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-Project Gutenberg's Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression (Vol. I), 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: Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression (Vol. I)
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: August 16, 2017 [EBook #55368]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NAZI CONSPIRACY ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Larry Harrison, Cindy Beyer, and the online
-Distributed Proofreaders Canada team at
-http://www.pgdpcanada.net with images provided by TIA-US.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- [Cover Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- NAZI CONSPIRACY
- AND AGGRESSION
-
- _VOLUME I_
-
-
- _Office of United States_
- _Chief of Counsel For Prosecution_
- _of Axis Criminality_
-
- [Illustration]
-
- UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
- WASHINGTON • 1946
-
-
-
-
- For Sale by the
- Superintendent of Documents
- U. S. Government Printing Office
- Washington 25, D. C.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-A Collection of Documentary Evidence and Guide Materials Prepared by the
-American and British Prosecuting Staffs for presentation before the
-International Military Tribunal at Nurnberg, Germany, in the case of
-
- THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, THE FRENCH REPUBLIC, THE UNITED
- KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND, and THE UNION OF
- SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS
-
- —against—
-
- HERMANN WILHELM GOERING, RUDOLF HESS, JOACHIM von RIBBENTROP,
- ROBERT LEY, WILHELM KEITEL, ERNST KALTENBRUNNER, ALFRED
- ROSENBERG, HANS FRANK, WILHELM FRICK, JULIUS STREICHER, WALTER
- FUNK, HJALMAR SCHACHT, GUSTAV KRUPP von BOHLEN und HALBACH, KARL
- DOENITZ, ERICH RAEDER, BALDUR von SCHIRACH, FRITZ SAUCKEL,
- ALFRED JODL, MARTIN BORMANN, FRANZ von PAPEN, ARTUR
- SEYSS-INQUART, ALBERT SPEER, CONSTANTIN von NEURATH, and HANS
- FRITZSCHE, Individually and as Members of Any of the Following
- Groups or Organizations to which They Respectively Belonged,
- Namely: DIE REICHSREGIERUNG (REICH CABINET); DAS KORPS DER
- POLITISCHEN LEITER DER NATIONALSOZIALISTISCHEN DEUTSCHEN
- ARBEITERPARTEI (LEADERSHIP CORPS OF THE NAZI PARTY); DIE
- SCHUTZSTAFFELN DER NATIONALSOZIALISTISCHEN DEUTSCHEN
- ARBEITERPARTEI (commonly known as the “SS”) and including DIE
- SICHERHEITSDIENST (commonly known as the “SD”); DIE GEHEIME
- STAATSPOLIZEI (SECRET STATE POLICE, commonly known as the
- “GESTAPO”); DIE STURMABTEILUNGEN DER N.S.D.A.P. (commonly known
- as the “SA”) and the GENERAL STAFF and HIGH COMMAND of the
- GERMAN ARMED FORCES all as defined in Appendix B of the
- Indictment,
-
- Defendants.
-
-
-
-
- C O N T E N T S
-
-
- Page
- Preface v
- Chapter
- I. Agreement by the United States, France, Great Britain, and
- the Soviet Union for the Prosecution and Punishment of the
- Major War Criminals of the European Axis 1
-
- II. Charter of the International Military Tribunal and Protocol
- of 6 October 1945 4
-
- III. International Military Tribunal, Indictment No. 1 and
- Statement of Reservation Filed by U. S. Chief of Counsel 13
-
- IV. Motions, Rulings, and Explanatory Material Relating to
- Certain of the Defendants 83
- 1. Robert Ley 83
- 2. Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach 84
- 3. Martin Bormann 94
- 4. Ernst Kaltenbrunner 95
- 5. Julius Streicher 96
- 6. Rudolf Hess 97
-
- V. Opening Address for the United States 114
-
- VI. Organization of the Nazi Party and State 175
-
- VII. Means used by the Nazi Conspirators in Gaining Control of
- the German State 184
- 1. Common Objectives, Methods, and Doctrines of the
- Conspiracy 184
- 2. Acquisition of Totalitarian Political Control 199
- 3. Consolidation of Totalitarian Political Control 218
- 4. Purge of Political Opponents and Terrorization 239
- 5. Destruction of the Free Trade Unions and Acquisition of
- Control over the Productive Labor Capacity 252
- 6. Suppression of the Christian Churches 263
- 7. Adoption and Publication of the Program for Persecution
- of Jews 296
- 8. Reshaping of Education and Training of Youth 312
- 9. Propaganda, Censorship, and Supervision of Cultural
- Activities 328
- 10. Militarization of Nazi Organizations 341
-
- VIII. Economic Aspects of the Conspiracy 349
-
- IX. Launching of Wars of Aggression 370
- 1. The Plotting of Aggressive War 370
- 2. Preparation for Aggression: 1933-1936 410
- 3. Aggression Against Austria 450
- 4. The Execution of the Plan to Invade Czechoslovakia 515
- 5. Opening Address for the United Kingdom 593
- 6. Aggression as a Basic Nazi Idea: Mein Kampf 644
- 7. Treaty Violations 651
- 8. Aggression against Poland, Danzig, England and France 673
- 9. Aggression against Norway and Denmark 733
- 10. Aggression against Belgium, the Netherlands, and
- Luxembourg 760
- 11. Aggression against Greece and Yugoslavia 775
- 12. Aggression against the USSR 794
- 13. Collaboration with Italy and Japan and Aggressive War
- against the United States: November 1936 to December
- 1941 840
-
- X. The Slave Labor Program, the Illegal Use of Prisoners of
- War, and the Special Responsibility of Sauckel and Speer
- Therefor 875
-
- XI. Concentration Camps 949
-
- XII. The Persecution of the Jews 978
-
- XIII. Germanization and Spoliation 1023
-
- XIV. The Plunder of Art Treasures 1097
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE
-
-
- I
-
-On the 2d day of May 1945, President Truman signed Executive Order 9547
-appointing Justice Robert H. Jackson as Representative of the United
-States and as its Chief of Counsel in the preparation and prosecution of
-the case against the major Axis war criminals. Since that date and up to
-the present, the staff of the Office of Chief of Counsel, or OCC, has
-been engaged continuously in the discovery, collection, examination,
-translation, and marshalling of documentary evidence demonstrating the
-criminality of the former leaders of the German Reich. Since the 20th
-day of November 1945, a considerable part of this documentary arsenal
-has been directed against the 22 major Nazi war criminals who are on
-trial before the International Military Tribunal in Nurnberg. As of this
-writing the American and British cases-in-chief, on Counts I and II of
-the Indictment charging, respectively, conspiracy and the waging of wars
-of aggression, have been completed.
-
-There is perhaps no need to recall in these pages that the Nurnberg
-trial represents the first time in history that legal proceedings have
-been instituted against leaders of an enemy nation. It is perhaps equal
-supererogation to state here that there are no exact precedents for the
-charges made by the American, British, French, and Russian prosecutors
-that to plot or wage a war of aggression is a crime for which
-individuals may be punished. Yet it was because of these very facts that
-in its indictment the prosecution presented a challenge to itself quite
-as great as to the defense. A heavy burden was laid on the accusing
-nations to make sure that their proof measured up to the magnitude of
-their accusations, and that the daring of their grand conception was
-matched by the industry of their research, lest the hard-bought
-opportunity to make International Law a guardian of peace should fail by
-default.
-
-It is not surprising, therefore, that the American collecting and
-processing of documentary evidence, under the general direction of Col.
-Robert G. Storey, gradually developed into an operation of formidable
-scope. Although some pieces of evidence were secured in Washington and
-London, by far the greater part was obtained in the land of the enemy.
-As the American Armies had swept into Germany, military investigating
-teams had filled document centers with an increasing wealth of materials
-which were freely made available by the Army to OCC field investigators.
-Special assistance was given by the Document Section, G-2 Division,
-SHAEF, and by the Document Sections of the Army Groups and Armies
-operating in the European Theater. OCC investigators also made valuable
-discoveries while prospecting on their own. They soon found themselves
-embarrassed with riches. Perhaps foremost among the prize acquisitions
-was the neatly crated collection of all the personal and official
-correspondence of Alfred Rosenberg, together with a great quantity of
-Nazi Party correspondence. This cache was discovered behind a false wall
-in an old castle in Eastern Bavaria, where it had been sent for
-safekeeping. Another outstanding collection consisted of thirty-nine
-leather-bound volumes containing detailed inventories of the art
-treasures of Europe which had been looted by the _Einsatzstab
-Rosenberg_. These catalogues, together with much of the priceless
-plunder itself, were found hidden deep in an Austrian salt mine. An
-innocent-appearing castle near Marburg was found to contain some 485
-tons of crated papers, which inspection revealed to be the records of
-the German Foreign Office from 1837 to 1944. Among other outstanding
-bulk acquisitions were more than 300 crates of German High Command
-files, 85 notebooks containing minutes of Hitler’s conferences, and the
-complete files of the German Navy.
-
-The task was to screen thoroughly this abundance of material so as to
-overlook no relevant item, and yet at the same time to obtain the proof
-and to translate it in season, so as not to delay preparation of the
-Indictment or commencement of the trial. The procedures followed in this
-process are described in the affidavit of Maj. William H. Coogan
-(_001-A-PS_), which is listed numerically among the documents. As a
-result of those procedures, more than 100,000 documents were
-individually examined in order to segregate those of importance. Of
-these 100,000 documents, approximately 4,000 were found to be of clear
-or potential value. This group of 4,000 was further reduced through
-exacting standards of elimination to a total of some 2,000 documents
-which it was proposed to offer in evidence, and which make up the bulk
-of this publication. Thus, the documents presented in these volumes are
-the fittest survivors of a rigorous sifting. Each of them has met
-requirements designed to ensure the selection of only the most
-significant in bearing on the American case. Documents primarily
-concerned with the report of individual barbarities or perversions were
-excluded, in conformity with the emphasis placed upon those tending to
-prove elements in the Nazi Master Plan.
-
-These documents consist, in the main, of official papers found in
-archives of the German Government and Nazi Party, diaries and letters of
-prominent Germans, and captured reports and orders. There are included,
-in addition, excerpts from governmental and Party decrees, from official
-newspapers and from authoritative German publications. The authenticity
-of all these materials is established by Maj. Coogan’s affidavit
-(_001-A-PS_). Considered together, they reveal a fairly comprehensive
-view of the inner workings and outward deeds of the German government
-and of the Nazi Party, which were always concealed from the world, and
-for which, the world will always hold the Hitler regime in horror and
-contempt.
-
- II
-
-It is important that it be clearly understood what this collection of
-documents is not. In the first place, it is neither an official record,
-nor an unofficial transcript of the trial proceedings. It is not
-designed to reproduce what has taken place in court. It is merely the
-documentary evidence prepared by the American and British prosecuting
-staffs, and is in no wise under the sponsorship of the Tribunal. It is
-presented in the belief that this collection containing the full text of
-the documents, classified under appropriate subjects, may be more useful
-to students of the Nurnberg trial than the official record, when
-prepared, may be.
