and trusted Nazi. He certified in Document 2974-PS, dated
-17 November 1945, which is already in evidence before this Tribunal
-as Exhibit Number USA-15, that he held the following positions:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Starting with his membership in the NSDAP, he was thereafter
-a member of the Reichstag; he was Gauleiter of Thuringia; he was
-a member of the Thuringian legislature; he was Minister of Interior
-and head of the Thuringian State Ministry; he was Reichsstatthalter
-for Thuringia; he was an SA Obergruppenführer; he was SS Obergruppenführer;
-he was administrator for the Berlin-Suhler Waffen
-and Fahrzeugwerke in 1935; he was head of the Gustloff Werke
-Nationalsozialistische Industrie-Stiftung, 1936, and the honorary
-head of the Foundation. And from the 21st of March 1942 until
-1945, he was the Plenipotentiary General for Labor Allocation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sauckel’s official responsibilities are borne out by evidence. His
-appointment as Plenipotentiary General for manpower was effected
-by a decree of the 21st of March 1942, which we have read and
-which was signed by Hitler, Lammers, and the Defendant Keitel.
-And by that decree Sauckel was given authority, as well as responsibility,
-subordinate only to that of Hitler and Göring, who was the
-head of the Four Year Plan—subordinate only to those two for all
-matters relating to recruitment, allocation, and handling of foreign
-and domestic manpower.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Göring, to whom Sauckel was directly responsible,
-abolished the recruitment and allocation agencies of his Four
-Year Plan and delegated their powers to the Defendant Sauckel and
-placed his far-reaching authority as deputy for the Four Year Plan
-at Sauckel’s disposal.
-<span class='pageno' title='470' id='Page_470'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In Document 1666-PS, a second 1666-PS but of another date, the
-27th of March 1942—I ask the Tribunal to take judicial notice of
-this original decree, which is published in the 1942 <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>,
-Part I, at Page 180:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In pursuance of the Führer’s decree of 21st of March 1942,
-I decree as follows:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk853'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. My manpower sections are hereby abolished (circular
-letter of 22d of October 1936). Their duties (recruitment and
-allocation of manpower, regulation of labor conditions) are
-taken over by the Plenipotentiary General for Allocation of
-Labor, who is directly under me.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk854'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. The Plenipotentiary General for Allocation of Labor will
-be responsible for regulating the conditions of labor (wage
-policy) employed in the Reich territory, having regard to the
-requirements of labor allocation.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk855'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3. The Plenipotentiary General for Allocation of Labor is
-part of the Four Year Plan. In cases where new legislation
-is required or existing laws need to be modified; he will submit
-appropriate proposals to me.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk856'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“4. The Plenipotentiary General for Allocation of Labor will
-have at his disposal for the performance of his task the right
-delegated to me by the Führer for issuing instructions to the
-highest Reich authorities and their subordinate offices, as well
-as the Party offices and their sections and their affiliated
-organizations, also to the Reich Protector, the Governor
-General, the military commanders, and heads of the civil
-administrations. In the case of ordinances and instructions
-of fundamental importance, a report is to be submitted to me
-in advance.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Document Number 1903-PS is a Hitler decree of the 30th of September
-1942 giving the Defendant Sauckel extraordinary powers
-over the civil and military authority of the territories occupied by
-Germany. We ask that judicial notice be taken by this Tribunal
-of the original decree, which is published in Volume II, Page 510,
-of the <span class='it'>Verfügungen, Anordnungen, und Bekanntgaben</span>, published by
-the Party Chancellery. This decree states as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I herewith authorize the Plenipotentiary General for Allocation
-of Labor, Reich Governor and Gauleiter Fritz Sauckel
-to take all necessary measures for the enforcement of my
-decree of 21 March 1942, concerning a Plenipotentiary General
-for Allocation of Labor (<span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span> I, Page 179), according
-to his own judgment, in the Greater German Reich, in the
-Protectorate, and in the Government General, as well as in
-the Occupied Territories—measures which will safeguard
-under all circumstances the regulated deployment of labor
-<span class='pageno' title='471' id='Page_471'></span>
-for the German war economy. For this purpose he may
-appoint commissioners to the bureaus of the military and
-civilian administration. These are responsible directly to the
-Plenipotentiary General for Allocation of Labor. In order to
-carry out their tasks, they are entitled to issue directives to
-the competent military and civilian authorities in charge of
-labor allocation and of wage policy.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk857'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“More detailed directives will be issued by the Plenipotentiary
-General for Allocation of Labor.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk858'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Führer headquarters, 30 September 1942. The Führer,”—signed—“Adolf
-Hitler.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Within 1 month after his appointment, the Defendant Sauckel
-sent Defendant Rosenberg his “Labor Mobilization Program”. This
-program, Document Number 016-PS, already in evidence as Exhibit
-USA-168, envisaged a recruitment by force and the maximum
-exploitation of the entire labor resources of the conquered areas
-and of prisoners of war in the interests of the Nazi war machine
-at the lowest conceivable degree of expenditure to the German
-State.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Sauckel states—and I refer now to the bottom
-of Page 6 of the English text of that document. It is Page 9, Paragraph
-2, of the German text, and I quote as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It must be emphasized, however, that an additional tremendous
-number of foreign laborers has to be found for the
-Reich. The greatest pool for that purpose is the occupied
-territories of the East. Consequently, it is an imperative
-necessity to use the human reserves of the conquered Soviet
-territory to the fullest extent. Should we not succeed in obtaining
-the necessary amount of labor on a voluntary basis,
-we must immediately institute conscription of forced labor.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk859'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Apart from the prisoners of war still in the occupied territories,
-we must, therefore, requisition skilled or unskilled
-male and female labor from the Soviet territory from the age
-of 15 up, for the German allocation of labor.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Passing to Page 11 of the English text, first paragraph and
-Page 17, Paragraph 4, of the German text, I quote, as follows
-directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The complete employment of all prisoners of war as well as
-the use of a gigantic number of new foreign civilian workers,
-men and women, has become an indisputable necessity for the
-solution of the problem of the allocation of labor in this war.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Sauckel proceeded to implement this plan, which
-he submitted, with certain basic directives. He provided that if
-voluntary recruitment of foreign workers was unsuccessful compulsory
-service should be instituted.
-<span class='pageno' title='472' id='Page_472'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Document Number 3044-PS is the Defendant Sauckel’s Regulation
-Number 4, dated the 7th of May 1942. And we ask that the Tribunal
-take judicial notice of the original regulation published in
-Volume II, Pages 516 to 527 of the <span class='it'>Verfügungen, Anordnungen, und
-Bekanntgaben</span>, to which I have previously referred. Reading from
-Page 1, Paragraph 3, of the English text:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The recruitment of foreign labor will be done on principle
-on a volunteer basis. Where, however, in the occupied territories
-the appeal for volunteers does not suffice, obligatory service
-and drafting must, under all circumstances, be resorted
-to. This is an indisputable requirement of our labor situation.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sauckel provided also for the allocation of foreign labor in the
-order of its importance to the Nazi war machine. We refer to Document
-Number 3044(a)-PS, which is the Defendant Sauckel’s Regulation
-Number 10, and ask that the Court take judicial notice of the
-original regulation, published in Volume II, <span class='it'>Verfügungen, Anordnungen,
-und Bekanntgaben</span>, at Pages 531 to 533. Paragraph 3 of
-this regulation I quote as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The resources of manpower that are available in the occupied
-territories are to be employed primarily to satisfy the requirements
-of importance for the war in Germany itself. In allocating
-the said labor resources in the Occupied Territories,
-the following order of priority will be observed:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk860'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(a) Labor required for the troops, the occupation authorities,
-and the civil authorities;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk861'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(b) Labor required for German armament;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk862'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(c) Labor required for food and agriculture;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk863'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(d) Labor required for industrial work in the interests of
-Germany, other than armaments;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk864'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(e) Labor required for industrial work in the interests of
-the population of the territory in question.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Sauckel, and agencies subordinate to him, exercised
-exclusive authority over the recruitment of workers from
-every area in Europe occupied by, controlled by, or friendly to, the
-German nation. He affirmed, himself—the Defendant Sauckel did—this
-authority in a decree, Document Number 3044-PS, already
-in evidence as Exhibit Number USA-206. I refer to Paragraph 5
-on Page 1 of the English text of that document, and I am quoting
-it directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The recruitment of labor in the areas occupied by Germany
-will be carried out exclusively by the labor allocation offices
-of the German military or civil administration in these areas.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Haven’t you read that already?
-<span class='pageno' title='473' id='Page_473'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: No, I have not, if Your Honor pleases. We have
-referred to that decree before, but we have not referred to this
-portion of it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I am passing to Paragraph II, 1-a on Page 2, and quoting again
-directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“For the carrying out of recruitment in allied, friendly, or
-neutral foreign countries, my commissioners are solely responsible.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In addition, the following defendants, who were informed by
-Sauckel of the quotas of foreign laborers which he required, collaborated
-with Sauckel and his agents in filling these quotas: The
-Defendant Keitel, Chief of the OKW—which was the Supreme
-Command—who collaborated with Sauckel.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We refer to Document Number 3012(1)-PS, which is Exhibit
-Number USA-190. This document is the record of a telephone conversation
-of the Chief of the Economic Staff East of the German
-Army, and it is dated March 11, 1943. I wish to quote from the
-first two paragraphs of the document as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Plenipotentiary General for Allocation of Labor, Gauleiter
-Sauckel, points out to me in an urgent teletype that
-the allocation of labor in German agriculture, as well as all
-the most urgent armament programs ordered by the Führer,
-make the most rapid procurement of approximately 1 million
-women and men from the newly occupied Eastern Territories
-within the next 4 months an imperative necessity. For this
-purpose, Gauleiter Sauckel demands the shipment of 5,000
-workers daily beginning 15 March; 10,000 workers, male and
-female, beginning 1 April, from the newly occupied Eastern
-Territories.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I am passing down to the next paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In consideration of the extraordinary losses of workers which
-occurred in German war industry because of the developments
-of the past months, it is now necessary that the recruiting
-of workers be taken up again everywhere with all vigor.
-The tendency momentarily noticeable in that territory, to
-limit and/or entirely stop the Reich recruiting program, is
-absolutely not bearable in view of this state of affairs. Gauleiter
-Sauckel, who is informed about these events, because
-of this applied directly to General Field Marshal Keitel on
-10 March 1943, in a teletype, and emphasized on this occasion
-that, as in all other occupied territories, where all other
-methods fail, a certain pressure must be used, by order of the
-Führer.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At this point we were prepared to offer a transcript of an interrogation
-under oath of the Defendant Sauckel. Only the English
-<span class='pageno' title='474' id='Page_474'></span>
-of the transcript of the interrogation has been seen by the Counsel
-for the Defendant Sauckel. He has had it, however, for some time;
-and the excerpts on which we intended to rely were furnished to
-him as well in German.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If I understood the ruling of the Tribunal correctly, it would
-be necessary for us to have furnished the entire record in German.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I think you might use this interrogation, as
-the excerpts have been submitted in German.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Yes, they have, Your Honor, and the entire English
-text as, well.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Very well.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: I refer to a transcript of an interrogation under
-oath of the Defendant Sauckel, held on the morning of the 5th of
-October 1945 (Exhibit USA-224). That is the very last document in
-the document book. I wish to quote from the bottom of Page 1 of
-the English text and Page 1, Paragraph 11, of the German text, as
-follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: ‘Was it necessary, in order to accomplish the completion
-of the quotas given, to have liaison with the OKW?’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk865'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: ‘I remember that the Führer had given directives to Marshal
-Keitel, telling him that my task was a very important
-one; and I, too, have often conferred with Keitel after such
-discussions with the Führer, when I asked him for his
-support.’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk866'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: ‘It was his task to supervise the proper performance of
-the military commanders in the occupied countries in carrying
-but their assigned mission, was it not?’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk867'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: ‘Yes, the Führer had told me that he would inform the
-Chief of the OKW and the Chief of the Reich Chancellery as to
-these matters. The same applies to the Foreign Minister.’ ”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We are also prepared to offer the transcript of an interrogation
-of the Defendant Alfred Rosenberg. There is this distinction insofar
-as this record is concerned. While we have supplied the counsel
-with the German translation of those parts of it which we propose
-to use, we have not had an opportunity to supply the whole text
-to counsel. However, they have been supplied with the German of
-the parts which we propose to use and to offer to this Tribunal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Well, you are prepared to do it hereafter,
-I suppose?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Yes, we will, Your Honor, as soon as we can get
-these papers down to the Information Center.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Good.
-<span class='pageno' title='475' id='Page_475'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: The next document is rather lengthy, and I wonder
-what the Tribunal’s pleasure is. Do I understand that I may proceed
-with the interrogation?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: I wish to refer to the Defendant Alfred Rosenberg,
-the Reich Minister for Eastern Occupied Territories, as one who
-also collaborated with the Defendant Sauckel, and specifically, to
-refer to a transcript of an interrogation under oath of the Defendant
-Rosenberg, on the afternoon of the 6th of October 1945 (Exhibit
-USA-187). That record may be found about the third from the last
-of the interrogation records in the document book, and I wish to
-read from Page 1 of the transcript:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: ‘Isn’t it a fact that Sauckel would allocate to the various
-areas under your jurisdiction the number of persons to be
-obtained for labor purposes?’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk868'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: ‘Yes.’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk869'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: ‘And that thereafter your agents would obtain that labor
-in order to meet the quota which had been given. Is that
-right?’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk870'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: ‘Sauckel, normally, had very far-reaching desires, which
-one could not fulfil unless one looked very closely into the
-matter.’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk871'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: ‘Never mind about Sauckel’s desires being far-reaching
-or not being far-reaching. That has nothing to do with it.
-You were given quotas for the areas over which you had
-jurisdiction, and it was up to you to meet that quota?’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk872'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: ‘Yes. It was the responsibility of the administrative officials
-to receive this quota and to distribute the allotments
-over the districts in such a way, according to number and
-according to the age groups, that they would be most reasonably
-met.’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk873'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: ‘These administrative officials were part of your organization,
-isn’t that right?’</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: ‘They were functionaries or officials of the Reich Commissioner
-for the Ukraine; but, as such, they were placed in
-their office by the Ministry for the Eastern Occupied Territories.’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk874'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: ‘You recognized, did you not, that the quotas set by
-Sauckel could not be filled by voluntary labor; and you did
-not disapprove of the impressment of forced labor. Isn’t that
-right?’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk875'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: ‘I regretted that the demands of Sauckel were so urgent
-that they could not be met by a continuation of voluntary
-<span class='pageno' title='476' id='Page_476'></span>
-recruitments, and thus I submitted to the necessity of forced
-impressment.’ ”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then, passing a little further down on that page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: ‘The letters that we have already seen between you and
-Sauckel do not indicate, do they, any disagreement on your
-part with the principle of recruiting workers against their
-will? They indicate, as I remember, that you were opposed
-to the treatment that was later accorded these workers, but
-you did not oppose their initial impressment.’ ”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, I think you ought to read the next
-two answers in fairness to the Defendant Rosenberg, after the one
-where he said he submitted to the necessity of forced impressment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Very well, I shall read those, Your Honor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: “ ‘Did you ever argue with Sauckel .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.’ ”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Yes.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: ‘Did you ever argue with Sauckel that perhaps in view
-of the fact that the quotas could not be met by voluntary
-labor, the labor recruiting program be abandoned, except for
-what recruits could be voluntarily enrolled?’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk876'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: ‘I could not do that because the numbers or allotments
-that Sauckel had received from the Führer to meet were
-absolutely binding for him, and I couldn’t do anything about
-that.’ ”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then, referring again to the question which I had just read,
-the answer is as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“ ‘That is right. In those matters I mostly discussed the possibility
-of finding the least harsh methods of handling the
-matter, whereas in no way did I place myself in opposition
-to the orders that he was carrying out for the Führer.’ ”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I think the Tribunal might adjourn now.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Very well, Your Honor.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>The Tribunal adjourned until 13 December 1945 at 1000 hours.</span>]</h3>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='477' id='Page_477'></span><h1>NINETEENTH DAY<br/> <span style='font-size:smaller'>Thursday, 13 December 1945</span></h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'><span class='it'>Morning Session</span></h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: May it please the Tribunal, at the close of yesterday’s
-session we were discussing and had just completed reading
-the excerpts from the interrogation of 6 October 1945, wherein the
-Defendant Alfred Rosenberg was questioned.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There have already been introduced Documents 017-PS and
-019-PS and I have read excerpts from them. The Tribunal will
-recall that they are letters written by the Defendant Sauckel to
-the Defendant Rosenberg requesting the assistance of the Defendant
-Rosenberg in the recruitment of additional foreign laborers. I refer
-to them in passing, by way of recapitulation, with respect to the
-Defendant Sauckel’s participation in this slave-labor program and
-also the assistance of the Defendant Rosenberg. Also the Defendant
-Sauckel received help from the Defendant Seyss-Inquart who was
-the Reich Commissioner for the occupied Netherlands.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I refer again to the transcript of the interrogation under oath of
-the Defendant Sauckel, which was read from yesterday; and I now
-refer to another part of it. The transcript of this interrogation will
-be found in the rear of the document book. It is the very last
-document and I wish to quote particularly from it. It is the first
-question:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: For a moment, I want to turn our attention to Holland.
-It is my understanding that the quotas for the workers from
-Holland were agreed upon, and then the numbers given to
-the Reich Commissioner Seyss-Inquart to fulfill, is that correct?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk877'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: Yes, that is correct.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk878'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: After the quota was given to Seyss-Inquart, it was his
-mission to fulfill it with the aid of your representatives; was
-it not?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk879'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: Yes. This was the only possible thing for me to do and
-the same applied to other countries.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And the Defendant Hans Frank, who was the Governor General
-of the Government General of Poland, also participated in the filling
-of Defendant Sauckel’s quota requirements.
-<span class='pageno' title='478' id='Page_478'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I refer again to the interrogation of the Defendant Sauckel and
-to Page 1 of the excerpts from the transcript of this interrogation
-as it appears in the document book:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: Was the same procedure substantially followed of allocating
-quotas in the Government General of Poland?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk880'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: Yes. I have principally to repeat that the only possibility
-I had in carrying through these missions was to get in touch
-with the highest German military authority in the respective
-country and to transfer to them the orders of the Führer and
-ask them very urgently, as I have always done, to fulfill these
-orders.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk881'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: Such discussions in Poland, of course, were with the
-Governor General Frank?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk882'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: Yes. I spent a morning and an afternoon in Kraków
-twice or three times and I personally spoke to Governor
-General Frank. Naturally, there was also present Secretary
-Dr. Goebbels.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The SS, as in most matters involving the use of force and brutality,
-also extended its assistance. We refer to Document Number
-1292-PS, which is Exhibit USA-225. This Document, 1292-PS, is the
-report of the chief of the Reich Chancellery, Lammers, of a conference
-with Hitler, which was attended by, among others, the
-Defendant Sauckel, the Defendant Speer, and Himmler, the Reichsführer
-SS. I turn to Page 2 of the document, beginning with the
-third line from the top of the page of the English text; and it is
-Page 4, Paragraph 2 of the German text. The quotation reads as
-follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Plenipotentiary General for Allocation of Labor, Sauckel,
-declared that he will attempt with fanatical determination to
-obtain these workers. Until now he has always kept his
-promises as to the number of workers to be furnished. With
-the best of intentions, however, he is unable to make a definite
-promise for 1944. He will do everything in his power to
-furnish the requested manpower in 1944. Whether it will
-succeed depends primarily on what German executive agents
-will be made available. His project cannot be carried out
-with indigenous executive agents.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There are additional quotations, as the Tribunal may observe,
-in this very part from which I have been reading, but I intend to
-refer to them again a little further on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Sauckel participated in the formulation of the
-over-all labor requirements for Germany and passed out quotas to
-be filled by and with the assistance of the individuals and agencies
-referred to, in the certain knowledge that force and brutality were
-<span class='pageno' title='479' id='Page_479'></span>
-the only means whereby his demands could be met. Turning to
-Document 1292-PS again, and quoting from Page 1:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. A conference took place with the Führer today which was
-attended by:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk883'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor,
-Gauleiter Sauckel; the Secretary for Armament and War
-Production, Speer; the Chief of the Supreme Command of
-the Army, General Field Marshal Keitel; General Field Marshal
-Milch; the acting Reich Minister for Food and Agriculture,
-State Secretary Backe; the Minister of the Interior,
-Reichsführer of the SS, Himmler; and myself. (The Minister
-for Foreign Affairs and the Minister of National Economy had
-repeatedly asked to be permitted to participate prior to the
-conference, but the Führer did not wish their attendance.)”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Continuing the quotation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer declared in his introductory remarks:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk884'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“ ‘I want a clear picture:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk885'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“ ‘(1) How many workers are required for the maintenance of
-German war economy?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk886'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“ ‘(a) For the maintenance of present output?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk887'/>
-
-<hr class='tbk888'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“ ‘(b) To increase its output?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk889'/>
-
-<hr class='tbk890'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“ ‘(2) How many workers can be obtained from occupied countries,
-or how many can still be gained in the Reich by suitable
-means (increased output)? For one thing, it is a matter of
-making up for losses of labor by death, infirmity, the constant
-fluctuation of workers, and so forth; and further it is a matter
-of procuring additional workers.’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk891'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor,
-Sauckel, declared that, in order to maintain the present
-amount of workers he would have to add at least 2½ but
-probably 3 million new workers in 1944. Otherwise production
-would fall off.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk892'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Reich Minister Speer declared that he needed an additional
-1,300,000 laborers. However, this would depend on whether
-it will be possible to increase production of iron ore. Should
-this not be possible, he would need no additional workers.
-Procurement of additional workers from occupied territory
-would, however, be subject to the condition that these workers
-will not be withdrawn from armament and auxiliary
-industries already working there. For this would mean a
-decrease of production of these industries which he could not
-tolerate. Those, for instance, who are already working in
-France in industries mentioned above must be protected
-<span class='pageno' title='480' id='Page_480'></span>
-against being sent to work in Germany by the Plenipotentiary
-General for the Allocation of Labor.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk893'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer agreed with the opinions of Reich Minister Speer
-and emphasized that the measures taken by the Plenipotentiary
-General for the Allocation of Labor should create no
-circumstances which would lead to the withdrawal of workers
-from armament and auxiliary industries working in occupied
-territories, because such a shifting of workers would
-only cause disturbance of production in occupied countries.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk894'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Führer further called attention to the fact that at least
-250,000 laborers will be required for preparations against air
-attacks in the field of civilian air raid protection. For Vienna
-alone 2,000-2,500 are required immediately. The Plenipotentiary
-General for the Allocation of Labor will need at least
-4 million workers considering that he requires 2½ million
-workers for maintenance of the present level, that Reich
-Minister Speer needs 1,300,000 additional workers, and that
-the above-mentioned preparations for security measures
-against air attacks call for 250,000 laborers.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Referring again to Page 2, the first full paragraph of the English
-text of this document, and Page 5, Paragraph 1, of the German text:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Reichsführer SS explained that the executive agents
-put at his disposal are extremely few, but that he would try
-helping the Sauckel project to succeed by increasing them
-and working them harder. The Reichsführer SS made immediately
-available 2,000 to 2,500 men from concentration camps
-for air raid preparations in Vienna.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Passing the next paragraph of this document and continuing
-with the paragraph entitled “Results of the Conference” and quoting
-it directly after the small figure 1:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Plenipotentiary General for Allocation of Labor shall
-procure at least 4 million new workers from occupied territories.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Moreover, as Document 3012-PS, which has already been offered
-as Exhibit USA-190, revealed, the Defendant Sauckel, in requesting
-the assistance of the Army for the recruitment of 1 million men and
-women from the Occupied Eastern Territories, informed the Defendant
-Keitel that prompt action was required and that, as in all other
-occupied countries, pressure had to be used if other measures were
-not successful. Again, as revealed by Document 018-PS, which has
-been offered and from which excerpts have been read, the Defendant
-Sauckel was informed by the Defendant Rosenberg that the enslavement
-of foreign labor was achieved by force and brutality. Notwithstanding
-his knowledge of these conditions, the Defendant
-Sauckel continued to request greater supplies of manpower from
-<span class='pageno' title='481' id='Page_481'></span>
-the areas in which the most ruthless methods had been applied.
-Indeed, when German field commanders on the Eastern Front
-attempted to resist or restrain the Defendant Sauckel’s demands,
-because forced recruitment was swelling the ranks of the partisans
-and making the Army’s task more difficult, Sauckel sent a telegram
-to Hitler, in which he implored him, Hitler, to intervene.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I make reference to Document Number 407(II)-PS, which bears
-Exhibit Number USA-226. This document is a telegram from the
-Defendant Sauckel to Hitler dated 10 March 1943. It is a rather
-long message, but I wish to call particularly to the attention of the
-Tribunal the last paragraph on Page 1 of the English text. It is
-Page 2, Paragraph 5 of the German text. Quoting the last paragraph
-of the English text:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Therefore, my Führer, I ask you to abolish all orders which
-oppose the obligation of foreign workers for labor and kindly
-to report to me whether my conception of the mission presented
-here is still right.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Turning to Paragraph 5 on the first page of this English text,
-we find these words, quoting them directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“If the obligation for labor and the forced recruiting of workers
-in the East is not possible any more, then the German
-war industries and agriculture cannot fulfill their tasks to the
-full extent.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The next paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I myself have the opinion that our Army leaders should not
-give credence, under any circumstances, to the atrocity and
-defamatory propaganda campaign of the partisans. The generals
-themselves are greatly interested that the support for
-the troops is made possible in time. I should like to point out
-that hundreds of thousands of excellent workers going into
-the field as soldiers now cannot possibly be replaced by German
-women not used to work, even if they are trying to do
-their best. Therefore, I have to use the people of the Eastern
-Territories.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I think you should read the next paragraph.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>MR. DODD: “I myself report to you that the workers belonging
-to all foreign nations are treated humanely, and correctly,
-and cleanly; are fed and housed well and are even clothed.
-On the basis of my own services with foreign nations I go as
-far as to state that never before in the world were foreign
-workers treated as correctly as they are now, in the hardest
-of all wars, by the German people.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In addition to being responsible for the recruitment of foreign
-civilian labor by force, Defendant Sauckel was responsible for the
-<span class='pageno' title='482' id='Page_482'></span>
-conditions under which foreign workers were deported to Germany
-and for the treatment to which they were subjected within Germany.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We have already referred to the conditions under which these
-imported persons were transported to Germany and we have read
-from Document 2241(3)-PS to show that Sauckel knew of these conditions.
-Yesterday we referred at length to the brutal, degrading,
-and inhumane conditions under which these laborers worked and
-lived within Germany. We again invite the attention of the Tribunal
-to Document 3044-PS, already offered as Exhibit USA-206. It
-is Regulation Number 4 of 7 May 1942, issued by Sauckel as the
-Plenipotentiary General for the mobilization of labor, concerning
-recruitment, care, lodging, feeding, and treatment of foreign workers
-of both sexes. By this decree Defendant Sauckel expressly
-directed that the assembly and operation of rail transports and the
-supplying of food therefor was the responsibility of his agents
-until the transports arrived in Germany. By the same regulation
-Defendant Sauckel directed that within Germany the care of foreign
-industrial workers was to be carried out by the German Labor
-Front and that the care of foreign agricultural workers was to be
-carried out by the Reich Food Administration. By the terms of the
-regulation, Sauckel reserved for himself ultimate responsibility for
-all aspects of care, treatment, lodging, and feeding of foreign workers
-while in transit to and within Germany.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I refer particularly to the English text of this Document 3044-PS,
-Exhibit USA-206; and the part of it that I make reference to is at
-the bottom of Page 1 in the English text, and it appears at Page 518
-of the volume in the German text. Quoting directly from the English
-text:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The care of foreign labor will be carried out:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk895'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(a) Up to the Reich border by my commissioners or, in the
-occupied areas, by competent military or civil labor allocation
-agencies; care of the workers will be carried out in co-operation
-with the respective, competent foreign organization;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk896'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(b) Within the area of the Reich (1) by the German Labor
-Front in the cases of non-agricultural workers, (2) by the
-Reich Food Administration in the case of agricultural workers.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk897'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The German Labor Front and the German Food Administration
-are bound by my directives in the carrying out of their
-tasks of caring for the workers.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk898'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The administrative agencies for the Allocation of Labor are
-to give far-reaching support to the German Labor Front and
-the German Food Administration in the fulfillment of their
-assigned tasks.
-<span class='pageno' title='483' id='Page_483'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk899'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“My competence for the execution of the care for foreign
-labor is not prejudiced by the assignment of these tasks to
-the German Labor Front and the Reich Food Administration.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, don’t you think that that sort of
-passage is the sort of passage which might be summarized and not
-read, because all that it is really stating is that Sauckel, his department
-and commissioners, were responsible and that is what he is
-saying.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Yes, indeed, Your Honor, we spelled it out, thinking
-that perhaps under the rule of getting it into the record it must be
-read fully. I quite agree.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: A summary will be quite sufficient, I think.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: In the same document, I should like to make
-reference to the data on Page 3, Paragraph III, of the English text,
-which indicate, under the title of “Composition and Operation of
-the Transports” that this function is the obligation of the representatives
-of the Defendant Sauckel; and in Paragraph “c,” on
-Page 5 of the English text, under the title of “Supply for the
-Transport,” after setting out some responsibility for the Office of
-the German Workers Front, the Defendant Sauckel states that for
-the rest his offices effect the supply for the transport.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Sauckel had an agreement with the head of the
-German Labor Front, Dr. Robert Ley, and in this agreement the
-Defendant Sauckel emphasized his ultimate responsibility by creating
-a central inspectorate charged with examining the working and
-living conditions of foreign workers. We refer to Document 1913-PS,
-Exhibit USA-227. This agreement between the Defendant Sauckel
-and the then Chief of the German Labor Front is published in the
-1943 edition of the <span class='it'>Reichsarbeitsblatt</span>, Part I, at Page 588. It is a
-rather lengthy agreement; and I shall not read it all or any great
-part of it except such part as will indicate the basic agreements
-between the Defendant Sauckel and Ley with respect to the foreign
-workers and their living conditions and working conditions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the first page of the English text:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Reichsleiter of the German Labor Front, Dr. Ley, in
-collaboration with the Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation
-of Labor, Gauleiter Sauckel, will establish a ‘Central
-Inspection’ for the continuous supervision of all measures
-concerning the care of the foreign workers mentioned under 1.
-This will have the designation: Central Inspection for Care
-of Foreign Workers.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Paragraph 4 marked with the Roman numeral IV, in the same
-text, states:
-<span class='pageno' title='484' id='Page_484'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The offices for the administration of the Allocation of Labor
-will be constantly informed by the ‘Central Inspection for the
-Care of Foreign Workers’ of its observations, in particular,
-immediately in each case in which action of state organizations
-seems to be necessary.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I should also like to call the attention of the Tribunal to this
-paragraph, which is quoted on the same page. It is the fourth paragraph
-down after the small number 2 and it begins with the words:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The authority of the Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation
-of Labor to empower the members of his staff and the
-presidents of the state employment offices to get direct information
-on the conditions regarding the employment of foreigners
-in the factories and camps will remain untouched.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We have already offered to the Court proof that the Defendant
-Sauckel was responsible for compelling citizens of the occupied
-countries, against their will, to manufacture arms and munitions
-and to construct military fortifications for use in war operations
-against their own country and its allies. He was, moreover, responsible
-for having compelled prisoners of war to produce arms and
-munitions for use against their own countries and their actively
-resisting allies.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The decree appointing Sauckel indicates that he was appointed
-Plenipotentiary General for manpower for the express purpose,
-among others, of integrating prisoners of war into the German war
-industry; and in a series of reports to Hitler, Sauckel described how
-successful he had been in carrying out that program. One such
-report states that in a single year the Defendant Sauckel had
-incorporated 1,622,829 prisoners of war into the German economy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I refer to Document Number 407(V)-PS, which is Exhibit USA-228.
-It is a letter from the Defendant Sauckel to Hitler on the
-14th of April 1943. Although the figures in the document have been
-contained in another document, this is the first introduction of this
-particular document. Quoting from Paragraphs 1 and 2 of the English
-text, it begins:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“My Führer:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk900'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. after having been active as Plenipotentiary for the Allocation
-of Labor for one year, I have the honor to report to
-you that 3,638,056 new foreign workers have been added to
-the German war economy between April 1st of the last year
-and March 31st of this year.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Passing on a little bit, with particular reference to the prisoners
-of war, we find this statement:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Besides the foreign civilian workers another 1,622,829 prisoners
-of war are employed in the German economy.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='485' id='Page_485'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A later report states that 846,511 additional foreign laborers and
-prisoners of war were incorporated into the German war industry;
-and quoting from Document 407(IX)-PS, Exhibit USA-229, which is
-also a letter from the Defendant Sauckel to Hitler, I read in part
-from Page 1, Paragraphs 1 and 2:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“My Führer:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk901'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I beg to be permitted to report to you on the situation of
-the Arbeitseinsatz for the first 5 months of 1943. For the first
-time the following number of new foreign laborers and prisoners
-of war were employed in the German war industry .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-Total: 846,511.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This use of prisoners of war in the manufacture of armaments
-allocated by the Defendant Sauckel was confirmed by the Defendant
-Speer, who stated that 40 percent of all prisoners of war were
-employed in the production of weapons and munitions and in subsidiary
-industries. I wish to refer briefly to Paragraphs 6, 7, and 8
-on Page 15 of the English text of an interrogation of the Defendant
-Speer, on the 18th of October 1945, which was offered and referred
-to yesterday and has the Exhibit Number USA-220. Quoting from
-Paragraphs 6, 7 and 8 on Page 15—Paragraph 1 on Page 19 of the
-German text—there are two questions which will establish the
-background for this answer:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: Let me understand; when you wanted labor from prisoners
-of war did you requisition prisoners of war separately,
-or did you ask for a total number of workers?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk902'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: Only Schmelter can answer that directly. As far as the
-commitment of prisoners of war for labor goes, it was effected
-through employment officers of the Stalags. I tried several
-times to increase the total number of prisoners of war that
-were occupied in production, at the expense of the other
-demands.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk903'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: Will you explain that a little more?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk904'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: In the last phase of production, that is, in the year 1944
-when everything collapsed, I had 40 percent of all prisoners
-of war employed in production. I wanted to have this percentage
-increased.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk905'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: And when you say ‘employed in production’, you mean
-in these subsidiary industries that you have discussed and
-also in the production of weapons and munitions, is that
-right?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk906'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: Yes. That was the total extent of my task.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE TRIBUNAL (Mr. Biddle): What do you mean by “subsidiary
-industries,” Mr. Dodd? Is that war industries?
-<span class='pageno' title='486' id='Page_486'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Yes, Sir; war industries, as we understand it. It
-was referred to many times by these defendants as the component
-parts of the plans.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I also would like to call the attention of the Tribunal again to
-the “Minutes of the 36th Meeting of the Central. Planning Board,”
-Document R-124, from which we read a number of excerpts yesterday,
-and remind the Tribunal that in the report of the minutes of
-that meeting the Defendant Speer stated that, “Ninety thousand
-Russian prisoners of war employed in the whole of the armament
-industry are for the greater part skilled men.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We should like, at this point, to turn to the special responsibility
-of the Defendant Speer and to discuss the evidence of the
-various crimes committed by Defendant Speer in planning and
-participating in the vast program of forcible deportation of the
-citizens of occupied countries. He was the Reich Minister of Armaments
-and Munitions and Chief of the Organization Todt, both of
-which positions he acquired on the 15th of February 1942; and by
-virtue of his later acquisition of control over the armament offices
-of the Army, Navy, and Air Force, and the production offices of the
-Ministry of Economics, the Defendant Speer was responsible for the
-entire war production of the Reich as well as for the construction
-of fortifications and installations for the Wehrmacht. Proof of the
-positions held by the Defendant Speer is supplied in his own statement
-as contained in Document 2980-PS, which has already been
-offered to the Tribunal and which bears Exhibit Number USA-18.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The industries under the Defendant Speer’s control were really
-the most important users of manpower in Germany; and thus,
-according to the Defendant Sauckel, Speer’s labor requirements
-received unconditional priority over all other demands for labor.