-
-The reason for this goes back to the first few days of the trial, when
-the Tribunal ruled that it would treat no written matter as in evidence
-unless it was read in full, word by word, in court. The purpose of the
-ruling was to enable the documentary material which the American and
-British staffs had translated from German into English to be further
-translated into Russian and French through the simultaneous interpreting
-system in the courtroom. The consequence, however, was to enforce upon
-the American and British prosecution the task of trimming their evidence
-drastically unless the trial was to be protracted to an unconscionable
-length. Counsel therefore had to content themselves in most instances
-with introducing, by reading _verbatim_, only the most vital parts of
-the documents relied upon. Only these evidentiary minima appear in the
-daily transcript, and presumably, since no more is officially in
-evidence under the Tribunal’s ruling, no more can properly be included
-in the official record. It has frequently been the case, furthermore,
-that different parts of certain documents were read in proof of
-different allegations, and hence are scattered throughout the
-transcript. American counsel, in several instances, read only sketchy
-portions of some documents, leaving other portions, at the request of
-the French and Soviet delegations, to be read later as a part of their
-case. Still other portions of the same document will undoubtedly be read
-later on by the defense. It is an unavoidable consequence that the
-transcript itself will be a thing of shreds and patches, and that any
-comprehensive and orderly notion of the documentary evidence must be
-obtained elsewhere. The documentary excerpts, when accompanied by the
-explanation of trial counsel, are of course sufficient for the trial and
-for the judgment of the Tribunal. But the purposes of historians and
-scholars will very likely lead them to wish to examine the documents in
-their entirety. It is to those long-range interests that these volumes
-are in the main addressed.
-
-Secondly, this collection of documents is not the American case. It is
-at once more and less than that. It is less, because it of course cannot
-include the captured motion picture and still photographic evidence
-relied upon, and because it contains only a few of the organizational
-charts and visual presentation exhibits utilized at the trial. It is
-more, because although it does contain all the evidence introduced
-either in part or in whole by the American staff in proof of Count I, it
-also includes many documents not introduced into evidence at all. There
-were various reasons for not offering this material to the Tribunal: the
-documents were cumulative in nature, better documents were available on
-the same point, or the contents did not justify the time required for
-reading. (The document index at the end of Volume VIII is marked to
-indicate which documents were introduced, either in whole or in part, in
-evidence.) Of more than 800 American documents so far introduced in
-evidence, a small number were received through judicial notice or oral
-summarization, while some 500 were read, in part or in whole, in court.
-Approximately 200 more went into evidence in the first few days of the
-trial, under an earlier ruling of the Tribunal which admitted documents
-without reading, and merely on filing with the court after proof of
-authenticity. Of the documents not now in evidence and thus not before
-the Tribunal for consideration in reaching its decision, many have been
-turned over to the French and Soviet prosecuting staffs and, by the time
-these volumes are published, will have been introduced in the course of
-their cases. Others will have been put before the Tribunal by the
-American case in rebuttal or utilized in cross-examining witnesses
-called by the defense.
-
-This publication includes a series of affidavits prepared under the
-direction of Col. John Harlan Amen, chief of the OCC Interrogation
-Division. Those which were introduced into evidence are listed among the
-documents in the _PS_ series. A number of affidavits which were not
-offered to the Tribunal are printed in a separate section at the end of
-the document series. Affidavits of the latter type were prepared in an
-attempt to eliminate surprise by delineating clearly the testimony which
-the affiant might be expected to give in court, should it be decided to
-call him as a witness. In the case of the affiants who testified in
-court, their affidavits represent a substantially accurate outline of
-their testimony on direct examination. Others of the affiants may, by
-the time of publication, have been called as rebuttal witnesses for the
-prosecution. In addition, there are included selected statements of
-certain defendants and prisoners written to the prosecutors from prison.
-It should be mentioned in this connection that as a result of many
-months of exhaustive questioning of the defendants, prisoners of war,
-and other potential witnesses, the Interrogation Division has harvested
-approximately 15,000 typewritten pages of valuable and previously
-unavailable information on a variety of subjects. These extensive
-transcripts represent approximately 950 individual interrogations and
-are presently being edited and catalogued in Nurnberg so that the
-significant materials may be published in a useful form and within a
-manageable scope, as a supplement to these present volumes.
-
-This collection also includes approximately 200 documents obtained and
-processed by the British prosecuting staff, known as the British War
-Crimes Executive, and presented in substantiation of Count II of the
-Indictment, which the British delegation assumed the responsibility of
-proving. It seems altogether fitting that these documents should be
-included in these volumes since, in proving illegal acts of aggression,
-they naturally supplement the American documents proving the illegal
-conspiracy to commit aggression. The American prosecuting staff is
-grateful to Sir David Maxwell-Fyfe, the British Deputy Chief Prosecutor,
-from whom and from the goodly company of whose associates there has ever
-been the most generous cooperation, for consent to the publication of
-the British documents by the United States Government.
-
-Under the division of the case agreed on by the Chief Prosecutors of the
-four Allied nations, the French and Soviet delegates are responsible for
-the presentation of evidence bearing on the proof of Count III (War
-Crimes) and Count IV (Crimes against Humanity) of the Indictment. The
-French case will concern itself with these crimes when committed in the
-West, while the Russian evidence will concern the commission of these
-crimes in the East. None of the documents obtained by these two
-prosecuting nations are included in these volumes. The reason is that,
-at this writing, the French case has just commenced and the Soviet case
-will not be reached for several weeks. Since one of the objects of this
-undertaking is to acquaint the American public at the earliest
-opportunity with the character of the evidence produced by its
-representatives, there seems no justification in delaying publication
-until the close of the French and Russian cases, when all the
-prosecution documents will be available. As is indicated by the title of
-these present volumes, _Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression_, this collection
-relates only to Counts I and II of the Indictment, or one-half of the
-prosecution case. It is to be hoped, however, that supplementary volumes
-containing the French and Soviet documents may be published at a later
-time.
-
-Finally, this collection, by its nature limited to a part of the
-prosecution case, does not of course purport to present the whole story
-of the evidence adduced at Nurnberg. The evidence and arguments of
-defense counsel will not be presented for some time, and the text of
-these matters will, if possible, be included in any additional volumes,
-which it may become possible to publish.
-
- III
-
-On the other hand, it may be useful to indicate what this collection is.
-The publication is offered in accordance with the conviction which has
-constantly animated the American prosecution, that only a part of its
-duty would have been done if it succeeded in persuading the judges of
-the International Military Tribunal. Its full task will be accomplished
-only if the world is also convinced of the justness of the cause. There
-were always some people who, perhaps under the spell of the exposure of
-the “atrocity propaganda” used in the First World War, felt that the
-deceptions and the outrages laid to the Nazis were quite possibly untrue
-and in any event exaggerated. The mission of convincing these skeptics
-is one that has not been and cannot be discharged by newspaper reports
-of the Nurnberg proceedings, which by their nature are incomplete and
-evanescent. But an inspection of the Nazis’ own official records should
-suffice to banish all honest doubts, and to make it undeniably clear
-that those things really happened because the Nazis planned it that way.
-It is the hope of the American prosecution that these volumes may in
-some measure expose, for the warning of future generations as well as a
-reminder to the present, the anatomy of National Socialism in all its
-ugly nakedness. Many of these documents disclose the repressive
-governmental machinery and intricate Party bureaucracy by which the
-Nazis stifled initiative and opposition. They reveal also the image of
-horror which a gang of brigands created in the name of the German state,
-in order to seize and maintain power for themselves at the expense of
-the liberties of their own people and the lives of their neighbors.
-Legal proof has perhaps seldom been so overwhelming, certainly never so
-self-admitted, as is this proof of the deeds with which the Nazi
-leadership befouled the earth.
-
-Yet, although these documents naturally are concerned primarily with the
-guilt of the leaders of the German Reich, they also contain a wealth of
-information, much of it hitherto unavailable elsewhere, on many other
-matters of importance. Their pages illuminate many dark corners of
-recent history. Hence, this collection has an additional purpose. It is
-offered as a source book, of interest to historians, political
-scientists, students, universities, libraries, government agencies,
-private research groups, newspaper editors, and others, so that they may
-see, from the official papers of the Nazi government and from the words
-of its own leaders, the things that went on in Germany in the days of
-that blasphemous regime. These papers, although they include a few legal
-matters, are not addressed nor are they expected to appeal primarily to
-lawyers. The satisfaction of these professional interests must perforce
-be postponed until publication of the official record of the trial.
-
- IV
-
-It is apparent that such a vast collection of documents on a variety of
-subjects would be useless to any one not thoroughly conversant with the
-field, without some sort of guide through the maze. That is the reason
-for the first two volumes, which consist of various explanatory
-materials included in order to facilitate understanding. The average
-reader who tries to cope with some of the more pompous of the Nazi
-titles—such as _Beauftragter des Fuehrers fuer die ueberwachung des
-Gesamten Geistigen und Weltausschaulichers Schulung und Erziehung der
-NSDAP_, or Delegate of the Fuehrer for the Total Supervision of
-Intellectual and Ideological Training and Education of the Party
-(Rosenberg)—is plainly in need of assistance. A Glossary of common
-German and Nazi titles, designations, and terms has therefore been
-compiled. For those who are unfamiliar with the difference between a
-_Hauptmann_ and a _Hauptsturmfuehrer_, a table of military ranks, with
-their American equivalents, has been prepared. A brief biographical
-gazeteer of the more prominent Nazis, together with a listing of the
-major officials of the Government, Party, and Armed Forces, has also
-been included for reference purposes. In addition, an index of the
-Code-Words used by the Nazis to preserve the secrecy of the invasions
-they plotted has been compiled. Moreover, in order to make clear
-developments in the proceedings affecting the status of several of the
-defendants, certain motions of counsel and rulings of the Tribunal,
-together with factual accounts, are also presented. And finally the
-international treaties relating to land warfare and prisoners of war are
-printed in full (_3737-PS_; _3738-PS_).
-
-The principal content of Volumes I and II is composed of what might be
-called essays, summarizing and connecting up most of the documents
-relating to particular subjects in the order of their mention in Counts
-I and II of the Indictment. As an additional aid, at the end of each
-essay there appears a descriptive list of all documents referred to in
-the essay, so that the reader may quickly discover which of the
-published documents bear upon the subject in which he is interested. In
-many cases these lists include documents not discussed in the essays for
-the reason that they are cumulative in nature or were discovered
-subsequent to the preparation of the essays.
-
-Some of these essays are adaptations of factual “trial briefs” prepared
-by the staff of OCC. Some of these “trial briefs” were handed to the
-Tribunal for its assistance, while others were used only for the
-guidance of trial counsel. Others of the essays have been adapted from
-the oral presentation and summary of counsel in court. Their difference
-in origin explains their difference in form. It must be borne in mind
-that each of these essays, which were originally prepared for the
-purpose of convincing the Tribunal of the legal guilt of the defendants,
-has been submitted to a process of editing and revision in order to
-serve a quite different purpose—to give the general reader a general
-and coherent conception of the subject matter.
-
-These essays bear the marks of haste and are not offered as in any sense
-definitive or exhaustive. The task of translation from German into
-English was a formidable one, and in many instances translations of
-documents could be made available to the brief-writers only a few days
-before the briefs were scheduled to be presented in court. In other
-instances it was utterly impossible, with the constantly overburdened
-translating staff available, to translate in full all the material known
-to be of value if the prosecution was to be ready on the date set for
-trial. The diary of Hans Frank, for example (_2233-PS_) consisted of 42
-volumes, of which only a few outstanding excerpts, chosen by
-German-reading analysts, were translated. Similarly, large portions of
-the 250 volumes of the Rosenberg correspondence remain still
-untranslated and unused. Books, decrees, and lengthy reports were not
-translated, in full, and only salient excerpts were utilized.
-Approximately 1,500 documents in the possession of OCC have not yet been
-translated and more are being received daily. It is expected that they
-will be used for purposes of cross-examination and rebuttal, and may
-later be published.
-
-It must also be remembered that these documents are, in the main,
-translations from the original German. The magnitude of the task,
-coupled with a sense of the hastening on of time, naturally resulted in
-imperfections. However, an attempt has been made to preserve the format
-of the original documents in the printed translations. Italics represent
-underlining in the original documents and editorial additions have been
-enclosed in brackets. The reader may notice occasional variations
-between the English wording of documents quoted in the essays, and the
-full text of the document itself. This divergence is explained by the
-fact that translations of the same documents were sometimes made by two
-different persons. Variations in the exact means of expression were of
-course to be expected in such an event, yet both translations are of
-equal authenticity. Certain passages of some documents may strike the
-reader as confused or incomplete, and occasionally this is the result of
-hasty work. More frequently, however the jumble of language accurately
-reflects the chaos of the original German, for the language of National
-Socialists was often merely a turgid and mystical aggregation of words
-signifying nothing, to which the German language easily lends itself.
-The accuracy of the translations is attested to in Maj. Coogan’s
-affidavit (_001-A-PS_).
-
-If the case had not been set down for trial until 1948, a complete and
-satisfactory preparation would have been possible. A perfect case could
-not have been made in less time. But the Allied governments and public
-opinion were understandably impatient of delay for whatever reason, and
-they had to be respected. The nature of the difficulties caused by the
-pressure for speed were stated in Justice Jackson’s address opening the
-American case:
-
- “In justice to the nations and the men associated in this
- prosecution, I must remind you of certain difficulties which may
- leave their mark on this case. Never before in legal history has
- an effort been made to bring within the scope of a single
- litigation the developments of a decade, covering a whole
- Continent, and involving a score of nations, countless
- individuals, and innumerable events. Despite the magnitude of
- the task, the world has demanded immediate action. This demand
- has had to be met, though perhaps at the cost of finished
- craftsmanship. In my country, established courts, following
- familiar procedures, applying well thumbed precedents, and
- dealing with the legal consequences of local and limited events,
- seldom commence a trial within a year of the event in
- litigation. Yet less than eight months ago today the courtroom
- in which you sit was an enemy fortress in the hands of German SS
- troops. Less than eight months ago nearly all our witnesses and
- documents were in enemy hands. The law had not been codified, no
- procedures had been established, no Tribunal was in existence,
- no usable courthouse stood here, none of the hundreds of tons of
- official German documents had been examined, no prosecuting
- staff had been assembled, nearly all the present defendants were
- at large, and the four prosecuting powers had not yet joined in
- common cause to try them. I should be the last to deny that the
- case may well suffer from incomplete researches and quite likely
- will not be the example of professional work which any of the
- prosecuting nations would normally wish to sponsor. It is,
- however, a completely adequate case to the judgment we shall ask
- you to render, and its full development we shall be obliged to
- leave to historians.”
-
- V
-
-No work in a specialized field would be complete without its own occult
-paraphernalia, and the curious reader may desire an explanation of the
-strange wizardry behind the document classification symbols. The
-documents in the American series are classified under the cryptic
-categories of “_L_,” “_R_,” “_PS_,” “_EC_,” “_ECH_,” “_ECR_,” and “_C_.”
-The letter “_L_” was used as an abbreviation for “London,” and
-designates those documents either obtained from American and British
-sources in London or processed in the London Office of the OCC, under
-the direction of Col. Murray C. Bernays and Col. Leonard Wheeler, Jr.
-The letter “_R_” stands for “Rothschild,” and indicates the documents
-obtained through the screening activities of Lt. Walter Rothschild of
-the London branch of OSS. The origins of the “_PS_” symbol are more
-mysterious, but the letters are an abbreviation of the amalgam,
-“Paris-Storey.” The “_PS_” symbol, accordingly, denotes those documents
-which, although obtained in Germany, were processed by Col. Storey’s
-division of the OCC in Paris, as well as those documents later processed
-by the same division after headquarters were established in Nurnberg.
-The “_EC_” symbol stands for “Economic Case” and designates those
-documents which were obtained and processed by the Economic Section of
-OCC under Mr. Francis M. Shea, with field headquarters at Frankfurt. The
-“_ECH_” variant denotes those which were screened at Heidelberg. The
-letter “_C_,” which is an abbreviation for “Crimes,” indicates a
-collection of German Navy documents which were jointly processed by
-British and American teams, with Lt. Comdr. John Bracken representing
-the OCC.
-
-The British documents hence include some in the joint Anglo-American
-“_C_” series. The remainder of the British documents are marked with the
-symbols “_TC_,” “_UK_,” “_D_,” and “_M_.” The symbol “_TC_” is an
-abbreviation of “Treaty Committee” and signifies the documents selected
-by a Foreign Office Committee which assisted the British prosecution.
-“_UK_” is the abbreviation for “United Kingdom” and indicates documents
-collected from another source. No especial significance lurks in the
-letters “_D_” and “_M_,” which were apparently the result of accident,
-possibly caprice, rather than design. As a matter of record, however,
-“_M_” stands for the first name of the British assistant prosecutor.
-Finally, “_D_” is merely an humble filing reference, which may have had
-some obscure connection with the word “document.”
-
-The reader will note that there are numerous and often lengthy gaps in
-the numbering of documents within a given series, and the documents are
-not numbered in any apparent order. This anomaly is accounted for by
-several different factors. As the documents avalanched into the OCC
-offices they were catalogued and numbered in the order received without
-examination. Upon subsequent analysis it was frequently found that an
-earlier document was superseded in quality by a later acquisition, and
-the earlier one was accordingly omitted. Others were withdrawn because
-of lack of proof of their authenticity. Occasionally it was discovered
-that two copies of the same document had been received from different
-sources, and one of them was accordingly stricken from the list. In
-other cases blocks of numbers were assigned to field collecting teams,
-which failed to exhaust all the numbers allotted. In all these cases no
-change was made in the original numbers because of the delay and
-confusion which would accompany renumbering. Nor has renumbering been
-attempted in this publication, and the original gaps remain. This is
-because the documents introduced into evidence carried their originally
-assigned numbers, and students of the trial who use these volumes in
-conjunction with the official record will therefore be able to refer
-rapidly from citations in the record of the proceedings to the text of
-the documents cited.
-
- VI
-
-It only remains to acknowledge the toil and devotion of the members of
-the OCC staff who were responsible for the original preparation of the
-materials contained in these volumes. Mention must first be made of Mr.
-Gordon Dean, who was responsible in large part for the conception of
-this undertaking, and of Lt. Comdr. Charles A. Horsky, USCGR (T) who set
-in motion the governmental machinery necessary to publication.
-
-The material in Chapter VI on the Organization of the Nazi Party and
-State was originally prepared by Mr. Ralph G. Albrecht.
-
-The essays in Chapter VII on the Means Used by the Nazi Conspirators in
-Gaining Control of the German State were originally prepared by Col.
-Leonard Wheeler, Jr., Lt. Col. Benjamin Kaplan, Maj. Frank B. Wallis,
-Dr. Edmund A. Walsh, Maj. Seymour M. Peyser, Maj. J. Hartley Murray, Lt.
-Paul Johnston, USNR, Lt. Comdr. Morton E. Rome, USNR, Capt. D. A.
-Sprecher, Lt. Samuel E. Sharp, Lt. (jg) A. R. Martin, USNR, Lt. Henry V.
-Atherton, and Lt. William E. Miller.
-
-The materials on the Economic Aspects of the Conspiracy, contained in
-Chapter VIII, on Slave Labor, contained in Chapter X, and on
-Germanization and Spoliation, contained in Chapter XIII, were prepared
-by Mr. Francis M. Shea, Mr. Benedict Deinard, Lt. Col. Murray I.
-Gurfein, Lt. Comdr. W. S. Emmet, USNR, Lt. Thomas L. Karsten, USNR,
-Capt. Sam Harris, Capt. James H. Mathias, Capt. Melvin Siegel, Capt.
-Edward H. Kenyon, Lt. (jg) Bernard Meltzer, USNR, Lt. (jg) Brady O.
-Bryson, USNR, Lt. Raymond Ickes, USMCR, Mr. Jan Charmatz, Mr. Walter
-Derenberg, Mr. Sidney Jacoby, Mr. Werner Peiser, Mr. Edgar Bodenheimer,
-and Mr. Leon Frechtel.
-
-The materials contained in Chapter IX on Aggressive War, (except those
-relating to Aggression as a Basic Nazi Idea, the Violation of Treaties,
-and Aggression against Poland, Danzig, England and France, Norway and
-Denmark, the Low Countries, and the Balkans) were prepared by Mr. Sidney
-S. Alderman, Comdr. Sidney J. Kaplan, USCGR, Lt. Col. Herbert Krucker,
-Maj. Lacey Hinely, Maj. Joseph Dainow, Lt. Comdr. Harold Leventhal,
-USCGR, Lt. John M. Woolsey, Jr., USNR, Lt. James A. Gorrell, and Lt. Roy
-H. Steyer, USNR.
-
-The materials contained in Chapter XII, on Persecution of the Jews, in
-Chapter XI on Concentration Camps, and in Chapter XIV on Plunder of Art
-Treasures, were prepared by Col. Hardy Hollers, Maj. William F. Walsh,
-Mr. Thomas J. Dodd, Capt. Seymour Krieger, Lt. Frederick Felton, USNR,
-Lt. (jg) Brady O. Bryson, USNR, Mr. Hans Nathan, Mr. Isaac Stone, Lt.
-Daniel F. Margolies, Capt. Edgar Boedeker, Lt. (jg) Bernard Meltzer,
-USNR, Lt. Nicholas Doman, and Mr. Walter W. Brudno.
-
-The materials contained in Chapter XVI on the responsibility of the
-Individual Defendants were prepared by Col. Howard Brundage, Mr. Ralph
-G. Albrecht, Dr. Robert M. W. Kempner, Lt. Col. William H. Baldwin, Maj.
-Seymour M. Peyser, Maj. Joseph D. Bryan, Capt. D. A. Sprecher, Capt.
-Norman Stoll, Capt. Robert Clagett, Capt. John Auchincloss, Capt.
-Seymour Krieger, Lt. Whitney R. Harris, USNR, Lt. Frederick Felton,
-USNR, Lt. Henry V. Atherton, Lt. Richard Heller, USNR, Mr. Henry
-Kellerman, Mr. Frank Patton, Mr. Karl Lachmann, Mr. Bert Heilpern, Mr.
-Walter Menke, Mr. Joseph Michel, Mr. Walter W. Brudno, Mrs. Katherine
-Walch, Miss Harriet Zetterberg, Lt. (jg) Brady O. Bryson, USNR, and
-Capt. Sam Harris.
-
-The materials contained in the first six sections of Chapter XV on the
-Criminal Organizations were prepared by Lt. Col. George E. Seay, Maj.