-We refer to the transcript of the interrogation of the Defendant
-Sauckel on the 22d of September 1945. It is Exhibit USA-230. It
-is next to the last document in the document book. I wish to refer
-to Page 1 of that document, Paragraph 4. It is a brief reference,
-the last answer on the page. The question was asked of the Defendant
-Sauckel:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: Except for Speer, they would give the requirements in
-general for the whole field; but in Speer’s work you would
-get them allocated by industry, and so on—is that right?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk907'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: The others only got whatever was left. Because Speer
-told me once in the presence of the Führer that I am here to
-work for Speer and that, mainly, I am his man.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Speer has admitted under oath that he participated
-in the discussions during which the decision to use foreign
-forced labor was made. He has also said that he concurred in the
-decision and that it was the basis for the program of bringing foreign
-workers into Germany by compulsion. I make reference to the
-<span class='pageno' title='487' id='Page_487'></span>
-interrogation of the Defendant Speer of the 18th of October 1945.
-It bears the Exhibit Number USA-220. We have already read from
-it; and I particularly refer to the bottom of Page 12 and the top of
-Page 13 of the English text:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: But is it clear to you, Mr. Speer, that in 1942 when the
-decisions were being made concerning the use of forced foreign
-labor, that you participated in the discussions yourself?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk908'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: Yes.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk909'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: So that I take it that the execution of the program of
-bringing foreign workers into Germany by compulsion under
-Sauckel was based on earlier decisions that had been made
-with your agreement?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk910'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: Yes, but I must point out that only a very small part of
-the manpower that Sauckel brought into Germany was made
-available to me; a far larger part of it was allocated to other
-departments that demanded them.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This admission is confirmed by the minutes of Speer’s conferences
-with Hitler on 10, 11, and 12 August 1942 in Document R-124,
-which has been offered here and from which excerpts have been
-read. Page 34 of that document, Paragraph 1 of the English text,
-has already been quoted, and those excerpts have been read before
-the Tribunal yesterday. The Tribunal will recall that the Defendant
-Speer related the outcome of his negotiations concerning the
-forcible recruitment of 1 million Russian laborers for the German
-armaments industry; and this use of force was again discussed by
-Hitler and Defendant Speer on the 4th of January 1943 as shown
-by the excerpts read from the Document 556(13)-PS, where it was
-decided that stronger measures were to be used to accelerate the
-conscription of French civilian workers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We say the Defendant Speer demanded foreign workers for the
-industries under his control and used those workers with the knowledge
-that they had been deported by force and were being compelled
-to work. Speer has stated under oath in his interrogation of
-18 October 1945, Page 5, Paragraph 9, of the English text, quoting
-it directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I do not wish to give the impression that I want to deny
-the fact that I demanded manpower and foreign labor from
-Sauckel very energetically.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He has admitted that he knew he was obtaining foreign labor,
-a large part of which was forced labor; and referring again to that
-same interrogation of the 18th of October 1945, and to Pages 8 and
-9 of the English text and Page 10 of the German text:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: So that during the period when you were asking for
-labor, it seems clear, does it not, that you knew you were
-<span class='pageno' title='488' id='Page_488'></span>
-obtaining foreign labor as well as domestic labor in response
-to your requests and that a large part of the foreign labor
-was forced labor?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk911'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: Yes.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk912'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: So that, simply by way of illustration, suppose that on
-January 1, 1944 you require 50,000 workers for a given purpose;
-would you put in a requisition for 50,000 workers, knowing
-that in that 50,000 there would be forced foreign workers?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk913'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: Yes.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Speer has also stated under oath that he knew
-at least as early as September of 1942 that workers from the Ukraine
-were being forcibly deported for labor into Germany. Likewise he
-knew that the great majority of the workers of the western occupied
-countries were slave laborers forced against their will to come to
-Germany; and again referring to his interrogation of this 18th day
-of October 1945, and beginning with the fourth Paragraph from the
-bottom of Page 5 of the English text, Paragraph 10 on Page 6 of
-the German text, we find this series of questions and answers:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: When did you first find out then that some of the manpower
-from the Ukraine was not coming voluntarily?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk914'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: It is rather difficult to answer this here, that is, to name
-a certain date to you. However, it is certain that I knew that
-at some particular point of time the manpower from the
-Ukraine did not come voluntarily.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk915'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: And does that apply also to the manpower from other
-occupied countries; that is, did there come a time when you
-knew that they were not coming voluntarily?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk916'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: Yes.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk917'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: When, in general, would you say that time was without
-placing a particular month of the year?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk918'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: As far as the Ukraine situation goes, I believe that they
-did not come voluntarily any more after a few months, because
-immense mistakes were made in their treatment by us. I
-should say offhand that this time was either in July, August,
-or September of 1942.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Turning to Paragraph 11 on Page 6 of the English text of this
-same interrogation and Page 7 and Paragraph 8 of the German
-text, we find this series of questions and answers—quoting:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: But many workers actually did come from the west to
-Germany, did they not?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk919'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: Yes.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk920'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: That means then, that the great majority of the workers
-that came from the western countries—the western occupied
-countries—came against their will to Germany?
-<span class='pageno' title='489' id='Page_489'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk921'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: Yes.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>These admissions are borne out, of course, by other evidence,
-for as Document R-124 shows and as we have shown by the readings
-from it, in all countries conscription for work in Germany could
-be carried out only with the active assistance of the police; and the
-prevailing methods of recruitment had provoked such violence that
-many German recruiting agents had been killed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And again, at a meeting with Hitler to discuss the manpower
-requirements for 1944, which is reported in Document 1292-PS,
-Speer was informed by the Defendant Sauckel that the requirements—including
-Speer’s requirement for 1,300,000 additional laborers—could
-be met only if German enforcement agents were furnished
-to carry out the enslavement program in the occupied countries.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now we say that notwithstanding this knowledge that these
-workers were conscripted and deported to Germany against their
-will, Speer nevertheless continued to formulate requirements for
-the foreign workers and requested their allocation to these industries
-which were subject to his control. This is borne out by the
-minutes of the Central Planning Board as contained in Document
-R-124, and particularly Page 13, Paragraph 4 of the English text;
-and that is Page 6 and Paragraph 4 of the German text. Speer
-speaking:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Now the labor problem in Germany. I believe it is still
-possible to transfer some from the western territories. Only
-recently the Führer stated he wishes to dissolve these foreign
-volunteers as he had the impression that the army groups
-were carting around with them a lot of ballast. Therefore, if
-we cannot settle this matter ourselves, we shall have to call
-a meeting with the Führer to clear up the whole coal situation.
-Keitel and Zeitzler will be invited to attend in order
-to determine the number of Russians from the rear army
-territories who must be sent to us. However, I see another
-possibility: We might organize another drive to pick out
-workers for the mines from the Russian prisoners of war in
-the Reich. But this possibility is none too promising.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At another meeting of the Central Planning Board the Defendant
-Speer rejected a suggestion that labor for industries under his
-control be furnished from German sources instead of from foreign
-sources. And again in this Document R-124, on Page 16, Paragraphs
-3, 4, and 5 of the English text, and Page 12, Paragraphs 6
-and 7 of the German text—I quote the Defendant Speer:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“We do it that way: Kehrl collects the demands for labor
-necessary to complete the coal-and-iron plan and communicates
-the numbers to Sauckel. Probably there will be a conference
-at the Reich Marshal’s in the next week, and an
-<span class='pageno' title='490' id='Page_490'></span>
-answer from Sauckel should have arrived by then. The question
-of recruitment for the armaments industry will be solved
-together with Weger.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Kehrl speaking:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I wish to urge that the allotments to the mines should not
-be made dependent on the possibility of recruitment of men
-abroad. We were completely frustrated these last 3 months
-because this principle had been applied. We ended December
-with a deficit of 25,000 and we never get replacements. The
-number must be made up by men from Germany.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk922'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Speer: ‘No, nothing doing.’ ”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We say also that, the Defendant Speer is guilty of advocating
-terror and brutality as a means of maximizing, production by slave
-laborers. And again I refer to this Document R-124. At Page 42
-there is a discussion concerning the supply and exploitation of labor.
-That excerpt has been read to the Tribunal before, and I simply
-refer to it in passing. It is the excerpt wherein Speer said it would
-be a good thing; the effect of it was that nothing could be said
-against the SS and the police taking a hand and making these men
-work and produce more.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We say he is also guilty of compelling allied nationals and prisoners
-of war to engage in the production of armaments and munitions
-and in direct military operations against their own country.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We say that as Chief of the Organization Todt he is accountable
-for its policies, which were in direct conflict with the laws of war;
-for the Organization Todt, in violation of the laws of war, impressed
-allied nationals into its service.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Document L-191, Exhibit USA-231, is an International Labor
-Office study of the exploitation of foreign labor by Germany. We
-have only one copy of this document, this International Labor Office
-study, printed at Montreal, Canada, in 1945. We ask that the Tribunal
-take judicial notice of it as an official publication of the International
-Labor Office.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I might say to the Tribunal, with some apology, that this arrived
-at a time when we were not able even to have the excerpt mimeographed
-and printed to place in your document book, so this is the
-one document which is missing from the document book which is in
-your hands. However, I should like to quote from Page 73, Paragraph
-2, of this study by the International Labor Office. It is not
-long; it is very brief. I am quoting directly. It says:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The methods used for the recruitment of foreign workers
-who were destined for employment in the Organization did
-not greatly differ from the methods used for the recruitment
-of foreigners for deportation to Germany.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='491' id='Page_491'></span></p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Organization,” by the way, is the Organization Todt. Going
-on with the quotation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The main difference was that, since the principal activities
-of the Organization lay outside the frontiers of Germany, foreigners
-were not transported to Germany but had either to
-work in their own country or in some other occupied country.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk923'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the recruitment drives for foreign workers for the Organization,
-methods of compulsion as well as methods of persuasion
-were used, the latter usually with very little result.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Moreover, conscripted allied nationals were compelled by this
-same Organization Todt actually to engage in operations of war
-against their country.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Document 407(VIII)-PS discloses that the foreign workers who
-were impressed into the Organization Todt through the efforts of
-the Defendant Sauckel did participate in the building of the Atlantic
-Wall fortifications.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As chief of German war production, this Defendant Speer sponsored
-and approved the use of these prisoners of war in the production
-of armaments and munitions. This has been made plain
-by the evidence already discussed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To sum it up briefly finally we say that it shows first that after
-Speer assumed the responsibility for the armament production, his
-concern, in his discussions with his co-conspirators, was to secure
-a larger allocation of prisoners of war for his armament factories.
-That has been shown by the quotations from the excerpts of Document
-R-124, the minutes of the meeting of the Central Planning
-Board; and in this same meeting the Tribunal will recall that Speer
-complained because only 30 percent of the Russian prisoners of war
-were engaged in the armaments industry.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We referred to a speech of Speer, Document 1435-PS—we
-quoted from it—in which he said that 10,000 prisoners of war
-were put at the disposal of the armaments industry upon his orders.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And finally, Speer advocated the returning of escaped prisoners
-of war to factories as convicts. That is shown again by Document
-R-124, Page 13, Paragraph 5, of the English text, where the
-Defendant Speer says that he has come to an arrangement .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, don’t you think that we have
-really got this sufficiently now?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Yes, Sir; I just .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: We have Speer’s own admission and any
-number of documents which prove the way in which these prisoners
-of war and other laborers were brought into Germany.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Well I just wanted to refer briefly to that passage
-in that document, R-124, as showing that this defendant advocated
-having escaped prisoners of war returned to the munitions factories.
-<span class='pageno' title='492' id='Page_492'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: What page?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Thirteen. I don’t want to labor this responsibility
-of the Defendant Speer. I was anxious—or perhaps I should say
-we are all overanxious—to have the documents in the record, and
-before the Tribunal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Which is the passage you want to refer to
-on Page 13?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: I just referred in passing to the statement which
-begins with the words, “We have to come to an arrangement with
-the Reichsführer SS.” And in the next to the last sentence it says:
-“The men should be put into the factories as convicts.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Finally, with reference to the Defendant Speer, I should like
-to say to the Tribunal that he visited the concentration camp at
-Mauthausen and he also visited factories such as those conducted
-by the Krupp industries, where concentration camp labor was
-exploited under degrading conditions. Despite this first-hand
-knowledge of these conditions, both in Mauthausen and in the
-places where these forced laborers were at work in factories, he
-continued to direct the use of this type of labor in factories under
-his own jurisdiction.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: How do you intend to prove it as to these
-concentration camps?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: I was going to refer the Tribunal to Page 9 of
-the interrogation of the 18th of October 1945; and I refer to Page 11,
-Paragraph 5, of the German text and Page 9, beginning with
-Paragraph 9, of the English text:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: But, in general, the use of concentration camp labor was
-known to you and approved by you as a source of labor?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk924'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: Yes.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk925'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: And you knew also, I take it, that among the inmates
-of the concentration camps there were both Germans and
-foreigners?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk926'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: I didn’t think about it at that time.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk927'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: As a matter of fact, you visited the Austrian concentration
-camp personally, did you not?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk928'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: I did not—well, I was in Mauthausen once, but at that
-time I was not told just to what categories the inmates of
-the concentration camps belonged.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk929'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: But in general everybody knew, did they not, that
-foreigners who were taken away by the Gestapo or arrested
-by the Gestapo, as well as Germans, found their way into the
-concentration camps?
-<span class='pageno' title='493' id='Page_493'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk930'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: Of course, yes. I didn’t mean to imply anything like
-that.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And on Page 15 of this same interrogation, beginning with the
-13th Paragraph of the English text and Page 20 in the German
-text, we find this question:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: Did you ever discuss, by the way, the requirements of
-Krupp for foreign labor?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk931'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: It is certain that it was reported to me what lack Krupp
-had in foreign workers.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk932'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Q: Did you ever, discuss it with any of the members of the
-Krupp firm?</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk933'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A: I cannot say that exactly; but during the time of my
-activities I visited the Krupp factory more than once and
-it is certain that this was discussed, that is, the lack of
-manpower.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Before closing I should like to take 2 minutes of the time of
-the Tribunal to refer to what we consider to be some of the
-applicable laws of the case for the assistance of the Tribunal in
-considering these documents which we have offered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We refer, of course, first of all, to Sections 6 (b) and 6 (c) of
-the Charter of this Tribunal. We also say that the acts of the
-conspirators constituted a flagrant violation of Articles 46 and 52
-of the Regulations annexed to the Hague Convention Number IV
-of 1907.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Article 46 seeks to safeguard the family honor, the rights and
-the lives of persons in areas under belligerent occupation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Article 52 provides in part that:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Requisitions in kind and services shall not be demanded
-from municipalities or inhabitants except for the needs of
-the army of occupation. They shall be in proportion to the
-resources of the country.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We say that these conspirators violated this article because the
-labor which they conscripted was not used to satisfy the needs
-of the army of occupation, but on the contrary, was forcibly
-removed from the occupied areas and exploited in the interest
-of the German war effort.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Finally, we say that these conspirators—and particularly the
-Defendants Sauckel and Speer—by virtue of their planning, of
-their execution, and of their approval of this program, which we
-have been describing yesterday and today, the enslavement and
-the misuse of the forced labor of prisoners of war—that for this
-they bear a special responsibility for their Crimes against Humanity
-and their War Crimes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Are you finishing, Mr. Dodd?
-<span class='pageno' title='494' id='Page_494'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Yes, I have concluded.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I should like to ask you why you have not
-read Document 3057-PS, which is Sauckel’s statement.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Yes. We had intended to offer that document.
-Counsel for the Defendant Sauckel informed me a day or two
-ago that his client maintained that he had been coerced into making
-the statement. Because we had not ample time to ascertain the
-facts of the matter, we preferred to withhold it, rather than to
-offer it to the Tribunal under any question of doubt.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: He objects to it, and therefore you have not
-put it in?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: No, we did not offer it while there was any
-question about it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Very well.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Might I suggest to the Tribunal that a recess be
-taken at this time? I am sorry to have to say that I am due to
-be before the Tribunal for a little while—that is, I am sorry for
-the Tribunal—with the matters on the concentration camps.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: You mean a recess now?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: If Your Honor pleases.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Certainly, yes; 10 minutes.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: May it please the Tribunal, we propose to offer
-additional evidence at this time concerning the use of Nazi
-concentration camps against the people of Germany and allied
-nationals. We propose to examine the purposes and the role of
-the concentration camp in the larger Nazi scheme of things. We
-propose to show that the concentration camp was one of the
-fundamental institutions of the Nazi regime, that it was a pillar
-of the system of terror by which the Nazis consolidated their power
-over Germany and imposed their ideology upon the German people,
-that it was really a primary weapon in the battle against the
-Jews, against the Christian church, against labor, against those
-who wanted peace, against opposition or non-conformity of any
-kind. We say it involved the systematic use of terror to achieve
-the cohesion within Germany which was necessary for the
-execution of the conspirators’ plans for aggression.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We propose to show that a concentration camp was one of the
-principal instruments used by the conspirators for the commission,
-on an enormous scale, of Crimes against Humanity and War Crimes;
-<span class='pageno' title='495' id='Page_495'></span>
-that it was the final link in a chain of terror and repression which
-involved the SS and the Gestapo and which resulted in the
-apprehension of victims and their confinement without trial, often
-without charges, generally with no indication of the length of their
-detention.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My colleagues will present full evidence concerning the criminal
-role of the SS and the Gestapo in this phase of Nazi terrorism,
-the concentration camp; but at this point I wish simply to point
-out that the SS, through its espionage system, tracked down the
-victims, that the criminal police and the Gestapo seized them and
-brought them to the camps, and that the concentration camps were
-administered by the SS.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This Tribunal, we feel, is already aware of the sickening
-evidence of the brutality of the concentration camp from the
-showing of the moving picture. More than that, individual
-prosecutions are going on, going forward before other courts which
-will record these outrages in detail. Therefore, we do not propose
-to present a catalogue of individual brutalities but, rather, to
-submit evidence showing the fundamental purposes for which, the
-camps were used, the techniques of terror which were employed,
-the large number of victims, and the death and the anguish which
-they caused.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The evidence relating to concentration camps has been assembled
-in a document book bearing the letter “S.” I might say that the
-documents in this book have been arranged in the order of
-presentation, rather than, as we have been doing, numerically. In
-this book we have put them in as they occur in the presentation.
-One document in this book, 2309-PS, is cited several times, so we
-have marked it with a tab with a view to facilitating reference
-back to it. It will be referred to more than once.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Nazis realized early that without the most drastic repression
-of actual and potential opposition they could not consolidate their
-power over the German people. We have seen that, immediately
-after Hitler became Chancellor, the conspirators promptly destroyed
-civil liberties by issuing the Presidential Emergency Decree of
-February 28, 1933. It is Document 1390-PS of the document book;
-and it sets forth that decree which has already been introduced
-in evidence before the Tribunal and is included in USA Exhibit B.
-It was this decree, which was the basis for the so-called “Schutzhaft,”
-that is, protective custody—the terrible power to imprison
-people without judicial proceedings. This is made clear by Document
-Number 2499-PS, which is a typical order for protective
-custody. We offer it for that purpose, as a typical order for
-protective custody which has come into the possession of the
-Prosecution. It bears Exhibit Number USA-232. I should like to
-quote from the body of that order:
-<span class='pageno' title='496' id='Page_496'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Order of Protective Custody.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk934'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Based on Article 1 of the Decree of the Reich President for
-the Protection of People and State of 28 February 1933
-(<span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span> I, Page 83), you are taken into protective
-custody in the interest of public security and order.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk935'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Reason: Suspicion of activities inimical toward the State.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Göring in a book entitled <span class='it'>Aufbau einer Nation</span>,
-published in 1934, sought to give the impression, it appears, that
-the camps were originally directed at those whom the Nazis
-considered Communists and Social Democrats. We refer to Document
-2324-PS, Exhibit USA-233. This document is an excerpt from
-Page 89 of the German book. We refer to the third and fourth
-paragraphs of the document, which I read as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“We had to deal ruthlessly with these enemies of the State.
-It must not be forgotten that at the moment of our seizure
-of power, over 6 million people officially voted for communism
-and about 8 million for Marxism in the Reichstag
-elections in March.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk936'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Thus the concentration camps were created to which we
-had to send first thousands of functionaries of the Communist
-and Social Democratic Parties.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In practical operation the power to order confinement in these
-camps was almost without limit. The Defendant Frick, in an
-order which he issued on the 25th day of January 1938 as Minister
-of the Interior, made this quite clear. An extract from this order
-is set forth in Document 1723-PS, to which we make reference.
-It bears Exhibit Number USA-206. I wish to read Article 1,
-beginning at the bottom of Page 5 of the English translation of
-this order:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Protective custody can be decreed as a coercive measure of
-the Secret State Police to counter all hostile efforts of
-persons who endanger the existence and security of the
-people and the State through their attitude.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I wish also to read into the record the first two paragraphs of
-that order, which are found at the top of Page 1 of the English
-translation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In a summary of all the previously issued decrees on the
-co-operation between the Party and the Gestapo I refer to
-the following and ordain:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk937'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. To the Gestapo has been entrusted the mission by the
-Führer to watch over and to eliminate all enemies of the
-Party and the National State, as well as all disintegrating
-forces of all kinds directed against both. The successful solution
-of this mission forms one of the most essential prerequisites
-for the unhampered and frictionless work of the
-<span class='pageno' title='497' id='Page_497'></span>
-Party. The Gestapo, in its extremely difficult task, is to be
-granted support and assistance in every possible way by the
-NSDAP.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The conspirators then were directing their apparatus of terror
-against the “enemies of the State,” against “disintegrating forces,”
-against those people who endangered the State “through their
-attitude.” Whom did they consider as belonging in these broad
-categories? Well, first, there were the men in Germany who wanted
-peace. We refer to Document L-83 (Exhibit USA-234).</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: What was the date of that document that you
-have been referring to, Number 1723-PS?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: January 25, 1938. It has already been introduced
-and is included in USA Exhibit B. This document consists of an
-affidavit of Gerhart H. Seger, and I wish only to read from Page 1,
-Paragraph 2 of that affidavit:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. During the period after World War I, until I was committed
-to the Leipzig jail and Oranienburg Concentration
-Camp, in the spring of 1933 following the Nazi accession to
-power in January of that year, my business and political
-affiliations exposed me to the full impact of the Nazi theories
-and practice of violent regimentation and terroristic tactics.
-My conflict with the Nazis by virtue of my identification with
-the peace movement and as duly elected member of the
-Reichstag representing a political faith (Social Democratic
-Party) hostile to National Socialism, clearly demonstrated that
-even in the period prior to 1933 the Nazis considered crimes
-and terrorism a necessary and desirable weapon in overcoming
-democratic opposition.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Passing to Page 5 of the same document and the paragraph
-marked “(e)”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“That the Nazis had already conceived the device of the concentration
-camp as a means of suppressing and regimenting
-opposition elements was forcefully brought to my attention
-during the course of a conversation which I had with Dr. Wilhelm
-Frick in December 1932. Frick at that time was chairman
-of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the Reichstag of
-which I was a member. When I gave an emphatic answer to
-Frick concerning the particular matter discussed, he replied,
-‘Don’t worry, when we are in power we shall put all of you
-guys into concentration camps.’ When the Nazis came into
-power, Frick was appointed Reich Minister of Interior and
-promptly carried out his threat in collaboration with Göring,
-as Chief of the Prussian State Police, and Himmler.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This paragraph shows that even before the Nazis had seized
-power in Germany they had conceived the plan to repress any
-<span class='pageno' title='498' id='Page_498'></span>
-potential oppositions by terror, and Frick’s statement to Seger is
-completely consistent with an earlier statement which he made on
-the 18th of October 1929. We refer to Document Number 2513-PS
-(Exhibit USA-235), which has also been received in evidence and
-has been included in USA Exhibit B. We refer to the first page of
-the English translation, Page 48 of the German text. On Page 1
-the quotation begins:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“This fateful struggle will first be taken up with the ballot;
-but this cannot continue indefinitely, for history has taught
-us that in a battle blood must be shed and iron broken. The
-ballot is the beginning of the fateful struggle. We are determined
-to promulgate by force that which we preach. Just as
-Mussolini exterminated the Marxists in Italy, so must we also
-succeed in accomplishing the same through dictatorship and
-terror.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: This is the defendant, is it?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Yes, the Defendant Frick.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There are many additional cases of the use of the concentration
-camp against the men who wanted peace. There was, for example,
-a group called the Bibelforscher, that is, Bible research workers,
-most of whom were known as Jehovah’s Witnesses. They were
-pacifists, and so the conspirators provided not only for their prosecution
-in the regular courts but also for their confinement in concentration
-camps after they had served the judicial sentences; and
-we refer to Document Number D-84, Exhibit USA-236.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This document is dated the 5th day of August 1937; and it is
-an order by the Secret State Police at Berlin, and I refer particularly
-to the first and last paragraphs of this order, as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Reich Minister of Justice had informed me that he does
-not share the opinion voiced by subordinate departments on
-various occasions according to which the arrest of the Bibelforscher
-after they have served a sentence is supposed to
-jeopardize the authority of the law courts. He is fully aware
-of the necessity for measures by the State Police after the
-sentence has been served. He asks, however, not to bring the
-Bibelforscher into protective custody under circumstances
-detrimental to the respect of the law courts.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then, the Paragraph numbered “(2)”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“If information regarding the impending release of a Bibelforscher
-from arrest is received from the authorities carrying
-out the sentence, my decision regarding the ordering of measures
-by the State Police will be asked for without delay in
-accordance with my circular decree dated 22. 4. 37, so that
-transfer to a concentration camp can take place immediately
-<span class='pageno' title='499' id='Page_499'></span>
-after the sentence has been served. Should a transfer into
-concentration camp immediately after the serving of the sentence
-not be possible, Bibelforscher will be detained in police
-prisons.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The labor unions, of which I think it is safe to say the majority
-are traditionally opposed to wars of aggression, also felt the full
-force of Nazi terror. A member of the American staff, Major Wallis,
-has already submitted evidence before this Tribunal concerning the
-conspirators’ campaign against the trade unions. But the concentration
-camp was an important weapon in this campaign; and the
-Tribunal will recall that in Document Number 2324-PS, to which
-I made reference this morning, the Defendant Göring made it plain
-that members of the Social Democratic Party were to be confined
-in concentration camps. Now labor leaders were very largely members
-of that party, and they soon learned the horrors of protective
-custody. We refer to Document Number 2330-PS (Exhibit USA-237),
-which has already been received as part of USA Exhibit G, which
-consists of an order that one Joseph Simon should be placed in
-protective custody. We refer to the middle of the first page of the
-English translation of that order, beginning with the material under
-the word “reasons.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I think you should read the sentence before
-that—the two lines before it. The words are, “The arrestee has no
-right to appeal against the decree of protective custody.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: “The arrestee has no right to appeal against the
-application of protective custody.” Then comes a title: “Reasons”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Simon was for many years a member of the Socialist Party
-and temporarily a member of the Union Socialiste Populaire.
-From 1907 to 1918 he was Landtag deputy of the Socialist
-Party; from 1908 to 1930 Social Democratic City Counsellor
-(Stadtrat) in Nuremberg. In view of the decisive role which
-Simon played in the international trade unions and in regard
-to his connection with international Marxist leaders and central
-agencies, which he continued after the national recovery,
-he was placed under protective custody on the 3rd day of
-May 1933 and was kept, until 25 January 1934, in the Dachau
-Concentration Camp. Simon is under the grave suspicion
-that even after this date he played an active part in the illegal
-continuation of the Socialist Party. He took part in meetings
-which aimed at the illegal continuation of the Socialist Party
-and propagation of illegal Marxist printed matter in Germany.
-Through this radical attitude, which is hostile to the
-State, Simon directly endangers public security and order.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We do not wish to burden these proceedings with a multiplication
-of such instances, but we refer the Tribunal to documents
-<span class='pageno' title='500' id='Page_500'></span>
-which have already been offered in connection with the presentation
-of the evidence concerning the destruction of the trade unions. In
-particular, we wish to refer to Document Number 2334-PS and
-Document Number 2928-PS, (Exhibits USA-238 and 239) both of
-which are included within USA Exhibit G.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thousands of Jews, as the world so well knows, were, of course,
-confined in these concentration camps. The evidence on this point
-will be developed in a later presentation by another member of the
-prosecuting staff of the United States. But among the wealth of
-evidence available on this point showing the confinement of Germans
-only because they were Jews, we wish to offer a document,
-Number 3051-PS, which bears Exhibit Number USA-240. This is a
-copy of a teletype from SS Gruppenführer Heydrich, and it is dated
-the 10th of November 1938. It was sent to all headquarters of the
-State Police and all districts and subdistricts of the SD. We refer
-to Paragraph 5 of this teletype. Paragraph 5 is found on Page 3 of
-the English translation. It begins at the bottom of Page 2 and runs
-over to Page 3. Quoting from Paragraph 5:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“As soon as the course of events of this night allows the use
-of the officials employed for this purpose, as many Jews,
-especially rich ones, as can be accommodated in the existing
-prisons are to be arrested in all districts. For the time being
-only healthy men, not too old, are to be arrested. Upon their
-arrest, the appropriate concentration camps should be contacted
-immediately, in order to confine them in these camps
-as fast as possible.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk938'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Special care should be taken that the Jews arrested in
-accordance with these instructions are not ill-treated.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Himmler in 1943 indicated that use of the concentration camp
-against the Jews had been motivated not simply by Nazi racialism.
-Himmler indicated that this policy had been motivated by a fear
-that the Jews might have been an obstacle to aggression. There is
-no necessity to consider whether this fear was justified. The important
-consideration is that the fear existed; and with reference to
-it we refer to Document 1919-PS, which bears Exhibit Number
-USA-170. The document is a speech delivered by Himmler at the
-meeting of the SS major generals at Posen on 4 October 1943, in
-the course of which he sought to justify the Nazi anti-Jewish policy.
-We refer to a portion of this document or this speech, which is
-found on Page 4, Paragraph 3, of the English translation, starting
-with the words, “I mean the clearing out of the Jews”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I mean the clearing out of the Jews, the extermination of the
-Jewish race. It’s one of those things it is easy to talk about.
-‘The Jewish race is being exterminated’, says one Party member,
-‘that’s quite clear; it’s in our program; elimination of the
-<span class='pageno' title='501' id='Page_501'></span>
-Jews, and we’re doing it, exterminating them.’ And then
-there come 80 million worthy Germans and each one has his
-decent Jew. Of course, the others are vermin, but this one is
-an A-l Jew. Not one of all those who talk this way has witnessed
-it, not one of them has been through it. Most of you
-must know what it means when 100 corpses are lying side by
-side, or 500 or 1,000. To have stuck it out and at the same
-time—apart from exceptions caused by human weakness—to
-have remained decent fellows, that is what has made us hard.
-This is a page of glory in our history which has never been
-written and is never to be written, for we know how difficult
-we should have made it for ourselves, if—with bombing raids,
-the burden and deprivations of war—we still had Jews today
-in every town as secret saboteurs, agitators, and trouble-mongers.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is clear, we say, from the foregoing that prior to the launching
-of the aggression, the concentration camp had been one of the principal
-weapons by which the conspirators achieved the social cohesion
-which was needed for the execution of their plans for aggression.
-After they launched their aggression and their armies swept over
-Europe, they brought the concentration camp to occupied countries;
-and they also brought the citizens of the occupied countries to Germany
-and subjected them to the whole apparatus of Nazi brutality.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Document Number R-91 is Exhibit USA-241. This document
-consists of a communication dated the 16th day of December 1942
-sent by Müller to Himmler, for the Chief of the Security Police and
-SD, and deals with the seizure of Polish Jews for deportation to
-concentration camps in Germany. I am beginning with the first
-paragraph. It says, quoting directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In connection with the increase in the transfer of labor to
-the concentration camps ordered to be completed by 30 January
-1943, the following procedure may be applied in the
-Jewish section:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk939'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. Total number: 45,000 Jews.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk940'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. Start of transportation: 11 January 1943. End of transportation:
-31 January 1943. (The Reich railroads are unable
-to provide special trains for the evacuation during the period
-from 15 December 1942 to 10 January 1943 because of the
-increased traffic of Armed Forces leave trains.)</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk941'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3. Composition: The 45,000 Jews are to consist of 30,000 Jews
-from the district of Bialystok; 10,000 Jews from the Ghetto
-of Theresienstadt, 5,000 of whom are Jews fit for work who
-heretofore had been used for smaller jobs required for the
-ghetto and 5,000 Jews who are generally incapable of working,
-also Jews over 60-years old.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='502' id='Page_502'></span></p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>And passing the next sentence:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“As heretofore only such Jews would be taken for the evacuation
-who do not have any particular connections and who
-are not in possession of any high decorations. Three thousand
-Jews from the occupied Dutch territories, 2,000 Jews from
-Berlin—45,000. The figure of 45,000 includes those unfit for
-work (old Jews and children). By use of a practical standard,
-the screening of the arriving Jews in Auschwitz should yield
-at least 10,000 to 15,000 people fit for work.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Jews of Hungary suffered the same tragic fate. Between
-19 March 1944 and the 1st of August 1944, more than 400,000 Hungarian
-Jews were rounded up. Many of these were put in wagons
-and sent to extermination camps, and we refer to Document Number
-2605-PS, Exhibit USA-242. This document is an affidavit made
-in London by Dr. Rudolph Kastner, a former official of the Hungarian
-Zionist Organization. We refer to Page 3 of the document,
-the third full paragraph. In March 1944, quoting:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Together with the German military occupation, there arrived
-in Budapest a ‘Special Section Commando’ of the German
-Secret Police with the sole object of liquidating the Hungarian
-Jews. It was headed by Adolf Aichmann, SS Obersturmbannführer,
-Chief of Section IV B of the Reich Security
-Head Office. His immediate collaborators were: SS Obersturmbannführer
-Hermann Krumey, Hauptsturmführer Wisliczeny,
-Hunsche, Novak, Dr. Seidl, and later Danegger, Wrtok.