-Warren F. Farr, Lt. Comdr. Wm. S. Kaplan, USNR, Lt. Whitney R. Harris,
-USNR, Miss Katherine Fite, Maj. Robert G. Stephens, Lt. Thomas F.
-Lambert, Jr., USNR, and Mr. Charles S. Burdell.
-
-The materials contained in Section 7 of Chapter XV on the General Staff
-and High Command were prepared on behalf of the American delegation by
-Col. Telford Taylor, Maj. Loftus Becker, Maj. Paul Neuland, Capt. Walter
-Rapp, Capt. Seymour Krieger, and Mr. Charles Kruszeawski; with the
-assistance of a British staff made jointly available to both the
-American and British delegations, consisting of W/Cdr. Peter
-Calvocoressi, RAFVR, Maj. Oliver Berthoud, IC, Lt. Michael Reade, RNVR,
-F/Lt. George Sayers, RAFVR, S/O Barbara Pinion, WAAF, W/O Mary Carter,
-WAAF, and Miss Elizabeth Stewart.
-
-The charts reproduced are among those introduced by the prosecution, and
-were designed and executed by presentation specialists assigned to OCC
-by the Office of Strategic Services, and headed by David Zablodousky
-under the direction of Comdr. James B. Donovan, USNR.
-
-Acknowledgment must also be made of the very effective labors of the
-British delegation in preparing those materials in Chapter IX on
-Aggressive War relating to Aggression as a Basic Nazi Idea, the
-Violation of Treaties, and the Aggressions against Poland, Danzig,
-England and France, Norway and Denmark, the Low Countries, and the
-Balkans, as well as the materials in sections on Individual Defendants
-relating to Streicher, Raeder, Doenitz, Neurath, and Ribbentrop. This
-share of the common task was borne by Sir David Maxwell-Fyfe, K.C.,
-M.P., Mr. Geoffrey D. Roberts, K.C., Lt. Col. J. M. G. Griffith-Jones,
-M.C., Col. Harry J. Phillimore, O.B.E., and Maj. Elwyn Jones, M.P. The
-British opening address was delivered by the Attorney General and chief
-of the British delegation, Sir Hartley Shawcross, K.C., M.P.
-
-Recognition is also due to Maj. F. Jay Nimitz, Miss Alma Soller, and
-Miss Mary Burns, for their loyal and capable assistance in all the
-harassing details of compiling, editing and indexing these numerous
-papers.
-
-One final word should be said in recognition of the financial burden
-assumed by the State and War Departments, which have generously joined
-in allocating from their budgets the very considerable funds required to
-make this publication possible.
-
- Roger W. Barrett, Captain, JAGD
- William E. Jackson, Lieutenant (jg), USNR
- _Editors_
-
-Approved:
-
- Robert H. Jackson
- _Chief of Counsel_
-Nurnberg, 20 January 1946.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter I
-
-
- AGREEMENT BY THE GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA; THE
- PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT OF THE FRENCH REPUBLIC, THE GOVERNMENT OF THE
- UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND AND THE GOVERNMENT
- OF THE UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS FOR THE PROSECUTION AND
- PUNISHMENT OF THE MAJOR WAR CRIMINALS OF THE EUROPEAN AXIS.
-
-WHEREAS the United Nations have from time to time made declarations of
-their intention that War Criminals shall be brought to justice;
-
-AND WHEREAS the Moscow Declaration of the 30th October 1943 on German
-atrocities in Occupied Europe stated that those German Officers and men
-and members of the Nazi Party who have been responsible for or have
-taken a consenting part in atrocities and crimes will be sent back to
-the countries in which their abominable deeds were done in order that
-they may be judged and punished according to the laws of these liberated
-countries and of the free Governments that will be created therein;
-
-AND WHEREAS this Declaration was stated to be without prejudice to the
-case of major criminals whose offenses have no particular geographic
-location and who will be punished by the joint decision of the
-Governments of the Allies;
-
-NOW THEREFORE the Government of the United States of America, the
-Provisional Government of the French Republic, the Government of the
-United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and the Government
-of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (hereinafter called “the
-Signatories”) acting in the interests of all the United Nations and by
-their representatives duly authorized thereto have concluded this
-Agreement.
-
-_Article 1._ There shall be established after consultation with the
-Control Council for Germany an International Military Tribunal for the
-trial of war criminals whose offenses have no particular geographical
-location whether they be accused individually or in their capacity as
-members of organizations or groups or in both capacities.
-
-_Article 2._ The constitution, jurisdiction and functions of the
-International Military Tribunal shall be those set out in the Charter
-annexed to this Agreement, which Charter shall form an integral part of
-this Agreement.
-
-_Article 3._ Each of the Signatories shall take the necessary steps to
-make available for the investigation of the charges and trial the major
-war criminals detained by them who are to be tried by the International
-Military Tribunal. The Signatories shall also use their best endeavors
-to make available for investigation of the charges against and the trial
-before the International Military Tribunal such of the major war
-criminals as are not in the territories of any of the Signatories.
-
-_Article 4._ Nothing in this Agreement shall prejudice the provisions
-established by the Moscow Declaration concerning the return of war
-criminals to the countries where they committed their crimes.
-
-_Article 5._ Any Government of the United Nations may adhere to this
-Agreement by notice given through the diplomatic channel to the
-Government of the United Kingdom, who shall inform the other signatory
-and adhering Governments of each such adherence.
-
-_Article 6._ Nothing in this Agreement shall prejudice the jurisdiction
-or the powers of any national or occupation court established or to be
-established in any allied territory or in Germany for the trial of war
-criminals.
-
-_Article 7._ This Agreement shall come into force on the day of
-signature and shall remain in force for the period of one year and shall
-continue thereafter, subject to the right of any Signatory to give,
-through the diplomatic channel, one month’s notice of intention to
-terminate it. Such termination shall not prejudice any proceedings
-already taken or any findings already made in pursuance of this
-Agreement.
-
-IN WITNESS WHEREOF the Undersigned have signed the present Agreement.
-
-DONE in quadruplicate in London this 8th day of August 1945 each in
-English, French and Russian, and each text to have equal authenticity.
-
- For the Government of the United States of America
- [signed] ROBERT H. JACKSON
- For the Provisional Government of the French Republic
- [signed] ROBERT FALCO
- For the Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain
- and Northern Ireland
- [signed] JOWITT C.
- For the Government of the Union of Soviet
- Socialist Republics
- [signed] I. T. NIKITCHENKO
- [signed] A. N. TRAININ
-
-
-
-
- Chapter II
- CHARTER OF THE INTERNATIONAL MILITARY TRIBUNAL
-
-
- I. CONSTITUTION OF THE INTERNATIONAL MILITARY TRIBUNAL
-
-_Article 1._ In pursuance of the Agreement signed on the 8th day of
-August 1945 by the Government of the United States of America, the
-Provisional Government of the French Republic, the Government of the
-United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and the Government
-of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, there shall be established
-an International Military Tribunal (hereinafter called “the Tribunal”)
-for the just and prompt trial and punishment of the major war criminals
-of the European Axis.
-
-_Article 2._ The Tribunal shall consist of four members, each with an
-alternate. One member and one alternate shall be appointed by each of
-the Signatories. The alternates shall, so far as they are able, be
-present at all sessions of the Tribunal. In case of illness of any
-member of the Tribunal or his incapacity for some other reason to
-fulfill his functions, his alternate shall take his place.
-
-_Article 3._ Neither the Tribunal, its members nor their alternates can
-be challenged by the prosecution, or by the Defendants or their Counsel.
-Each Signatory may replace its member of the Tribunal or his alternate
-for reasons of health or for other good reasons, except that no
-replacement may take place during a Trial, other than by an alternate.
-
-_Article 4._
-
- (_a_) The presence of all four members of the Tribunal or the
-alternate for any absent member shall be necessary to constitute the
-quorum.
-
- (_b_) The members of the Tribunal shall, before any trial begins,
-agree among themselves upon the selection from their number of a
-President, and the President shall hold office during that trial, or as
-may otherwise be agreed by a vote of not less than three members. The
-principle of rotation of presidency for successive trials is agreed. If,
-however, a session of the Tribunal takes place on the territory of one
-of the four Signatories, the representative of that Signatory on the
-Tribunal shall preside.
-
- (_c_) Save as aforesaid the Tribunal shall take decisions by a
-majority vote and in case the votes are evenly divided, the vote of the
-President shall be decisive: provided always that convictions and
-sentences shall only be imposed by affirmative votes of at least three
-members of the Tribunal.
-
-_Article 5._ In case of need and depending on the number of the matters
-to be tried, other Tribunals may be set up; and the establishment,
-functions, and procedure of each Tribunal shall be identical, and shall
-be governed by this Charter.
-
- II. JURISDICTION AND GENERAL PRINCIPLES
-
-_Article 6._ The Tribunal established by the Agreement referred to in
-Article 1 hereof for the trial and punishment of the major war criminals
-of the European Axis countries shall have the power to try and punish
-persons who, acting in the interests of the European Axis countries,
-whether as individuals or as members of organizations, committed any of
-the following crimes.
-
-The following acts, or any of them, are crimes coming within the
-jurisdiction of the Tribunal for which there shall be individual
-responsibility:
-
- (_a_) CRIMES AGAINST PEACE: namely, planning, preparation, initiation,
-or waging of war of aggression, or a war in violation of international
-treaties, agreements or assurances, or participation in a common plan or
-conspiracy for the accomplishment of any of the foregoing;
-
- (_b_) WAR CRIMES: namely, violations of the laws or customs of war.
-Such violations shall include, but not be limited to, murder,
-ill-treatment or deportation to slave labor or for any other purpose of
-civilian population of or in occupied territory, murder or ill-treatment
-of prisoners of war or persons on the seas, killing of hostages, plunder
-of public or private property, wanton destruction of cities, towns or
-villages, or devastation not justified by military necessity;
-
- (_c_) CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY: namely, murder, extermination,
-enslavement, deportation, and other inhumane acts committed against any
-civilian population, before or during the war; or persecution on
-political, racial or religious grounds in execution of or in connection
-with any crime within the jurisdiction of the Tribunal, whether or not
-in violation of domestic law of the country where perpetrated.
-
-Leaders, organizers, instigators and accomplices participating in the
-formulation or execution of a common plan or conspiracy to commit any of
-the foregoing crimes are responsible for all acts performed by any
-persons in execution of such plan.
-
-_Article 7._ The official position of defendants, whether as Heads of
-State or responsible officials in Government Departments, shall not be
-considered as freeing them from responsibility or mitigating punishment.
-
-_Article 8._ The fact that the Defendant acted pursuant to order of his
-Government or of a superior shall not free him from responsibility, but
-may be considered in mitigation of punishment if the Tribunal determine
-that justice so requires.
-
-_Article 9._ At the trial of any individual member of any group or
-organization the Tribunal may declare (in connection with any act of
-which the individual may be convicted) that the group or organization of
-which the individual was a member was a criminal organization.
-
-After receipt of the Indictment the Tribunal shall give such notice as
-it thinks fit that the prosecution intends to ask the Tribunal to make
-such declaration and any member of the organization will be entitled to
-apply to the Tribunal for leave to be heard by the Tribunal upon the
-question of the criminal character of the organization. The Tribunal
-shall have power to allow or reject the application. If the application
-is allowed, the Tribunal may direct in what manner the applicants shall
-be represented and heard.
-
-_Article 10._ In cases where a group or organization is declared
-criminal by the Tribunal, the competent national authority of any
-Signatory shall have the right to bring individuals to trial for
-membership therein before national, military or occupation courts. In
-any such case the criminal nature of the group or organization is
-considered proved and shall not be questioned.
-
-_Article 11._ Any person convicted by the Tribunal may be charged before
-a national, military or occupation court, referred to in Article 10 of
-this Charter, with a crime other than of membership in a criminal group
-or organization and such court may, after convicting him, impose upon
-him punishment independent of and additional to the punishment imposed
-by the Tribunal for participation in the criminal activities of such
-group or organization.
-
-_Article 12._ The Tribunal shall have the right to take proceedings
-against a person charged with crimes set out in Article 6 of this
-Charter in his absence, if he has not been found or if the Tribunal, for
-any reason, finds it necessary, in the interests of justice, to conduct
-the hearing in his absence.
-
-_Article 13._ The Tribunal shall draw up rules for its procedure. These
-rules shall not be inconsistent with the provisions of this Charter.
-
- III. COMMITTEE FOR THE INVESTIGATION AND,
- PROSECUTION OF MAJOR WAR CRIMINALS
-
-_Article 14._ Each Signatory shall appoint a Chief Prosecutor for the
-investigation of the charges against and the prosecution of major war
-criminals.
-
-The Chief Prosecutors shall act as a committee for the following
-purposes:
-
- (_a_) to agree upon a plan of the individual work of each of the Chief
-Prosecutors and his staff,
-
- (_b_) to settle the final designation of major war criminals to be
-tried by the Tribunal,
-
- (_c_) to approve the Indictment and the documents to be submitted
-therewith,
-
- (_d_) to lodge the Indictment and the accompanying documents with the
-Tribunal,
-
- (_e_) to draw up and recommend to the Tribunal for its approval draft
-rules of procedure, contemplated by Article 13 of this Charter. The
-Tribunal shall have power to accept, with or without amendments, or to
-reject, the rules so recommended.
-
-The Committee shall act in all the above matters by a majority vote and
-shall appoint a Chairman as may be convenient and in accordance with the
-principle of rotation: provided that if there is an equal division of
-vote concerning the designation of a Defendant to be tried by the
-Tribunal, or the crimes with which he shall be charged, that proposal
-will be adopted which was made by the party which proposed that the
-particular Defendant be tried, or the particular charges be preferred
-against him.
-
-_Article 15._ The Chief Prosecutors shall individually, and acting in
-collaboration with one another, also undertake the following duties:
-
- (_a_) investigation, collection and production before or at the Trial
-of all necessary evidence,
-
- (_b_) the preparation of the Indictment for approval by the Committee
-in accordance with paragraph (_c_) of Article 14 hereof,
-
- (_c_) the preliminary examination of all necessary witnesses and of
-the Defendants,
-
- (_d_) to act as prosecutor at the Trial,
-
- (_e_) to appoint representatives to carry out such duties as may be
-assigned to them,
-
- (_f_) to undertake such other matters as may appear necessary to them
-for the purposes of the preparation for and conduct of the Trial.
-
-It is understood that no witness or Defendant detained by any Signatory
-shall be taken out of the possession of that Signatory without its
-assent.
-
- IV. FAIR TRIAL FOR DEFENDANTS
-
-_Article 16._ In order to ensure fair trial for the Defendants, the
-following procedure shall be followed:
-
- (_a_) The Indictment shall include full particulars specifying in
-detail the charges against the Defendants. A copy of the Indictment and
-of all the documents lodged with the Indictment, translated into a
-language which he understands, shall be furnished to the Defendant at a
-reasonable time before the Trial.
-
- (_b_) During any preliminary examination or trial 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 and his Trial shall be
-conducted in or translated into, a language which the Defendant
-understands.
-
- (_d_) A defendant shall have the right to conduct his own defense
-before the Tribunal or to have the assistance of Counsel.
-
- (_e_) A defendant shall have the right through himself or through his
-Counsel to present evidence at the Trial in support of his defense, and
-to cross-examine any witness called by the Prosecution.
-
- V. POWERS OF THE TRIBUNAL AND
- CONDUCT OF THE TRIAL
-
-_Article 17._ The Tribunal shall have the power
-
- (_a_) to summon witnesses to the Trial and to require their attendance
-and testimony and to put questions to them,
-
- (_b_) to interrogate any Defendant,
-
- (_c_) to require the production of documents and other evidentiary
-material,
-
- (_d_) to administer oaths to witnesses,
-
-(_e_) to appoint officers for the carrying out of any task designated by
-the Tribunal including the power to have evidence taken on commission.
-
-_Article 18._ The Tribunal shall
-
- (_a_) confine the Trial strictly to an expeditious hearing of the
-issues raised by the charges,
-
- (_b_) take strict measures to prevent any action which will cause
-unreasonable delay, and rule out irrelevant issues and statements of any
-kind whatsoever,
-
- (_c_) deal summarily with any contumacy, imposing appropriate
-punishment, including exclusion of any Defendant or his Counsel from
-some or all further proceedings, but without prejudice to the
-determination of the charges.
-
-_Article 19._ 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.
-
-_Article 20._ The Tribunal may require to be informed of the nature of
-any evidence before it is offered so that it may rule upon the relevance
-thereof.
-
-_Article 21._ 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 acts 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.
-
-_Article 22._ The permanent seat of the Tribunal shall be in Berlin. The
-first meetings of the members of the Tribunal and of the Chief
-Prosecutors shall be held at Berlin in a place to be designated by the
-Control Council for Germany. The first trial shall be held at Nurnberg,
-and any subsequent trials shall be held at such places as the Tribunal
-may decide.
-
-_Article 23._ One or more of the Chief Prosecutors may take part in the
-prosecution at each Trial. The function of any Chief Prosecutor may be
-discharged by him personally, or by any person or persons authorized by
-him.
-
-The function of Counsel for a Defendant may be discharged at the
-Defendant’s request by any Counsel professionally qualified to conduct
-cases before the Courts of his own country, or by any other person who
-may be specially authorized thereto by the Tribunal.
-
-_Article 24._ The proceedings at the Trial shall take the following
-course:
-
- (_a_) The Indictment shall be read in court.
-
- (_b_) The Tribunal shall ask each Defendant whether he pleads “guilty”
-or “not guilty”.
-
- (_c_) The prosecution shall make an opening statement.
-
- (_d_) The Tribunal shall ask the prosecution and the defense what
-evidence (if any) they wish to submit to the Tribunal, and the Tribunal
-shall rule upon the admissibility of any such evidence.
-
- (_e_) The witnesses for the Prosecution shall be examined and after
-that the witnesses for the Defense. Thereafter such rebutting evidence
-as may be held by the Tribunal to be admissible shall be called by
-either the Prosecution or the Defense.
-
- (_f_) The Tribunal may put any question to any witness and to any
-Defendant, at any time.
-
- (_g_) The Prosecution and the Defense shall interrogate and may
-cross-examine any witnesses and any Defendant who gives testimony.
-
- (_h_) The Defense shall address the court.
-
- (_i_) The Prosecution shall address the court.
-
- (_j_) Each Defendant may make a statement to the Tribunal.
-
- (_k_) The Tribunal shall deliver judgment and pronounce sentence.
-
-_Article 25._ All official documents shall be produced, and all court
-proceedings conducted, in English, French, and Russian, and in the
-language of the Defendant. So much of the record and of the proceedings
-may also be translated into the language of any country in which the
-Tribunal is sitting, as the Tribunal considers desirable in the
-interests of justice and public opinion.
-
- VI. JUDGMENT AND SENTENCE
-
-_Article 26._ The judgment of the Tribunal as to the guilt or the
-innocence of any Defendant shall give the reasons on which it is based,
-and shall be final and not subject to review.
-
-_Article 27._ The Tribunal shall have the right to impose upon a
-Defendant on conviction, death or such other punishment as shall be
-determined by it to be just.
-
-_Article 28._ In addition to any punishment imposed by it, the Tribunal
-shall have the right to deprive the convicted person of any stolen
-property and order its delivery to the Control Council for Germany.
-
-_Article 29._ In case of guilt, sentences shall be carried out in
-accordance with the orders of the Control Council for Germany, which may
-at any time reduce or otherwise alter the sentences, but may not
-increase the severity thereof. If the Control Council for Germany, after
-any Defendant has been convicted and sentenced, discovers fresh evidence
-which, in its opinion, would found a fresh charge against him, the
-Council shall report accordingly to the Committee established under
-Article 14 hereof, for such action as they may consider proper, having
-regard to the interests of justice.
-
- VII. EXPENSES
-
-_Article 30._ The expenses of the Tribunal and of the Trials, shall be
-charged by the Signatories against the funds allotted for maintenance of
-the Control Council for Germany.
-
- * * * * *
-
- PROTOCOL
-
-Whereas an Agreement and Charter regarding the Prosecution of War
-Criminals was signed in London on the 8th August 1945, in the English,
-French and Russian languages.
-
-And whereas a discrepancy has been found to exist between the originals
-of Article 6, paragraph (_c_), of the Charter in the Russian language,
-on the one hand, and the originals in the English and French languages,
-on the other, to wit, the semi-colon in Article 6, paragraph (_c_), of
-the Charter between the words “war” and “or”, as carried in the English
-and French texts, is a comma in the Russian text.
-
-And whereas it is desired to rectify this discrepancy:
-
-NOW, THEREFORE, the undersigned, signatories of the said Agreement on
-behalf of their respective Governments, duly authorized thereto, have
-agreed that Article 6, paragraph (_c_), of the Charter in the Russian
-text is correct, and that the meaning and intention of the Agreement and
-Charter require that the said semi-colon in the English, text should be
-changed to a comma, and that the French text should be amended to read
-as follows:
-
- (_c_) LES CRIMES CONTRE L’HUMANITE: c’est à dire l’assassinat,
-l’extermination, la reduction en esclavage, la deportation, et tout
-autre acte inhumain commis contre toutes populations civiles, avant ou
-pendant la guerre, ou bien les persecutions pour des motifs politiques,
-raciaux, ou religieux, lorsque ces actes ou persecutions, qu’ils aient
-constitue ou non une violation du droit interne du pays ou ils ont ete
-perpetres, ont ete commis a la suite de tout crime rentrant dans la
-competence du Tribunal, ou en liaison avec ce crime.
-
-IN WITNESS WHEREOF the Undersigned have signed the present Protocol.
-
-DONE in quadruplicate in Berlin this 6th day of October, 1945, each in
-English, French, and Russian, and each text to have equal authenticity.
-
- For the Government of the United States of America
- /s/ ROBERT H. JACKSON
- For the Provisional Government of the French Republic
- /s/ FRANCOIS de MENTHON
- For the Government of the United Kingdom
- of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
- /s/ HARTLEY SHAWCROSS
- For the Government of the Union
- of Soviet Socialist Republics
- /s/ R. RUDENKO
-
-
-
-
- Chapter III
- INTERNATIONAL MILITARY TRIBUNAL,
- INDICTMENT NUMBER I.