-They arrested and later deported to Mauthausen all the
-leaders of Jewish political and business life and journalists,
-together with, the Hungarian democratic and anti-fascist
-politicians; taking advantage of the ‘interregnum’ following
-upon the German occupation lasting 4 days, they have placed
-their Quislings in the Ministry of the Interior.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On Page 7 of that same document, the 8th paragraph, beginning
-with the words “Commanders of the death camps” and quoting:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Commanders of the death camps gassed only on direct or
-indirect instructions of Aichmann. The particular officer of
-IV B who directed the deportations from some particular
-country had the authority to indicate whether the train should
-go to a death camp or not and what should happen to the
-passengers. The instructions were usually carried by the
-SS non-commissioned officers escorting the train. The letters
-‘A’ or ‘M’ ”—capital letters “A” or “M”—“on the escorting
-instruction documents indicated Auschwitz (Oswieczim) or
-Majdanek; it meant that the passengers were to be gassed.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>And passing over the next sentence, we come to these words:
-<span class='pageno' title='503' id='Page_503'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Regarding Hungarian Jews the following general ruling was
-laid down in Auschwitz: Children up to the age of 12 or 14,
-older people over 50, as well as the sick, or people with
-criminal records (who were transported in specially marked
-wagons) were taken immediately on their arrival to the gas
-chambers.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk942'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The others passed before an SS doctor who, on sight, indicated
-who was fit for work and who was not. Those unfit
-were sent to the gas chambers, while the others were distributed
-in various labor camps.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the so-called “Eastern Territories” these victims were apprehended
-for extermination .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, don’t you want Page 5 for the
-numbers which you have stated “up to the 27th of June 1944”? You
-haven’t yet given us any authority for the numbers that you have
-stated.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Oh, yes. On Page 5 of that same document, 2605-PS,
-quoting: “Up to the 27th of June 1944, 475,000 Jews were deported.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the so-called “Eastern Territories” these victims were apprehended
-for extermination in concentration camps without any
-charges having been made against them. In the western occupied
-territories charges seemed to have been made against some of the
-victims. Some of the charges which the Nazi conspirators considered
-sufficient basis for confinement to the concentration camps
-are shown by reference to Document Number L-215, which bears
-Exhibit Number USA-243. This document is the summary of the
-file, the dossier, of 25 persons arrested in Luxembourg for commitment
-to various concentration camps and sets forth the charges
-made against each person. Beginning with the paragraph after the
-name “Henricy,” at the bottom of the first page, and quoting:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Name: Henricy; charge: .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. by associating with members of
-illegal resistance movements and making money for them,
-violating legal foreign exchange rates, by harming the interests
-of the Reich and being expected in the future to disobey
-official administrative regulations and act as an enemy of the
-Reich; place of confinement—Natzweiler.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Next comes the name of “Krier” and the charge:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. by being responsible for continuous sabotage of labor and
-causing fear because of his political and criminal past—freedom
-would only further his anti-social urge; place of confinement—Buchenwald.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Passing to the middle of Page 2, after the name “Monti”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Charge:.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. by being strongly suspected of aiding desertion;
-place of confinement—Sachsenhausen.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='504' id='Page_504'></span></p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Next, after the name “Junker”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Charge:.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. because as a relative of a deserter he is expected
-to endanger the interests of the Greater German Reich if
-allowed to go free; place of confinement—Sachsenhausen.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Jaeger” is the next name and the charge against Jaeger, quoting:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. because as a relative of a deserter he is expected, to take
-advantage of every occasion to harm the Greater German
-Reich if allowed to go free; place of confinement—Sachsenhausen.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>And down to the name “Ludwig” and the charge against Ludwig:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. for being strongly suspected of aiding desertion; place of
-confinement—Dachau.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Not only civilians of the occupied countries but also prisoners
-of war were subjected to the horrors and the brutality of the concentration
-camps; and we refer to Document Number 1165-PS,
-which bears Exhibit Number USA-244. This document is a memorandum
-to all officers of the State Police signed by Müller, the
-Chief of the Gestapo, dated the 9th of November 1941. The memorandum
-has the revealing title of—and I quote—“Transportation of
-Russian Prisoners of War, destined for Execution, into the Concentration
-Camps.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I wish to quote also from the body of this memorandum, which
-is found on Page 2 of the English translation, and I quote directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The commandants of the concentration camps are complaining
-that 5 to 10 percent of the Soviet Russians destined for
-execution are arriving in the camps dead or half dead. Therefore
-the impression has arisen that the Stalags are getting
-rid of such prisoners in this way.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk943'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It was particularly noted that when marching, for example,
-from the railroad station to the camp a rather large number
-of PW’s collapsed on the way from exhaustion, either dead
-or half dead, and had to be picked up by a truck following
-the convoy.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk944'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It cannot be prevented that the German people take notice
-of these occurrences.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk945'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Even if the transportation to the camps is generally taken
-care of by the Wehrmacht, the population will attribute this
-situation to the SS.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk946'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In order to prevent, if possible, similar occurrences in the
-future, I therefore order that, effective from today on, Soviet
-Russians declared definitely suspect and obviously marked by
-death (for example with hunger-typhus) and therefore not
-able to withstand the exertions of even a short march on foot
-shall in the future, as a matter of basic principle, be excluded
-<span class='pageno' title='505' id='Page_505'></span>
-from the transport into the concentration camps for execution.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>More evidence of the confinement of Russian prisoners of war
-in concentration camps is found in an official report of the investigation
-of the Flossenbürg Concentration Camp by the Headquarters
-of the United States Third Army, the Judge Advocate Section, and
-particularly the War Crimes Branch, under the date of the 21st day
-of June 1945. It is our Document Number 2309-PS and bears
-Exhibit Number USA-245. At the bottom of Page 2 of the English
-text the last two sentences of that last paragraph say, and I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In 1941 an additional stockade was added at the Flossenbürg
-camp to hold 2,000 Russian prisoners. Of these 2,000 prisoners
-only 102 survived.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Soviet prisoners of war found their allies in the concentration
-camps too; and at Page 4 of this same Document Number 2309-PS,
-it will show, particularly Paragraph 5 on Page 4, and I quote it:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The victims of Flossenbürg included among them: Russian
-civilians and prisoners of war, German nationals, Italians,
-Belgians, Poles, Czechs, Hungarians, British, and American
-prisoners of war. No practical means was available to complete
-a list of victims of this camp; however, since the foundation
-of the camp in 1938 until the day of liberation, it is
-estimated that more than 29,000 inmates died.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Escaped prisoners of war were sent to concentration camps by
-the conspirators, and these camps were specially set up as extermination
-centers; and we refer to Document Number 1650-PS,
-bearing Exhibit Number USA-246. This document is a communication
-from the Secret State Police of Cologne and it is dated the
-4th day of March 1944. At the very top of the English text it says,
-“To be transmitted in secret—to be handled as a secret Government
-matter.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the third paragraph, quoting:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Concerns: Measures to be taken against captured escaped
-prisoners of war who are officers or non-working noncommissioned
-officers, except British and American prisoners
-of war. The Supreme Command of the Army has ordered
-as follows:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk947'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. Every captured escaped prisoner of war who is an officer
-or a non-working noncommissioned officer, except British and
-American prisoners of war, is to be turned over to the Chief
-of the Security Police and of the Security Service under the
-classification Step III regardless of whether the escape
-occurred during a transport, whether it was a mass escape,
-or an individual one.
-<span class='pageno' title='506' id='Page_506'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk948'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. Since the transfer of the prisoners of war to the Security
-Police and Security Service may not become officially known
-to the outside under any circumstances, other prisoners of
-war may by no means be informed of the capture. The
-captured prisoners are to be reported to the Army Information
-Bureau as ‘escaped and not captured.’ Their mail is to be
-handled accordingly. Inquiries of representatives of the
-protective power, of the International Red Cross, and of other
-aid societies will be given the same answer.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The same communication carried a copy of an order of SS
-General Müller, acting for the Chief of the Security Police and
-SD, directing the Gestapo to transport escaped prisoners directly to
-Mauthausen; and I quote the first two paragraphs of Müller’s order,
-which begins on the bottom of Page 1 and runs over to Page 2
-of the English text. Quoting:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The State Police directorates will accept the captured
-escaped officer prisoners of war from the prisoner-of-war
-camp commandants and will transport them to the Concentration
-Camp Mauthausen following the procedure
-previously used, unless the circumstances render a special
-transport imperative. The prisoners of war are to be put in
-irons on the transport—not on the way to the station if it
-is subject to view by the public. The camp commandant at
-Mauthausen is to be notified that the transfer occurs within
-the scope of the action ‘Kugel.’ The State Police directorates
-will submit semi-yearly reports on these transfers giving
-merely the figures, the first report being due on 5 July 1944.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Passing the next three sentences, we come to this line:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“For the sake of secrecy the Supreme Command of the Armed
-Forces has been requested to inform the prisoner-of-war
-camps to turn the captured prisoners over to the local State
-Police office concerned and not to send them directly to Mauthausen.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is no coincidence that the literal translation for the German
-word “Kugel” is the English word “bullet,” since Mauthausen,
-where the escaped prisoners were sent, was an extermination
-center.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nazi conquest was marked by the establishment of concentration
-camps over all of Europe. In this connection we refer to
-Document Number R-129. It is a report on the location of concentration
-camps signed by Pohl, who was an SS general who was
-in charge of concentration camp labor policies. Document Number
-R-129 bears our Exhibit Number USA-217.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I wish to refer particularly to Section 1, Paragraphs numbered 1
-and 2 of this document, which are found on Page 1 of the English
-<span class='pageno' title='507' id='Page_507'></span>
-translation. It is addressed to the Reichsführer SS and bears the
-stamp “secret”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:0em;margin-bottom:.5em;'>“Reichsführer:</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Today I report about the present situation of the concentration
-camps and about measures I have taken in order
-to carry out your order of 3 March 1942:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk949'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. At the outbreak of war there existed the following concentration
-camps:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk950'/>
-
-<p class='hang'>“a. Dachau—1939, 4,000 prisoners; today, 8,000.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk951'/>
-
-<p class='hang'>“b. Sachsenhausen—1939, 6,500 prisoners; today, 10,000.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk952'/>
-
-<p class='hang'>“c. Buchenwald—1939, 5,300 prisoners; today, 9,000.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk953'/>
-
-<p class='hang'>“d. Mauthausen—1939, 1,500 prisoners; today, 5,500.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk954'/>
-
-<p class='hang'>“e. Flossenbürg—1939, 1,600 prisoners; today, 4,700.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk955'/>
-
-<p class='hang'>“f. Ravensbrück—1939, 2,500 prisoners; today, 7,500.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then it goes on to say in Paragraph Number 2, quoting:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In the years 1940 and 1942 nine additional camps were
-erected:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk956'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“a. Auschwitz,&nbsp;&nbsp;b. Neuengamme,&nbsp;&nbsp;c. Gusen,&nbsp;&nbsp;d. Natzweiler,&nbsp;&nbsp;e.
-Gross-Rosen,&nbsp;&nbsp;f. Lublin,&nbsp;&nbsp;g. Niederhagen,&nbsp;&nbsp;h. Stutthof,&nbsp;&nbsp;i. Arbeitsdorf.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In addition to the camps in the occupied territory mentioned
-in this Document R-129, from which I have just read these names
-and figures, there were many, many others. I refer to the official
-report by the United States Third Army Headquarters, to which
-we have already made reference, Document Number 2309-PS, on
-Page 2 in the English text, Section IV, Paragraph 4, quoting:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Concentration Camp Flossenbürg was founded in 1938 as a
-camp for political prisoners. Construction was commenced
-on the camp in 1938 and it was not until April 1940 that the
-first transport of prisoners was received. From this time on
-prisoners began to flow steadily into the camp. (Exhibit B-1.)
-Flossenbürg was the mother camp and under its direct control
-and jurisdiction were 47 satellite camps or outer-commandos
-for male prisoners and 27 camps for female workers. To these
-outer-commandos were supplied the necessary prisoners for
-the various work projects undertaken.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk957'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Of all these outer-commandos, Hersbruck and Leitmeritz (in
-Czechoslovakia), Oberstaubling, Mulsen and Sall, located on
-the Danube, were considered to be the worst.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I do not wish to take the time of the Tribunal to discuss each
-of the Nazi concentration camps which dotted the map of Europe.
-We feel that the widespread use of these camps is commonly known
-and notorious. We do, however, wish to invite the Tribunal’s
-attention to a chart which we have had prepared. The solid black
-<span class='pageno' title='508' id='Page_508'></span>
-line marks the boundary of Germany after the Anschluss, and we
-call the Tribunal’s attention to the fact that the majority of the
-camps shown on the chart are located within the territorial limits
-of Germany itself. They are the red spots, of course, on the map.
-In the center of Germany there is the Buchenwald camp located
-near the city of Weimar, and at the extreme bottom of the chart
-there is Dachau, several miles outside of Munich. At the top of
-the chart are Neuengamme and Bergen-Belsen, located near Hamburg.
-To the left is the Niederhagen camp in the Ruhr Valley.
-In the upper right there are a number of camps near Berlin, one
-named Sachsenhausen (formerly Oranienburg, which was one of the
-first camps established after the Nazis came into power). Near
-to that is the camp of Ravensbrück which was used exclusively
-for women. Some of the most notorious camps were located indeed
-outside of Germany. Mauthausen was in Austria. In Poland was
-the infamous Auschwitz; and to the left of the chart is a camp
-called Hertogenbosch and this one was located in Holland, as the
-chart shows; and below it is Natzweiler, located in France.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The camps were established in networks; and it may be observed
-that surrounding each of the major camps—the larger red dots—is
-a group of satellite camps; and the names of the principal camps,
-the most notorious camps, at least, are above the map and below
-it on the chart; and those names, for most people, symbolize the
-Nazi system of concentration camps as they have become known
-to the world since May or a little later in 1945.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I should like to direct your attention briefly to the treatment
-which was meted out in these camps. The motion picture to which
-I have made reference a short time ago and which was shown to
-the members of this High Tribunal has disclosed the terrible and
-savage treatment which was inflicted upon these Allied nationals,
-prisoners of war, and other victims of Nazi terror. Because the
-moving picture has so well shown the situation, as of the time of
-its taking at least, I shall confine myself to a very brief discussion
-of the subject.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The conditions which existed inside these camps were, of course,
-we say, directly related to the objectives which these Nazi
-conspirators sought to achieve outside of the camps through their
-employment of terror.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is truly remarkable, it seems to us, how easily the words
-“concentration camps” rolled off the lips of these men. How simple
-all problems became when they could turn to the terror institution
-of the concentration camps. I refer to Document Number R-124,
-which is already before the Tribunal as Exhibit USA-179. It is
-again that document covering the minutes of the Central Planning
-Committee on which the Defendant Speer sat and where the high
-strategy of the high Nazi armament production was formulated.
-<span class='pageno' title='509' id='Page_509'></span>
-I do not intend to read from the document again, because I read
-from it this morning to illustrate another point; but the Tribunal
-will recall that it was at this meeting that the Defendant Speer
-and others were discussing the so-called slackers, and the conversation
-had to do with having drastic steps taken against these
-workers who were not putting out sufficient work to please their
-masters. Speer suggested that, “There is nothing to be said against
-the SS and Police taking steps and putting those known as slackers
-into concentration camp industries,” and he used the words “concentration
-camp industries.” And he said, “Let it happen several
-times and the news will soon get around.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Words spoken in this fashion, we say, sealed the fate of many
-victims. As for getting the news around as suggested by the
-Defendant Speer, this was not left to chance, as we shall presently
-show.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The deterrent effect of the concentration camps upon the public
-was a carefully planned thing. To heighten the atmosphere of terror,
-these camps were shrouded in secrecy. What went on in the barbed
-wire enclosures was a matter of fearful conjecture in Germany and
-countries under Nazi control; and this was the policy from the
-very beginning, when the Nazis first came into power and set up
-this system of concentration camps. We refer now to Document
-Number 778-PS, which bears Exhibit Number USA-247. This
-document is an order issued on the 1st of October 1933 by the
-camp commander of Dachau. The document prescribed a program
-of floggings, solitary confinement, and executions for the inmates
-for infractions of the rules.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Among the rules were those prescribing a rigid censorship
-concerning conditions within the camp; and I refer to the first
-page of the English text, paragraph numbered Article 11, and
-quoting:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“By virtue of the law on revolutionaries, the following
-offenders considered as agitators, will be hanged:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk958'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Anyone who, for the purpose of agitating, does the following
-in the camp, at work, in the quarters, in the kitchens and
-workshops, toilets and places of rest: holds political or inciting
-speeches and meetings, forms cliques, loiters around with
-others; who, for the purpose of supplying the propaganda of
-the opposition with atrocity stories, collects true or false
-information about the concentration camp and its institution,
-receives such information, buries it, talks about it to others,
-smuggles it out of the camp into the hands of foreign visitors
-or others by means of clandestine or other methods, passes
-it on in writing or orally to released prisoners or prisoners
-who are placed above them, conceals it in clothing or other
-<span class='pageno' title='510' id='Page_510'></span>
-articles, throws stones and other objects over the camp wall
-containing such information, or produces secret documents;
-who, for the purpose of agitating, climbs on barracks roofs
-and trees, seeks contact with the outside by giving light or
-other signals, or induces others to escape or commit a crime,
-gives them advice to that effect or supports such undertakings
-in any way whatsoever.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The censorship about the camps themselves was complemented
-by an officially inspired rumor campaign outside the camps. Concentration
-camps were spoken of in whispers, and the whispers
-were spread by agents of the Secret Police. When the Defendant
-Speer said that if the threat of the concentration camp were used,
-the news would get around soon enough, he knew whereof he spoke.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We refer to Document 1531-PS. With reference to this document,
-I wish to submit a word of explanation. The original German text,
-the original German document, the captured document, was here
-in the document room and was translated into English as our
-translation shows. Yesterday we were advised that it has either
-been lost or misplaced, the original German text; and unfortunately
-no photostatic copy was available here in Nuremberg. A certified
-copy is, however, being sent to the office here from Frankfurt, and
-it is on its way today; and I ask the Tribunal’s permission to offer
-the English translation of the German original, which is certified
-to be accurate by the translator, into evidence, subject to a motion
-to strike it if the certified copy of the original German document
-does not arrive.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now refer to the Document Number 1531-PS. It bears our
-Exhibit Number USA-248. This document is marked “top secret”
-and it is addressed to all State Police district offices and to the
-Gestapo office and for the information of the Inspectors of the
-Security Police and the SD. It is an order relating to concentration
-camps, issued by the head of the Gestapo; and I read from the
-English text, beginning with the second paragraph, and quoting
-directly:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In order to achieve a further deterrent effect, the following
-must, in the future, be observed in each individual case:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk959'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3. The length of the period of custody must in no case be
-made known, even if the Reichsführer SS and Chief of the
-German Police or the Chief of the Security Police and the
-SD has already fixed it.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk960'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The term of commitment to a concentration camp is to be
-openly announced as ‘until further notice.’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk961'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In most serious cases there is no objection to increasing
-the deterrent effect by the spreading of cleverly carried
-out rumor propaganda, more or less to the effect that,
-<span class='pageno' title='511' id='Page_511'></span>
-according to hearsay, in view of the seriousness of his case,
-the arrested man will not be released for 2 or 3 years.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk962'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“4. In certain cases the Reichsführer SS and Chief of the
-German Police will order flogging in addition to detention
-in a concentration camp. Orders of this kind will, in the
-future, also be transmitted to the State Police district office
-concerned. In this case, too, there is no objection to spreading
-the rumor of this increased punishment as laid down in
-Section 3, Paragraph 3, insofar as this appears suitable to
-add to the deterrent effect.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk963'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“5. Naturally, particularly suitable and reliable people are
-to be chosen for the spreading of such news.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, the Tribunal think that they will
-take judicial notice of that United States Document, Number
-2309-PS; and for the convenience of the Defense Counsel, the
-Tribunal having sat until 1 will not sit again until 2:15.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Very well, Your Honor.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken until 1415 hours.</span>]</h3>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<h2><span class='pageno' title='512' id='Page_512'></span><span class='it'>Afternoon Session</span></h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: May it please the Tribunal, the deterrent effect
-of the concentration camps was based on the promise of brutal
-treatment. Once in the custody of the SS guards, the victim was
-beaten, tortured, starved, and often murdered through the so-called
-“extermination through work” program which I described the other
-day or through the mass execution gas chambers and furnaces of
-the camps, which were shown several days ago on the moving
-picture screen in this courtroom.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The reports of official government investigations furnish additional
-evidence of the conditions within the concentration camps.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Document 2309-PS, which has already been referred to and of
-which the Tribunal has taken judicial notice, I now refer to again,
-particularly to the second page of the English text, beginning with
-the second sentence of the second paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The work at these camps mainly consisted of underground
-labor, the purpose being the construction of large underground
-factories, storage rooms, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>. This labor was performed
-completely underground and as a result of the brutal
-treatment, working and living conditions, a daily average of
-100 prisoners died. To the one camp Oberstaubling 700 prisoners
-were transported in February 1945, and on the 15th of
-April 1945 only 405 of these men were living. During the
-12 months preceding the liberation, Flossenbürg and the
-branch camps under its control accounted for the death of
-14,739 male inmates and 1,300 women. These figures represent
-the deaths as obtained from the available records in the
-camp. However, they are in no way complete, as many
-secret mass executions and deaths took place. In 1941 an
-additional stockade was added at the Flossenbürg camp to
-hold 2,000 Russian prisoners. From these 2,000 prisoners only
-102 survived.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk964'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Flossenbürg Concentration Camp can best be described as
-a factory dealing in death. Although this camp had in view
-the primary object of putting to work the mass slave labor,
-another of its primary objectives was the elimination of
-human lives by the methods employed in handling the
-prisoners.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk965'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Hunger and starvation rations, sadism, housing facilities,
-inadequate clothing, medical neglect, disease, beatings,
-hangings, freezing, forced hand hanging, forced suicides,
-shooting, all played a major role in obtaining their objective.
-Prisoners were murdered at random; spite killings against
-Jews were common. Injections of poison and shooting in
-<span class='pageno' title='513' id='Page_513'></span>
-the neck were everyday occurrences. Epidemics of typhus and
-spotted fever were permitted to run rampant as a means
-of eliminating prisoners. Life in this camp meant nothing.
-Killing became a common thing, so common that a quick
-death was welcomed by the unfortunate ones.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Passing to the next to the last sentence of this same paragraph,
-quoting directly .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: What are those exhibits that are referred to?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: They are in evidence with the affidavit. They are
-attached to it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: They are not, I suppose, mimeographed in
-our copy?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: No, we have not had an opportunity to mimeograph
-each one of them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Are they documents or photographs or what?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: They are principally documents. There are some
-few plans and photographs, and so on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Are they affidavits or what? There seem to
-be instances of .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Well, some of them are in the form of affidavits
-taken at the time of the liberation of the camp from persons who
-were there, and others are pictures of writings that were found
-there and of the plans and so on—such sort of thing.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes. Well the Tribunal will take judicial
-notice of those exhibits as well.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Very well, Your Honor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Reading from the last sentence of this same paragraph on the
-same page and quoting:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“On Christmas, 1944, a number of prisoners were hanged at
-one time. The prisoners were forced to view this hanging.
-By the side of the gallows was a decorated Christmas tree;
-and as expressed by one prisoner, ‘It was a terrible sight,
-that combination of prisoners hanging in the air and the
-glistening Christmas tree.’ ”</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk966'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In March or April, 13 American or British parachutists were
-hanged. They had been delivered to this camp some time
-before and had been captured while trying to blow up
-bridges.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We will not burden the Tribunal with a recital of all of these
-reports. We wish, however, to make reference to the Concentration
-Camp Mauthausen, one of the most notorious extermination
-centers; and I refer particularly to Document Number 2176-PS,
-<span class='pageno' title='514' id='Page_514'></span>
-which I have already placed in evidence as Exhibit Number
-USA-249. This is also an official report of the office of the Judge
-Advocate General of the United States 3rd Army, dated 17 June
-1945. I wish to refer to the conclusions on Page 3 of the English
-text, at paragraph numbered Roman V, beginning with the second
-sentence as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“V. Conclusions. There is no doubt that Mauthausen was the
-basis for long-term planning. It was constructed as a gigantic
-stone fortress on top of a mountain flanked by small barracks.
-Mauthausen, in addition to its permanency of construction,
-had facilities for a large garrison of officers and men and had
-large dining rooms and toilet facilities for the staff. It was
-conducted with the sole purpose in mind of exterminating
-any so-called prisoner who entered within its walls. The
-so-called branches of Mauthausen were under direct command
-of the SS officials located there. All records, orders, and
-administrative facilities were handled for these branches
-through Mauthausen. The other camps, including Gusen and
-Ebensee, its two most notorious and largest branches, were
-not exclusively used for extermination; but prisoners were
-used as tools in construction and production until they were
-beaten or starved into uselessness, whereupon they were
-customarily sent to Mauthausen for final disposal.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Both from the showing of the moving picture and from these
-careful reports, which were made by the 3rd Army of the United
-States on their arrival at those centers, we say it is clear that
-the conditions in those concentration camps over Germany—and in
-a few instances outside of the actual borders of the Old Reich—followed
-the same general pattern. The wide-spread incidence of
-these conditions makes it clear that they were not the result
-of sporadic excesses on the part of individual jailers, but were the
-result of policies deliberately imposed from above. The crimes
-committed in these camps were on so vast a scale that individual
-atrocities pale into insignificance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We have had turned over to us two exhibits which we are
-prepared to show to this Tribunal only because they illustrate the
-depths to which the administration of these camps had sunk shortly
-before, at least, the time that they were liberated by the Allied
-Army. The Tribunal will recall that in the showing of the moving
-picture, with respect to one of the camps, there was a showing of
-sections of human skin taken from human bodies in the Buchenwald
-Concentration Camp and preserved as ornaments. They were
-selected, these particular hapless victims, because of the tattooing
-which appeared on the skin. This exhibit, which we have here,
-is Exhibit Number USA-252. Attached to the exhibit is an extract
-<span class='pageno' title='515' id='Page_515'></span>
-of an official United States Army report describing the circumstances
-under which this exhibit was obtained; and that extract is
-set forth in Document 3420-PS, which I refer to in part. It is
-entitled:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Mobile Field Interrogation Unit Number 2; PW Intelligence
-Bulletin; 13. Concentration Camp, Buchenwald.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk967'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Preamble. The author of this account is PW Andreas
-Pfaffenberger, 1 Coy, 9 Landesschützen Bn., 43 years old and
-of limited education. He is a butcher by trade. The substantial
-agreement of the details of his story with those found in
-PWIB (H) /LF/36 establishes the validity of his testimony.
-PW has not been questioned on statements which, in the light
-of what is known, are apparently erroneous in certain details,
-nor has any effort been made to alter the subjective
-character of the PW’s account, which he wrote without being
-told anything of the intelligence already known. The results
-of interrogation on personalities at Buchenwald have already
-been published (PWIB Number 2/12, item 31.).</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk968'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“ ‘In 1939 all prisoners with tattooing on them were ordered
-to report to the dispensary.’ ”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Is this what Pfaffenberger said?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Yes, Sir.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“ ‘No one knew what the purpose was; but after the tattooed
-prisoners had been examined, the ones with the best and
-most artistic specimens were kept in the dispensary and then
-killed by injections administered by Karl Beigs, a criminal
-prisoner. The corpses were then turned over to the pathological
-department where the desired pieces of tattooed skin
-were detached from the bodies and treated. The finished
-products were turned over to SS Standartenführer Koch’s
-wife, who had them fashioned into lamp shades and other
-ornamental household articles. I myself saw such tattooed
-skins with various designs and legends on them, such as
-“Hänsel and Gretel,” which one prisoner had on his knee,
-and designs of ships from prisoners’ chests. This work was
-done by a prisoner named Wernerbach.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I also refer to Document 3421-PS, which bears Exhibit Number
-USA-253.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I, George C. Demas, Lieutenant, USNR, associated with the
-United States Chief of Counsel for the Prosecution of Axis
-Criminality, hereby certify that the attached exhibit, consisting
-of parchment, was delivered by the War Crimes Section,
-Judge Advocate General, United States Army, to me in my
-above capacity, in the usual course of business, as an exhibit
-<span class='pageno' title='516' id='Page_516'></span>
-found in Buchenwald Camp and captured by military forces
-under the command of the Supreme Commander, Allied
-Expeditionary Forces.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And the last paragraph of Document 3423-PS (Exhibit USA-252)
-is a conclusion reached in a United States Army report, and
-I quote it:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Based on the findings in Paragraph 2, all three specimens
-are tattooed human skin.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This document is also attached to this exhibit on the board. We
-do not wish to dwell on this pathological phase of the Nazi culture;
-but we do feel compelled to offer one additional exhibit, which we
-offer as Exhibit Number USA-254. This exhibit, which is on the
-table, is a human head with the skull bone removed, shrunken,
-stuffed, and preserved. The Nazis had one of their many victims
-decapitated, after having had him hanged, apparently for fraternizing
-with a German woman, and fashioned this terrible ornament
-from his head.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The last paragraph of the official United States Army report
-from which I have just read deals with the manner in which this
-exhibit was acquired. It reads as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“There I also saw the shrunken heads of two young Poles
-who had been hanged for having relations with German girls.
-The heads were the size of a fist, and the hair and the marks
-of the rope were still there.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Another certificate by Lieutenant Demas is set forth in Document
-3422-PS (Exhibit USA-254) and is similar to the one which I
-have read a few minutes ago with relation to the human skin,
-excepting that it applies to this second exhibit. We have no accurate
-estimate of how many persons died in these concentration camps
-and perhaps none will ever be made; but as the evidence already
-introduced before this Tribunal indicates, the Nazi conspirators
-were generally meticulous record keepers. But the records which
-they kept about concentration camps appear to have been quite
-incomplete. Perhaps the character of the records resulted from the
-indifference which the Nazis felt for the lives of their victims. But
-occasionally we find a death book or a set of index cards. For the
-most part, nevertheless, the victims apparently faded into an
-unrecorded death. Reference to a set of death books suggests at
-once the scale of the concentration camp operations, and we refer
-now and offer Document Number 493-PS as Exhibit Number
-USA-251. This exhibit is a set of seven books, the death ledger of
-the Mauthausen Concentration Camp. Each book has on its cover
-the word “Totenbuch” (or Death Book)—Mauthausen.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In these books were recorded the names of some of the inmates
-who died or were murdered in this camp, and the books cover the
-<span class='pageno' title='517' id='Page_517'></span>
-period from January of 1939 to April of 1945. They give the name,
-the place of birth, the assigned cause of death, and time of death
-of each individual recorded. In addition each corpse is assigned a
-serial number, and adding up the total serial numbers for the
-5-year period one arrives at the figure of 35,318.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>An examination of the books is very revealing insofar as the
-camp’s routine of death is concerned; and I invite the attention of
-the Tribunal to Volume 5 from Pages 568 to 582, a photostatic copy
-of which has been passed to the Tribunal. These pages cover death
-entries made for the 19th day of March 1945 between 15 minutes
-past 1 in the morning until 2 o’clock in the afternoon. In this space
-of 12 and three-quarter hours, on these records, 203 persons are
-reported as having died. They were assigned serial numbers
-running from 8390 to 8593. The names of the dead are listed. And
-interestingly enough the victims are all recorded as having died of
-the same ailment—heart trouble. They died at brief intervals.
-They died in alphabetical order. The first who died was a man
-named Ackermann, who died at 1:15 a.m., and the last was a man
-named Zynger, who died at 2 o’clock in the afternoon.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At 20 minutes past 2 o’clock of that same afternoon, according
-to these records, on the 19th of March 1945, the fatal roll call began
-again and continued until 4:30 p.m. In a space of 2 hours 75 more
-persons died, and once again they died all from heart failure and in
-alphabetical order. We find the entries recorded in the same
-volume, from Pages 582 through 586.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was another death book found at Camp Mauthausen. It
-is our Document Number 495-PS and bears Exhibit Number
-USA-250. This is a single volume, and again has on its cover the
-words “Death Book—Prisoners of War.” And I invite the attention
-of the Tribunal in particular to Pages 234 through 246. Here the
-entries record the names of 208 prisoners of war, apparently
-Russians, who at 15 minutes past midnight on the 10th day of
-May 1942 were executed at the same time. The book notes that the
-execution was directed by the chief of the SD and the Sipo, at
-that time Heydrich.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was called to my attention as late as this morning—a publication
-of a New York newspaper published in the United States, part
-of which is made up of three or more pages consisting of advertisements
-from the families, the relatives of people who once resided in
-Germany or in Europe, asking for some advice about them. Most of
-the advertisements refer to one of these concentration camps or
-another. The paper is called <span class='it'>Der Aufbau</span>. It is a German-language
-newspaper in New York City, published on the 23rd day—this
-particular issue—on the 23rd day of November 1945. I do not
-propose to burden the record of this Tribunal with the list of the
-<span class='pageno' title='518' id='Page_518'></span>
-names of all of these unfortunate individuals; but we refer to it as
-a publication in the City of New York, a German-language newspaper
-of recent date which illustrates the horrible extent of this
-terrible tragedy which has affected so many people as a result of
-this concentration-camp institution. We feel that no argument, no
-particular argument, is necessary to support our statement that
-the Nazi conspirators used these concentration camps and the
-related instruments of terror in them to commit Crimes against
-Humanity and to commit War Crimes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>More about concentration camps will of necessity be involved in
-the presentation concerning the persecution of the Jews, but this
-concludes our presentation with respect to the concentration camps
-as a specific entity of proof.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, speaking for myself, I should like
-to know what these headings mean.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Yes, I have them here.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Document 495-PS?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Yes, Document 495-PS. Column 1 is the serial
-number assigned to the prisoners in the order of their deaths.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Column 2, prisoners-of-war serial number. Column 3
-is the last name, Column 4 is the first name.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Column 5 is the date of birth. Column 6, the place
-of birth. Column 7, cause of death. In these cases their cause of
-death is stated as follows: “Execution pursuant to order of the
-Chief of the Sipo and SD dated 30th April 1942,” and the ditto
-marks beneath indicate that the same cause of death was assigned
-to the names which come beneath it. In the eighth column is the
-date of death and the hour of death. The first one being 9.5.42
-at 2335 hours. In the ninth column there is a space which says it
-is reserved for comments.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: There are numbers there too—M1681 is the
-first one.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: Well, the German word, I am told, means that it
-confirms the death with that number. Apparently the number
-of the .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I think you said the number of the corpse.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. DODD: The number of the corpse, I think that is what it is
-as distinguished from the number of the prisoner. Each corpse was
-given a number as well after the individual died.
-<span class='pageno' title='519' id='Page_519'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COL. STOREY: If the Tribunal please, the next phase of War
-Crimes and Crimes against Humanity, the Persecution of the Jews,
-will be presented by Major Walsh.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Major Walsh.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WILLIAM F. WALSH (Assistant Trial Counsel for the
-United States): If the Tribunal please, on behalf of the United
-States Counsel, I now present to this august Tribunal the evidence
-to establish certain phases of the Indictment alleged in Count One
-under War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity, and by agreement
-between the prosecutors the allegations in Count Four,
-Paragraph X(B), Crimes against Humanity. The topical title of this
-presentation is “The Persecution of the Jews.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At this time I offer in evidence a Document Book of translations,
-lettered “T.” These documents contained in the books are arranged
-according to the D-, L-, PS-, and R-series; and under the series the
-translations are listed numerically. This title, “The Persecution of
-the Jews,” is singularly inappropriate when weighed in the light of
-the evidence to follow. Academically, I am told, to persecute is to
-afflict, harass, and annoy. The term used does not convey, and
-indeed I cannot conjure a term that does convey the ultimate aim,
-the avowed purpose to obliterate the Jewish race.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This presentation is not intended to be a complete recital of all
-the crimes committed against the Jews. The extent and the scope of
-the crimes was so great that it permeated the entire German nation,
-its people and its organizations.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I am informed that others to follow me will offer additional
-evidence under other phases of the Prosecution’s case. Evidence
-relating to the Party organizations and state organizations, whose
-criminality the Prosecution will seek to establish, will disclose
-and emphasize the part that these organizations played in the
-pattern and plan for annihilation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The French and the Soviet Prosecutors, too, have a volume of
-evidence all related to this subject, which will be submitted in the
-course of the Trial.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Before I begin a recital of the overt acts leading to the
-elimination of the Jews, I am prepared to show that these acts and
-policies within Germany from the year 1933 to the end of the war
-related to the planning, preparation, initiation, and waging of
-aggressive wars, thus falling within the definition of Crimes
-against Humanity as defined in Article 6(c) of the Charter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It had long been a German theory that the first World War
-ended in Germany’s defeat because of a collapse in the zone of the
-interior. In planning for future wars it was determined that the
-home front must be secure to prevent a repetition of this 1918
-<span class='pageno' title='520' id='Page_520'></span>
-debacle. Unification of the German people was essential to
-successful planning and waging of war, and the Nazi political
-premise must be established—“One race, one state, one Führer.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Free trade unions must be abolished, political parties (other than
-the National Socialist Party) must be outlawed, civil liberties must
-be suspended, and opposition of every kind must be swept away.