-
-
-THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, THE FRENCH REPUBLIC, THE UNITED KINGDOM OF
- GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND, AND THE UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST
- REPUBLICS
-
- —AGAINST—
-
-HERMANN WILHELM GOERING, RUDOLF HESS, JOACHIM VON RIBBENTROP, ROBERT
-LEY, WILHELM KEITEL, ERNST KALTENBRUNNER, ALFRED ROSENBERG, HANS FRANK,
-WILHELM FRICK, JULIUS STREICHER, WALTER FUNK, HJALMAR SCHACHT, GUSTAV
-KRUPP VON BOHLEN UND HALBACH, KARL DOENITZ, ERICH RAEDER, BALDUR VON
-SCHIRACH, FRITZ SAUCKEL, ALFRED JODL, MARTIN BORMANN, FRANZ VON PAPEN,
-ARTUR SEYSS-INQUART, ALBERT SPEER, CONSTANTIN VON NEURATH, AND HANS
-FRITZSCHE, =Individually and as Members of Any of the Following
-Groups or Organisations to Which They Respectively Belonged,
-Namely=: DIE REICHSREGIERUNG (REICH CABINET); DAS KORPS DER
-POLITISCHEN LEITER DER NATIONALSOZIALISTISCHEN DEUTSCHEN ARBEITERPARTEI
-(LEADERSHIP CORPS OF THE NAZI PARTY); DIE SCHUTZSTAFFELN DER
-NATIONALSOZIALISTISCHEN DEUTSCHEN ARBEITERPARTEI (=commonly known
-as the= “SS”) AND INCLUDING DIE SICHERHEITSDIENST (COMMONLY KNOWN
-AS THE “SD”); DIE GEHEIME STAATSPOLIZEI (SECRET STATE POLICE,
-=commonly known as the= “GESTAPO”); DIE STURMABTEILUNGEN DER
-N.S.D.A.P. (COMMONLY KNOWN AS THE “SA”) AND THE GENERAL STAFF AND HIGH
-COMMAND OF THE GERMAN ARMED FORCES ALL AS DEFINED IN APPENDIX B.
-
- Defendants
-
-
- INDICTMENT
-
- I.
-
-The United States of America, the French Republic, the United Kingdom of
-Great Britain and Northern Ireland and the Union of Soviet Socialist
-Republics by the undersigned, Robert H. Jackson, Francois de Menthon,
-Hartley Shawcross and R. A. Rudenko, duly appointed to represent their
-respective Governments in the investigation of the charges against and
-the prosecution of the major war criminals, pursuant to the Agreement of
-London dated 8th August, 1945, and the Charter of this Tribunal annexed
-thereto, hereby accuse as guilty, in the respects hereinafter set forth,
-of Crimes against Peace, War Crimes, and Crimes against Humanity, and of
-a Common Plan or Conspiracy to commit those Crimes, all as defined in
-the Charter of the Tribunal, and accordingly name as defendants in this
-cause and as indicted on the counts hereinafter set out: HERMANN WILHELM
-GOERING, RUDOLF HESS, JOACHIM VON RIBBENTROP, ROBERT LEY, WILHELM
-KEITEL, ERNST KALTENBRUNNER, ALFRED ROSENBERG, HANS FRANK, WILHELM
-FRICK, JULIUS STREICHER, WALTER FUNK, HJALMAR SCHACHT, GUSTAV KRUPP VON
-BOHLEN UND HALBACH, KARL DOENITZ, ERICH RAEDER, BALDUR VON SCHIRACH,
-FRITZ SAUCKEL, ALFRED JODL, MARTIN BORMANN, FRANZ VON PAPEN, ARTUR
-SEYSS-INQUART, ALBERT SPEER, CONSTANTIN VON NEURATH AND HANS FRITZSCHE,
-individually and as members of any of the Groups or Organizations next
-hereinafter named.
-
- II.
-
-The following are named as Groups or Organizations (since dissolved)
-which should be declared criminal by reason of their aims and the means
-used for the accomplishment thereof and in connection with the
-conviction of such of the named defendants as were members thereof: DIE
-REICHSREGIERUNG (REICH CABINET); DAS KORPS DER POLITISCHEN LEITER DER
-NATIONALSOZIALISTISCHEN DEUTSCHEN ARBEITERPARTEI (LEADERSHIP CORPS OF
-THE NAZI PARTY); DIE SCHUTZSTAFFELN DER NATIONALSOZIALISTISCHEN
-DEUTSCHEN ARBEITERPARTEI (commonly known as the “SS”) and including DIE
-SICHERHEITSDIENST (commonly known as the “SD”); DIE GEHEIME
-STAATSPOLIZEI (SECRET STATE POLICE, commonly known as the “GESTAPO”);
-DIE STURMABTEILUNGEN DER N.S.D.A.P. (commonly known as the “SA”); and
-the GENERAL STAFF and HIGH COMMAND of the GERMAN ARMED FORCES. The
-identity and membership of the Groups or Organizations referred to in
-the foregoing titles are hereinafter in Appendix B more particularly
-defined.
-
-
- COUNT ONE—THE COMMON PLAN OR CONSPIRACY
-
- (Charter, Article 6, especially 6 (_a_))
- III. Statement of the Offense
-
-All the defendants, with divers other persons, during a period of years
-preceding 8th May, 1945, participated as leaders, organizers,
-instigators or accomplices in the formulation or execution of a common
-plan or conspiracy to commit, or which involved the commission of,
-Crimes against Peace, War Crimes, and Crimes against Humanity, as
-defined in the Charter of this Tribunal, and, in accordance with the
-provisions of the Charter, are individually responsible for their own
-acts and for all acts committed by any persons in the execution of such
-plan or conspiracy. The common plan or conspiracy embraced the
-commission of Crimes against Peace, in that the defendants planned,
-prepared, initiated and waged wars of aggression, which were also wars
-in violation of international treaties, agreements or assurances. In the
-development and course of the common plan or conspiracy it came to
-embrace the commission of War Crimes, in that it contemplated, and the
-defendants determined upon and carried out, ruthless wars against
-countries and populations, in violation of the rules and customs of war,
-including as typical and systematic means by which the wars were
-prosecuted, murder, ill-treatment, deportation for slave labor and for
-other purposes of civilian populations of occupied territories, murder
-and ill-treatment of prisoners of war and of persons on the high seas,
-the taking and killing of hostages, the plunder of public and-private
-property, the wanton destruction of cities, towns, and villages, and
-devastation not justified by military necessity. The common plan or
-conspiracy contemplated and came to embrace as typical and systematic
-means, and the defendants determined upon and committed, Crimes against
-Humanity, both within Germany and within occupied territories, including
-murder, extermination, enslavement, deportation, and other inhumane acts
-committed against civilian populations before and during the war, and
-persecutions on political, racial or religious grounds, in execution of
-the plan for preparing and prosecuting aggressive or illegal wars, many
-of such acts and persecutions being violations of the domestic laws of
-the countries where perpetrated.
-
- IV. Particulars of the nature and development of the common plan or
- conspiracy
-
- (_A_) NAZI PARTY AS THE CENTRAL CORE OF THE COMMON PLAN OR CONSPIRACY
-
-In 1921 Adolf Hitler became the supreme leader or Fuehrer of the
-Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei (National Socialist
-German Workers Party), also known as the Nazi Party, which had been
-founded in Germany in 1920. He continued as such throughout the period
-covered by this Indictment. The Nazi Party, together with certain of its
-subsidiary organizations, became the instrument of cohesion among the
-defendants and their co-conspirators and an instrument for the carrying
-out of the aims and purposes of their conspiracy. Each defendant became
-a member of the Nazi Party and of the conspiracy, with knowledge of
-their aims and purposes, or, with such knowledge, became an accessory to
-their aims and purposes at some stage of the development of the
-conspiracy.
-
- (_B_) COMMON OBJECTIVES AND METHODS OF CONSPIRACY
-
-The aims and purposes of the Nazi Party and of the defendants and divers
-other persons from time to time associated as leaders, members,
-supporters or adherents of the Nazi Party (hereinafter called
-collectively the “Nazi conspirators”) were, or came to be, to accomplish
-the following by any means deemed opportune, including unlawful means,
-and contemplating ultimate resort to threat of force, force and
-aggressive war: (i) to abrogate and overthrow the Treaty of Versailles
-and its restrictions upon the military armament and activity of Germany;
-(ii) to acquire the territories lost by Germany as the result of the
-World War of 1914-1918 and other territories in Europe asserted by the
-Nazi conspirators to be occupied principally by so-called “racial
-Germans”; (iii) to acquire still further territories in continental
-Europe and elsewhere claimed by the Nazi conspirators to be required by
-the “racial Germans” as “Lebensraum,” or living space, all at the
-expense of neighboring and other countries. The aims and purposes of the
-Nazi conspirators were not fixed or static but evolved and expanded as
-they acquired progressively greater power and became able to make more
-effective application of threats of force and threats of aggressive war.
-When their expanding aims and purposes became finally so great as to
-provoke such strength of resistance as could be overthrown only by armed
-force and aggressive war, and not simply by the opportunistic methods
-theretofore used, such as fraud, deceit, threats, intimidation, fifth
-column activities and propaganda, the Nazi conspirators deliberately
-planned, determined upon and launched their aggressive wars and wars in
-violation of international treaties, agreements and assurances by the
-phases and steps hereinafter more particularly described.
-
- (_C_) DOCTRINAL TECHNIQUES OF THE COMMON PLAN OR CONSPIRACY
-
-To incite others to join in the common plan or conspiracy, and as a
-means of securing for the Nazi conspirators the highest degree of
-control over the German community, they put forth, disseminated, and
-exploited certain doctrines, among others, as follows:
-
-1. That persons of so-called “German blood” (as specified by the Nazi
-conspirators) were a “master race” and were accordingly entitled to
-subjugate, dominate or exterminate other “races” and peoples;
-
-2. That the German people should be ruled under the Fuehrerprinzip
-(leadership principle) according to which power was to reside in a
-Fuehrer from whom sub-leaders were to derive authority in a hierarchical
-order, each sub-leader to owe unconditional obedience to his immediate
-superior but to be absolute in his own sphere of jurisdiction; and the
-power of the leadership was to be unlimited, extending to all phases of
-public and private life;
-
-3. That war was a noble and necessary activity of Germans;
-
-4. That the leadership of the Nazi Party, as the sole bearer of the
-foregoing and other doctrines of the Nazi Party, was entitled to shape
-the structure, policies and practices of the German State and all
-related institutions, to direct and supervise the activities of all
-individuals within the State, and to destroy all opponents.
-
- (_D_) THE ACQUIRING OF TOTALITARIAN CONTROL OF GERMANY: POLITICAL
-
-1. _First steps in acquisition of control of State machinery_
-
-In order to accomplish their aims and purposes, the Nazi conspirators
-prepared to seize totalitarian control over Germany to assure that no
-effective resistance against them could arise within Germany itself.
-After the failure of the Munich Putsch of 1923 aimed at the overthrow of
-the Weimar Republic by direct action, the Nazi conspirators set out
-through the Nazi Party to undermine and capture the German Government by
-“legal” forms supported by terrorism. They created and utilized, as a
-Party formation, Die Sturmabteilungen (SA), a semi-military, voluntary
-organization of young men trained for and committed to the use of
-violence, whose mission was to make the Party the master of the streets.
-
-2. _Control acquired_
-
-On 30th January, 1933, Hitler became Chancellor of the German Republic.
-After the Reichstag fire of 28th February, 1933, clauses of the Weimar
-constitution guaranteeing personal liberty, freedom of speech, of the
-press, of association and assembly were suspended. The Nazi conspirators
-secured the passage by the Reichstag of a “Law for the Protection of the
-People and the Reich” giving Hitler and the members of his then cabinet
-plenary powers of legislation. The Nazi conspirators retained such
-powers after having changed the members of the cabinet. The conspirators
-caused all political parties except the Nazi Party to be prohibited.
-They caused the Nazi Party to be established as a para-governmental
-organization with extensive and extraordinary privileges.
-
-3. _Consolidation of control_
-
-Thus possessed of the machinery of the German State, the Nazi
-conspirators set about the consolidation of their position of power
-within Germany, the extermination of potential internal resistance and
-the placing of the German nation on a military footing.
-
- (_a_) The Nazi conspirators reduced the Reichstag to a body of their
-own nominees and curtailed the freedom of popular elections throughout
-the country. They transformed the several states, provinces and
-municipalities, which had formerly exercised semi-autonomous powers,
-into hardly more than administrative organs of the central government.
-They united the offices of the President and the Chancellor in the
-person of Hitler; instituted a widespread purge of civil servants; and
-severely restricted the independence of the judiciary and rendered it
-subservient to Nazi ends. The conspirators greatly enlarged existing
-State and Party organizations; established a network of new State and
-Party organizations; and “co-ordinated” State agencies with the Nazi
-Party and its branches and affiliates, with the result that German life
-was dominated by Nazi doctrine and practice and progressively mobilized
-for the accomplishment of their aims.
-
- (_b_) In order to make their rule secure from attack and to instil
-fear in the hearts of the German people, the Nazi conspirators
-established and extended a system of terror against opponents and
-supposed or suspected opponents of the regime. They imprisoned such
-persons without judicial process, holding them in “protective custody”
-and concentration camps, and subjected them to persecution, degradation,
-despoilment enslavement, torture and murder. These concentration camps
-were established early in 1933 under the direction of the defendant
-GOERING and expanded as a fixed part of the terroristic policy and
-method of the conspirators and used by them for the commission of the
-Crimes against Humanity hereinafter alleged. Among the principal
-agencies utilized in the perpetration of these crimes were the SS and
-the GESTAPO, which, together with other favored branches or agencies of
-the State and Party, were permitted to operate without restraint of law.
-
- (_c_) The Nazi conspirators conceived that, in addition to the
-suppression of distinctively political opposition, it was necessary to
-suppress or exterminate certain other movements or groups which they
-regarded as obstacles to their retention of total control in Germany and
-to the aggressive aims of the conspiracy abroad. Accordingly:
-
- (1) The Nazi conspirators destroyed the free trade unions in
- Germany by confiscating their funds and properties, persecuting
- their leaders, prohibiting their activities, and supplanting
- them by an affiliated Party organization. The leadership
- principle was introduced into industrial relations, the
- entrepreneur becoming the leader and the workers becoming his
- followers. Thus any potential resistance of the workers was
- frustrated and the productive labor capacity of the German
- nation was brought under the effective control of the
- conspirators.
-
- (2) The Nazi conspirators, by promoting beliefs and practices
- incompatible with Christian teaching, sought to subvert the
- influence of the Churches over the people and in particular over
- the youth of Germany. They avowed their aim to eliminate the
- Christian Churches in Germany and sought to substitute therefor
- Nazi institutions and Nazi beliefs and pursued a programme of
- persecution of priests, clergy and members of monastic orders
- whom they deemed opposed to their purposes and confiscated
- church property.
-
- (3) The persecution by the Nazi conspirators of pacifist groups,
- including religious movements dedicated to pacifism, was
- particularly relentless and cruel.
-
- (_d_) Implementing their “master race” policy, the conspirators
-joined in a program of relentless persecution of the Jews, designed to
-exterminate them. Annihilation of the Jews became an official State
-policy, carried out both by official action and by incitements to mob
-and individual violence. The conspirators openly avowed their purpose.
-For example, the defendant ROSENBERG stated: “Anti-Semitism is the
-unifying element of the reconstruction of Germany.” On another occasion
-he also stated: “Germany will regard, the Jewish question as solved only
-after the very last Jew has left the greater German living space . . .
-Europe will have its Jewish question solved only after the very last Jew
-has left the Continent.” The defendant LEY declared: “We swear we are
-not going to abandon the struggle until the last Jew in Europe has been
-exterminated and is actually dead. It is not enough to isolate the
-Jewish enemy of mankind—the Jew has got to be exterminated.” On another
-occasion he also declared: “The second German secret weapon is
-anti-Semitism because if it is consistently pursued by Germany, it will
-become a universal problem which all nations will be forced to
-consider.” The defendant STREICHER declared: “The sun will not shine on
-the nations of the earth until the last Jew is dead.” These avowals and
-incitements were typical of the declarations of the Nazi conspirators
-throughout the course of their conspiracy. The program of action against
-the Jews included disfranchisement, stigmatization, denial of civil
-rights, subjecting their persons and property to violence, deportation,
-enslavement, enforced labor, starvation, murder and mass extermination.
-The extent to which the conspirators succeeded in their purpose can only
-be estimated, but the annihilation was substantially complete in many
-localities of Europe. Of the 9,600,000 Jews who lived in the parts of
-Europe under Nazi domination, it is conservatively estimated that
-5,700,000 have disappeared, most of them deliberately put to death by
-the Nazi conspirators. Only remnants of the Jewish population of Europe
-remain.
-
- (_e_) In order to make the German people amenable to their will, and
-to prepare them psychologically for war, the Nazi conspirators reshaped
-the educational system and particularly the education and training of
-the German youth. The leadership principle was introduced into the
-schools and the Party and affiliated organizations were given wide
-supervisory powers over education. The Nazi conspirators imposed a
-supervision of all cultural activities, controlled the dissemination of
-information and the expression of opinion within Germany as well as the
-movement of intelligence of all kinds from and into Germany, and created
-vast propaganda machines.
-
- (_f_) The Nazi conspirators placed a considerable number of their
-dominated organizations on a progressively militarized footing with a
-view to the rapid transformation and use of such organizations whenever
-necessary as instruments of war.
-
- (_E_) THE ACQUIRING OF TOTALITARIAN CONTROL IN GERMANY: ECONOMIC; AND
- THE ECONOMIC PLANNING AND MOBILIZATION FOR AGGRESSIVE WAR
-
-Having gained political power the conspirators organized Germany’s
-economy to give effect to their political aims.
-
-1. In order to eliminate the possibility of resistance in the economic
-sphere, they deprived labour of its rights of free industrial and
-political association as particularized in paragraph (_D_) 3 (_c_) (1)
-herein.
-
-2. They used organizations of German business as instruments of economic
-mobilization for war.
-
-3. They directed Germany’s economy towards preparation and equipment of
-the military machine. To this end they directed finance, capital
-investment, and foreign trade.
-
-4. The Nazi conspirators, and in particular the industrialists among
-them, embarked upon a huge rearmament programme and set out to produce
-and develop huge quantities of materials of war and to create a powerful
-military potential.
-
-5. With the object of carrying through the preparation for war the Nazi
-conspirators, set up a series of administrative agencies and
-authorities. For example, in 1936 they established for this purpose the
-office of the Four Year Plan with the defendant GOERING as
-Plenipotentiary, vesting it with overriding control over Germany’s
-economy. Furthermore, on 28th August, 1939, immediately before launching
-their aggression against Poland, they appointed the defendant FUNK
-Plenipotentiary for Economics; and on 30th August, 1939, they set up the
-Ministerial Council for the Defence of the Reich to act as a War
-Cabinet.
-
- (_F_) UTILIZATION OF NAZI CONTROL FOR FOREIGN AGGRESSION
-
-1. _Status of the conspiracy by the middle of 1933 and projected plans._
-
-By the middle of the year 1933 the Nazi conspirators, having acquired
-governmental control over Germany, were in a position to enter upon
-further and more detailed planning with particular relationship to
-foreign policy. Their plan was to rearm and to re-occupy and fortify the
-Rhineland, in violation of the Treaty of Versailles and other treaties,
-in order to acquire military strength and political bargaining power to
-be used against other nations.
-
-2. The Nazi conspirators decided that for their purpose the Treaty of
-Versailles must definitely be abrogated and specific plans were made by
-them and put into operation by 7th March, 1936, all of which opened the
-way for the major aggressive steps to follow, as hereinafter set forth.
-In the execution of this phase of the conspiracy the Nazi conspirators
-did the following acts:
-
- (_a_) They led Germany to enter upon a course of secret rearmament
-from 1933 to March, 1935, including the training of military personnel
-and the production of munitions of war, and the building of an air
-force.
-
- (_b_) On 14th October, 1933, they led Germany to leave the
-International Disarmament Conference and the League of Nations.
-
- (_c_) On 10th March, 1935, the defendant GOERING announced that
-Germany was building a military air force.
-
- (_d_) On 16th March, 1935, the Nazi conspirators promulgated a law
-for universal military service, in which they stated the peace-time
-strength of the German Army would be fixed at 500,000 men.
-
- (_e_) On 21st May, 1935, they falsely announced to the world, with
-intent to deceive and allay fears of aggressive intentions, that they
-would respect the territorial limitations of the Versailles Treaty and
-comply with the Locarno Pacts.
-
- (_f_) On 7th March, 1936, they reoccupied and fortified the
-Rhineland, in violation of the Treaty of Versailles and the Rhine Pact
-of Locarno of 16th October, 1925, and falsely announced to the world
-that “we have no territorial demands to make in Europe.”
-
-3. _Aggressive action against Austria and Czechoslovakia_
-
- (_a_) _The 1936-1938 phase of the plan: planning for the assault on
-Austria and Czechoslovakia_
-
- The Nazi conspirators next entered upon the specific planning
- for the acquisition of Austria and Czechoslovakia, realizing it
- would be necessary, for military reasons, first to seize Austria
- before assaulting Czechoslovakia. On 21st May, 1935, in a speech
- to the Reichstag, Hitler stated that: “Germany neither intends
- nor wishes to interfere in the internal affairs of Austria, to
- annex Austria or to conclude an Anschluss.” On 1st May, 1936,
- within two months after the reoccupation of the Rhineland,
- Hitler stated: “The lie goes forth again that Germany tomorrow
- or the day after will fall upon Austria or Czechoslovakia.”
- Thereafter, the Nazi conspirators caused a treaty to be entered
- into between Austria and Germany on 11th July, 1936, Article 1
- of which stated that “The German Government recognizes the full
- sovereignty of the Federated State of Austria in the spirit of
- the pronouncements of the German Fuehrer and Chancellor of 21st
- May, 1935.” Meanwhile, plans for aggression in violation of that
- treaty were being made. By the autumn of 1937, all noteworthy
- opposition within the Reich had been crushed. Military
- preparation for the Austrian action was virtually concluded. An
- influential group of the Nazi conspirators met with Hitler on
- 5th November, 1937, to review the situation. It was reaffirmed
- that Nazi Germany must have “Lebensraum” in central Europe. It
- was recognized that such conquest would probably meet resistance
- which would have to be crushed by force and that their decision
- might lead to a general war, but this prospect was discounted as
- a risk worth taking. There emerged from this meeting three
- possible plans for the conquest of Austria and Czechoslovakia.