-Loyalty to God, church, and scientific truth was declared to be
-incompatible with the Nazi regime. The anti-Jewish policy was
-part of this plan for unification because it was the conviction of the
-Nazis that the Jews would not contribute to Germany’s military
-program, but on the contrary would hamper it. The Jew must
-therefore be eliminated.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This view is clearly borne out by a statement contained in Document
-1919-PS, Exhibit USA-170. This document is a transcript of
-a Himmler speech at a meeting of the SS major generals on
-4 October 1943, and from Page 4, Paragraph 3, of the translation
-before the Court, I read a very short passage:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“We know how difficult we should have made it for ourselves
-if with the bombing raids, the burdens and deprivations of
-war, we still had Jews today in every town as secret saboteurs,
-agitators, and trouble mongers; we would now probably
-have reached the 1916-17 stage when the Jews were still in
-the German national body.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The treatment of the Jews within Germany was therefore as
-much of a plan for aggressive war as was the building of armaments
-and the conscription of manpower. It falls within the jurisdiction of
-this Tribunal as an integral part of the planning and preparation
-to wage a war of aggression.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is obvious that the persecution and murder of Jews throughout
-the conquered territories of Europe following 1939 are War Crimes
-as defined by Article 6(b) of the Charter. It further violates
-Article 46 of the Regulations of the Hague Convention of 1907, to
-which Germany was a signatory. I quote Article 46 and ask the
-Court to take judicial notice thereof:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Family honor and rights, the lives of persons, and private
-property, as well as religious convictions and practices, must
-be respected.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I know of no crime in the history of mankind more horrible in
-its details than the treatment of the Jews. It is intended to establish
-that the Nazi Party precepts, later incorporated within the policies
-of the German State, often expressed by the defendants at bar,
-were to annihilate the Jewish people. I shall seek to avoid the
-temptation to editorialize or to draw inferences from the documents,
-however great the provocation; rather I shall let the documentary
-evidence speak for itself—its stark realism will be unvarnished.
-<span class='pageno' title='521' id='Page_521'></span>
-Blood lust may have played some part in these savage crimes, but
-the underlying purpose and objective to annihilate the Jewish race
-was one of the fundamental principles of the Nazi plan to prepare
-for and to wage aggressive war. I shall from this point limit my
-proof to the overt acts committed; but I dare to request the Court’s
-indulgence, if it is necessary in weaving the pattern of evidence,
-to make reference to certain documents and evidence previously
-submitted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now this ultimate objective, that is, the elimination and
-extermination of the Jews, could not be accomplished without
-preliminary steps and measures. The German State must first be
-seized by the Nazi Party, the force of world opinion must be faced,
-and even the regimented German people must be indoctrinated
-with hatred against the Jews.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The first clear-cut evidence of the Party policies concerning the
-Jews was expressed in the Party program in February 1920.
-I offer in evidence Document 1708-PS, “Program of the National
-Socialist Party,” Exhibit USA-255. With the Court’s permission,
-I would like to quote the relevant part of that program, Paragraph
-(4):</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Only a member of the race can be a citizen. A member of
-the race can only be one who is of German blood without
-consideration of confession.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE TRIBUNAL (Mr. Biddle): May I interrupt a minute. It is
-a little hard to know where these exhibits are or what volume you
-are now quoting from.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: This, Sir, is 1708-PS.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE TRIBUNAL (Mr. Biddle): Volume 2?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: Volume 2.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE TRIBUNAL (Mr. Biddle): And what page of that exhibit?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: That is Paragraph (4) and Paragraph (6), Sir,
-on the first page.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Paragraph (4):</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Only a member of the race can be a citizen. A member of
-the race can only be one who is of German blood, without
-consideration of confession. Consequently, no Jew can be a
-member of the race.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And again, in Paragraph (6):</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The right to determine matters concerning administration
-and law belongs only to the citizen; therefore, we demand
-that every public office of any sort whatsoever, whether in
-the Reich, the county, or municipality, be filled only by
-citizens.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='522' id='Page_522'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now offer Document 2662-PS, <span class='it'>Mein Kampf</span>, Exhibit Number
-USA-256. On Pages 724-725, Hitler, in this book, speaking of the
-Jew, said that if the National Socialist movement was to fulfill its
-task—and I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It must open the eyes of the people with regard to foreign
-nations and must remind them again and again of the true
-enemy of our present-day world. In the place of hate against
-Aryans—from whom we may be separated by almost
-everything but to whom, however, we are tied by common
-blood or the great tie of a common culture—it must dedicate
-to the general anger the evil enemy of mankind as the true
-cause of all suffering.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk969'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It must see to it, however, that at least in our country he
-be recognized as the most mortal enemy and that the struggle
-against him may show, like a flaming beacon of a better era,
-to other nations, too, the road to salvation for a struggling
-Aryan mankind.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A flood of abusive literature of all types and for all age groups
-was published and circulated throughout Germany. Illustrative of
-this type of publication is the book entitled <span class='it'>Der Giftpilz</span>. I offer in
-evidence Document 1778-PS, Exhibit Number USA-257. This book
-brands the Jew as a persecutor of the labor class, as a race defiler,
-devil in human form, a poisonous mushroom, and a murderer. This
-particular book instructed school children to recognize the Jew
-by caricature of his physical features, shown on Pages 6 and 7;
-taught them that the Jew abuses little boys and girls, on Page 30;
-and that the Jewish Bible permits all crimes, Pages 13-17. The
-Defendant Streicher’s periodical <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span>, Number 14, April
-1937, in particular, went to such extremes as to publish the
-statement that Jews at the ritual celebration of their Passover
-slaughtered Christians.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I offer Document 2699-PS, Exhibit Number USA-258. On Page 2,
-Column 1, Paragraphs 6 to 9, I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Also the numerous confessions made by the Jews show that
-the execution of ritual murders is a law of the Talmud Jew.
-The former chief Rabbi (and later monk) Teofiti declares that
-the ritual murders take place especially on the Jewish Purim
-(in memory of the Persian murders) and Passover (in memory
-of the murder of Christ). The rules are as follows:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk970'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The blood of the victims is to be tapped by force. On
-Passover it is to be used in wine and matzos. Thus a small
-part of the blood is to be poured into the dough of the matzos
-and into the wine. The mixing is done by the head of the
-Jewish family.
-<span class='pageno' title='523' id='Page_523'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk971'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The procedure is as follows: The family head empties a few
-drops of the fresh and powdered blood into a glass, wets the
-fingers of the left hand with it and sprays (blesses) with it
-everything on the table. The head of the family then says,
-‘Thus we ask God to send the 10 plagues to all enemies of
-the Jewish faith.’ Then they eat, and at the end the head of
-the family exclaims, ‘May all Gentiles perish, as the child
-whose blood is contained in the bread and wine.’</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk972'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The fresh (or dried and powdered) blood of the slaughtered
-is further used by young married Jewish couples, by
-pregnant Jewesses, for circumcision and so on. Ritual murder
-is recognized by all Talmud Jews. The Jew believes he
-absolves himself thus of his sins.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is difficult for our minds to grasp that falsehoods such as these
-could fall on fertile soil, that a literate nation could read, digest, or
-believe these doctrines. We must realize, however, that with a
-rigidly controlled press which precluded an exposé of such lying
-propaganda, some of the ignorant and gullible would be led to
-believe.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now offer in evidence Document 2697-PS, a copy of <span class='it'>Der
-Stürmer</span>, Exhibit Number USA-259. This publication, <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span>,
-was published by the Defendant Streicher’s publishing firm. In this
-publication, Streicher, speaking of the Jewish faith, said, “The Holy
-Scripture is a horrible criminal romance abounding with murder,
-incest, fraud, and indecency.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And again he said, “The Talmud is the great Jewish book of
-criminal instructions that the Jew practices in his daily life.” This
-is contained in Document 2698-PS, <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span>, which I now offer
-in evidence, Exhibit Number USA-260.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This propaganda campaign of hate was too widespread and
-notorious to require further elaboration. Within the documents
-offered in evidence in this and in other phases of the case will be
-found similar and even more scurrilous statements, many by the
-defendants themselves and others by their accomplices.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When the Nazi Party gained control of the German State, a
-new and terrible weapon against the Jews was placed within their
-grasp, the power to apply the force of the state against them. This
-was done by the issuance of decrees.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Jewish immigrants were denaturalized: 1933 <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>,
-Part I, Page 480, signed by Defendants Frick and Neurath.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Native Jews were precluded from citizenship: 1935 <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>,
-Part I, Page 1146, signed by Defendant Frick.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Jews were forbidden to live in marriage or to have extramarital
-relations with persons of German blood: 1935 <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>,
-Part I, Page 1146, signed by Frick and Hess.
-<span class='pageno' title='524' id='Page_524'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Jews were denied the right to vote: 1936 <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>,
-Part I, Page 133, signed by Defendant Frick.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Jews were denied the right to hold public office or civil service
-positions: <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span> 1933, Part I, Page 277, signed by
-Defendant Frick.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was determined to relegate the Jews to an inferior status by
-denying them common privileges and freedoms. Thus, they were
-denied access to certain city areas, sidewalks, transportation, places,
-of amusement, restaurants: 1938 <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>, Part I, Page 1676.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Progressively more and still more stringent measures were
-applied, even to the denial of private pursuits. They were excluded
-from the practice of dentistry: 1939 <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>, Part I,
-Page 47, signed by Defendant Hess.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The practice of law was denied: 1938 <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>, Part I,
-Page 1403, signed by Defendants Frick and Hess.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The practice of medicine was denied: 1938 <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>,
-Part I, Page 969, signed by Defendants Frick and Hess.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They were denied employment by press and radio: 1933 <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>,
-Part I, Page 661.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From stock exchanges and stock brokerage: 1934 <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>,
-Part I, Page 169.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And even from farming: 1933 <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>, Part I, Page 685.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In 1938 they were excluded from business in general and from
-the economic life of Germany: 1938 <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>, Part I,
-Page 1580, signed by the Defendant Göring.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Jews were forced to pay discriminatory taxes and huge
-atonement fines. Their homes, bank accounts, real estate, and
-intangibles were expropriated.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To digress for a moment from a recital of decrees and to refer
-specifically to the atonement fines, I wish to offer Document
-1816-PS, Exhibit Number USA-261. This exhibit is a stenographic
-report of a conference under the chairmanship of the Defendant
-Göring, attended by the Defendant Funk among others, held at
-11 o’clock on 12 November 1938 at the Reich Ministry for Air. From
-Pages 8 and 9 of Section 7, I quote the Defendant Göring:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“One more question, gentlemen, what would you think the
-situation would be if I announced today that Jewry shall
-have to contribute this 1,000,000,000 as a punishment.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then the last paragraph on Page 22 of the translation before
-the Court—I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I shall choose the wording this way—that German Jewry
-shall, as punishment for their abominable crimes, <span class='it'>et cetera,
-et cetera</span>, have to make a contribution of 1,000,000,000. That
-will work. The pigs won’t commit another murder in a hurry.
-<span class='pageno' title='525' id='Page_525'></span>
-I should like to say again that I would not like to be a Jew
-in Germany.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was whimsical remarks such as these that originated decrees,
-for following this meeting a decree was issued placing upon the
-German Jews the burden of 1,000,000,000 Reichsmark fine: 1938
-<span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>, Part I, Page 1579, date 12 November 1938, signed
-by the Defendant Göring.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Similar decrees are contained in 1939 <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>, Part I,
-Page 282, signed by Defendant Göring, and 1941 <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>,
-Part I, Page 722, signed by Defendants Frick and Bormann.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Finally, in the year 1943, the Jews were placed beyond the
-protection of any judicial process by a decree signed by the
-Defendants Bormann and Frick and others; and the police became
-the sole arbiters of punishment and death: 1943 <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>,
-Part I, Page 372, signed by Frick and Bormann.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I ask the Court to take judicial notice of the <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>
-decrees cited.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Side by side with the passage of these decrees and their execution
-went still another weapon, wielded by the Party and the
-Party-controlled state. These were the openly sponsored and official
-anti-Jewish boycotts against Jews. I now offer Document 2409-PS,
-the published diary of Joseph Goebbels, Exhibit Number USA-262,
-and I invite the Court’s attention to Page 290 where, under date
-of 29 March 1933—the Court will find the quotation on the top
-of Page 1 of the translation of 2409-PS—“The boycott appeal is
-approved by the entire Cabinet.” And again on the 31st of March
-1933 he wrote, on Page 1, first sentence of Paragraph 2, “We are
-having a last discussion among a very small circle and decide that
-the boycott is to start tomorrow with all severity.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Streicher and the Defendant Frank, together with
-Himmler, Ley, and others, were members of a central committee
-who conducted the 1933 boycott against the Jews. Their names are
-listed in Document 2156-PS, <span class='it'>National Socialist Party Correspondence</span>,
-29 March 1933, Exhibit Number USA-263.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As early as 1933 violence against the Jews was undertaken.
-Raids were conducted, by uniformed Nazis, on services within
-synagogues. Attending members of the synagogues were assaulted
-and religious insignia and emblems were desecrated. A report of
-such an occurrence is contained in the official dispatch from the
-American Consul General in Leipzig, dated 5 April 1933.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I offer in evidence Document 2709-PS .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: What do you refer to 2156 for?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR. WALSH: Only, Sir, to show the names of the Defendants
-Streicher and Frank as members of the boycott committee.
-<span class='pageno' title='526' id='Page_526'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I see.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: Document 2709 has been given Exhibit Number
-USA-265. From Paragraph 1 of Page 1, I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In Dresden, several weeks ago, uniformed Nazis raided the
-Jewish prayer house, interrupted the evening religious
-service, arrested 25 worshippers, and tore the holy insignia
-or emblems from their headcovering worn while praying.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At a meeting here in Nuremberg, before the representatives of
-the German press, the Defendant Streicher and Mayor Liebel of
-Nuremberg revealed in advance to the gathered members of the
-press that the Nuremberg synagogue was to be destroyed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I offer in evidence Document 1724-PS, Exhibit Number USA-266,
-which is minutes of this meeting, dated 4 August 1938. From
-Page 1, Paragraph 4 of the original, I quote the translation before
-the Court:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The breaking up of the synagogue (information must still be
-secret). On August 10, 1938, at 10 o’clock a.m., the breakup
-of the synagogue will commence. Gauleiter Julius Streicher
-will personally set the crane into motion with which the
-Jewish symbols, Star of David, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>, will be torn down.
-This should be arranged in a big way. Closer details are still
-unknown.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>The Defendant Streicher himself supervised the demolition.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In support of this, I offer Document 2711-PS, a newspaper
-account of 11 August 1938, Exhibit Number USA-267, Paragraph 1
-of the translation before the Court:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In Nuremberg the synagogue is being demolished; Julius
-Streicher himself inaugurates the work by a speech lasting
-more than an hour and a half. By his order then—so to speak
-as a prelude of the demolition—the tremendous Star of David
-came off the cupola.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>These accounts of violence were not localized anti-Semitic
-demonstrations but were directed and ordered from a centralized
-headquarters in Berlin. This is established by a series of teletype
-messages sent by the Berlin Secret State Police headquarters to
-chiefs of police throughout Germany on 10 November 1938, which
-contained instructions pertaining to the pre-arranged demonstration.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now refer to Document 3051-PS, previously offered in evidence
-as Exhibit Number USA-240. I shall quote the relevant part of one
-of these confidential orders signed by Heydrich, the translation
-before the Court, the last half on Page 2:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Because of the attempt on the life of the Secretary of the
-Legation, Von Rath, in Paris tonight, 9-10 November 1938,
-demonstrations against Jews are to be expected throughout
-<span class='pageno' title='527' id='Page_527'></span>
-the Reich. The following instructions are given on how to
-treat these events:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk973'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1) The Chiefs of the State Police or their deputies must get
-in telephonic contact with the political leaders who have
-jurisdiction over their districts and must arrange a joint
-meeting with the appropriate inspector or commander of the
-Order Police to discuss the organization of the demonstrations.
-At these discussions the political leaders have to be informed
-that the German Police has received from the Reichsführer SS
-and Chief of the German Police the following instructions, in
-accordance with which the political leaders should adjust
-their own measures.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk974'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“a) Only such measures should be taken which do not involve
-danger to German life or property. (For instance synagogues
-are to be burned down only when there is no danger of fire
-to the surroundings.)</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk975'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“b) Business and private apartments of Jews may be
-destroyed but not looted. The police is instructed to supervise
-the execution of this order and to arrest looters.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To this point we have found a gradual and a mounting emphasis
-in the campaign against the Jews, one of the basic tenets of the
-Nazi Party and of the state. The flame of prejudice has now been
-lighted and fanned. The German people have been to a large
-degree indoctrinated, and the seeds of hatred have been sown. The
-German State is now armed and is prepared for conquest and the
-force of world opinion can now safely be ignored. Already they
-have forced out of Germany 200,000 of its original 500,000 Jews.
-The Nazi-controlled German State is therefore emboldened; and
-Hitler, in anticipation of the aggressive wars already planned, casts
-about for a “whipping boy” upon whose shoulders can be placed
-the blame for the world catastrophe yet to come. The speech before
-the Reichstag on 30 January 1939 is set forth in Document Number
-2663-PS, which I now offer in evidence as Exhibit Number USA-268.
-I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“If the international Jewish financiers within and without
-Europe succeed in plunging the nations once more into a
-world war, the result will not be the Bolshevization of the
-world and the victory of Jewry, but the obliteration of the
-Jewish race in Europe.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn for 10 minutes.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Major Walsh, it would, I think, assist the
-Tribunal if you were careful to state the PS number which we
-<span class='pageno' title='528' id='Page_528'></span>
-have rather more clearly and slowly. You see, the United States
-Exhibit number we do not have and I do not know whether it
-would be better to state the United States Exhibit number first
-and then give us the PS number; I am not sure it would. Anyhow,
-if you would go a little more slowly and make certain we get the
-PS number, it would be helpful.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: Yes, Your Honor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Chief Editor of the official organ of the SS, the <span class='it'>Schwarze
-Korps</span>, expressed similar sentiments on August 8, 1940.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I offer in evidence Document 2668-PS; this is Exhibit Number
-USA-269, Page 2 of the original and the full excerpt before the
-Court in translation, as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Just as the Jewish question will be solved for Germany only
-when the last Jew has been deported, so the rest of Europe
-should also realize that the German peace which awaits it
-must be a peace without Jews.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>These were not the only officials of the Party and of the State
-to voice the same views. The Defendant Rosenberg wrote for
-the publication <span class='it'>World Struggle</span>. I offer in evidence Document
-2665-PS, Exhibit Number USA-270. This publication, Volumes 1
-and 2, April and September 1941, Page 71 of the original, reads,
-“The Jewish question will be solved only when the last Jew has
-left the European continent.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Court will recall Mr. Justice Jackson’s reference to the
-apologetic note contained in the diary of Hans Frank when he
-wrote, and I quote from Document 2233(c)-PS, Exhibit Number
-USA-271, bottom of Page 1 of the translation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Of course, I could neither eliminate all lice nor all Jews in
-only 1 year’s time. But in the course of time and, above all,
-if you will help me, this end will be attained.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I forgot to say, Major Walsh, it would help
-us too, when you do not begin at the beginning of a paragraph,
-if you would indicate about where it is.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: Yes, Sir; I shall do that.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>While this presentation is not necessarily intended to be a
-chronological narrative of events in the treatment of the Jewish
-people, it would appear at this point that we should pause to
-examine the record to date. We find that the Nazi Party and the
-Nazi-dominated State have, by writings and by utterances, by
-decrees and by official acts, clearly expressed their intent: the Jew
-must be eliminated.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>How do they now progress to the accomplishment of this
-purpose? The first requirement was a complete registration of all
-Jews; and inasmuch as the policy relating to the Jews followed
-<span class='pageno' title='529' id='Page_529'></span>
-on the heels of German aggression, such registration was required
-not only within the Reich but successively within the conquered
-territories. For example, within Germany registration was required
-by decree (<span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>, Part I, 1938, Page 922, 23 July, signed
-by the Defendant Frick); within Austria (<span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>, Volume 1,
-1940, Page 694, 29 April); within Poland (Kurjer Krakowski,
-5 October 1939); in France (<span class='it'>Journal Officiel</span> Number 9, Page 92,
-30 September 1940); in Holland (<span class='it'>Verordnungsblatt</span>, Number 6,
-10 January 1941, signed by the Defendant Seyss-Inquart).</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The second step was to segregate and concentrate the Jews
-within restricted areas called ghettos. This policy was carefully
-worked out, and perhaps the confidential statement taken from the
-files of the Defendant Rosenberg will best serve as an illustration.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I offer in evidence a copy of a memorandum from Defendant
-Rosenberg’s file entitled, “Directions for Handling of the Jewish
-Question,” Document 212-PS, Exhibit Number USA-272. I quote
-from the top of Page 2 of the translation before the Court:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The first main goal of the German measures must be strict
-segregation of Jewry from the rest of the population. The
-presupposition of this is, first of all, the registration of the
-Jewish population by the introduction of a compulsory
-registration order and similar appropriate measures.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then, in the second sentence, in the second paragraph, on
-Page 2, I continue:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. all rights of freedom for Jews are to be withdrawn.
-They are to be placed in ghettos and at the same time are to
-be separated according to sexes. The presence of many more
-or less closed Jewish settlements in White Ruthenia and in
-the Ukraine makes this mission easier. Moreover, places are
-to be chosen which make possible the full use of the Jewish
-manpower as a consequence of present labor programs. These
-ghettos can be placed under the supervision of a Jewish self-government
-with Jewish officials. The guarding of the
-boundaries between the ghettos and the outer world is,
-however, the duty of the police.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk976'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Also, in the case in which a ghetto could not yet be
-established, care is to be taken through strict prohibition and
-similar suitable measures that a further intermingling of
-blood of the Jews and the rest of the populace does not
-continue.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In May 1941 Rosenberg, as the Reich Minister for the Eastern
-regions, issued directions confining the Jews to ghettos in the
-Ukraine.
-<span class='pageno' title='530' id='Page_530'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I offer in evidence Document 1028-PS, Exhibit Number USA-273,
-and from the first sentence of the translation before the Court,
-I read:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“After the customary removal of Jews from all public offices,
-the Jewish question will have to be solved conclusively
-through the institution of ghettos.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The policies expressed in the quoted Rosenberg memoranda were
-not isolated instances nor the acts of one individual. It was the
-expressed state policy. Defendant Von Schirach played his part in
-the program of “ghettoization.” I offer in evidence Document
-3048-PS, Exhibit Number USA-274. Before the Court is a full
-translation of that which I wish to quote. The Defendant Von
-Schirach spoke before the European Youth Congress held in Vienna
-on 14 September 1942, and from Page 2, Column 2, of the Vienna
-edition of the <span class='it'>Völkischer Beobachter</span> of 15 September, I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Every Jew who exerts influence in Europe is a danger to
-European culture. If anyone reproaches me with having driven
-from this city, which was once the European metropolis of
-Jewry, tens of thousands upon tens of thousands of Jews into
-the ghetto of the East, I feel myself compelled to reply, ‘I
-see in this an action contributing to European culture.’ ”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>One of the largest ghettos was within the City of Warsaw. The
-original report made by SS Major General Stroop concerning this
-ghetto is entitled, “The Warsaw Ghetto is no more.” I now offer
-this in evidence at this time, if the Court please, and request leave
-to refer to it later on in this presentation—Exhibit Number
-USA-275, 1061-PS, top of Page 3 of the translation, Document
-1061-PS:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Ghetto thus established in Warsaw was inhabited by
-about 400,000 Jews.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk977'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It contained 27,000 apartments with an average of two and
-a half rooms each. It was separated from the rest of the city
-by partitions and other walls and by walling-up of thoroughfares,
-windows, doors, open spaces, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Some idea of the conditions within this ghetto can be gathered
-from the fact that an average of six persons lived in every room.
-Himmler received a report from the SS Brigadeführer Group A,
-dated 15 October 1941 which further illustrates the establishment
-and operation of the ghettos. I offer Document L-180 in evidence
-as Exhibit Number USA-276. The translation, if the Tribunal
-please, is from the second paragraph from the bottom of Page 9:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Apart from organizing and carrying out measures of execution,
-the creation of ghettos was begun in the larger towns
-at once during the first days of operations. This was especially
-<span class='pageno' title='531' id='Page_531'></span>
-urgent in Kovno because there were 30,000 Jews in a total
-population of 152,400.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And from the last paragraph on Page 9 continuing to page 10
-I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In Riga the so-called ‘Moscow suburb’ was designated as
-a ghetto. This is the worst dwelling district of Riga, already
-now mostly inhabited by Jews. The transfer of the Jews into
-the ghetto district proved rather difficult because the Latvian
-dwellings in that district had to be evacuated and residential
-space in Riga is very crowded. Of the 28,000 Jews living in
-Riga 24,000 have been transferred into the ghetto so far. In
-creating the ghetto the Security Police restricted themselves
-to mere policing duties, while the establishment and administration
-of the ghetto as well as the regulation of the
-food supply for the inmates of the ghetto was left to civil
-administration; the Labor Offices were left in charge of labor
-allocation. In the other towns with a larger Jewish population
-ghettos shall be established likewise.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Jews were also forced into ghettos in the Polish Province of
-Galicia. No words in my vocabulary could describe quite so
-adequately the conditions as those contained in the report from
-Katzmann, Lieutenant General of Police, to Krüger, General of
-the Police East, dated 3 June 1943, entitled “Solution of Jewish
-Question in Galicia.” I offer Document L-18 in evidence as Exhibit
-Number USA-277. From the translation, if the Court please, we
-will begin with the last three sentences on Page 11, that is, the last
-three sentences prior to the word “nothing” which is there on that
-page: “Nothing but catastrophical conditions were found in the
-ghettos of Rawa-Ruska and Rohatyn.”</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Jews of Rawa-Ruska, fearing the evacuation, had concealed
-those who suffered from spotted fever in underground
-holes. When evacuation was to start it was found that 3,000
-Jews suffering from spotted fever lay about in this ghetto.
-In order to destroy this center of pestilence at once, every
-police officer inoculated against spotted fever was called into
-action. Thus we succeeded in destroying this plague-boil,
-losing thereby only one officer. Almost the same conditions
-were found in Rohatyn.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On Page 19 of this same document, L-18, the last paragraph, I
-wish to quote further.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>MAJOR WALSH: “Since we received more and more
-alarming reports on the Jews becoming armed in an ever-increasing
-manner, we started, during the last fortnight in
-<span class='pageno' title='532' id='Page_532'></span>
-June 1943, an action throughout the whole of the District of
-Galicia with the intent to use strongest measures to destroy
-the Jewish gangsterdom. Special measures were found necessary
-during the action to dissolve the living quarters in Lvov
-where the dug-out mentioned above had been established.
-Here we had to act brutally from the beginning in order to
-avoid losses on our side; we had to blow up or to burn down
-several houses. On this occasion the surprising fact arose that
-we were able to catch about 20,000 Jews instead of 12,000
-Jews who had registered. We had to pull at least 3,000 Jewish
-corpses out of every kind of hiding place; they had committed
-suicide by taking poison.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On Page 20 of this document, the third paragraph I read:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Despite the extraordinary burden heaped upon every single
-SS and Police member during these actions, the mood and
-spirit of the men were extraordinarily good and praiseworthy
-from the first to the last day.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>These acts and actions of removal and slaughter were not
-entirely without profit. The author of this report, on the ninth
-page of this translated copy stated, and I quote the last paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Together with the evacuation action we executed the confiscation
-of Jewish property. Very high values were confiscated
-and handed over to the Special Staff ‘Reinhard.’ Apart from
-furniture and many textile goods, the following amounts were
-confiscated and turned over to Special Staff ‘Reinhard.’ ”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I would like to read a few of the many and assorted items listed
-under this confiscation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“20.952 kilograms of golden wedding rings; 7 stamp collections,
-complete; 1 suitcase with pocket knives; 1 basket of
-fountain pens and propelling pencils; 3 bags filled with rings—not
-genuine; 35 wagons of furs.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I will not burden the Court with the detailed lists of objects
-of value and of the money confiscated; but the foregoing is cited to
-illustrate the thoroughness of the looting of a defenseless people,
-even to the 11.73 kilograms of gold teeth and inlays.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By the end of 1942 Jews in the Government General of Poland
-had been crowded into 55 localities whereas before the German
-invasion there had been approximately 1,000 Jewish settlements
-within this same area. This is reported in the 1942 official gazette
-for the Government General, Number 94, Page 665, 1 November
-1942.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Jews having been registered and confined within the
-ghettos, they now furnished a reservoir for slave labor. It is
-believed pertinent at this time to point out the difference between
-the slave labor and labor duty. The latter group were entitled
-<span class='pageno' title='533' id='Page_533'></span>
-to reasonable compensation, stated work hours, medical care and
-attention, and other social security measures, while the former
-were granted none of these advantages, being in fact on a level
-below a slave.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Defendant Rosenberg, as Reich Minister for the Eastern Occupied
-Territories, set up within his organization a department which,
-among other things, was to seek a solution for the Jewish problem
-by means of forced labor. His plans are contained in another
-document, 1024-PS, which I now offer in evidence, Exhibit Number
-USA-278.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I quote the first part of Paragraph 3 of Page 1 of the document
-entitled, “General Organization and Tasks of Our Office for the
-General Handling of Problems in the Eastern Territory.” This is
-dated 29 April 1941. This brief excerpt reads as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A general treatment is required for the Jewish problem for
-which a temporary solution will have to be determined
-(forced labor for the Jews, creation of ghettos, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>).”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thereafter he issued instructions that Jewish forced labor should
-be effected and utilized for every manual labor; and I refer to
-Document 212-PS, already in evidence, Exhibit Number USA-272.
-From Page 3 of this document, Paragraph 5 and Paragraph 7, I
-quote Paragraph 5:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The standing rule for the Jewish labor employment is the
-complete and unyielding use of Jewish manpower regardless
-of age in the reconstruction of the Eastern Occupied Territories.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And from Paragraph 7 of the same page I read:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Violations of German measures, especially evasions of the
-forced labor regulations, are to be punished by death in the
-case of the Jews.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From the ghettos Jewish labor was selected and sent to a concentration
-area. Here the usable Jews were screened from those
-considered worthless. For example, a contingent of 45,000 Jews
-would be expected to yield 10,000 to 15,000 usable laborers. My
-authority for this statement is contained in a RSHA telegram to
-Himmler, marked “urgent” and “secret,” dated 16 December 1942.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I offer this document, 1472-PS, in evidence, Exhibit Number
-USA-279; and from the translation before the Court I read the last
-four lines:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the total of 45,000 are included physically handicapped
-and others (old Jews and children). In making a distribution
-for this purpose, at least 10,000 to 15,000 laborers will be
-available when the Jews arriving at Auschwitz are assigned.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From Document L-18, a report from the Lieutenant General of
-the Police, Katzmann, to General of the Police East, Krüger, already
-<span class='pageno' title='534' id='Page_534'></span>
-in evidence, Exhibit Number USA-277, we find the clearly outlined
-nature of the forced labor situation for the Jews. On Page 2 of the
-translation, starting with Paragraph 6, I read:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The best remedy consisted in the formation of forced labor
-camps by the SS and Police Leader. The best opportunity
-for labor was offered by the necessity to complete the ‘Dg. 4’
-road which was extremely important and necessary for the
-whole of the southern part of the front and which was in a
-catastrophically bad condition. On October 15, 1941, the
-establishment of camps along the road was commenced; and
-despite considerable difficulties there existed, after a few
-weeks only, seven camps containing 4,000 Jews.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From Page 2, Paragraph 7, I read:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Soon more camps followed these first ones, so that after a
-very short time the completion of 15 camps of this kind could
-be reported to the superior leader of SS and police. In the
-course of time about 20,000 Jewish laborers passed through
-these camps. Despite the hardly imaginable difficulties arising
-from this problem I can report today that about 160 kilometers
-of the road are completed.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And from Page 2, Paragraph 8, I read:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“At the same time all other Jews fit for work were registered
-and distributed for useful work by the labor agencies.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And on Page 5, last part of Paragraph 1 .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Don’t you want the remainder of that paragraph
-on Page 2?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: It is such a lengthy document, I hesitated to
-burden the record with so much of it, and had extracted certain
-portions therefrom, but I shall be very glad to read it into the
-record.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>THE PRESIDENT: “Then, for instance, the Municipal Administration
-at Lvov had no success in their attempts to house
-the Jews within a closed district which would be inhabited
-only by Jews. This question, too, was solved quickly by the
-SS and Police Leader through his subordinate officials.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: With the Court’s permission, I add that to the
-record.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Reading the last paragraph of Page 2:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“When the Jews were marked by the Star of David, as well
-as when they were registered by the labor agencies, the first
-symptoms appeared in their attempts to dodge the order of
-the authorities. The measures which were introduced thereupon
-led to thousands of arrests. It became more and more
-apparent that the civil administration was not in a position
-<span class='pageno' title='535' id='Page_535'></span>
-to solve the Jewish problem in an approximately satisfactory
-manner. Then, for instance, the municipal administration at
-Lvov had no success in their attempts to house the Jews
-within a closed district which would be inhabited only by
-Jews. This question, too, was solved quickly by the SS and
-Police Leader through his subordinate officials. This measure
-became the more urgent as in the winter of 1941 big centers
-of spotted fever were noted in many parts of the town .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And on Page 5 of this document, L-18, last half of Paragraph 1,
-I read:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“During the removal of the Jews into a certain quarter of the
-town several sluices were erected at which all the work-shy
-and asocial Jewish rabble were caught during the screening
-and treated in a special way. Owing to the peculiar fact that
-almost 90 percent of artisans working in Galicia were Jews,
-the task to be solved could be fulfilled only step by step, since
-an immediate evacuation would not have served the interest
-of war economy.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And again, on Page 5, Paragraph 2, the latter part, beginning
-with “cases were discovered”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Cases were discovered where Jews, in order to acquire any
-certificate of labor, not only renounced all wages but even
-paid money themselves. Moreover, the organizing of Jews
-for the benefit of their employers grew to such catastrophical
-extent that it was deemed necessary to interfere in the most
-energetic manner for the benefit of the German name.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk978'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Since the administration was not in a position and showed
-itself too weak to master this chaos, the SS and Police leader
-simply took over the entire disposition of labor for Jews. The
-Jewish labor agencies, which were manned by hundreds of
-Jews, were dissolved. All certificates of labor given by firms
-or administrative offices were declared invalid, and the cards
-given to the Jews by the labor agencies were validated by
-the police offices by stamping them. In the course of this
-action, again, thousands of Jews were caught who were in
-possession of forged certificates or who had obtained, surreptitiously,
-certificates of labor by all kinds of pretexts. These
-Jews also were exposed to special treatment.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If the Court please, at this time I would like to arrange for the
-showing of a very short motion picture, perhaps one of the most
-unusual exhibits that will be presented during the Trial. With the
-Court’s permission I would like to call upon Commander Donovan
-to assist.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Need we adjourn for it or not?
-<span class='pageno' title='536' id='Page_536'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: No, Sir. The movie itself is very, very short,
-Sir.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Very well.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COMMANDER DONOVAN: May it please the Tribunal, the
-United States now offers in evidence Document Number 3052-PS,
-Exhibit Number USA-280, entitled “Original German 8-millimeter
-Film of Atrocities against Jews.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This is a strip of motion pictures taken, we believe, by a member
-of the SS and captured by the United States military forces in an
-SS barracks near Augsburg, Germany, as described in the affidavits
-now before the Tribunal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We have not been able to establish beyond doubt in which area
-these films were made, but we believe that to be immaterial.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The film offers undeniable evidence, made by Germans themselves,
-of almost incredible brutality to Jewish people in the custody
-of the Nazis, including German military units.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is believed by the Prosecution that the scene is the extermination
-of a ghetto by Gestapo agents, assisted by military units.
-And, as the other evidence to be presented by the Prosecution will
-indicate, the scene presented to the Tribunal is probably one which
-occurred a thousand times all over Europe under the Nazi rule of
-terror.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This film was made on an 8-millimeter home camera. We have
-not wished even to reprint it, and so shall present the original,
-untouched film captured by our troops. The pictures obviously were
-taken by an amateur photographer. Because of this, because of the
-fact that part of it is burned, because of the fact that it runs for only
-1½ minutes, and because of the confusion on every hand shown on
-this film, we do not believe that the Tribunal can properly view the
-evidence if it is shown only once. We therefore ask the Tribunal’s
-permission to project the film twice as we did before the Defense
-Counsel.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This is a silent film. The film has been made available to all
-Defense Counsel, and they have a copy of the supporting affidavits,
-duly translated.</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:4em;margin-top:1em;margin-bottom:1em;font-size:.8em;'>[<span class='it'>The film was shown.</span>]</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COMMANDER DONOVAN: [<span class='it'>Continuing.</span>] May it please the Tribunal,
-while the film is being rewound I wish to say that attached
-to the affidavits offered in evidence is a description of every picture
-shown in this film. And, with the Tribunal’s permission, I wish
-to read a few selections from that at this time, before again projecting
-the film, in order to direct the Tribunal’s attention to certain
-of the scenes:
-<span class='pageno' title='537' id='Page_537'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Scene 2—A naked girl running across the courtyard.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Scene 3—An older woman being pushed past the camera, and
-a man in SS uniform standing at the right of the scene.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Scene 5—A man with a skullcap and a woman are manhandled.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Number 14—A half-naked woman runs through the crowd.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Number 15—Another half-naked woman runs out of the house.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Number 16—Two men drag an old man out.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Number 18—A man in German military uniform, with his back
-to the camera, watches.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Number 24—A general shot of the street, showing fallen bodies
-and naked women running.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Number 32—A shot of the street, showing five fallen bodies.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Number 37—A man with a bleeding head is hit again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Number 39—A soldier in German military uniform, with a rifle,
-stands by as a crowd centers on a man coming out of the house.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Number 44—A soldier with a rifle, in German military uniform,
-walks past a woman clinging to a torn blouse.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Number 45—A woman is dragged by her hair across the street.</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:4em;margin-top:1em;margin-bottom:1em;font-size:.8em;'>[<span class='it'>The film was shown again.</span>]</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COMMANDER DONOVAN: [<span class='it'>Continuing.</span>] We submit to the Tribunal
-for its permanent records this strip of 8-millimeter film.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: It is difficult from this point to follow the
-thread of chronological order or a topical outline. So numerous are
-the documents and so appalling the contents that in this brief recital
-the Prosecution will make no effort to itemize the criminal acts.
-Selected documents, however, will unfold the crimes in full detail.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Before launching a discussion of the means utilized to accomplish
-the ultimate aim, that is the extermination of the Jewish people,
-I now turn to that fertile source of evidence, the diary of Hans
-Frank, then Governor General of occupied Poland. In a cabinet
-session on Tuesday, 16 December 1941, in the government building
-at Kraków, the Defendant Frank made a closing address to the session.
-I offer now in evidence that part of the document, Number
-2233(d)-PS, Exhibit Number USA-281, identified CV 1941, October
-to December, and from Page 76, line 10, to Page 77, line 33, of the
-original and of the entire translation before the Court. I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“As far as the Jews are concerned, I want to tell you quite
-frankly that they must be done away with in one way or
-another. The Führer said once: ‘Should united Jewry again
-succeed in provoking a world war, the blood of not only the
-nations which have been forced into the war by them will
-be shed, but the Jew will have found his end in Europe.’
-I know that many of the measures carried out against the
-<span class='pageno' title='538' id='Page_538'></span>
-Jews in the Reich at present are being criticized. It is being
-tried intentionally, as is obvious from the reports on the
-morale, to talk about cruelty, harshness, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>. Before I
-continue, I would beg you to agree with me on the following
-formula: We will principally have pity on the German people
-only and nobody else in the whole world. The others, too,
-had no pity on us. As an old National Socialist I must also
-say: This war would be only a partial success if the whole lot
-of Jewry would survive it, while we would have shed our best
-blood in order to save Europe. My attitude towards the Jews
-will, therefore, be based only on the expectation that they
-must disappear. They must be done away with. I have
-entered negotiations to have them deported to the East. A
-large conference concerning that question, to which I am
-going to delegate the State Secretary Dr. Bühler, will take
-place in Berlin in January. That discussion is to take place
-in the Reich Security Main Office with SS Lieutenant General
-Heydrich. A great Jewish migration will begin, in any case.
-“But what should be done with the Jews? Do you think they
-will be settled down in the ‘Ostland’ in villages? This is what
-we were told in Berlin: Why all this bother? We can do
-nothing with them either in the ‘Ostland’ or in the ‘Reichskommissariat.’
-So liquidate them yourselves.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk979'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Gentlemen, I must ask you to arm yourselves against all
-feeling of pity. We must annihilate the Jews, wherever we
-find them and wherever it is possible, in order to maintain
-there the structure of the Reich as a whole. This will, naturally,
-be achieved by other methods than those pointed out
-by Bureau Chief Dr. Hummel. Nor can the judges of the
-Special Courts be made responsible for it because of the limitations
-of the frame work of the legal procedure. Such outdated
-views cannot be applied to such gigantic and unique
-events. We must find at any rate a way which leads to the
-goal, and my thoughts are working in that direction.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk980'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Jews represent for us also extraordinarily malignant
-gluttons. We have now approximately, 2,500,000 of them in
-the Government General, perhaps with the Jewish mixtures
-and everything that goes with it, 3,500,000 Jews. We cannot
-shoot or poison those 3,500,000 Jews; but we shall nevertheless
-be able to take measures which will lead, somehow,
-to their annihilation, and this in connection with the gigantic
-measures to be determined in discussions with the Reich. The
-Government General must become free of Jews, the same as
-the Reich. Where and how this is to be achieved is a matter
-for the offices which we must appoint and create here. Their
-activities will be brought to your attention in due course.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='539' id='Page_539'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This, if the Tribunal please, is not the planning and scheming
-of an individual, but is the expression of the official of the German
-State, the appointed Governor General of occupied Poland. The
-methods used to accomplish the annihilation of the Jewish people
-were varied and, although not subtle, were highly successful.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I have from time to time made reference to certain utterances
-and actions of the Defendant Rosenberg as one of the leaders and
-policy makers of the Nazi Party and German State. It is perhaps
-reasonable to assume that the Defendant Rosenberg will claim for
-many of his actions that he pursued them pursuant to superior
-orders. I have before me, however, a captured document, Number
-001-PS, marked “secret,” dated 18 December 1941, entitled “Documentary
-Memorandum for the Führer—Concerning Jewish Possessions
-in France,” Exhibit Number USA-282. I dare say that no
-document before this Tribunal will more clearly evidence the
-Defendant Rosenberg’s personal attitude, his temperament, and convictions
-toward the Jews more strongly than this memorandum,
-wherein he, in his own initiative, urges plundering and death. I
-offer in evidence Document Number 001-PS. The body of the memorandum
-reads as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In compliance with the order of the Führer for protection of
-Jewish cultural possessions, a great number of Jewish dwellings
-remained unguarded. Consequently, many furnishings
-have disappeared because a guard could, naturally, not be
-posted. In the whole East the administration has found terrible
-conditions of living quarters, and the chances of procurement
-are so limited that it is not possible to procure any
-more. Therefore, I beg the Führer to permit the seizure of
-all Jewish home furnishings of Jews in Paris who have fled
-or will leave shortly and those of Jews living in all parts of
-the occupied West to relieve the shortage of furnishings in
-the administration in the East.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk981'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. A great number of leading Jews were, after a short
-examination in Paris, again released. The attempts on the
-lives of members of the Forces have not stopped; on the
-contrary they continue. This reveals an unmistakable plan
-to disrupt the German-French co-operation, to force Germany
-to retaliate and, with this, evoke a new defense on the
-part of the French against Germany. I suggest to the Führer
-that, instead of executing 100 Frenchmen, we shoot in their
-place 100 Jewish bankers, lawyers, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>. It is the Jews
-in London and New York who incite the French Communists
-to commit acts of violence, and it seems only fair that the
-members of this race should pay for this. It is not the little
-Jews but the leading Jews in France who should be held
-<span class='pageno' title='540' id='Page_540'></span>
-responsible. That would tend to awaken the anti-Jewish
-sentiment.”—Sighed—“A. Rosenberg.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:4em;margin-top:1em;margin-bottom:1em;font-size:.8em;'>[<span class='it'>Dr. Thoma approached the lectern.</span>]</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: May I ask you to speak slowly so that your
-application will come to me through the earphones correctly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. THOMA: Since the Prosecutor is now dealing with the case
-against my client, Rosenberg, may I be permitted to voice an objection
-to Document 212-PS, Exhibit Number USA-272. The Prosecutor
-claims that this document was a directive issued by the
-Minister for the East. It begins with the words .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: None of that has come through on the earphones.
-I don’t understand you. You had better begin again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. THOMA: The Prosecutor presented earlier today Document
-Number 212-PS, Exhibit Number USA-272, claiming that its content
-was a directive issued by the Minister for the East on the treatment
-of Jews. In this document he is said to have given instructions that
-violations of German regulations by Jews, especially violations of
-the compulsory labor laws, could only be punished by death. This
-document does not originate with the Defendant Rosenberg; nor did
-it by mistake .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: More slowly, please.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. THOMA: This document does not originate with the Defendant
-Rosenberg. It bears neither a date nor an address, nor his
-signature. I, therefore, object to the assertion that this document
-originated with the Defendant Rosenberg.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Wait a minute. I don’t think that Counsel
-for the Prosecution said that, that Document 212-PS emanated from
-Rosenberg. I didn’t so understand him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. THOMA: I understood him to say that it was a directive
-issued by the Minister for the East; and if I am not mistaken, he
-also said it was dated April 1941. At that time there was no
-Ministry for the East. Rosenberg was only named Minister for the
-East in July 1941.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I will ask the Counsel for the Prosecution.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: It is my understanding, Sir, that that document,
-212-PS, was taken from the captured files of Rosenberg.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. THOMA: That is true, it was found among the papers of the
-Defendant Rosenberg; the Defendant Rosenberg claims, however,
-that he has never seen this document, that he knows nothing about
-it, and that it has never passed through his hands.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Rosenberg, when he is called as a witness
-or when you appear to speak for him, will be able to say that he
-<span class='pageno' title='541' id='Page_541'></span>
-has never seen the document before. All that Counsel, for the Prosecution
-has said—and it appears to be true—is that the document
-was found in Rosenberg’s file. You can say or prove by Rosenberg’s
-evidence when you call Rosenberg—if you do call him—that he
-never saw the document. Do you understand?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. THOMA: Yes, thank you.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: It is 5 o’clock now, so we will adjourn.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>The Tribunal adjourned until 14 December 1945 at 1000 hours.</span>]</h3>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='542' id='Page_542'></span><h1>TWENTIETH DAY<br/> <span style='font-size:smaller'>Friday, 14 December 1945</span></h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'><span class='it'>Morning Session</span></h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. KAUFFMANN: May I bring up two points with regard to
-yesterday’s and all future presentation of evidence on the section
-dealing with Crimes against Humanity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Firstly, I request that the affidavit of the witness Pfaffenberger,
-which was submitted yesterday, be stricken from the record. The
-witness himself will later have to be cross-examined, since his
-affidavit is fragmentary in most important points. In many cases
-it does not appear whether his statements are based on personal
-observations or on hearsay, and therefore it is too easy to draw
-false conclusions. The witness did not mention that the Camp Commander
-Koch and his inhuman wife were condemned to death by
-an SS court, among other things, on account of these occurrences.
-It is, of course, possible to ascertain the complete facts by questioning
-the witness at a later stage of the Trial. But until then the
-Tribunal and all members of the Prosecution and the Defense must
-be continually influenced by such dreadful testimony.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The contents of this testimony are so horrifying and so degrading
-to the human mind that one would like to avert one’s eyes and ears.
-In the meantime such statements make their way into the press of
-the whole world, and civilization is justly indignant. The consequences
-of such prejudiced statements are incalculable. The Prosecutor
-clearly recognized the significance of this testimony and
-exposed the sorry documents in yesterday’s proceedings.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If weeks or months pass before such testimony is rectified, its
-initial effect can never be wholly eliminated; but truth suffers and
-justice is endangered thereby. Surely, Article 19 of the Charter
-does not envisage bringing about such a state of affairs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Secondly, I should, therefore, like to suggest that at the present
-stage of the Trial the testimony of witnesses who live in Germany
-and whose appearance here in court is possible should not be read
-in the proceedings. For at this stage of the Trial the charges being
-made are even more terrible than those referring to wars of aggression,
-since the tortured lives and deaths of human beings are
-involved.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the beginning of the Trial the Tribunal refused to admit
-testimony of the witness Schuschnigg, and it is my opinion that
-<span class='pageno' title='543' id='Page_543'></span>
-what was valid then should be all the more valid at this stage of
-the Trial.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I should like to emphasize my suggestion particularly with regard
-to the Defendant Dr. Kaltenbrunner himself, since it was not until
-the spring of 1943 that he became Chief of the Reich Security Main
-Office and since, in the opinion of the Defense, many, if not all, of
-his signatures were forged and the entire executive function attached
-to the concentration camps and the things connected with them lay
-exclusively in Himmler’s hands. That I hope to prove at a later
-date. I mentioned it now in order to justify my suggestion.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal would like to hear counsel for
-the Chief Prosecutor of the United States.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: May it please the Tribunal, Mr. Dodd,
-who had charge of the matter which is under discussion, left for the
-United States yesterday; and I shall have to substitute for him as
-best I can.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This Tribunal sits under a Charter which recognized the impossibility
-of covering a decade of time, a continent of space, a million
-acts, by ordinary rules of proof, and at the same time finishing this
-case within the lives of living men. We do not want to have a trial
-here that, like the trial of Warren Hastings, lasted 7 years. Therefore
-the Charter sets up only two standards by which any evidence,
-I submit, may be rejected. The first is that evidence must be relevant
-to the issue. The second is it must have some probative value.
-That was made mandatory upon this Tribunal in Article 19 because
-of the difficulty of ever trying this case if we used the technical
-rules of Common Law proof.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>One of the reasons this was a military tribunal, instead of an
-ordinary court of law, was in order to avoid the precedent-creating
-effect of what is done here on our own law and the precedent
-control which would exist if this were an ordinary judicial body.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Article 19 provides that the Tribunal shall not be bound by
-technical rules of evidence. It shall adopt and apply to the greatest
-possible extent expeditious and non-technical procedure and shall
-admit any evidence which it deems to have probative value. That
-was made mandatory, that it shall admit any evidence which it
-deems to have probative value. The purpose of that provision, Your
-Honors, I may say, was this: That the whole controversy in this
-case—and we have no doubt that there is room for controversy—should
-be centered upon the value of evidence and not on its admissibility.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We have no jury. There is no occasion for applying jury rules.
-Therefore, when a piece of evidence is offered, there are two questions
-which arise: Does it have probative value? If it has no probative
-value, then it should not encumber the records, of course.
-<span class='pageno' title='544' id='Page_544'></span>
-The second is, does it have relevancy? If it has not, of course it
-should not come in.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The evidence in question has relevance; no one questions that.
-No one can say that an affidavit, duly sworn, does not have some
-probative value. What probative value it has, the weight of it,
-should be determined on the submission of the case. That is to say,
-if a witness has made a statement in an affidavit, and it is denied
-by Mr. Kaltenbrunner, and you believe that the denial has weight
-and credibility, of course, the affidavit should not be considered in
-the final consideration of the case. But we are dealing here with
-events that took place over great periods of time and great distances.
-We are dealing with witnesses widely scattered and a situation
-where communications are almost at a standstill.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If this affidavit stands at the end of this case undenied, unchallenged,
-it is not, then, beyond belief that you would give it value
-and weight. An affidavit might bear internal evidence that it lacked
-credibility, such as evidence where the witness was talking of something
-of which he had no personal knowledge. I do not say that
-every affidavit that comes along has probative value just because it
-is sworn to. But it seems to me that if we are to make progress
-with this case, this simple system envisioned by this Charter, which
-was the subject of long consideration, must be followed; that if,
-when a piece of evidence is presented, even though it does not
-comply with technical rules governing judicial procedures, it is
-something which has probative value in the ordinary daily concerns
-of life, it should be admitted. If it stands undenied at the close
-of the case, as many of these things will, then, of course, there is
-no issue about it; and it saves the calling of witnesses, which will
-take an indefinite period of time as we have already seen. I may
-say that the testimony of the witness Lahousen, which took nearly
-2 days, could have been put in, in this Court, in 15 minutes in
-affidavit form, and all that was essential to it could have been
-placed before us; and if it were to be denied you could then have
-determined its weight.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We want to adhere to this Charter. I submit it is no reason for
-deviating from the Charter that an affidavit recites horrors. I should
-have thought that the world could not be more shocked by recitals
-of horrors in affidavits than it has been in the documents that have
-proceeded from sources of the enemy itself. There is no reason in
-that for departing from the plain principles of the Charter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I think the question of orderly procedure and the question of
-time are both involved in this. I think that the Tribunal should
-receive affidavits, and we have prepared them—we hope carefully,
-we hope fairly—to present a great many things that would take
-days and days of proof. I may say that this ruling is more important
-<span class='pageno' title='545' id='Page_545'></span>
-in subsequent stages of this case than it is on this particular
-affidavit.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There is another reason, perhaps. We have some situations in
-which a member of an accused organization, who is directly hostile
-to our position because the accusation would reach him within the
-accused class, has made an affidavit or affidavits which constitute
-admissions against interest; but on some other issue he makes statements
-which we believe are untrue and incredible; and we do not
-wish to vouch for his general credibility by calling him as a witness,
-but we wish to avail ourselves of his admission. Those things we
-think since we have to make our proof largely from enemy sources.
-All this proof and every witness 8 months ago were in the hands
-of the enemy. We have to make our proof from them. God alone
-knows how much proof there is in this world that we have not been
-able to reach. We submit that the orderly procedure here is to abide
-by this Charter and admit these affidavits. If they stand unquestioned
-at the end of the case, there is no issue about them. If they
-are questioned, then the weight is a matter which you would determine
-on final submission.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Justice Jackson, I have three questions
-I should like to ask you. The first is: Where is Pfaffenberger?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: That I cannot answer at the moment,
-but I will get an answer as quickly as I can. It is unknown to us
-at the moment. If we are able to ascertain, I will inform you at
-the conclusion of the noon recess.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The second point to which I wish to draw
-your attention is Article 16(e) of the Charter, which contemplates
-cross-examination of witnesses by the defendants. The only reason
-why it is thought that witnesses who are available should not give
-evidence by affidavit is because it denies to the Defense the opportunity
-of cross-examining them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: I think that this provision means just
-exactly what it says. If we call a witness, they have the right of
-cross-examination. If he is not called, they have the right to call
-him, if he is available, as their witness; but not, of course, the right
-of cross-examination. The provision itself, if Your Honor notices,
-reads that they have the right to cross-examine any witness called
-by the Prosecution; but that does not abrogate or affect Article 19,
-that we may obtain and produce any probative evidence in such
-manner as will expedite the Trial.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Then the next point to which I wish to draw
-your attention is Article 17(a). As I understood it, you were
-arguing that it was mandatory upon the Tribunal to consider any
-evidence which was relevant. Therefore, I draw your attention to
-<span class='pageno' title='546' id='Page_546'></span>
-Article 17(a) which gives the Tribunal power to summon witnesses
-to the Trial.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: That is right. I think there is no conflict
-in that whatever. The power of the Tribunal to summon witnesses
-and to put questions to them was introduced into this Charter
-through the continental systems of jurisprudence. Usually there are
-not Tribunal witnesses in our procedure in the States. Witnesses
-are called only by one of the parties; but it was suggested by the
-continental scholars that in this kind of case, since we were utilizing
-a mixture of the two procedures, the Tribunal itself should
-have the right to do several things. One is to summon witnesses,
-to require their attendance, and to put questions to them. I submit
-that this witness, whose affidavit has been received, can be called,
-if we can find him, by the Tribunal and questioned.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The next provision—and it bears, on the spirit of this—of
-Article 17 is that the Tribunal has the right to interrogate any
-defendant. Of course, under our system of jurisprudence the Tribunal
-would have no such right, because the defendant has the
-unqualified right to refrain from being a witness; but in deference
-again to the continental system, the Tribunal was given the right
-to interrogate any defendant, and his immunities, which he would
-have under the Constitution of the United States, if he were being
-tried under our system, were taken away.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I submit that the perfect consistency in those provisions
-empowers the Tribunal on its own motion (Article 17) to summon
-witnesses, to supplement anything that is offered, to put any questions
-to witnesses and to any defendant.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If any witness is called, the right of cross-examination cannot
-be denied; but that does not abrogate Article 19, which was intended
-to enable us to put our case before the Tribunal so that the issue
-would then be drawn by the defendants and the weight of what
-we offer determined on final submission.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Lastly, there is Article 17(e), which I suppose,
-in your submission, would entitle the Tribunal, if they thought
-right, after receiving the affidavit, to take the evidence of Pfaffenberger
-on commission.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: Yes, I think it would, Your Honor. I
-may say, in reference to that section—what, perhaps, may be surprising
-to those accustomed to our system of jurisprudence—that it
-was one of the most controversial issues we had in the framing of
-this Charter. We had in mind the authorization of what we call
-“masters” to go into various localities, perhaps, and take testimony,
-not knowing what might be necessary. Our practice, however, of
-sending “masters in equity” to take testimony and make recommendations
-was not acceptable to the continental system, and we
-<span class='pageno' title='547' id='Page_547'></span>
-finally compromised on this provision which authorizes the taking
-of testimony by commissions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Thank you.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>GENERAL R. A. RUDENKO (Chief Prosecutor for the U.S.S.R.):
-Your Honors, I have come forward after my colleague, Mr. Jackson,
-to make my own statement, inasmuch as I think that the petition
-of the Defense is fundamentally wrong and should not be
-complied with.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We are submitting our objections for the Tribunal’s consideration.
-I fully share the viewpoint held by the Chief Prosecutor
-of the U.S.A., Mr. Jackson, and in addition should like to point
-out the following; The Defense Counsel, in his petition, raises the
-question of whether the Prosecution should refer to, or make public,
-documents containing affidavits of persons residing in Germany. A
-statement of this sort is completely out of order since, as is known,
-the defendants committed the greater part of their atrocities in
-all countries of Europe and it will be readily understood that the
-witnesses of these atrocities live in different parts of these countries;
-it is essential that the Prosecution have recourse to the testimony
-of such persons, whether it be written or oral. Your Honors, we
-have entered a phase of the Trial in which we have to set forth
-the atrocities connected with so-called War Crimes and Crimes
-against Humanity, atrocities which were committed by the
-defendants over extensive areas. We shall submit as evidence
-documents originating from the defendants themselves or from
-persons who suffered at the hands of the war criminals; it would
-be impossible to summon all these witnesses to the Trial so that
-they could give their evidence orally. It is absolutely necessary to
-have affidavits and written testimonies from these witnesses.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As His Honor the President has already remarked, Article 17
-provides for the right of summoning witnesses to the Trial. That
-is correct; but it is impossible to summon all the witnesses who
-could depose affidavits on the crimes committed by the defendants.
-I therefore refer to Article 19 of the Charter which reads:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Tribunal shall not be bound by technical rules of
-evidence. It shall adopt and apply to the greatest possible
-extent expeditious”—and I emphasize, Your Honor, <span class='it'>expeditious</span>—“and
-non-technical procedure and shall admit any evidence
-which it deems to have probative value.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I would ask the Tribunal to proceed according to this article
-which definitely admits written affidavits of witnesses as evidence.
-That is what I wished to say by way of a supplement to the statement
-of Mr. Jackson.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ROBERTS: May it please the Tribunal, as far as the British
-Delegation is concerned, they desire to support what the American
-<span class='pageno' title='548' id='Page_548'></span>
-Chief Prosecutor has said, and we do not feel we can usefully add
-anything.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: [<span class='it'>To M. Faure of the French Delegation.</span>] Do
-you wish to add anything?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>M. EDGAR FAURE (Deputy Chief Prosecutor for the French
-Republic): Mr. President, I wish simply to inform the Court that
-the French Prosecution is entirely in accord with the remarks of
-the American and Soviet Prosecutors.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I think, as the representative of the American Prosecution said,
-it is impossible to settle the question of evidence in this Trial
-solely by hearing oral testimony in the courtroom, for under those
-circumstances it might be opportune to call to the witness stand
-all the inhabitants of the territories involved, which is obviously
-impossible. The Defense will have every opportunity of discussing
-the documents which have been presented by the Prosecution,
-including the written testimony.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I do not think that Counsel for Kaltenbrunner
-was suggesting that every witness must be called but
-that witnesses who were in Germany and available should be called
-and that their evidence should not be given by affidavit.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>M. FAURE: The Defense has the right of calling them as witnesses
-if it so desires.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. KAUFFMANN: May I add a few more words to this
-important question? The replies which have just been given
-illustrate that one of the main principles of the proceedings is that
-the Trial should proceed speedily. That is also expressed in
-Article 19 of the Charter, and no one can hope more than we
-that this principle be followed; but it is nevertheless my opinion
-that another principle, the highest known to mankind, the principle
-of truth, should not thereby suffer. If there is a fear that truth
-will suffer through an over-hasty trial, then formal methods of
-procedure must take a secondary place. There are human principles
-which remain unspoken, which need not be spoken.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This spirit of truth is certainly contained in and governs
-Article 19; and the objections I raised to the testimony of this
-witness seem to me justified to such a degree that the important
-principle of speeding up the Trial should give way to the principle
-of truth. Humanity itself is in question here. We want to establish
-the truth for our own generation and for that of our children. But
-if such testimony remains untold for months, then a part of
-mankind might well despair of all humanity and the German
-people, in particular, would suffer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. FRIEDRICH BERGOLD (Counsel for the Defendant Bormann):
-May it please the Tribunal, I should like to bring up one
-other point, which appears to me important, because it was
-<span class='pageno' title='549' id='Page_549'></span>
-apparently the real source of this discussion. According to our
-legal system it is the duty of the Prosecution to produce not only
-the incriminating evidence but also evidence for the defense of the
-accused. I can well understand that my colleague, Dr. Kauffmann,
-protests the Prosecution’s failure to mention a very important point,
-namely, that the German authorities indicted this inhuman SS
-leader and his wife and condemned them to death. It is highly
-probable that the Prosecution knew of this and that these horrible
-exhibits of perverted human nature, which were presented to us,
-were found in the files of the German Court.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I believe the whole discussion would not have arisen if the
-Prosecution had mentioned, as part of the ghastly evidence, the fact
-that the German authorities themselves passed judgment on this
-inhuman man and condemned him to death.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We find ourselves in difficulties because, in contrast to our own
-procedure, the Prosecution for the most part simply presents
-incriminating evidence but omits to present the exculpating
-evidence which may form part of any document or part of the
-testimony of a witness. If the German procedure had been followed
-in the present case and if the Prosecution had stated that this man
-was condemned to death, then in the first place, the evidence
-against the Defendant Kaltenbrunner would not have appeared so
-weighty and secondly, public opinion would, on the whole, have
-been left with a different impression. My colleague Kauffmann
-could then have limited himself to proving at a later stage of the
-Trial that Kaltenbrunner had, in fact, nothing at all to do with this
-affair; and the inhuman character of the proceedings and the
-dreadful impression which it made on us would have been avoided.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Will you explain the part of the German
-law to which you were referring, where you say it is the duty
-of the Prosecution not only to produce evidence for the Prosecution
-but also to produce evidence for the Defense.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. BERGOLD: That is a general principle of German jurisprudence,
-established in Paragraph 160 of the Reich Code of Penal
-Procedure. It is one of the basic principles of law in Germany to .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Give me that reference again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. BERGOLD: Paragraph 160. German law incorporates this
-principle in order to enable an accused person to .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: 160 of what?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. BERGOLD: Of the Reich Code of Penal Procedure. The
-same is true of Austria. In the Austrian Code of Penal Procedure there
-is a similar paragraph with which, however, I am not quite familiar.
-This principle is established to permit the whole truth of a case
-to be brought to light, since a defendant in custody is frequently
-<span class='pageno' title='550' id='Page_550'></span>
-not in a position to produce all the evidence in his favor. Therefore,
-under German law it is the Prosecution’s duty to present the
-exculpating as well as the incriminating evidence in a particular
-case.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. KUBUSCHOK: The question arising out of Pfaffenberger’s
-evidence does not specifically concern the Defendant Von Papen,
-because that part of the Indictment does not apply to his case.
-I am therefore speaking only of the principle behind it. I believe
-that in practice the effect of the different opinions expressed by
-the Prosecution and the Defense cannot be of very great importance.
-Justice Jackson agrees with us that every witness whose affidavit
-is presented can, if available, be called to the stand by the Defense.
-Thus, in all cases in which the Defense holds that an affidavit is
-evidence of secondary value and as such insufficient and that direct
-examination of the witness is necessary—in all such cases there
-would be duplication of evidence, namely, the reading of the
-affidavit and then the examination and cross-examination of the
-witness. This would undoubtedly delay the proceedings of the Trial;
-and to prevent that the Tribunal would, in all such cases, rule
-against the reading, of the affidavit. Consequently, it is futile for
-the Prosecution to present affidavits of witnesses who can be
-expected to appear in person later in the proceedings.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I do not think that the Prosecution should be worried about
-this. It is a matter of course that we—and we assume the same
-is true of the Prosecution—that we, the members of the Defense,
-want the Trial to be as speedy as possible but also want it to
-proceed cautiously to establish the full truth. But, it is obvious,
-if evidence is introduced which is a potential cause of completely
-unjust findings, that such evidence will have to be clarified in a
-more complicated and time-consuming way when the witness is
-called in person.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will consider the objection that
-has been raised when the Court adjourns.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: May I have one word?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Justice Jackson, it is unusual to hear
-counsel who opposes an objection a second time.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: I merely want to give you the answer
-to the question which you asked me as to the whereabouts of
-Pfaffenberger. My information is that these affidavits were taken
-by the American Army at the time it liberated the people in these
-concentration camps, at the same time the films were taken and
-the whole evidence that was available gathered. This witness was
-present at the concentration camp, and at that time his statements
-were taken. We do not know his present whereabouts, and I see
-<span class='pageno' title='551' id='Page_551'></span>
-no reasonable likelihood that we will be able to locate him within
-any short time. We will make an effort.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Thank you.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. ROBERTS: May it please the Tribunal, might I endeavor to
-assist? I think I have now obtained the German order to which
-the Defense Counsel referred, Paragraph 160. It is, My Lord, of
-course, in German. Perhaps I might hand it up, and the court
-translators will no doubt deal with the paragraph.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: I think one bit of additional information
-should be furnished in view of the statements made here that
-we have information that we are withholding. Kaltenbrunner has
-been interrogated. At no time has he made such a claim, so I am
-advised by our interrogators; and under the Charter our duty is
-to present the case for the Prosecution. I do not, in any instance,
-serve two masters.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Now, I call upon Major Walsh. Major Walsh,
-did you give a lettering to the document book with which you
-are dealing?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: Yes. If Your Honor please, it is the letter
-“T.” May it please the Tribunal, during the last session the
-Prosecution presented briefly the preliminary steps leading to the
-ultimate objective of the Nazi Party and the Nazi-controlled State,
-that is, the extermination of the Jews. Propaganda, decrees, the
-infamous Nuremberg Laws, boycotts, registration, and “ghettoization”
-were the initial measures in the program. I shall, with
-the Court’s permission, continue with a discussion of the methods
-utilized for the annihilation of the Jewish people.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I would like first to discuss starvation. Policies were designed
-and adopted to deprive the Jews of the most elemental necessities
-of life. Again the Defendant Hans Frank, then Governor General
-of Poland, wrote in his diary that hunger rations were introduced
-in the Warsaw ghetto; and referring to the new food regulations
-in August 1942, he callously, and perhaps casually, noted that by
-these food regulations he virtually condemned more than 1 million
-Jews to death. I offer in evidence that part of Document 2233(e)-PS,
-diary of Hans Frank, “Conference Volume,” 24 August 1942, Exhibit
-USA-283. And I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“That we sentence 1,200,000 Jews to die of hunger should
-be noted only marginally. It is a matter of course that
-should the Jews not starve to death it would, we hope, result
-in a speeding up of the anti-Jewish measures.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Frank’s diary was not the only guide to the deliberate policy
-of starvation of the Jews. They were prohibited from pursuing
-agricultural activities in order to cut them off from access to the
-<span class='pageno' title='552' id='Page_552'></span>
-source of food. I offer Document 1138-PS in evidence, Exhibit
-USA-284. I refer the Court to Page 4 of the translation, marked
-with the Roman numeral V, Paragraphs a and b. The document
-is entitled “Provisional Directive on the Treatment of Jews .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”
-and it was issued by the Reich Commissioner for the Ostland.
-I read:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Jews must be cleaned out from the countryside. The Jews
-are to be removed from all trades, especially from trade
-with agricultural products and other foodstuffs.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Jews were excluded from the purchase of basic food, such as wheat
-products, meat, eggs, and milk.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I offer in evidence Document 1347-PS, Exhibit USA-285, and
-I quote from Paragraph 2 on the first page of the translation before
-the Court. This is an original decree, dated 18 September 1942,
-from the Ministry of Agriculture. I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Jews will no longer receive the following foods, beginning
-with the 42d distribution period (19 October 1942): meat, meat
-products, eggs, wheat products, (cake, white bread, wheat
-rolls, wheat flour, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>), whole milk, fresh skimmed milk,
-as well as such food distributed not on food ration cards
-issued uniformly throughout the Reich but on local supply
-certificates or by special announcement of the nutrition office
-on extra coupons of the food cards. Jewish children and young
-people over 10 years of age will receive the bread ration
-of the normal consumer.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The sick, the old, and the pregnant mothers were excluded from
-the special food concessions allotted to non-Jews. Seizure by the
-State Police of food shipments to Jews from abroad was authorized,
-and the Jewish ration cards were distinctly marked with “Jew,”
-in color, across the face of the cards, so that the storekeepers could
-readily identify and discriminate against Jewish purchasers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Czechoslovakian Government published in 1943 an official
-document entitled “Czechoslovakia Fights Back.” I offer this book
-in evidence, Document 1689-PS, Exhibit USA-286. To summarize
-the contents of Page 110, it states that the Jewish food purchases
-were confined to certain areas and to certain days and hours. As
-might be expected, the period permitted for the purchases was
-during the time when food stocks were likely to be exhausted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By Special Order Number 44 for the Eastern Occupied
-Territories, dated 4 November 1941, the Jews were limited to
-rations as low as only one-half of the lowest basic category of
-other people; and the Ministry of Agriculture was empowered to
-exclude Jews entirely or partially from obtaining food, thus
-exposing the Jewish community to death by starvation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now offer in evidence Document L-165.
-<span class='pageno' title='553' id='Page_553'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Did you read anything from 1689-PS?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: Just to summarize, Sir, the contents of
-Page 110.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I see. Now you are offering L.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: L-165, Your Honor, Exhibit USA-287. I refer
-the Court to the last half of the first paragraph of the translation.
-This is a press bulletin issued by the Polish Ministry of Information,
-dated 15 November 1942. The Polish Ministry concludes that, upon
-the basis of the nature of the separate rationing and the amount
-of food available to Jews in the Warsaw and Kraków ghettos, the
-system was designed to bring about starvation; and from the
-quotation I read:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In regard to food supplies they are brought under a
-completely separate system, which is obviously aimed at
-depriving them of the most elemental necessities of life.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I would now like to discuss annihilation within the ghettos.
-Justice Jackson in his opening address to the Tribunal made
-reference to Document 1061-PS, “The Warsaw Ghetto Is No More,”
-marked Exhibit USA-275.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This finest example of ornate German craftsmanship, leather
-bound, profusely illustrated, typed on heavy bond paper, is the
-almost unbelievable recital of a proud accomplishment by Major
-General of the Police Stroop, who signed the report with a bold
-hand. General Stroop in this report first pays tribute to the bravery
-and heroism of the German forces who participated in the ruthless
-and merciless action against a helpless, defenseless group of Jews,
-numbering, to be exact, 56,065, including, of course, the infants and
-the women. In this document he proceeds to relate the day-by-day
-account of the ultimate accomplishment of his mission—to destroy
-and to obliterate the Warsaw ghetto.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>According to this report, the ghetto, which was established in
-Warsaw in November 1940, was inhabited by about 400,000 Jews;
-and prior to the action for the destruction of this ghetto, some
-316,000 had already been deported. The Court will note that this
-report is approximately 75 pages in length, and the Prosecution
-believes that the contents are of such striking evidentiary value
-that no part should be omitted from the permanent records of the
-Tribunal and that the Tribunal should consider the entire report
-in judging the guilt of these defendants.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The defendants were furnished with several photostatic copies
-of the entire document at least 20 days ago and have had ample
-time, I am sure, to scrutinize it in detail. If the Court, in the
-exercise of its judgment, determines that the entire report may
-be accepted <span class='it'>in toto</span>, the Prosecution believes that the reading of a
-<span class='pageno' title='554' id='Page_554'></span>
-portion of the summary, together with brief excerpts from the
-daily teletype reports, will suffice for the oral record. I would
-like the Court to examine it; and I present it to the Court, together
-with the duplicate original thereof, and ask that the Court rule
-that the entire document may be accepted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Major Walsh, the Court will take that course,
-provided that the Prosecution supplies as soon as possible, both to
-the Soviet and to the French members of the Tribunal, copies in
-Russian and French of the whole document.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: Yes, Sir; may I consult with .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I do not say present immediately, but present
-as soon as possible.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: You are going to read the passages that you
-think necessary?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: Yes. From Page 6 of the translation before
-the Court of Document 1061-PS I would like to read the boastful
-but nonetheless vivid account of some of this ruthless action within
-the Warsaw ghetto. I quote, second paragraph, Page 6:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The resistance put up by the Jews and bandits could be
-broken only by the relentless and energetic use of our shock-troops
-by day and night. On 23 April 1943 the Reichsführer
-SS issued through the Higher SS and Police Leader East at
-Kraków his order to complete the combing out of the Warsaw
-ghetto with the greatest severity and relentless tenacity. I
-therefore decided to destroy the entire Jewish residential area
-by setting every block on fire, including the blocks of
-residential buildings near the armament works. One building
-after the other was systematically evacuated and subsequently
-destroyed by fire. The Jews then emerged from their hiding
-places and dugouts in almost every case. Not infrequently
-the Jews stayed in the burning buildings until, because of
-the heat and the fear of being burned alive, they preferred
-to jump down from the upper stories after having thrown
-mattresses and other upholstered articles into the street from
-the burning buildings. With their bones broken they still
-tried to crawl across the street into blocks of buildings which
-had not yet been set on fire or were only partially in
-flames. Often the Jews changed their hiding places during
-the night by moving into the ruins of burnt-out buildings,
-taking refuge there until they were found by our patrols.
-Their stay in the sewers also ceased to be pleasant after the
-first week. Frequently from the street we could hear loud
-voices coming through the sewer shafts. Then the men of
-<span class='pageno' title='555' id='Page_555'></span>
-the Waffen-SS, the Police, or the Wehrmacht Engineers
-courageously climbed down the shafts to bring out the Jews
-and not infrequently they then stumbled over Jews already
-dead or were shot at. It was always necessary to use smoke
-candles to drive out the Jews. Thus one day we opened 183
-sewer entrance holes and at a fixed time lowered smoke
-candles into them, with the result that the bandits fled from
-what they believed to be gas into the center of the former
-ghetto, where they could then be pulled out of the sewer
-holes there. A great number of Jews who could not be
-counted were exterminated by blowing up sewers and
-dugouts.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk982'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The longer the resistance lasted, the tougher the men of the
-Waffen-SS, Police, and Wehrmacht became. They fulfilled
-their duty indefatigably in faithful comradeship and stood
-together as models and examples of soldiers. Their duty hours
-often lasted from early morning until late at night. At night
-search patrols, with rags wound around their feet, remained
-at the heels of the Jews and gave them no respite. Not
-infrequently they caught and killed Jews who used the night
-hours for supplementing their stores from abandoned dugouts
-and for contacting neighboring groups or exchanging news
-with them.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk983'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Considering that the greater part of the men of the Waffen-SS
-had only been trained for 3 to 4 weeks before being
-assigned to this action, high credit should be given to the
-pluck, courage, and devotion to duty which they showed. It
-must be stated that the Wehrmacht Engineers, too, executed
-the blowing up of dugouts, sewers, and concrete buildings
-with indefatigability and great devotion to duty. Officers
-and men of the Police, a large part of whom had already
-been at the front, again excelled by their dashing spirit.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk984'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Only through the continuous and untiring work of all
-involved did we succeed in catching a total of 56,065 Jews
-whose extermination can be proved. To this should be added
-the number of Jews who lost their lives in explosions or
-fires but whose number could not be ascertained.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Major Walsh, in the section that you are just
-upon now, ought you not to read the opening paragraphs of this
-document, which set out the amount of the losses of the German
-troops?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: I will do so, Sir. On Page 1 of the translation,
-I quote. The title: “The Warsaw Ghetto is no more.”</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“For the Führer and their country the following fell in the
-battle for the destruction of Jews and bandits in the former
-<span class='pageno' title='556' id='Page_556'></span>
-Jewish residential area of Warsaw.”—Fifteen names are
-thereafter listed.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk985'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Furthermore, the Polish Police Sergeant Julian Zielenski,
-born 13 November 1891, 8th Commissariat, fell on 19 April
-1943 while fulfilling his duty. They gave their utmost, their
-life. We shall never forget them.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk986'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The following were wounded.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Then follow the names of 60 Waffen-SS personnel, 11 watchmen
-from training camps (probably Lithuanians), 12 Security Police
-officers in SS units, 5 men of the Polish Police, and 2 soldiers of
-the Wehrmacht Engineers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Permit me to read some brief excerpts of the daily teletype
-reports. Page 13 of the translation, from the teletype message of
-22 April 1943, I read:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Our setting the block on fire achieved the result in the
-course of the night that those Jews whom we had not been
-able to find despite all our search operations left their hideouts
-under the roofs, in the cellars, and elsewhere and
-appeared on the outside of the building, trying to escape the
-flames anyhow. Masses of them—entire families—were
-already aflame and jumped from the windows or endeavored
-to let themselves down by means of sheets tied together or
-the like. Steps had been taken so that these Jews as well as
-the remaining ones were liquidated at once.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And from Page 28 of the translation, the last part of the first
-paragraph, I read:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“When the blocks of buildings mentioned above were
-destroyed, 120 Jews were caught and numerous Jews were
-destroyed when they jumped from the attics to the inner
-courtyards, trying to escape the flames. Many more Jews
-perished in the flames or were destroyed when the dugouts
-and sewer entrances were blown up.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And on Page 30, second half of the second paragraph, I read:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Not until the blocks of buildings were well aflame and were
-about to collapse did a considerable number of Jews emerge,
-forced to do so by the flames and the smoke. Time and again
-the Jews tried to escape even through burning buildings.
-Innumerable Jews whom we saw on the roofs during the
-conflagration perished in the flames. Others emerged from
-the upper stories in the last possible moment and were only
-able to escape death from the flames by jumping down.
-Today we caught a total of 2,283 Jews of whom 204 were
-<span class='pageno' title='557' id='Page_557'></span>
-shot; and innumerable Jews were destroyed in dugouts and
-in the flames.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And from Page 34, the second paragraph, I read, beginning the
-second line:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Jews testify that they emerge at night to get fresh air,
-since it is unbearable to stay permanently within the dugouts
-owing to the long duration of the operation. On the average
-the raiding parties shoot 30 to 50 Jews each night. From
-these statements it was to be inferred that a considerable
-number of Jews are still underground in the ghetto. Today
-we blew up a concrete building which we had not been able
-to destroy by fire. In this operation we learned that the
-blowing up of a building is a very lengthy process and
-takes an enormous amount of explosives. The best and only
-method for destroying the Jews therefore still remains the
-setting of fires.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And from Page 35, the last part of the second paragraph, I read:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Some depositions speak of three to four thousand Jews still
-remaining in underground holes, sewers, and dugouts. The
-undersigned is resolved not to terminate the large-scale
-operation until the last Jew has been destroyed.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And from the teletype message of 15 May 1943 on Page 44, we
-gather that the operation is in its last stage. I read the end of
-the first paragraph on Page 44:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A special unit once more searched the last block of buildings,
-which was still intact, in the ghetto and subsequently
-destroyed it. In the evening the chapel, mortuary, and all
-other buildings in the Jewish cemetery were blown up or
-destroyed by fire.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On 24 May 1943 the final figures have been compiled by Major
-General Stroop. He reports on Page 45, last paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Of the total of 56,065 caught, about 7,000 were destroyed
-in the former Jewish residential area during large-scale
-operations; 6,929 Jews were destroyed by transporting them
-to T. II”—which we believe to be Treblinka, Camp Number 2,
-which will later be referred to—“the sum total of Jews
-destroyed is therefore 13,929. Beyond the number of 56,065
-an estimated number of 5,000 to 6,000 Jews were destroyed
-by being blown up or by perishing in the flames.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Court has noted within the report 1061-PS a number of
-photographs; and with the Court’s permission I should like to show
-a few of these photographs, still pictures, on the screen, unless
-the Court believes that reference to the original text will be
-sufficient for the Court’s purpose.
-<span class='pageno' title='558' id='Page_558'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: No; if you want to put them on the screen,
-you may do so. Perhaps it would be convenient to adjourn now
-and you can put them on the screen afterwards.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>Still pictures were projected on the screen in the courtroom.</span>]</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: This first picture [<span class='it'>pointing to a picture on the
-screen</span>] is shown on Page 27 of the photographs in Document
-1061-PS. It is entitled “The Destruction of a Block of Buildings.”
-The Court will recall those portions of the teletype messages that
-referred to the setting of fires for the purpose of driving out the
-Jews. This picture, taken from the record, portrays such a scene.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This picture [<span class='it'>pointing to a picture on the screen</span>] is from
-Page 21 of the photographs contained in the exhibit, and the
-caption is “Smoking out of the Jews and Bandits.” Excerpts from
-the teletype messages read in the record relate to the use of smoke
-as a means of forcing Jews out of the hiding places.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This picture [<span class='it'>pointing to a picture on the screen</span>] is from Page 36
-of the photographs in the exhibit and it is called “Fighting a Nest
-of Resistance.” It is obviously a picture of an explosive blast
-being used to destroy one of the buildings, and the Court may
-recall the message of 7 May 1943 that related to the blowing up
-of buildings as a lengthy process requiring an enormous amount
-of explosive. The same message reported that the best method
-for destroying the Jews was the setting of fires.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This picture [<span class='it'>pointing to a picture on the screen</span>] is taken from
-Page 36 of the photographs. The Court’s attention is invited to
-the figure of a man in mid-air who appears in the picture about
-halfway between the center and the upper right-hand corner. He
-has jumped from one of the upper floors of the burning building.
-A close examination of this picture by the Court in the original
-photograph will disclose other figures, in the upper floor windows,
-who apparently are about to follow him. The teletype message of
-22 April reported that entire families jumped from burning
-buildings and were liquidated at once.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This picture [<span class='it'>pointing to a picture on the screen</span>] is from Page 39
-of the photographs. It is entitled “The Leader of the Large-scale
-Action.” The Nazi-appointed commander of this action was
-SS Major General Stroop, who probably is the central figure in
-this picture. I cannot refrain from commenting at this point on
-the smiling faces of the group shown there, in the midst of the
-violence and destruction.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Are you passing from that document now?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: Yes, Sir.
-<span class='pageno' title='559' id='Page_559'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Will you tell the Tribunal where the document
-was found?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: It is a captured document, Sir. I do not have
-the history, but I shall be very pleased to submit the background
-and history to the Court at the beginning of the afternoon session.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal, I think, would like to know
-where it was found and to whom it was submitted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: I have that. I believe that is contained in the
-document. The teletype messages, Sir, that are contained in this
-exhibit were all addressed to the Higher SS and Police Führer,
-SS Obergruppenführer and General of the Police Krüger or his
-deputy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was not always necessary, or perhaps desirable, first to place
-the Jews within the ghettos to effect the elimination. In the Baltic
-States a more direct course of action was followed. I refer to
-Document L-180, now in evidence, which is Exhibit USA-276. This
-is a report by SS Brigade Führer Stahlecker to Himmler, dated
-15 October 1941, entitled “Action Group A,” found in Himmler’s
-private files. He reported that 135,567 persons, nearly all Jews,
-were murdered in accordance with basic orders directing the
-complete annihilation of the Jews. This voluminous document
-provides me with the following statement by the same SS Brigade
-Führer, and from the translation at the bottom of Page 6, the
-second sentence of the last paragraph, I read:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“To our surprise it was not easy, at first, to set in motion an
-extensive pogrom against the Jews. Klimatis, the leader of
-the partisan unit mentioned above, who was used for this
-purpose primarily, succeeded in starting a pogrom on the
-basis of advice given to him by a small advanced detachment
-acting in Kovno and in such a way that no German
-order or German instigation was noticed from the outside.
-During the first pogrom in the night from 25 to 26 June the
-Lithuanian partisans did away with more than 1,500 Jews,
-setting fire to several synagogues or destroying them by other
-means and burning down a Jewish dwelling district consisting
-of about 60 houses. During the following nights 2,300 Jews
-were eliminated in a similar way.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From the last part of Paragraph 3, Page 7, I read:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It was possible, though, through similar influences on the
-Latvian auxiliary to set in motion a pogrom against the Jews
-also in Riga. During this pogrom all synagogues were
-destroyed and about 400 Jews were killed.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nazi ingenuity reached a new high mark with the construction
-and operation of the gas van as a means of mass annihilation of
-<span class='pageno' title='560' id='Page_560'></span>
-the Jews. A description of these vehicles of horror and death and
-the operation of them is fully set forth in a captured top-secret
-document, dated 16 May 1942, addressed to SS Obersturmbannführer
-Rauff, 8 Prinz-Albrecht-Strasse, Berlin, from Dr. Becker,
-SS Untersturmführer. I offer this document, 501-PS, Exhibit
-USA-288. I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The overhauling of vans by groups D and C is finished.
-While the vans in the first series can also be put into action
-if the weather is not too bad, the vans of the second series
-(Saurer) stop completely in rainy weather. If it has rained
-for instance for only one-half hour, the van cannot be used
-because it simply skids away. It can only be used in
-absolutely dry weather. It is a question now of whether the
-van can be used only when it stands at the place of execution.
-First the van has to be brought to that place, which is
-possible only in good weather. The place of execution is
-usually 10 to 15 kilometers away from the highway and
-is difficult of access because of its location; in damp or
-wet weather it is not accessible at all. If the persons to be
-executed are driven or led to that place, then they realize
-immediately what is going on and get restless, which is to be
-avoided as far as possible. There is only one way left: to
-load them at the collecting point and to drive them to
-the spot.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk987'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I ordered the vans of group D to be camouflaged as house-trailers
-by putting one set of window shutters on each side
-of the small van and two on each side of the larger vans,
-such as one often sees on farm houses in the country. The
-vans became so well-known that not only the authorities but
-also the civilian population called the van ‘death van’ as
-soon as one of the vehicles appeared. It is my opinion the
-van cannot be kept secret for any length of time, not even
-camouflaged.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then I read the fourth paragraph on this page:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Because of the rough terrain and the indescribable road and
-highway conditions the caulkings and rivets loosen in the
-course of time. I was asked if in such cases the vans should
-not be brought to Berlin for repairs. Transportation to Berlin
-would be much too expensive and would demand too much
-fuel. In order to save these expenses I ordered them to have
-smaller leaks soldered and, if that should no longer be
-possible, to notify Berlin immediately by radio, that License
-Number .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. is out of order. Besides that I ordered that during
-application of gas all the men were to be kept as far away
-from the vans as possible, so that they should not suffer
-<span class='pageno' title='561' id='Page_561'></span>
-damage to their health by the gas which eventually would
-escape. I should like to take this opportunity to bring the
-following to your attention: Several commands have had the
-unloading, after the application of gas, done by their own men.
-I brought to the attention of the commanders of these special
-detachments concerned the immense psychological injury
-and damage to their health which that work can have for
-those men, even if not immediately, at least later on. The
-men complained to me about headaches which appeared after
-each unloading. Nevertheless they don’t want to change the
-orders, because they are afraid prisoners called for that work
-could use an opportune moment to flee. To protect the men
-from such damage, I request orders be issued accordingly.
-The application of gas usually is not undertaken correctly.
-In order to come to an end as fast as possible, the driver
-presses the accelerator to the fullest extent. By doing that
-the persons to be executed suffer death from suffocation and
-not death by dozing off as was planned. My directions now
-have proved that by correct adjustment of the levers death
-comes faster and the prisoners fall asleep peacefully.
-Distorted faces and excretions, such as could be seen before,
-are no longer noticed.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk988'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Today I shall continue my journey to group B, where I can
-be reached with further news. Signed, Doctor Becker,
-SS Untersturmführer.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On Page 3 in Document 501-PS we find a letter signed by
-Hauptsturmführer Trühess on the subject of S-Vans, addressed to
-the Reich Security Main Office, Room II-D-3-A, Berlin, marked
-“top secret.” This letter establishes that the vans were used for
-the annihilation of the Jews. I read this top-secret message; subject,
-“S-Vans”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A transport of Jews, which has to be treated in a special
-way, arrives weekly at the office of the commandant of the
-Security Police and the Security Service of White Ruthenia.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk989'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The three S-vans which are there are not sufficient for that
-purpose. I request assignment of another S-van (5 tons). At
-the same time I request the shipment of 20 gas hoses for the
-three S-vans on hand (two Diamond, one Saurer), since the
-ones on hand are leaky already.”—Signed—“the Commandant
-of the Security Police and the Security Service, Ostland.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It would appear from the documentary evidence that a certain
-amount of discord existed between the officials of the German
-Government as to the proper means and methods used in connection
-with the program of extermination. A secret report dated 18 June
-1943, addressed to Defendant Rosenberg, complained that 5,000 Jews
-<span class='pageno' title='562' id='Page_562'></span>
-killed by the police and SS might have been used for forced labor
-and chided them for failing to bury the bodies of those liquidated.
-I offer in evidence this file, Document Number R-135, Exhibit
-USA-289.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Is it in these volumes, Major Walsh?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: I think, Sir, that will be found in the assembly
-of the document book in our case; that has been placed in front
-of R-124. I quote from the letter referred to, addressed to the
-Reich Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories, the first
-paragraph of the translation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The fact that Jews receive special treatment requires no
-further discussion. However, it appears hardly believable
-that this was done in the way described in the report of the
-General Commissioner of 1 June 1943. What is Katyn against
-that? Imagine only that these occurrences might become
-known to the other side and be exploited by them! Most
-likely such propaganda would have no effect, only because
-people who hear and read about it simply would not be ready
-to believe it.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The last part of Paragraph 3 on this page reads:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“To lock men, women, and children into barns and to set fire
-to them does not appear to be a suitable method for combatting
-bands, even if it is desired to exterminate the population.
-This method is not worthy of the German cause and hurts
-our reputation severely.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Günther, the prison warden at Minsk, in a letter dated 31 May
-1943, addressed to the General Commissioner for White Ruthenia,
-subject: “Action against Jews,” was critical by implication. With
-the Court’s permission I would like to read this entire letter, part
-of Document R-135, Page 5, subject: “Action Against Jews”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“On 13 April 1943 the former German dentist Ernst Israel
-Tichauer and his wife, Elisa Sara Tichauer, née Rosenthal,
-were committed to the court prison by the Security Service
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Since that time all German and Russian Jews who
-were turned over to us had their gold bridgework, crowns,
-and fillings pulled or broken out. This happens always 1 to
-2 hours before the respective action.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk990'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Since 13 April 1943, 516 German and Russian Jews have
-been finished off. On the basis of a definite investigation gold
-was taken only in two actions—on 14 April 1943, from 172,
-and on 27 April 1943, from 164 Jews. About 50 percent of the
-Jews had gold teeth, bridgework, or fillings. Hauptscharführer
-Rübe of the Security Service was always personally
-present, and he took the gold along, too.
-<span class='pageno' title='563' id='Page_563'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk991'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Before 13 April 1943 this was not done. Signed, Günther,
-Prison Warden.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This letter was forwarded to the Defendant Rosenberg as Reich
-Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories on 1 June 1943. I will
-read the covering letter, part of Document R-135, Page 4, to the
-Reich Minister of the Occupied Eastern Territories, Berlin, through
-the Reich Commissioner for the Ostland, Riga; Subject, “Actions
-against Jews in the Prison of Minsk”:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The enclosed official report from the warden of the prison
-in Minsk is submitted to the Reich Minister and the Reich
-Commissioner for Information.”—Signed—“the General Commissioner
-in Minsk.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Does “respective action,” as indicated in the
-letter dated the 31st of May 1943, mean execution?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: Yes, Sir; we so interpret it. The Court will
-recall that the ridding of the Jews via gas vans ties in very closely
-with the second letter of the transport of Jews arriving for that
-purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Was this document found in Rosenberg’s file?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: I am so informed, Sir. A further complaint
-is contained in a secret letter addressed to General of the Infantry
-Thomas, chief of the industrial armament department, dated
-2 December 1941. It might be noted with interest that the
-apprehensive writer of this letter stated that he did not forward
-the communication through official channels. I offer in evidence
-captured Document 3257-PS; and I quote from the first paragraph.
-This is Exhibit USA-290:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“For the personal information of the chief of the industrial
-armament department, I am forwarding a total account of
-the present situation in the Reichskommissariat Ukraine in
-which the difficulties and tensions encountered so far and the
-problems which give rise to serious anxiety are stated with
-unmistakable clarity.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk992'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Intentionally I have desisted from submitting such a report
-through official channels or from making it known to other
-departments interested in it because I do not expect any
-results that way, but on the contrary am apprehensive that
-the difficulties and tensions and also the divergent opinions
-might only be increased due to the peculiarity of the situation.”</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk993'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Jewish problem”—Paragraph c, Page 1:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk994'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Regulation of the Jewish question in the Ukraine was a difficult
-problem because the Jews constituted a large part of the
-urban population. We therefore have to deal—just as in the
-<span class='pageno' title='564' id='Page_564'></span>
-Government General—with a mass problem of policy concerning
-the population. Many cities had a percentage of
-Jews exceeding 50 percent. Only the rich Jews had fled from
-the German troops. The majority of Jews remained under
-German administration. The latter found the problem more
-complicated through the fact that these Jews represented
-almost entire trade and even a part of the manpower in small
-and medium industries, besides business, which had in part
-become superfluous as a direct or indirect result of the war.
-The elimination therefore necessarily had far-reaching economic
-consequences and even direct consequences for the
-armament industry (production for supplying the troops).”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Paragraph 1 on Page 2:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The attitude of the Jewish population was anxious—obliging
-from the beginning. They tried to avoid everything that
-might displease the German administration. That they hated
-the German administration and army inwardly goes without
-saying and cannot be surprising. However, there is no proof
-that Jewry as a whole or even to a greater part was implicated
-in acts of sabotage .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Surely there were some terrorists
-or saboteurs among them, just as among the Ukrainians.
-But it cannot be said that the Jews as such represented
-a danger to the German Armed Forces. The output produced
-by Jews who, of course, were prompted by nothing but the
-feeling of fear, was satisfactory to the troops and the German
-administration.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk995'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Jewish population remained temporarily unmolested
-shortly after the fighting. Only weeks, sometimes months
-later, specially detached formations of police executed a
-planned shooting of Jews. This action as a rule proceeded
-from east to west. It was done entirely in public with the
-use of the Ukrainian militia; and unfortunately, in many
-instances also with members of the Armed Forces taking part
-voluntarily. The way these actions, which included men and
-old men, women, and children of all ages, were carried out
-was horrible. The great masses executed make this action
-more gigantic than any similar measure taken so far in the
-Soviet Union. So far about 150,000 to 200,000 Jews may have
-been executed in the part of the Ukraine belonging to the
-Reichskommissariat; no consideration was given to the interests
-of economy.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk996'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Summarizing, it can be said that the kind of solution of the
-Jewish problem applied to the Ukraine, which obviously was
-based on the ideological theories as a matter of principle, had
-the following results:
-<span class='pageno' title='565' id='Page_565'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk997'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(a) Elimination of a part of partly superfluous eaters in the
-cities;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk998'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(b) Elimination of a part of the population which undoubtedly
-hated us;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk999'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(c) Elimination of badly needed tradesmen who were in
-many instances indispensable even in the interests of the
-Armed Forces;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1000'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(d) Consequences as to foreign policy propaganda which are
-obvious;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1001'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(e) Bad effects on the troops which in any case get indirect
-contact with the execution;</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1002'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“(f) Brutalizing effect on the formations which carry out the
-execution—regular police.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lest the Court be persuaded to the belief that these conditions
-related, existed only in the East, I invite attention to the official
-Netherlands Government report by the Commissioner for Repatriation
-as indicative of the treatment of the Jews in the West.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This document is a recital of the German measures taken in the
-Netherlands against the Dutch Jews. The decrees, the anti-Semitic
-demonstrations, the burning of synagogues, the purging of Jews
-from the economic life of their country, the food restrictions against
-them, forced labor, concentration camp confinement, deportation,
-and death—all follow the same pattern that was effected throughout
-Nazi-occupied Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I how refer to Document 1726-PS, Exhibit USA-195, already in
-evidence. It is not intended to read this document in evidence, but
-it is deemed important to invite the Court’s attention to that portion
-of the report relating to the deportation of Dutch Jews shown on
-Page 5 of the translation. There the Court will note that full Jews
-being liable to deportation number 140,000. The Court will also
-note that the total number of deportees was 117,000, representing
-more than 83 percent of all the Jews in the Netherlands. Of these
-115,000 were deported to Poland for slave labor, according to the
-Netherlands report, and after departure all trace of them was lost.
-Regardless of victory or defeat to Germany, the Jew was doomed.
-It was the expressed intent of the Nazi State that, whatever the
-German fate might be, the Jew would not survive.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I offer in evidence Document L-53, stamped “top secret,” Exhibit
-USA-291. This message is from the Commandant of the Sipo and
-SD for the Radom District, addressed to SS Hauptsturmführer Thiel
-on the subject, “Clearance of Prisons.” I read the body of this
-message:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I again stress the fact that the number of inmates of the Sipo
-and SD prisons must be kept as low as possible. In the present
-<span class='pageno' title='566' id='Page_566'></span>
-situation, particularly, those suspects handed over by the civil
-police need only be subjected to a short formal interrogation
-provided there are no serious grounds for suspicion. They are
-then to be sent by the quickest route to a concentration camp
-should no court-martial proceeding be necessary or should
-there be no question of discharge. Please keep the number of
-discharges very low. Should the situation at the front necessitate
-it, early preparations are to be made for the total
-clearance of prisons. Should the situation develop suddenly
-in such a way that it is impossible to evacuate the prisoners,
-the prison inmates are to be eliminated and their bodies disposed
-of as far as possible (burning, blowing up the building,
-<span class='it'>et cetera</span>). If necessary, Jews still employed in the armament
-industry or on other work are to be dealt with in the same
-way.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1003'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The liberation of prisoners or Jews by the enemy—be it the
-WB or the Red Army—must be avoided under all circumstances,
-nor may they fall into their hands alive.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: What is the WB?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: I have inquired about the WB, Your Honor,
-from several sources and have not found an understanding or a
-statement of it. Perhaps before the afternoon session I may be able
-to enlighten the Court. I have not yet been able to find out.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Where was the document found?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: It is a captured document, Sir.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Does it relate to prisoners of war, did you say?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: No, Sir; including therein, of course, prisoners
-of war as well as all Jews. The history of the document, Sir, I will
-try to gather for the Court’s information.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes. Did you tell us what the Sipo were?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: Yes, Sir; I furnished the Court with that; that
-is the Security Police, Sir.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This presentation, if the Court please, would be incomplete
-without incorporating herein reference to the concentration camps
-insofar as they relate to the hundreds of thousands—millions—of
-Jews who died by mass shooting, gas, poison, starvation, and other
-means. The subject of concentration camps and all its horrors was
-shown to this Tribunal not only in the motion picture film but by
-the most able presentation of Mr. Dodd yesterday; and it is not
-intended, at this time, to refer to the camps—only insofar as they
-relate to the part they played in the annihilation of the Jewish
-people. For example, in the camp at Auschwitz during July 1944
-Jews were killed at the rate of 12,000 daily. This information is
-<span class='pageno' title='567' id='Page_567'></span>
-contained in Document L-161, Exhibit USA-292. The Document
-L-161 is an official Polish report on Auschwitz Concentration Camp.
-It is dated 31 May 1945. I have taken a short excerpt from this
-report on the original marked .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I think you made a mistake, did you not?
-It is not a Polish report; it is a British report.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: I understand, Sir, it was compiled originally
-by the Polish Government and perhaps distributed from London.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I see. Very well.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“During July 1944 Hungarian Jews were being liquidated at
-the rate of 12,000 daily; and as the crematoria could not deal
-with such numbers, many bodies were thrown into large pits
-and covered with quicklime.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I offer in evidence Document 3311-PS, Exhibit USA-293. This is
-an official Polish Government Commission report on the investigation
-of German crimes in Poland. The document describes the concentration
-camp at Treblinka; and from Page 1, Paragraph 3 and 4,
-I read as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In March 1942 the Germans began to erect another camp,
-Treblinka B, in the neighborhood of Treblinka A, intended to
-become a place of torment for Jews.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1004'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The erection of this camp was closely connected with the
-German plans aimed at a complete destruction of the Jewish
-population in Poland, which necessitated the creation of a
-machinery by means of which the Polish Jews could be killed
-in large numbers. Late in April 1942 erection was completed
-of the first chambers in which these general massacres were
-to be performed by means of steam. Somewhat later the
-erection of the real death building, which contains 10 death
-chambers, was finished. It was opened for wholesale murders
-early in autumn 1942.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And on Page 3 of this report, beginning with the second paragraph,
-the Polish Commission describes graphically the procedure
-for the extermination within the camp:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The average number of Jews dealt with at the camp in the
-summer of 1942 was about two railway transports daily, but
-there were days of much higher efficiency. From autumn 1942
-this number was falling.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1005'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“After unloading in the siding, all victims were assembled in
-one place, where men were separated from women and children.
-In the first days of the existence of the camp the victims
-were made to believe that after a short stay in the camp,
-necessary for bathing and disinfection, they would be sent
-<span class='pageno' title='568' id='Page_568'></span>
-farther east for work. Explanations of this sort were given
-by SS men who assisted at the unloading of the transports,
-and further explanations could be read in notices stuck up on
-the walls of the barracks. But later, when more transports
-had to be dealt with, the Germans dropped all pretenses and
-only tried to accelerate the procedure.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1006'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“All victims had to strip off their clothes and shoes, which
-were collected afterwards, whereupon all victims, women and
-children first, were driven into the death chambers. Those too
-slow or too weak to move quickly were driven in by rifle
-butts, by whipping and kicking, often by Sauer himself.
-Many slipped and fell; the next victims pressed forward and
-stumbled over them. Small children were simply thrown
-inside. After being filled up to capacity, the chambers were
-hermetically closed and steam was let in. In a few minutes
-all was over. The Jewish menial workers had to remove the
-bodies from the platform and to bury them in mass graves.
-By and by, as new transports arrived, the cemetery grew,
-extending in an easterly direction.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1007'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“From reports received it may be assumed that several hundred
-thousands of Jews have been exterminated in Treblinka.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now offer in evidence the document identified by Number L-22,
-Exhibit USA-294. This is an official United States Government
-report issued by the Executive Office of the President of the United
-States, War Refugee Board, on the German camps at Auschwitz and
-Birkenau, dated 1944. On Page 33 of this report is set forth the
-number of Jews gassed in Birkenau in the 2-year period between
-April 1942 and April 1944. I have been assured that the figure
-printed in this report is not a typographical error. The number
-shown is 1,765,000.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I would now like to turn to the German bookkeeping and statistics
-for enlightenment on the extermination of Jews in Poland.
-Referring again to the diary of Hans Frank already in evidence,
-Document 2233-PS, Exhibit USA-281, I read briefly from the beginning
-of the fourth paragraph on Page 1:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“For us the Jews also represent extraordinarily malignant
-gluttons.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1008'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“We have now approximately 2,500,000 of them in the Government
-General .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Major Walsh, you have read this already
-yourself.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: Yes, Sir, that is true. I just want to make
-reference to it again, Sir, for comparison with other figures.
-<span class='pageno' title='569' id='Page_569'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Very well.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>MAJOR WALSH: “.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. perhaps with the Jewish mixtures, and
-everything that goes with it, 3,500,000 Jews.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now this figure, if the Court please, was as of 16 December 1941.
-I now wish to turn to 25 January 1944, 3 years and 1 month later,
-and make reference to another excerpt from Frank’s diary, 2233-PS,
-loose-leaf volume Exhibit USA-295. This volume covers the period
-from 1 January 1944 to 28 February 1944, and Page 5 of the original
-reads:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“At the present time we still have in the Government General
-perhaps 100,000 Jews.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In this period of 3 years, according to the records of the then
-Governor General of Occupied Poland, between 2,400,000 and
-3,400,000 Jews had been eliminated.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution could offer this Tribunal a wealth of evidence
-on the total number of Jews who died by Nazi hands, but it is
-believed that cumulative evidence would not vary the guilt of these
-defendants.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I do wish, however, to offer one document, a statement, to establish
-the deaths of 4 million Jews in camps and deaths of 2 million
-Jews by the State Police in the East, making a total of 6 million—Document
-2738-PS, Exhibit USA-296. This is a statement—of Adolf
-Eichmann, Chief of the Jewish Section of the Gestapo, and the
-source of the figures quoted—made by Dr. Wilhelm Hoettl, Deputy
-Group Leader of the foreign section of the Security Service, Amt VI
-of the RSHA. Dr. Wilhelm Hoettl, in affidavit form, made the following
-statement; and I quote from Page 2:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Approximately 4 million Jews had been killed in the various
-concentration camps, while an additional 2 million met death
-in other ways, the major part of which were shot by operational
-squads of the Security Police during the campaign
-against Russia.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>May I, in conclusion, emphasize that the captured documents in
-evidence are, almost without exception, from the official sources of
-the Nazi Party.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: You only read that one statement, but where
-does the person who made the affidavit get his information from?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: I shall be pleased to read that in there, Sir.
-I made a statement that Eichmann has been the source of the information
-given to Dr. Wilhelm Hoettl, one of his assistants, and on
-Page 1 it says:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“According to my knowledge Eichmann was at that time
-a section leader in the Amt IV (Gestapo) of RSHA; and in
-addition he had been ordered by Himmler to get hold of the
-<span class='pageno' title='570' id='Page_570'></span>
-Jews in all the European countries and to transport them to
-Germany. Eichmann was then very much impressed with the
-fact that Romania had withdrawn from the war in those
-days. Therefore, he had come to me to get information about
-the military situation, which I received daily from the Hungarian
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Ministry of War and from the Commander of the
-Waffen-SS in Hungary. He expressed his conviction that
-Germany had lost the war and that he personally had no
-further chance. He knew that he would be considered one of
-the main war criminals by the United Nations, since he had
-millions of Jewish lives on his conscience. I asked him how
-many that was, to which he answered that although the number
-was a great Reich secret, he would tell me since I, as a
-historian too, would be interested and that probably he would
-not return anyhow from his command in Romania. He had,
-shortly before that, made a report to Himmler, as the latter
-wanted to know the exact number of Jews who had been
-killed.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was on that basis of this information, Sir, that I read the
-following quotation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will adjourn now.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken until 1400 hours.</span>]</h3>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<h2><span class='pageno' title='571' id='Page_571'></span><span class='it'>Afternoon Session</span></h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The motion that was made this morning on
-behalf of the Defendant Kaltenbrunner is denied, and the affidavit
-is admitted and will not be stricken from the record. But the
-Tribunal wished me to say that it is open to the Defendants’ Counsel,
-in accordance with the Charter and the Rules, to make a motion,
-in writing, if they wish to do so, for the attendance of Pfaffenberger
-for cross-examination and to state in that motion the reasons
-therefor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. KAUFFMANN: May I now bring up a question similar,
-though in some respects different, from that of Pfaffenberger? I
-request that the evidence of Dr. Hoettl, which was read into the
-record this morning be stricken out again for the following two
-reasons. As far as I know, Dr. Hoettl is here in Nuremberg .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: One minute. Do you understand that the
-Tribunal has just denied the motion that you made this morning?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. KAUFFMANN: Yes, I understood that perfectly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: What is your motion now?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>DR. KAUFFMANN: I should like to ask that the evidence of
-Dr. Hoettl be stricken from the record. My reasons for this request
-are rather different from those given this morning in the Pfaffenberger
-case.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As can be seen from the affidavit, Dr. Hoettl was interrogated
-on the 26th of November hardly 3 weeks ago. Moreover I gather
-that Dr. Hoettl is kept in custody here in Nuremberg. No delay
-would therefore be involved if this witness were called to the stand.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This man held a significant position in the SS and for that reason
-I have already applied in writing that he be called as a witness.
-I am convinced that there is a large amount of important evidence
-which he can reveal to the Court. Dr. Hoettl’s deposition is infinitely
-important. The death of millions of people is involved here.
-His affidavit is based largely on inferences, on hearsay; I believe
-that the facts are very different, and I would not like to apply later,
-after weeks or months, for the witness to be brought into Court.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: If the Court please, excerpts from the affidavit
-of Dr. Wilhelm Hoettl were read into the record this morning for
-the purpose .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Wait—what was the number?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: Document 2738-PS.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes, go on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: Dr. Hoettl’s affidavit 2738 was in part read
-into the record this morning for the sole purpose of showing the
-<span class='pageno' title='572' id='Page_572'></span>
-approximate number of Jews, according to his estimates, that had
-met death at the hands of the German State. No other portion of
-his testimony was referred to and the evidence offered was
-only for the sole purpose of establishing his estimate of the
-number. His position in the Party and in the state, as well as the
-position of Adolf Eichmann, the source of his information, was also
-stated into the record.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I believe that Dr. Hoettl, if he is desired for any other purpose
-by the Defense, may be called by the Defense, but the Prosecution
-had no other purpose in utilizing his evidence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Do you wish to add anything more?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: That is all, Sir.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal makes the same ruling in this
-case as in the case of Pfaffenberger, namely, that the affidavit is
-admitted in evidence but that it is open to Defendants’ Counsel to
-make a motion, in writing, for the attendance of the witness for
-cross-examination and to state in that motion the reasons for it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: During the morning session the Court requested
-certain information concerning documents that had been offered and
-accepted in evidence. I refer to Document 1061-PS, the report “The
-Warsaw Ghetto Is No More.” This report, I am told, was prepared
-for presentation at a meeting of the SS Police leaders to be held
-on 18 May 1943. That is indicated on Page 45 of the translation
-before the Court.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This document was captured by the 7th United States Army and
-delivered by them to the G-2 of the United States Forces in the
-European Theater. In turn they were delivered to Colonel Storey
-of the United States prosecutors’ staff, some months ago. The Court
-also ignored .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Major Walsh, I think the Tribunal also
-wished to know whether you could tell us to whom the report had
-been made?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: The report, Sir, according to the teletypes—the
-daily teletypes, Sir—was addressed to the Higher SS and
-Police Leader East, SS Obergruppenführer and General of the Police
-Krüger, or his deputy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Thank you.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MAJOR WALSH: The Court further inquired about Document
-L-53 and I have obtained some information concerning this document.
-This document was captured by T-Force of the Counter
-Intelligence Corps Detachment Number 220, found among the German
-records at Weimar, Germany, sometime prior to 10 May 1945.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Court further inquired, concerning this document, the
-meaning of the letters “WB.” I regret that I have been unable to
-<span class='pageno' title='573' id='Page_573'></span>
-obtain definite information as to the meaning of “WB” but it has
-been suggested to me that it might mean Westbund or Western Ally
-because it is used in connection with the capture—the destruction
-of all prisoners before capture by either the WB or the Red Armies,
-and I presume that it may mean Westbund.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The slaughter of the Jews in Europe cannot be expressed in
-figures alone, for the impact of this slaughter is even more tragic
-to the future of the Jewish people and mankind. Ancient Jewish
-communities with their own rich spiritual, cultural, and economic
-life, bound up for centuries with the life of the nations in which
-they flourished, have been completely obliterated. The contribution
-of the Jewish people to civilization, the arts, the sciences, industry,
-and culture, need not, I am sure, be elaborated upon before this
-Tribunal. Their destruction, carried out continuously, deliberately,
-intentionally, and methodically by the Nazis, represents a loss to
-civilization of special qualities and abilities that cannot possibly be
-recouped.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I have not attempted to recount the multitudinous and diabolical
-crimes committed against the Jewish people by the state which
-these defendants ruled, because, with sober regard for contemporary
-and historical truth, a detailed description of some of these crimes
-would transcend the utmost reaches of the human faculty of
-expression. The mind already recoils and shrinks from the
-acceptance of the incredible facts already related. Rather, it is my
-purpose to elucidate the pattern, the successful and successive
-stages, the sequence and concurrence of the crimes committed, the
-pre-determined means to a pre-ordained end.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Yet, these cold, stark, brutal facts and figures, drawn largely
-from the defendants’ own sources and submitted in evidence before
-this Tribunal, defy rebuttal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From conception to execution, from the Party program of 1920
-to the gloating declarations of Himmler and the Defendant Frank
-in 1943 and 1944, the annihilation of the Jewish people in Europe
-was man-made—made by the very men, sitting in the defendants’
-box, brought to judgment before this Tribunal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Before closing may I acknowledge with appreciation the
-untiring services of the group of the staff of the United States’
-Prosecution, through whose painstaking search, analysis, and study,
-this presentation of evidence was made possible: Captain Seymour
-Krieger, Lieutenant Brady Bryson, Lieutenant Frederick Felton,
-Sergeant Isaac Stone, and Mr. Hans Nathan.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>COL. STOREY: If the Tribunal please, the next presentation,
-concerning Germanization and spoliation in occupied countries, will
-be presented by Captain Sam Harris.
-<span class='pageno' title='574' id='Page_574'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>CAPTAIN SAMUEL HARRIS (Assistant Trial Counsel for the
-United States): May the Tribunal please, documents relating to the
-Nazi program of Germanization and spoliation have been assembled
-in a document book bearing the letter “U.” These document books
-are now being distributed for the use of the members of the
-Tribunal. I ask Your Honors to note that the tabs on the side of
-the document book are numbered 1 to 30. The index sheet at the
-front of the book keys these numbers to the EC, PS, and R numbers
-of our exhibits.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For Your Honors’ convenience we have also numbered the pages
-of each exhibit in pencil at the upper right-hand corner of each
-exhibit.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The documents which we shall introduce were collected by
-Lieutenant Kenyon, who sits at my right, and by Doctors Derenberg
-and Jacoby. Without their untiring efforts, this presentation would
-not have been possible.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Evidence has already been introduced by Mr. Alderman to prove
-that the defendants conspired to wage aggressive war. It has also
-been proved that the desire for Lebensraum was one of the chief
-forces motivating the conspirators to plan, launch, and wage their
-wars of aggression. We propose at this time to present evidence
-disclosing what the conspirators intended to do with conquered
-territories, called by them Lebensraum, after they had succeeded
-in overpowering the victims of their aggressions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We have broadly divided this subject into two categories: Germanization
-and spoliation. When we speak of plans to germanize, we
-mean plans to assimilate conquered territories politically, culturally,
-socially, and economically into the German Reich. Germanization,
-we shall demonstrate, meant the obliteration of the former national
-character of the conquered territories and the extermination of all
-elements which could not be reconciled with the Nazi ideology. By
-spoliation, we mean the plunder of public and private property
-and, in general, the exploitation of the people and the natural
-resources of occupied countries.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We propose, with the permission of Your Honors, to introduce
-at this time 30 documents in all. These documents lay bare some
-of the secret plans of the conspirators to germanize, to plunder, to
-despoil, and to destroy. They do not, of course, tell the whole story
-of all the conspirators’ plans in this field. In some instances proof
-of the plan is derived from the acts committed by the conspirators.
-But these few documents are particularly illuminating with respect
-to the conspirators’ plans for Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Russia;
-and they indicate the outlines of carefully conceived plans for
-the rest of Europe. Others who follow will fill in this outline by
-showing a series of outrages committed on so vast a scale that no
-doubts will exist that they were committed according to plan.
-<span class='pageno' title='575' id='Page_575'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Poland was, in a sense, the testing ground for the conspirators’
-theories upon Lebensraum; and I turn to that country first.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The four western provinces of Poland were purportedly incorporated
-into Germany by an order of 8 October 1939. This order,
-which was signed by Hitler, Lammers, and Defendants Göring,
-Frick, and Hess, is set forth in <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>, 1939, Part I,
-Page 2042; and we ask the Tribunal to take judicial notice thereof.
-These areas of Poland are frequently referred to in correspondence
-among the conspirators as “incorporated Eastern Territories.” The
-remainder of Poland, which was seized by the Nazi invaders, was
-established as the Government General of Poland by an order of
-Hitler dated 12 October 1939. By that same order Defendant Hans
-Frank was named Governor General of the newly created Government
-General; and Defendant Seyss-Inquart was named Deputy
-Governor General. This order is set forth in <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>, 1939,
-Part I, Page 2077; and we ask the Tribunal also to take judicial
-notice of it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The plans with respect to Poland were rather complicated; and
-I believe that the significance of specific items of proof may be
-more readily apparent if, in advance of the introduction of the
-documents, I am permitted briefly to indicate the broad pattern
-of these plans.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We submit that the documents we are about to introduce on
-Poland show the following:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>First: The conspirators specifically planned to exploit the people
-and material resources of the Government General of Poland in
-order to strengthen the Nazi war machine, to impoverish the
-Government General, and to reduce it to a vassal state. At a later
-stage plans were formulated for creating islands of German settlements
-in the more fertile regions of the Government General in
-order to engulf the native Polish population and accelerate the
-process of Germanization.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Second: The incorporated area of Poland, which was deemed to
-be a part of the German Reich, was to be ruthlessly germanized.
-To that end, the conspirators planned:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>(a) To permit the retention of the productive facilities in the
-incorporated area, all of which, of course, would be dedicated to
-the Nazi war machine.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>(b) They planned to deport to the Government General many
-hundreds of thousands of Jews, members of the Polish intelligentsia,
-and other non-compliant elements. We shall show that the Jews
-who were deported to the Government General were doomed to
-speedy annihilation. Moreover, since the conspirators felt that
-members of the Polish intelligentsia could not be germanized and
-<span class='pageno' title='576' id='Page_576'></span>
-might serve as a center of resistance against their New Order,
-they too were to be eliminated.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>(c) They planned to deport all able-bodied Polish workers to
-Germany for work in the Nazi war machine. This served the twofold
-purpose of helping to satisfy the labor requirements of the
-Nazi war machine and preventing the propagation of a new
-generation of Poles. Mr. Dodd has already produced abundant
-proof on this topic, and I shall do no more than refer to it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>(d) They planned to mould all persons in the incorporated area
-who were deemed to possess German blood into German subjects
-who would religiously adhere to the principles of National
-Socialism. To that end the conspirators set up an elaborate racial
-register. Those who resisted or refused to co-operate in this
-program were sent to concentration camps.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>(e) They planned to bring thousands of German subjects into
-the incorporated area for purposes of settlement.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>(f) And finally, they planned to confiscate the property—particularly
-the farms—of the Poles, the Jews, and all dissident elements.
-The confiscation of the property of Jews was part of the
-conspirators’ larger program of extermination of the Jews. Confiscation
-likewise served three additional purposes: (1) It provided
-land for the new German settlers and enabled the conspirators to
-reward their adherents; (2) dispossessed Polish property owners could
-be shipped to Germany for work in the production of implements
-of war; and (3) the separation of Polish farmers from their wives
-furthered the plan to prevent the growth of a new generation
-of Poles.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We turn now to the specific items of proof.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I first offer in evidence Document Number EC-344 (16), which
-is Exhibit Number USA-297. This document is a report of an
-interview with Defendant Frank on 3 October 1939 and was found
-among the files of the OKW, which were assembled in bulk at
-the Fechenheim document center. This particular document was
-included in a large report prepared in the OKW by one Captain
-Varain at the direction of General Thomas, then chief of the
-military economic staff of the OKW. I quote from the first 19 lines
-of Page 3 of the English text. The German text appears on Page 29,
-lines 25-36, and Page 30, lines 1-6. The report states, and I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the first interview which the chief of the Central Division
-and the liaison officer between the Armament Department
-Upper East and the Chief Administrative Officer (subsequently
-Governor General) had with Reich Minister Frank on
-3 October 1939 in Posen, Frank explained the instruction
-which had been entrusted to him by the Führer and the
-economic political directives according to which he intended
-<span class='pageno' title='577' id='Page_577'></span>
-to administer Poland. According to these directives, Poland
-could be administered only by utilizing the country by means
-of ruthless exploitation; removal of all supplies—raw
-materials, machines, factory installations, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>—which are
-important for the German war economy; availability of all
-workers for work within Germany; reduction of the entire
-Polish economy to the absolute minimum necessary for the
-bare existence of the population; closing of all institutions,
-especially technical schools and colleges in order to prevent
-the growth of a new Polish intelligentsia. Poland”—Defendant
-Frank stated—and this is an exact quotation—“Poland shall
-be treated as a colony; the Poles shall be the slaves of the
-Greater German World Empire.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I should like also to quote from the last six lines of the English
-text of this Exhibit. In the German text it is lines 18 to 23 of
-Page 30. Defendant Frank further stated, and I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“By destroying Polish industry its subsequent reconstruction
-after the war would become more difficult, if not impossible,
-so that Poland would be reduced to its proper position as
-an agrarian country which would have to depend upon
-Germany for importation of industrial products.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As further proof of the defendant’s plan to plunder and despoil
-the Government General of Poland, I next offer in evidence Document
-Number EC-410, which is Exhibit Number USA-298. In
-addition to the proof of the defendant’s plans to plunder and
-despoil the Government General, this document demonstrates the
-difference in treatment which the conspirators planned for the
-incorporated area of Poland and the Government General. It is
-a copy of a directive issued and signed by Defendant Göring on
-19 October 1939 and was likewise found among the captured OKW
-files. I quote from lines 1 to 19 on Page 1 of the English text.
-In the German text it is all of Page 1 and the first line of Page 2.
-Defendant Göring’s directive states, and I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the meeting of October 13th I have given detailed instructions
-for the economical administration of the occupied
-territories. I will repeat them here in short:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1009'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. The task for the economic treatment of the various
-administrative regions is different, depending on whether
-a country which will be incorporated politically into the
-German Reich is involved or whether we deal with the
-Government General, which in all probability, will not be
-made a part of Germany,</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1010'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the first-mentioned territories the reconstruction and
-expansion of the economy, the safeguarding of all their
-production facilities and supplies must be aimed at, as well
-<span class='pageno' title='578' id='Page_578'></span>
-as a complete incorporation into the Greater German
-economic system at the earliest possible time. On the other
-hand, there must be removed from the territories of the
-Government General all raw materials, scrap materials,
-machines, <span class='it'>et cetera</span> which are of use for the German war
-economy. Enterprises which are not absolutely necessary for
-the meager maintenance of the naked existence of the
-population must be transferred to Germany, unless such
-transfer would require an unreasonably long period of time
-and would make it more practical to exploit those enterprises
-by giving them German orders to be executed at their
-present location.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Once the Government General had been stripped of its industrial
-potential, the defendants planned to leave the country desolate.
-Not even the war damage was to be repaired. This is the clear
-import of the documents previously introduced and is likewise
-made clear by Document Number EC-411, which is Exhibit Number
-USA-299. I offer this document in evidence. This document is a
-copy of an order dated 20 November 1939, by Defendant Hess,
-in his capacity as Deputy Führer. This document was also found
-in the captured OKW files. I quote the English and German texts
-in their entirety. Defendant Hess stated, and I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I hear from Party members who came from the Government
-General that various agencies, as for instance, the Military
-Economic Staff, the Reich Ministry for Labor, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>,
-intend to reconstruct certain industrial enterprises in Warsaw.
-However, in accordance with a decision by Minister Dr. Frank
-approved by the Führer, Warsaw shall not be rebuilt nor
-is it the intention of the Führer to rebuild or reconstruct
-any industry in the Government General.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Turning from the defendants’ program of economic spoliation in
-the Government General to their program of deportation and
-resettlement, I next offer in evidence Document Number 661-PS,
-which is Exhibit Number USA-300. This is a secret report, prepared
-by the Academy of German Law in January 1940, upon plans for
-the mass migration of Poles and Jews from incorporated areas of
-Poland to the Government General and for the forcible deportation of
-able-bodied Poles to Germany. This document was obtained from
-the ministerial collecting center at Kassel, Germany. The date
-does not appear in the English translation, but it is clearly set
-forth on the cover page of the original document as January 1940.
-Before quoting from this document, I ask first that the Tribunal
-take judicial notice of the decree of 11 July 1934, embodied in the
-<span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>, Part I, Page 605, 11 July 1934, which provided
-that the Academy of German Law would be a public corporation
-<span class='pageno' title='579' id='Page_579'></span>
-of the Reich under the supervision of the Reich Ministers of Justice
-and the Interior, and that its task would be:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“To promote the reconstruction of German legal life and to
-realize, in constant close collaboration with the competent
-legislative organizations, the National Socialist program in
-the entire sphere of the law.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Second, before quoting from the afore-mentioned report of the
-Academy of German Law, I should like to offer in evidence Document
-Number 2749-PS, which is Exhibit Number USA-301. This
-is the title page of the publication of the Academy of German Law
-for 1940. It is offered for the purpose of showing that defendant
-Frank was the President of the Academy of German Law during
-the period that the above-mentioned secret report of the Academy
-was made. The document specifically states, and I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Reich Minister Dr. Hans Frank, President of the Academy
-for German Law, 7th year 1940.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, if I may ask Your Honors to turn to Document Number
-661-PS, I should first like to quote Page 1, lines 6 to 24, of the
-English text. In the German text these extracts appear at Page 6,
-lines 6 to 10; and line 22, Page 6, to line 4, Page 7. I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In the carrying out of costly and long-term measures for
-the increase of agricultural production, the Government
-General can, at the most, absorb 1 to 1.5 million resettlers,
-as it is already over-populated in many cases.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. By further
-absorption of 1.6 million resettlers the 1925 Reich census
-figure of 133 inhabitants per square kilometer would be
-reached, which practically, because of already existing rural
-over-population and lack of industry, would result in a double
-over-pressure.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1011'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“This figure of 1.6 million will barely suffice for deportations
-from the Reich:</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Jews from the liberated East (over 600,000); groups of
-the remaining Jews, preferably the younger age groups from
-Germany proper, Austria, Sudetengau and the Protectorate
-(altogether over 1 million).”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Continuing the quotation, the report goes on with respect to
-transfers from the Reich, and I continue to quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Polish intelligentsia, who have been branded as
-politicians, and potential political leaders; the leading
-economic personalities, comprising owners of large estates,
-industrialists and businessmen, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>; the peasant
-population, so far as it has to be removed in order to carry
-out, by strips of German settlements, the encirclement of
-Polish territories in the East.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='580' id='Page_580'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Next I quote the last paragraph on Page 1 of the English text.
-The German text is at Page 8, lines 3-10:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“In order to relieve the living space of the Poles in the
-Government General as well as in the liberated East, one
-should temporarily remove cheap labor by the hundreds of
-thousands, employ them for a few years in the Old Reich,
-and thereby hamper their native biological propagation.
-(Their assimilation into the Old Reich must be prevented.)”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Finally, I quote from the last paragraph of Page 2 of the English
-text. In the German text it is the last 5 lines on Page 40:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Strictest care is to be taken that secret documents, memoranda,
-and official correspondence which contain instructions
-detrimental to the Poles are kept steadily under lock and
-key, so that they will not some day fill the White Books
-printed in Paris or the U.S.A.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Your Honors will recall, from your own experiences, the vicious
-propaganda campaigns conducted by Nazi Germany to discredit the
-Polish books when they made their appearance in countries friendly
-to Poland. The last paragraph of this document which I have just
-read gives the lie to that whole Nazi propaganda campaign.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The plans for the deportation of thousands of innocent people,
-which are set forth in the document from which I have just quoted,
-were not mere theories spun by lawyers. They represented, as the
-next three documents to be offered in evidence will show, a
-program which was, in fact, ruthlessly executed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I next offer in evidence Document Number 2233(g)-PS, the Frank
-diaries, 1939, from 25 October to 15 December, which is Exhibit
-Number USA-302. This document was obtained from the 7th Army
-document center at Heidelberg. I quote from the last paragraph
-of Page 1, carrying over to the first two lines of Page 2 of the
-English text. In the German text the statements appear at Page 19,
-lines 19 to 28. Defendant Frank stated, and I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Reichsführer SS”—meaning Himmler—“wishes that all
-Jews be evacuated from the newly gained Reich territories.
-Up to February approximately 1 million people are to be
-brought in this way into the Government General. The
-families of good racial extraction present in the occupied
-Polish territory (approximately 4 million people) should be
-transferred into the Reich and individually housed, thereby
-being uprooted as a people.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I next offer in evidence Document Number EC-305, which is
-Exhibit Number USA-303. This exhibit is the top-secret minutes
-of a meeting held on 12 February 1940, under the chairmanship
-of Defendant Göring, on “Questions Concerning the East.” The
-<span class='pageno' title='581' id='Page_581'></span>
-document was found in the captured OKW files. Himmler and
-Defendant Frank likewise were present at this meeting.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I initially quote from Page 1, lines 15 to 17, of the English text.
-These extracts are found in the front page, lines 1 to 8, of the
-German text. The minutes state, and I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“By way of introduction the General Field Marshal”—meaning
-Defendant Göring—“explained that the strengthening
-of the war potential of the Reich must be the chief
-aim of all measures to be taken in the East.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I next quote the first two lines of the last paragraph on Page 1
-of the English text. The German text appears at Page 2, lines 2 to 4.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Agriculture: The task consists of obtaining the greatest
-possible agricultural production from the new eastern Gaue,
-disregarding questions of ownership.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I next quote from the second paragraph of Page 2 of the English
-text. This is at Page 3, lines 22-24, of the German text:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Special questions concerning the Government General.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-The Government General will have to receive the Jews who
-are ordered to emigrate from Germany and the new eastern
-Gaue.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Finally, I quote the paragraph numbered 2 under Roman
-numeral II of Page 2 of the English text. These statements appear
-in the German text at Page 4, lines 3-19:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The following reported on the situation in the Eastern
-territories.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1012'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. Reichsstatthalter Gauleiter Forster”—who said—“ ‘The
-population of the Danzig-West Prussia Gau (newly acquired
-territories) is 1.5 million, of whom 240,000 are Germans,
-850,000 well-established Poles, and 300,000 immigrant Poles,
-Jews, and asocials (1,800 Jews). There have been evacuated
-87,000 persons, 40,000 of these from Gdynia. From there also
-the numerous shirkers, who are now looked after by welfare,
-will have to be deported to the Government General. Therefore
-an evacuation of 20,000 additional persons can be counted
-on for the current year.’ ”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Comparable reports were made by other Gauleiter at the
-meeting. The figures that were quoted, it may be noted, were only
-as of February 1940. The forcible deportations, which are reported
-in the exhibits from which I have just read, did not involve merely
-ordering the unfortunate victims to leave their homes and to take
-up new residences elsewhere. These deportations were accomplished
-according to plan in an utterly brutal and inhuman manner. Document
-Number 1918-PS, which is Exhibit Number USA-304, affords
-striking proof of this fact; and I offer it in evidence. This is a
-<span class='pageno' title='582' id='Page_582'></span>
-speech delivered by Himmler to officers of the SS on a day
-commemorating the presentation of the Nazi flag. It is contained
-in a compilation of speeches delivered by Himmler, and was
-captured by the Counter-Intelligence branch of the United States
-Army. The exact date of the speech does not appear in the exhibit,
-but its contents plainly show that it was delivered sometime after
-Poland had been overrun. I quote from the second to the eighth
-lines of Page 1 of the English text. In the German text this
-quotation appears on Page 52, lines 2 to 10. In this speech Himmler
-said, and I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Very frequently the member of the Waffen-SS thinks about
-the deportation of these people here. These thoughts came
-to me today when watching the very difficult work out there
-performed by the Security Police, supported by your men,
-who help them a great deal. Exactly the same thing
-happened in Poland in weather 40 degrees below zero, where
-we had to haul away thousands, ten thousands, a hundred
-thousand; where we had to have the toughness—you should
-hear this but also forget it again—to shoot thousands of
-leading Poles.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>I repeat the latter statement:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Where we had to have the toughness .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. to shoot thousands
-of leading Poles.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Such Poles from the incorporated area as managed to survive
-the journey to the Government General could look forward, at
-best, to extreme hardship and exposure to every form of degradation
-and brutality. Your Honors will recall Defendant Frank’s
-statement contained in Document Number EC-344(16), now Exhibit
-Number USA-297, which was introduced a short while ago, that
-the Polish economy would be reduced to the absolute minimum
-necessary for the bare existence of the population.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Your Honors Will also recall Defendant Göring’s directive in
-Document Number EC-410, now Exhibit Number USA-298, also
-introduced a few moments ago, that all industrial enterprises in
-the Government General not absolutely necessary for the maintenance
-of the naked existence of the Polish population must be
-removed to Germany. A bare and naked existence, by the precepts
-of the conspirators, meant virtual starvation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For the Jews who were forcibly deported to the Government
-General there was, of course, absolutely no hope. They were, in
-effect, deported to their graves. The Defendant Frank, by his own
-admissions, had dedicated himself to their complete annihilation.
-I refer Your Honors to the Frank diaries, conference volume, 1941,
-October to December, which is Document Number 2233(d)-PS, which
-was introduced by Major Walsh earlier as Exhibit Number USA-281.
-<span class='pageno' title='583' id='Page_583'></span>
-The particular statement that I want to quote appears on Page 4,
-Your Honor, of Document Number 2233-PS. I believe it appears at
-Page 77, lines 9 and 10 of the German text. I quote—this is what
-Defendant Frank stated, “We must annihilate the Jews, wherever
-we find them, and wherever it is possible.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I turn next to that aspect of the conspirators’ program which
-involved the forcible Germanization of persons in the incorporated
-area who were deemed to possess German blood. I refer you now,
-Your Honors, to the incorporated area, to persons who were deemed
-to possess German blood. Such persons, the evidence will show,
-were given the choice of the concentration camp or submission to
-Germanization. Himmler was the chief executioner of this program;
-and initially I should like to introduce a few documents which
-disclose the powers bestowed upon him and his conception of
-his task.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>First, I offer in evidence Document Number 686-PS. This is
-Exhibit Number USA-305. This is a copy of a secret decree signed
-by Hitler and Defendants Göring and Keitel, dated 7 October 1939,
-entrusting Himmler with the task of executing the conspirators’
-Germanization program. This particular document came from the
-ministerial collection center at Kassel, Germany. I quote from
-Page 1, lines 9 to 21 of the English text. In the German text
-these extracts appear at Page 1, lines 13 to 25:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Reichsführer SS”—that was Himmler—“has the obligation
-in accordance, with my directives:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1013'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. To bring back for final return into the Reich all German
-nationals and racial Germans in the foreign countries.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1014'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. To eliminate the harmful influence of such alien parts of
-the population which represent a danger to the Reich and
-the German folk community.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1015'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3. The forming of new German settlements by resettling and,
-in particular, by settling the returning German citizens and
-racial Germans from abroad.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1016'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Reichsführer SS is authorized to take all necessary
-general and administrative measures for the execution of
-his obligation.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Himmler’s conception of his task under this decree is plainly
-stated in the foreword which he wrote for the <span class='it'>Deutsche Arbeit</span>
-issue of June-July 1942. The foreword is contained in Document
-Number 2915-PS, now Exhibit Number USA-306. I quote from the
-first four lines of the English text. The German text appears at
-Page 157:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“It is our task”—Himmler wrote—“to germanize the East,
-not in the old sense—that is, to teach the people there the
-<span class='pageno' title='584' id='Page_584'></span>
-German language and German law—but to see to it that
-only people of purely German, Germanic blood live in the
-East. Signed, Himmler.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I next offer in evidence Document Number 2916-PS, which is
-Exhibit Number USA-307. This document contains various
-materials taken out of <span class='it'>Der Menscheneinsatz</span> of 1940, a confidential
-publication issued by Himmler’s office for the consolidation of
-German nationhood. I quote initially from Page 1, lines 7 to 11.
-In the German text these extracts appear at Page 51, first four
-lines under the letter “D.” I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The removal of foreign races from the incorporated Eastern
-Territories is one of the most essential goals to be
-accomplished in the German East. This is the chief national
-political task, which has to be executed in the incorporated
-Eastern Territories by the Reichsführer SS, Reich Commissioner
-for the Preservation of German Nationality.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I next quote from lines 33 to 39 of Page 1 of the English text.
-In the German text these extracts appear on Page 52, lines 14 to 20.
-I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“There are the following two primary reasons which make
-the regaining of this lost German blood an urgent necessity:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1017'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. Prevention of a further increase of the Polish intelligentsia
-through families of German descent, even if they are
-Polonized.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1018'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. Increase of the population by racial elements desirable
-for the German nation and the acquisition of ethno-biologically
-unobjectionable forces for the German reconstruction
-of agriculture and industry.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Further light is thrown upon the goals which the conspirators
-had set for their Germanization program in conquered Eastern
-areas by a speech delivered by Himmler on 14 October 1943. This
-speech was published by the National Socialist leadership staff of
-the OKW. The document came to us through the Document
-Section, 3rd U.S. Infantry Division. Excerpts from this speech are
-set forth in L-70, which is Exhibit Number USA-308. I quote
-all of the English text; and in the German text these excerpts
-appear at Page 23, lines 6 to 11, 12 to 15, 20 to 23, and Page 30,
-lines 7 to 16. Himmler said, and I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Therefore, I consider that in dealing with members of a
-foreign country, especially some Slav nationality, we must
-not start from German points of view, we must not endow
-these people with decent German thoughts and logical
-conclusions of which they are not capable, but we must take
-them as they really are.
-<span class='pageno' title='585' id='Page_585'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1019'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Obviously in such a mixture of peoples there will always
-be some racially good types. Therefore I think that it is our
-duty to take their children with us, to remove them from
-their environment, if necessary, by robbing or stealing them.
-Either we win over the good blood that we can use for
-ourselves and give it a place in our people or .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. we destroy
-that blood.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Continuing the German text on Page 30, lines 7 to 16, which
-is a continuation of the English text, I believe, Your Honor—Himmler
-stated and I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“For us the end of this war will mean an open road to the
-East, the creation of the Germanic Reich in this way or
-that .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. the fetching home of 30 million human beings of our
-blood, so that still during our lifetime we shall be a people
-of 120 million Germanic souls. That means that we shall be
-the sole and decisive power in Europe. That means that we
-shall then be able to tackle the peace, during which we shall
-be willing for the first 20 years to rebuild and spread out our
-villages and towns, and that we shall push the borders of our
-German race 500 kilometers farther to the East.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In furtherance of the unlawful plans disclosed by the last four
-exhibits, which have been offered in evidence, the conspirators contrived
-a racial register in the incorporated area of Poland. The
-racial register was, in effect, an elaborate classification of persons
-deemed to be of German blood, and contained provisions setting
-forth some of the rights, privileges, and duties of the persons in
-each classification. Persons were classified into four groups:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>(1) Germans who had actively promoted the Nazi cause;</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>(2) Germans who had been more or less passive in the Nazi
-struggle, but had retained their German nationality;</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>(3) Persons of German extraction who, although previously
-connected with the Polish nation, were willing to submit to
-Germanization;</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>(4) Persons of German descent, who had been “politically absorbed
-by the Polish nation,” and who would be resistant to
-Germanization.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The racial register was inaugurated under a decree of 12 September
-1940 issued by Himmler as Reich Commissioner for the
-consolidation of German nationhood, and this is contained in Document
-Number 2916-PS, previously introduced in evidence. That is
-Exhibit Number USA-307. I quote from Page 4 of the English text,
-lines 14 to 46. In the German text these extracts appear at Page 92,
-lines 29 to the end of the page, and lines 1 to 9 of Page 93. I
-quote:
-<span class='pageno' title='586' id='Page_586'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“For inter-office use the list of racial Germans will be divided
-into four groups:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1020'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. Racial Germans who fought actively in the ethnic struggle.
-Besides the membership of a German organization, every other
-deliberated activity in favor of the Germans against a foreign
-nationality will be considered an active manifestation.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1021'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. Racial Germans who did not actively intervene in favor
-of the German nationality but had preserved their traceable
-German nationality.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1022'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3. Persons of German descent who became connected with
-the Polish nation in the course of the years but have, on
-account of their attitude, the pre-requisites to become full-fledged
-members of the German national community. To this
-group belong also persons of non-German descent who live in
-a people’s mixed marriage with an ethnic German in which
-the German spouse has prevailed. Persons of Masurian,
-Kushubian, Slonzak, or Upper Silesian descent, who are to be
-recognized as racial Germans usually belong to this group 3.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1023'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“4. Persons of German descent politically absorbed by the
-Polish nation (renegades). Persons not included on the list
-of radial Germans are Poles or other foreign nationals. Their
-treatment is regulated by B II.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1024'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Members of groups 3 and 4 have to be educated as full
-Germans, that is, they have to be re-germanized in the
-course of time through an intensive educational training in
-Old Germany.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1025'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The establishment of members of group 4 has to be based
-on the doctrine that German blood must not be utilized in the
-interest of a foreign nation. Against those who refuse re-Germanization,
-Security Police measures are to be taken.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The basic idea of creating a racial register for persons of German
-extraction was later incorporated in a decree of 4 March 1941
-signed by Himmler and the Defendants Frick and Hess. This decree
-is dated 4 March 1941; and is set forth in the <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>, 1941,
-Part 1, Page 118. We ask the Tribunal to take judicial notice thereof.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The entire apparatus of the SS was thrown behind the vigorous
-execution of these decrees. Proof of this fact is contained in Document
-Number R-112, which is Exhibit Number USA-309, and I now
-offer it in evidence. This exhibit contains directives issued by
-Himmler as the Reich Commissioner for the consolidation of German
-nationhood. I quote first from the last two paragraphs of the
-English text of the directives, 16 February 1942, which is on Page 3
-of this exhibit. In the German text this provision appears on Page 1
-of the first decree, dated 16 February 1942, Paragraph 1 and 2. The
-directive provided, and I now quote:
-<span class='pageno' title='587' id='Page_587'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I. Where racial Germans have not applied for entry in the
-German ethnical list you will instruct the subordinate agencies
-to turn over their names to the local State Police
-(superior) Office. Subsequently, you will report to me.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1026'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“II. The local State Police (superior) Office will charge the
-persons whose names are turned over to it to prove within
-8 days that they have applied for entry in the German ethnical
-list.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1027'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“If such proof is not submitted, the person in question is to
-be taken into protective custody for transfer to a concentration
-camp.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The measures taken against persons in the fourth category—“Polonized
-Germans” as the conspirators called them—were particularly
-harsh. These persons were resistant to Germanization, and
-ruthless measures calculated to break their resistance were prescribed.
-Where the individual’s past history indicated that he could
-not be effectively germanized, he was thrown into a concentration
-camp.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Some of these measures are set forth in Subparagraph A of
-Paragraph II on Page 5 of Document R-112, and I quote in full from
-the English text of that particular paragraph. This passage is set
-forth in the German text at Pages 2 and 3 of the second decree
-dated 16 February 1942 under II. This is what the directive
-provides:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“II. The re-Germanization of the Polonized Germans presupposes
-their complete separation from Polish surroundings.
-For that reason the persons entered in Division 4 of the German
-ethnical list are to be dealt with in the following manner:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1028'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“A. They are to be resettled in Old Reich territory.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1029'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“1. The Higher SS and Police Leaders are charged with
-evacuating and resettling them in Old Reich territory according
-to instructions which will follow later.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1030'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“2. Asocial persons and others who are of inferior hereditary
-quality will not be included in the resettlement. Their names
-will be turned over at once by the Higher SS and Police
-Leaders (Inspectors of Security Police and Security Service)
-to the competent State Police (superior) Office. The latter
-will arrange for their transfer to a concentration camp.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1031'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“3. Persons with a particularly bad political record will not
-be included in the resettlement action. Their names will also
-be given by the Higher SS and Police Leaders (Inspectors
-of Security Police and Security Service) to the competent
-State Police (superior) Office for transfer to a concentration
-camp.
-<span class='pageno' title='588' id='Page_588'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1032'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The wives and children of such persons are to be resettled
-in Old Reich territory and to be included in the Germanization
-measures. Where the wife also has a particularly bad
-political record and cannot be included in the resettlement
-action, her name, too, is to be turned over to the competent
-State Police (superior) Office with a view to transferring her
-to a concentration camp. In such cases the children are to be
-separated from their parents and dealt with according to III,
-Paragraph 2 of this decree.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1033'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Persons are to be considered as having a particularly bad
-political record who have offended the German nation to a
-very great degree (for example, those who participated in
-persecutions of Germans, or boycotts of Germans, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>.)”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Coincident with the program of germanizing persons of German
-extraction in the incorporated areas, the conspirators, as previously
-indicated, undertook to settle large numbers of Germans of proven
-Nazi convictions in that area. This aspect of their program is clearly
-shown by an article by SS Obergruppenführer and General of the
-Police Wilhelm Koppe, who was one of Himmler’s trusted agents.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Excerpts from this article are contained in Document Number
-2915-PS, which was earlier introduced as Exhibit Number USA-306.
-I quote from the second paragraph of the English text of this
-exhibit. The German text appears at the third line from the bottom
-of Page 170 and continues to the first full paragraph of Page 171.
-I now quote Koppe’s statement:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The victory of German weapons in the East must, therefore,
-be followed by the victory of the German race over the Polish
-race, if the regained Eastern sphere—according to the Führer’s
-will—shall henceforth remain for all time an essential
-constituent part of the Greater German Reich. It is therefore
-of decisive importance to infiltrate German farmers, laborers,
-civil servants, merchants, and artisans into the regained
-German region so that a living and deep-rooted bastion of
-German people can be formed as a protective wall against
-foreign penetration and possibly as a starting point for the
-racial infusion of the territories farther east.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn now for 10 minutes.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>CAPT. HARRIS: Up to this point we have been speaking of the
-Germanization measures in the incorporated areas. I should like
-now briefly to turn to the Germanization program in the Government
-General.
-<span class='pageno' title='589' id='Page_589'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the Government General there were relatively few persons,
-at the outset, who qualified as Germans according to the conspirators’
-standards. Hence little would be served by the introduction
-of a racial register categorizing persons of German extraction on
-the model of the one instituted in the incorporated area; and to our
-knowledge, no such racial register was prescribed in the Government
-General. Rather, the plan seems to have been (a) to make the
-Government General a colony of Germany, which—as Your Honors
-will recall from Document EC-344(16), which has been introduced
-as Exhibit Number USA-297—was the objective expressed by the
-Defendant Frank; and (b) to create so-called “German island settlements”
-in the productive farming areas. These island settlements
-were to be created by an influx of German persons who faithfully
-adhered to the principles of National Socialism.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In this connection I offer in evidence Document Number 910-PS.
-This is Exhibit Number USA-310. These are secret notes bearing
-the date line, “Department of the Interior, Kraków, 30 March 1942,”
-and they concerned Himmler’s statements upon the planned Germanization
-of the Government General. This document was obtained
-from the 3rd Army intelligence center at Freising, Germany; and
-I now quote from Page 2 of the English text, from line 3 to the end
-of the report. This appears in the German text at Page 2, line 21,
-continuing to the end of the report. The document states, and I
-quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Reichsführer SS”—Himmler—“developed additional
-trains of ideas to the effect that, in the first 5-year plan for
-resettlement after the war, the new German Eastern territories
-should first be filled; it is intended afterwards to
-provide the Crimea and the Baltic countries with a German
-upper class at least. Into the Government General, perhaps,
-further German island settlements should be newly transplanted
-from European nations. An exact decision in this
-respect, however, has not been issued. In any case, it is
-wished that at first a heavy colonization along the San and
-the Bug be achieved so that the parts of Poland with alien
-populations are encircled. Hitherto, it has been always proved
-that this kind of encircling leads most quickly to the desired
-nationalization.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In this same connection, I offer in evidence Document Number
-2233(h)-PS. This is Defendant Frank’s diary, 1941, Volume II, Page
-317. This is Exhibit Number USA-311. I quote from the last sentence
-at the bottom of our Page 3 of the English text of this exhibit.
-In the German text this passage appears on Page 317, lines 25 to
-28. Defendant Frank stated in this diary, and I quote:
-<span class='pageno' title='590' id='Page_590'></span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Thanks to the heroic courage of our soldiers this territory
-has become German; and the time will come when the valley
-of the Vistula, from its source to its mouth at the sea, will
-be as German as the valley of the Rhine.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now turn to another phase of the program that I mentioned
-earlier, that is the conspirators’ plan to confiscate the property of
-Poles, Jews, and dissident elements. As I previously mentioned,
-the evidence will show that these plans were designed to accomplish
-a number of objectives. Insofar as the Jews were concerned, they
-were part and parcel of the conspirators’ overall program of extermination.
-Confiscation was also a means of providing property for
-German settlers and of rewarding those who had rendered faithful
-service to the Nazi State. This phase of their program likewise
-made available dispossessed Polish farmers for slave labor in Germany
-and operated to further the conspirators’ objective of preventing
-the growth of another generation of Poles.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Proof of the fact that the conspirators confiscated the property
-of Poles in furtherance of their Germanization and slave labor program
-is contained in Document Number 1352-PS, previously introduced
-by Mr. Dodd as Exhibit Number USA-176. This exhibit
-contains a number of reports by one Kusche, who appears to have
-been one of Himmler’s chief deputies in Poland. Mr. Dodd quoted
-from one of Kusche’s confidential reports, dated 22 May 1940, at our
-Page 4, Paragraph 5 of the English text. In the German text it is
-at Page 9, lines 16 to 18. In this statement Kusche pointed out that
-it was possible, without difficulty, to confiscate small farms and
-that—and I now quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The former owners of Polish farms together with their families
-will be transferred to the Old Reich by the labor offices
-for employment as farm workers.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now desire to quote from another report by Kusche contained
-in the same exhibit and bearing the same date, 22 May 1940. I
-think the upper right-hand corner numbers might simplify it. The
-report from which I now quote is marked “secret” and is entitled,
-“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Details of the Confiscation in the Bielsko Region.” Initially, I
-should like to quote from the last paragraph at the bottom of
-Page 1 of this exhibit. This exhibit, you will recall, is 1352-PS, last
-paragraph at the bottom of Page 1. The German text is at Page 11,
-Paragraphs 1 and 2. Kusche stated, and I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Some days ago the commandant of the concentration camp
-being built at Auschwitz called on Staff Leader Müller and
-requested support for the carrying out of his assignments. He
-said that it was absolutely necessary to confiscate the agricultural
-enterprises within a certain area around the concentration
-camp, since not only the fields but also in some cases
-<span class='pageno' title='591' id='Page_591'></span>
-the farm houses of these border directly on the concentration
-camp. A local inspection held on the 21st of this month
-revealed the following:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1034'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“There is no room for doubt that agricultural enterprises
-bordering on the concentration camp must be confiscated at
-once. In addition, the camp commandant requests that further
-plots of farm land be placed at his disposal, so that he can
-keep the prisoners busy. This, too, can be done without difficulty
-since enough land can be made available for the purpose.
-The owners of the plots are all Poles.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I next quote from Page 2, lines 22 to 31, of the English text of
-this same exhibit. The German text is at Page 12, Paragraph 2,
-continuing through to line 22 from the top of the page. I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“I had the following discussion with the chief of the labor
-office in Bielsko:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1035'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The lack of agricultural laborers still exists in the Old Reich.
-The transfer of the previous owners of the confiscated agricultural
-enterprises to the Reich as farm workers, together
-with their entire families, is possible without any difficulty.
-It is only necessary for the labor office to receive the lists of
-the persons in time, in order to enable it to take the necessary
-steps (collection of transportation; distribution over the
-various regions in need of such labor).”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Finally, I quote from Page 3 of this same exhibit, lines 6 to 13
-of the English text. The German text appears at Page 13, the last
-three lines, continuing through to Page 14, line 9:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The confiscation of these Polish enterprises in Alzen will also
-be carried out within the next few days. The commandant of
-the concentration camp will furnish SS men and a truck for
-the execution of the action. Should it not yet be possible to
-take the Poles from Alzen to Auschwitz”—and Auschwitz,
-Your Honors will recall, is where the concentration camp
-was—“they should be transferred to the empty castle at
-Zator. The liberated Polish property is to be given to the
-needy racial German farmers for their use.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In order to regularize the program of confiscation, Defendant
-Göring issued a decree on September 17, 1940. This decree appears
-in the <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>, 1940, Part I, Page 1270; and I ask the Tribunal
-to take judicial notice of it. Under Section 2 of this decree
-sequestration of movable and immovable property, stores, and other
-intangible property, interests of Jews and “persons who have fled
-or are not merely temporarily absent”, was made mandatory. In
-addition, sequestration was authorized under Section 2, Subsection 2,
-if the property was required “for the public welfare, particularly
-in the interests of Reich defense or the strengthening of German
-<span class='pageno' title='592' id='Page_592'></span>
-folkdom.” By Section 9 of this decree, issued by Defendant Göring,
-confiscation of sequestrated property was authorized “if the public
-welfare, particularly the defense of the Reich, or the strengthening
-of German folkdom, so requires.” However, Section 1, Subsection 2,
-of the decree provided that property of German nationals was not
-subject to sequestration and confiscation; and Section 13 provided
-that sequestration would be suspended if the owner of the property
-asserted that he was a German. The decree, on its face, indicates
-very clearly a purpose to strip Poles, Jews, and dissident elements
-of their property. It was, moreover, avowedly designed to promote
-Germanism.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We ask the Court to take judicial notice of it. It is in the <span class='it'>Reichsgesetzblatt</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Apparently some question arose at one point as to whether the
-decree required that a determination be made in each case, involving
-the property of a Pole, that the property was required “for
-the public welfare, particularly in the interests of Reich defense or
-the strengthening of German folkdom.” The answer supplied by the
-conspirators was firm and clear. In any case in which the property
-of a Pole is involved, the “strengthening of German folkdom”
-required its seizure. In this connection I offer in evidence document
-Number R-92, which is Exhibit Number USA-312. This document,
-which is dated 15 April 1941, bears the letterhead of the Reich
-Leader SS, commissioner for the consolidation of German nationhood,
-and is entitled, “Instruction for Internal Use on the Application
-of the Law Concerning Property of the Poles, of 17 September
-1940.” This document was captured by the U.S. Counter-Intelligence
-Corps. I quote from Page 2, lines 11 to 14 of the English
-text. In the German text this statement appears at Page 3,
-Paragraph 2, Subparagraph 2. I quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The objective conditions permitting seizure according to
-Section II, Subsection 2(a), are to be assumed whenever, for
-example, the property belongs to a Pole, for the Polish real
-estate will be needed without exception for the preservation
-of the German folkdom.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the Government General Defendant Frank promulgated a
-decree on 24 January 1940 authorizing sequestration for the “performance
-of tasks serving the public interest” and liquidation of
-“anti-social or financially unremunerative concerns.” The decree is
-embodied in the <span class='it'>Verordnungsblatt</span> of the Government General,
-Number 6, 27 January 1940, Page 23; and we ask the Tribunal to
-take judicial notice of it. The undefined criteria in this decree
-obviously empowered Nazi officials in the Government General to
-engage in wholesale seizure of property.
-<span class='pageno' title='593' id='Page_593'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The magnitude of the conspirators’ confiscation program in
-Poland was staggering. I ask Your Honors to turn to the chart on
-the sixth page of Document Number R-92, which was introduced
-into evidence a moment ago as Exhibit Number USA-312.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This chart shows that as of 31 May 1943 the staggering total of
-693,252 estates, comprising 6,097,525 hectares, had been seized and
-9,508 estates, comprising 270,446 hectares, had been confiscated by
-the Estate Offices Danzig-West Prussia, Posen, Ciechanów, and
-Silesia. This, it will be noted, represented the seizure and confiscation
-of only four offices.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That, Your Honors, concludes our discussion on Poland; and I
-now turn to Czechoslovakia. At this point of the proceedings we
-shall introduce only one document upon Czechoslovakia. This one
-document, however, contains a startling revelation of the conspirators’
-plans to germanize Bohemia and Moravia. It relates how three
-plans, each characterized by its severity, were discussed; and finally
-how the Führer decided on plan (c), which involved the assimilation
-of about one-half of the Czech population by the Germans and
-the extermination of the other half. Moreover, the plan envisaged
-a large influx into Czechoslovakia of Germans whose loyalty to the
-Führer was unquestioned. I offer this document in evidence. It
-is Document Number 862-PS, and it is Exhibit Number USA-313.
-This is a top-secret report, dated 15 October 1940, which was
-written by General Friderici, Deputy General of the Wehrmacht
-in Bohemia and Moravia. On the face of the document, it appears
-that only four copies were made. The document we offer in evidence
-is the original document, which was found among the captured
-files of the OKW. This document bears the handwritten letters “K”
-and “J” on the first page on the left-hand side, and I am advised
-that the handwriting is unquestionably that of Defendants Keitel
-and Jodl. I quote the document in its entirety:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“On 9 October of this year the office of the Reich Protector
-held an official conference in which State Secretary SS
-Gruppenführer R. H. Frank spoke about the following .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>SS Gruppenführer K. H. Frank, it may be noted, was Secretary
-of State under Defendant Von Neurath, who at the date of this
-report was the Protector of Bohemia and Moravia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Who did you say Frank was?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>CAPT. HARRIS: Frank was an SS Gruppenführer, and Secretary
-of State under Defendant Von Neurath. He is not the Defendant
-Hans Frank. At the date of this particular report Von Neurath,
-under whom K. H. Frank served, was the Protector of Bohemia and
-Moravia. Continuing the quotation:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Since creation of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia,
-Party agencies, industrial circles, as well as agencies of the
-<span class='pageno' title='594' id='Page_594'></span>
-central authorities of Berlin, have considered a solution for
-the Czech problem.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1036'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“After ample deliberation, the Reich Protector expressed his
-views about the various plans in a memorandum. In this
-three ways of solution were indicated:</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1037'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“a) German infiltration of Moravia and confinement of the
-Czech nationals to a residual Bohemia. This solution is considered
-unsatisfactory, because the Czech problem, even if in
-diminished form, will continue to exist.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1038'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“b) Many arguments can be brought up against the most
-radical solution, namely, the deportation of all Czechs. Therefore,
-in the memorandum it is concluded that it cannot be
-carried out within a reasonable period of time.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1039'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“c) Assimilation of the Czechs, that is, absorption of about
-half of the Czech nationals by the Germans insofar as these
-are of racial or otherwise valuable importance. This will also
-be caused, among other things, by increased employment of
-Czechs in the Reich territory (with the exception of the
-Sudeten German border districts), in other words, by dispersing
-the concentrations of Czech nationals.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1040'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The other half of the Czech nationals must be deprived of
-their power, eliminated, and shipped out of the country by
-all sorts of methods. This applies particularly to the racially
-mongoloid part and to the major part of the intellectual class.
-The latter can scarcely be converted and would become a
-burden by constantly making claims for the leadership over
-the other Czech classes and thus interfering with a possible
-rapid assimilation.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1041'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Elements which counteract the planned Germanization ought
-to be handled roughly and eliminated.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1042'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The above development naturally pre-supposes an increased
-influx of Germans from the Reich territory into the Protectorate.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1043'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Having been reported, the Führer has chosen solution (c)
-(assimilation) as a directive for the solution of the Czech
-problem and decided that, while keeping up the autonomy of
-the Protectorate on the surface, the Germanization will have
-to be carried out in a centralized way by the office of the
-Reich Protector for years to come.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1044'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“From the above no particular conclusions are to be drawn
-by the Armed Forces. This is the line which has always been
-taken here. In this connection I refer to my memorandum
-submitted to the Chief of the High Command of the Armed
-Forces, dated 12 July 1939, file number 6/39, top secret,
-entitled ‘The Czech Problem’ (attached as annex).
-<span class='pageno' title='595' id='Page_595'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1045'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The Representative of the Armed Forces with the Reich Protector
-in Bohemia and Moravia.”—Signed—“Friderici, General
-of Infantry.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With the permission of Your Honors, I should like to comment
-further upon some parts of this memorandum. First, I invite your
-attention to solution (a). This solution would have called for German
-infiltration into Moravia and the forcible removal of the Czechs
-from that area to Bohemia. As Your Honors know, Moravia lies
-between Bohemia and Slovakia. Thus solution (a) would have
-involved the erection of a German State between Bohemia and
-Slovakia, and would have prevented effective inter-communications
-between the Czechs and the Slovaks. In this manner, the historic
-desire for unity of these two groups of peace-loving people and the
-continued existence of their Czechoslovakian State would have been
-frustrated. Solution (a), it may be noted, was rejected because the
-surviving Czechs, even though compressed into a “residual Bohemia”,
-would have remained to plague the conspirators.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Solution (b) which involved the forcible deportation of all Czechs
-was rejected, not because its terms were deemed too drastic, but
-rather because a more speedy resolution of the problem was desired.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Solution (c), as shown in the exhibit, was regarded as the most
-desirable and was adopted. This solution first provided for the
-assimilation of about one-half of the Czechs. This meant two things:
-a. Enforced Germanization for those who were deemed racially
-qualified and b. deportation to slave labor in Germany for others.
-“Increased employment of Czechs in the Reich territory” as stated
-in the exhibit meant, in reality, slave labor in Germany.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Solution (c) further provided for the elimination and deportation
-“by all sorts of methods” of the other half of the Czech population,
-particularly the intellectuals and those who did not meet the racial
-standards of the conspirators. Intellectuals everywhere were an
-anathema to the Nazi conspirators, and the Czech intellectuals were
-no exception. Indeed, the Czech intellectuals, as the conspirators
-well knew, had a conspicuous record of gallantry, self-sacrifice, and
-resistance to the Nazi ideology. They were, therefore, to be exterminated.
-As will be shown in other connections, that section of the
-top-secret report which stated “elements which counteract the
-planned Germanization are to be handled roughly and eliminated”
-meant that intellectuals and other dissident elements were either
-to be thrown in concentration camps or immediately exterminated.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In short, the provisions of solution (c) were simply a practical
-application of the conspirators’ philosophy as expressed in Himmler’s
-speech, part of which we have quoted in L-70, already presented
-in evidence as Exhibit Number USA-308. Himmler said that
-“either we win over any good blood that we can use for ourselves
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. or we destroy this blood.”
-<span class='pageno' title='596' id='Page_596'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I now turn briefly to the conspirators’ program of spoliation and
-Germanization in the western occupied countries. Evidence which
-will be presented at a later stage of this proceeding will show how
-the conspirators sought to germanize the western occupied countries;
-how they stripped the conquered countries in the West of
-food and raw materials, leaving to them scarcely enough to maintain
-a bare existence; how they compelled local industry and agriculture
-to satisfy the insatiable wants of the German civilian
-population and the Wehrmacht; and finally how the spoliation in
-the western occupied countries was aided and abetted by excessive
-occupation charges, compulsory and fraudulent clearing arrangements,
-and confiscation of their gold and foreign exchange. The
-evidence concerning these matters which will be presented in great
-detail by the Prosecutor for the Republic of France is so overwhelming
-that the inference is inescapable that the conspirators’ acts
-were committed according to plan.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>However, it will not be until after the Christmas recess that the
-evidence concerning the execution of the conspirators’ plans in the
-West will be presented to this Tribunal. Accordingly, by way of
-illustration, and for the purpose of showing in this presentation
-that the conspirators’ plans embraced the occupied Western countries
-as well as the East, we now offer in evidence a single exhibit
-on this aspect of the case, R-114, which is Exhibit Number USA-314.
-This document was obtained from the U.S. Counter-Intelligence
-branch. This exhibit consists of a memorandum dated 7 August 1942
-and a memorandum dated 29 August 1942 from Himmler’s personal
-files. The former memorandum deals with a conference of SS officers
-and bears the title, “Directions for the Treatment of Deported
-Alsatians.” The latter memorandum is marked secret and is entitled,
-“Shifting of Alsatians into the Reich.” The memoranda comprising
-this exhibit show that plans were made and partially executed to
-remove all elements from Alsace which were hostile to the conspirators
-and to germanize the province. I quote from Page 1,
-lines 21 to 31, of the English text entitled, “Directions for the
-Treatment of Deported Alsatians.” These extracts contained in the
-German text at Page 1, the last 8 lines, and Page 2, lines 1 to 5.
-I now quote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The first expulsion action was carried out in Alsace in the
-period from July to December 1940; in the course of it 105,000
-persons were either expelled or prevented from returning.
-They were in the main Jews, gypsies and other foreign racial
-elements, criminals, asocial and incurably insane persons, and
-in addition Frenchmen and Francophiles. The <span class='it'>patois</span>-speaking
-population was combed out by this series of deportations in
-the same way as the other Alsatians.
-<span class='pageno' title='597' id='Page_597'></span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk1046'/>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Referring to the permission the Führer had given him to
-cleanse Alsace of all foreign, sick, or unreliable elements,
-Gauleiter Wagner has recently pointed out the political
-necessity of a new deportation”—zweite Aussiedlungsaktion—“which
-is to be prepared as soon as possible.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I should like Your Honors to permit me to defer the remainder
-of this presentation until Monday. Mr. Justice Jackson would like
-to make a few remarks to the Tribunal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: May it please the Tribunal, I wish
-to bring to the attention of the Tribunal and of the Defense Counsel
-some matters concerning the case as it will take its course next
-week, in the belief that it will result in expediting our procedure
-if, over the weekend, our program can be considered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Captain Harris’ presentation will take a short time longer on
-Monday; and when it has concluded, the presentation by the United
-States will have reached that part of the Indictment which seeks
-a declaratory judgment of this Tribunal that six of the organizations
-named therein are criminal organizations. They effect such a finding
-only that they may constitute such a basis for prosecution
-against individual members in other courts than this, proceedings in
-which every defense will be open to an accused individual, except
-that he may not deny the findings made by this Tribunal as to the
-character of the organization of which he was a member.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The United States desires to offer this evidence under conditions
-which will save the time of the Tribunal and advance the prosecution
-as rapidly as possible so that United States personnel can
-be released.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We also desire defendants’ counsel to have before them as much
-as possible of our evidence against organizations before the Christmas
-recess so that they may use that recess time to examine it and
-to prepare their defenses and that we may be spared any further
-applications for delay for that purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The substance of our proposal is that all of the ultimate questions
-on this branch of the case be reserved for consideration after
-the evidence is before the Tribunal. The real question, we submit,
-is not whether to admit the evidence. The real question is its value
-and its legal consequences under the provisions of this Charter. All
-of the evidence which we will tender will be tendered in the belief
-that it cannot be denied to have some probative value and that it
-is relevant to the charges made in the Indictment. And those are
-the grounds upon which the Charter authorizes a rejection of evidence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the time we seek no advantage from this suggestion except
-the advantage of saving time to the Tribunal and to ourselves to
-get as much of the case as possible in the hands of the defendants
-<span class='pageno' title='598' id='Page_598'></span>
-before the Christmas recess and to urge the ultimate issues only
-when they can be intelligibly argued and understood on the basis
-of a real record instead of on assumptions and hypothetical statements
-of fact.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In offering this evidence as to the organizations, therefore, we
-propose to stipulate as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Every objection of any character to any item of the evidence
-offered by the United States, as against these organizations, may
-be deemed to be reserved and fully available to Defense Counsel
-at any time before the close of the United States case with the same
-effect as if the objection had been made when the evidence was
-offered. All evidence on this subject shall remain subject to a continuing
-power of the Tribunal, on motion of any counsel or on its
-own motion, to strike, unprejudiced by the absence of objection.
-Every question as to the effect of the evidence shall be considered
-open and unprejudiced by the fact it has been received without
-objection.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now we recognize the adherent controversial character of the
-issues which may be raised concerning this branch of the case.
-What this evidence proves, what organizations it is sufficient to
-condemn, and how the Charter applies to it are questions capable
-of debate, which we are quite ready to argue when it can be done
-in orderly and intelligible fashion. We had expected to do it in
-final summation, but we will do it at any time suggested by the
-Tribunal, after there is a record on which to found the argument;
-and we are willing to do it either before or after the defendants
-take up the case. But we do suggest that, if it is done step by step
-as the evidence is produced and on questions of admissibility, it
-will be disorderly and time-consuming. Piecemeal argument will
-consume time by requiring counsel on both sides to recite evidence
-that is either in the case, or to speculate as to evidence that is not
-yet in, to resort to hypothetical cases, and to do it over and over
-again to each separate objection. It will also be disorderly because
-of our plan of presentation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Questions which relate to these organizations go to the very
-basis of the proposal made by President Roosevelt to the Yalta Conference,
-agreement upon which was the basis for this proceeding.
-The United States would not have participated in this kind of determination
-of question of guilt but for this or some equivalent plan
-of reaching thousands of others, who, if less conspicuous, are just
-as guilty of these crimes as the men in the dock. Because of participation
-in the framing of the Charter and knowledge of the problem
-it was designed to reach, I shall expect to reach the legal issues
-involved in these questions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The evidence, however, will be presented by the lawyers who
-have specialized in the search for the arrangement of evidence on
-<span class='pageno' title='599' id='Page_599'></span>
-a particular and limited charge or indictment. Piecemeal argument,
-therefore, would not be orderly, but would be repetitious, incomplete,
-poorly organized, and of little help to the Tribunal. The
-issues deserve careful, prepared presentation of the contentions on
-both sides.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We will ask, therefore, upon these conditions, which we think
-protect everybody’s rights and enable the Defense as well as ourselves
-to make a better presentation of their questions because they
-will have time to prepare them, to lay before the Tribunal, as
-rapidly as possible next week and as uninterruptedly as possible,
-the evidence which bears upon the accusations against the organizations.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Justice Jackson, have you yet communicated
-that to the defendants’ counsel in writing or not?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: I have not communicated it, unless
-it has been sent to the Information Center since noon.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I think, perhaps, it might be convenient that
-you should state what you have stated to us as to objections to the
-evidence in writing so they may thoroughly understand it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: I have prepared to do that and to
-supply sufficient copies for members of the Tribunal and for all
-defense counsel.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: I represent the members of the S.A. who have
-volunteered to be questioned before the Tribunal. I understood the
-statement of Justice Jackson only partially. As Defense Counsel
-I have no one who can supply me with information and I cannot,
-under any circumstances, agree to give my views on statements
-which I do not know or which are made known to me in such a way
-that I am not in a position to get information.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I should like to ask first that I be supplied with a German translation
-of the statement which the Prosecution has made on the
-future course of the Trial, so that I can express my views on it.
-I do not represent here just one person but millions of people who
-will, after the Trial, come forward with all sorts of accusations
-against me, possibly even justified accusations. My own responsibility,
-as well as that of my colleagues who represent the organizations,
-is immense. I should therefore like to request, as a matter
-of principle, that anything which is presented in this Trial at all
-be submitted to me in the German language, because I am not in
-a position to have whole volumes of documents translated into German
-from one day to the next—documents which could quite easily
-be given to me in the German original. This is a circumstance
-<span class='pageno' title='600' id='Page_600'></span>
-which makes it dreadfully hard for me, as well as for a number
-of my colleagues, to follow the Trial at all.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Of the incriminatory evidence against the organizations, I have
-previously gathered little in the proceedings up to now. Since,
-according to today’s statements, however, the evidence against the
-organizations is to be presented shortly, I should like to ask emphatically
-that, if we are to continue to represent the organizations,
-the proceedings be conducted in such a way that, in a technical
-respect, too, we shall be in a position to carry on the defense in a
-responsible manner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: As you know or have been told, only those
-parts of documents which are read before the Tribunal are treated
-as being in evidence and therefore you hear through your earphones
-everything that is in evidence read to you in German. You know
-also that there are two copies of the documents in your Information
-Center which are in German. So much for that. That has been the
-procedure up to now.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In order to meet the legitimate wishes of German counsel, the
-proposal which Mr. Justice Jackson has just made is perfectly
-simple, as I understand it, and it is this:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That the question of the criminality of these organizations should
-not be argued before the evidence is put in; that the United States
-counsel should put in their evidence first, and that they hope to put
-the majority of it in evidence before the Christmas recess, but that
-the German counsel (defendants’ counsel) shall be at liberty at any
-time, up to the time the United States case is finished, to make
-objection to any part of the evidence on these criminal organizations.
-Is that not clear?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: Yes, that is clear.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Have you any objection to that procedure?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: Yes. The procedure as suggested is clear, but I
-think it is highly inadequate. I have as yet had no opportunity to
-get into my hands either of the two copies, which are said to be
-downstairs in Room 54, maybe because two copies are not sufficient
-for the purposes of 25 lawyers, especially if these copies are placed
-in Room 54 at 10:30 in the morning, when the session starts at
-10:00 o’clock. It would not even suffice if these two copies for 25
-of us were placed into our room on the day before, since it is not
-possible for all of us to make satisfactory use of these two copies
-in so short a time. Arrangements should therefore be made—just
-how the Prosecution will make them, I cannot say—to enable us to
-know at the proper time—and I emphasize again, in the German
-language—what the Prosecution expects of us, so that our work
-may be of avail to the Tribunal.
-<span class='pageno' title='601' id='Page_601'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: What you have just stated is a general objection
-to the procedure which has been adopted up to now and has
-nothing to do with the procedure which has been suggested by
-Mr. Justice Jackson with reference to these criminal organizations.
-His suggestion was that argument on the law of the criminal issue
-or the criminal nature of these organizations should be postponed
-until the evidence was put in and that the right of Counsel for the
-Defense should be to make objection at any stage or, rather, to
-defer their objections until the evidence had been put in; and it was
-hoped that the evidence would be completed or nearly completed
-by the Christmas recess. What you say about the general procedure
-may be considered by the Tribunal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So far as the particular question is concerned, namely, the
-question of the procedure suggested by Mr. Justice Jackson, have
-you any objection to that?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: I have objections to this procedure only—and in
-this respect I reserve for myself all rights, for the sake of the great
-number of people I represent—if it handicaps or hinders me in any
-way in representing the interests of my many clients.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: We are aware of that fact, but that does not
-seem to be material to the question whether the legal argument
-should be deferred until after the evidence is presented. The fact
-that you have millions of people to represent has nothing to do with
-the question whether the legal argument shall take place before,
-or in the middle of, or at the end of the presentation of the evidence.
-What I am asking you is: Have you any objection to the legal
-argument taking place at the end of the presentation of the evidence?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>HERR BÖHM: I have no objection to these suggestions if they
-do not impair my defense in any way.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will now adjourn.</p>
-
-<h3>[<span class='it'>The Tribunal adjourned until 17 December 1945 at 1000 hours.</span>]</h3>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:4em;margin-bottom:2em;font-size:1.2em;'>TRANSCRIBER NOTES</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Punctuation and spelling has been maintained except where obvious
-printer errors have occurred such as missing periods or commas for
-periods. English and American spellings occur throughout the document
-depending on the author; however, American spellings are the rule,
-hence, 'Defense' versus 'Defence'. Multiple occurrences of the following
-spellings which differ and are found throughout this volume are as
-follows:</p>
-
-<table id='tab2' summary='' class='center'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 17em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 17em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle1'>cooperation</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle0'>co-operation</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle1'>Sudeten Gau</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle0'>Sudetengau</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle1'>Sudeten-Deutsche territory</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle0'>Sudeten-German territory</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle1'>Sudeten German(s)</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle0'>Sudeten-German(s)</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Although some sentences may appear to have incorrect spellings
-or verb tenses, the original text has been maintained as it represents
-what the tribunal read into the record and reflects the actual translations
-between the German, English, Russian and French documents presented in
-the trial(s).</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>An attempt has been made to produce this ebook in a format as close as
-possible to the original document's presentation and layout.</p>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>[The end of <span class='it'>Trial of the Major War Criminals
-Before the International Military Tribunal: Nuremberg 14
-November 1945-1 October 1946 (Vol. 3)</span>, by Anonymous.]</p>
-
-
-
-
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