- Which of the three was to be used was to depend upon the
- developments in the political and military situation in Europe.
- It was contemplated that the conquest of Austria and
- Czechoslovakia would, through compulsory emigration of 2,000,000
- persons from Czechoslovakia and 1,000,000 persons from Austria,
- provide additional food to the Reich for 5,000,000 to 6,000,000
- people, strengthen it militarily by providing shorter and better
- frontiers, and make possible the constituting of new armies up
- to about twelve divisions. Thus, the aim of the plan against
- Austria and Czechoslovakia was conceived of not as an end to
- itself but as a preparatory measure toward the next aggressive
- steps in the Nazi conspiracy.
-
- (_b_) _The execution of the plan to invade Austria: November, 1937,
-to March, 1938_
-
- Hitler on 8th February, 1938, called Chancellor Schuschnigg to a
- conference at Berchtesgaden. At the meeting of 12th February,
- 1938, under threat of invasion, Schuschnigg yielded a promise of
- amnesty to imprisoned Nazis and appointment of Nazis to
- ministerial posts. He agreed to remain silent until Hitler’s
- 20th February speech in which Austria’s independence was to be
- reaffirmed, but Hitler in his speech, instead of affirming
- Austrian independence, declared himself protector of all
- Germans. Meanwhile, subversive activities of Nazis in Austria
- increased. Schuschnigg on 9th March, 1938, announced a
- plebiscite for the following Sunday on the question of Austrian
- independence. On 11th March Hitler sent an ultimatum, demanding
- that the plebiscite be called off or that Germany would invade
- Austria. Later the same day a second ultimatum threatened
- invasion unless Schuschnigg should resign in three hours.
- Schuschnigg resigned. The defendant SEYSS-INQUART, who was
- appointed Chancellor, immediately invited Hitler to send German
- troops into Austria to “preserve order.” The invasion began on
- 12th March, 1938. On 13th March, Hitler by proclamation assumed
- office as Chief of State of Austria and took command of its
- armed forces. By a law of the same date Austria was annexed to
- Germany.
-
- (_c_) _The execution of the plan to invade Czechoslovakia: April,
-1938, to March, 1939_
-
- 1. Simultaneously with their annexation of Austria the Nazi
- conspirators gave false assurances to the Czechoslovak
- Government that they would not attack that country. But within a
- month they met to plan specific ways and means of attacking
- Czechoslovakia, and to revise, in the light of the acquisition
- of Austria, the previous plans for aggression against
- Czechoslovakia.
-
- 2. On 21st April, 1938, the Nazi conspirators met and prepared
- to launch an attack on Czechoslovakia not later than 1st
- October, 1938. They planned specifically to create an “incident”
- to “justify” the attack. They decided to launch a military
- attack only after a period of diplomatic squabbling which,
- growing more serious, would lead to the excuse for war, or, in
- the alternative, to unleash a lightning attack as a result of an
- “incident” of their own creation. Consideration was given to
- assassinating the German Ambassador at Prague to create the
- requisite incident. From and after 21st April, 1938, the Nazi
- conspirators caused to be prepared detailed and precise military
- plans designed to carry out such an attack at any opportune
- moment and calculated to overcome all Czechoslovak, resistance
- within four days, thus presenting the world with a fait
- accompli, and so forestalling outside resistance. Throughout the
- months of May, June, July, August and September, these plans
- were made more specific and detailed, and by 3rd September,
- 1938, it was decided that all troops were to be ready for action
- on 28th September, 1938.
-
- 3. Throughout this same period, the Nazi conspirators were
- agitating the minorities question in Czechoslovakia, and
- particularly in the Sudetenland, leading to a diplomatic crisis
- in August and September, 1938. After the Nazi conspirators
- threatened war, the United Kingdom and France concluded a pact
- with Germany and Italy at Munich on 29th September, 1938,
- involving the cession of the Sudetenland by Czechoslovakia to
- Germany. Czechoslovakia was required to acquiesce. On 1st
- October, 1938, German troops occupied the Sudetenland.
-
- 4. On 15th March, 1939, contrary to the provisions of the Munich
- Pact itself, the Nazi conspirators caused the completion of
- their plan by seizing and occupying the major part of
- Czechoslovakia not ceded to Germany by the Munich Pact.
-
-4. _Formulation of the plan to attack Poland_: _preparation and
-initiation of aggressive war_: _March, 1939, to September, 1939_
-
- (_a_) With these aggressions successfully consummated, the
-conspirators had obtained much desired resources and bases and were
-ready to undertake further aggressions by means of war. Following
-assurances to the world of peaceful intentions, an influential group of
-the conspirators met on 23rd May, 1939, to consider the further
-implementation of their plan. The situation was reviewed and it was
-observed that “the past six years have been put to good use and all
-measures have been taken in correct sequence and in accordance with our
-aims”; that the national-political unity of the Germans had been
-substantially achieved; and that further successes could not be achieved
-without war and bloodshed. It was decided nevertheless next to attack
-Poland at the first suitable opportunity. It was admitted that the
-questions concerning Danzig which they had agitated with Poland were not
-true questions, but rather that the question was one of aggressive
-expansion for food and “Lebensraum.” It was recognized that Poland would
-fight if attacked and that a repetition of the Nazi success against
-Czechoslovakia without war could not be expected. Accordingly, it was
-determined that the problem was to isolate Poland and, if possible,
-prevent a simultaneous conflict with the Western Powers. Nevertheless,
-it was agreed that England was an enemy to their aspirations, and that
-war with England and her ally France must eventually result, and
-therefore that in that war every attempt must be made to overwhelm
-England with a “Blitzkrieg.” It was thereupon determined immediately to
-prepare detailed plans for an attack on Poland at the first suitable
-opportunity and thereafter for an attack on England and France, together
-with plans for the simultaneous occupation by armed force of air bases
-in the Netherlands and Belgium.
-
- (_b_) Accordingly, after having denounced the German-Polish Pact of
-1934 on false grounds, the Nazi conspirators proceeded to stir up the
-Danzig issue to prepare frontier “incidents” to “justify” the attack,
-and to make demands for the cession of Polish territory. Upon refusal by
-Poland to yield, they caused German armed forces to invade Poland on 1st
-September, 1939, thus precipitating war also with the United Kingdom and
-France.
-
-5. _Expansion of the war into a general war of aggression: planning and
-execution of attacks on Denmark, Norway, Belgium, The Netherlands,
-Luxembourg, Yugoslavia, and Greece: 1939 to April, 1941_
-
-Thus the aggressive war prepared for by the Nazi conspirators through
-their attacks on Austria and Czechoslovakia was actively launched by
-their attack on Poland, in violation of the terms of the Briand-Kellogg
-Pact, 1928. After the total defeat of Poland, in order to facilitate the
-carrying out of their military operations against France and the United
-Kingdom, the Nazi conspirators made active preparations for an extension
-of the war in Europe. In accordance with those plans, they caused the
-German armed forces to invade Denmark and Norway on 9th April, 1940;
-Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg on 10th May, 1940; Yugoslavia
-and Greece on 6th April, 1941. All these invasions had been specifically
-planned in advance.
-
-6. _German invasion on June 22nd, 1941, of the U.S.S.R. territory in
-violation of Non-Aggression Pact of 23rd August, 1939_
-
-On June 22nd, 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.
-
-From the first day of launching their attack on Soviet territory the
-Nazi conspirators, in accordance with their detailed plans, began to
-carry out the destruction of cities, towns and villages, the demolition
-of factories, collective farms, electric stations and railroads, the
-robbery and barbaric devastation of the natural cultural institutions of
-the peoples of the U.S.S.R., the devastation of museums, churches,
-historic monuments. The mass deportation of the Soviet citizens for
-slave labor to Germany, as well as the annihilation of old people, women
-and children, especially Belo-Russians and Ukrainians. The extermination
-of Jews committed throughout the territory of the Soviet Union.
-
-The above-mentioned criminal offenses were perpetrated by the German
-troops in accordance with the orders of the Nazi Government and the
-General Staff and High Command of the German armed forces.
-
-7. _Collaboration with Italy and Japan and aggressive war against the
-United States: November, 1936, to December, 1941_
-
-After the initiation of the Nazi wars of aggression the Nazi
-conspirators brought about a German-Italian-Japanese ten-year
-military-economic alliance signed at Berlin on 27th September, 1940.
-This agreement, representing a strengthening of the bonds among those
-three nations established by the earlier but more limited pact of 25th
-November, 1936, stated: “The Governments of Germany, Italy and Japan,
-considering it as a condition precedent of any lasting peace that all
-nations of the world be given each its own proper place, have decided to
-stand by and co-operate with one another in regard of their efforts in
-Greater East Asia and regions of Europe respectively wherein it is their
-prime purpose to establish and maintain a new order of things calculated
-to promote the mutual prosperity and welfare of the peoples concerned.”
-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.” Taking advantage of the wars of
-aggression then being waged by the Nazi conspirators, Japan commenced an
-attack on 7th December, 1941, against the United States of America at
-Pearl Harbor and the Philippines, and against the British Commonwealth
-of Nations, French Indo-China and the Netherlands in the southwest
-Pacific. Germany declared war against the United States on 11th
-December, 1941.
-
-(_G_) WAR CRIMES AND CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY COMMITTED IN THE COURSE OF
- EXECUTING THE CONSPIRACY FOR WHICH THE CONSPIRATORS ARE RESPONSIBLE
-
-1. Beginning with the initiation of the aggressive war on 1st September,
-1939, and throughout its extension into wars involving almost the entire
-world, the Nazi conspirators carried out their common plan or conspiracy
-to wage war in ruthless and complete disregard and violation of the laws
-and customs of war. In the course of executing the common plan or
-conspiracy there were committed the War Crimes detailed hereinafter in
-Count Three of this Indictment.
-
-2. Beginning with the initiation of their plan to seize and retain total
-control of the German State, and thereafter throughout their utilization
-of that control for foreign aggression, the Nazi conspirators carried
-out their common plan or conspiracy in ruthless and complete disregard
-and violation of the laws of humanity. In the course of executing the
-common plan or conspiracy there were committed the Crimes against
-Humanity detailed hereinafter in Count Four of this Indictment.
-
-3. By reason of all the foregoing, the defendants with divers other
-persons are guilty of a common plan or conspiracy for the accomplishment
-of Crimes against Peace; of a conspiracy to commit Crimes against
-Humanity in the course of preparation for war and in the course of
-prosecution of war; and of a conspiracy to commit War Crimes not only
-against the armed forces of their enemies but also against
-non-belligerent civilian populations.
-
-(_H_) INDIVIDUAL, GROUP AND ORGANIZATION RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE OFFENSE
- STATED IN COUNT ONE
-
-Reference is hereby, made to Appendix A of this Indictment for a
-statement of the responsibility, of the individual defendants for the
-offense set forth in this Count One of the Indictment. Reference is
-hereby made to Appendix B of this Indictment for a statement of the
-responsibility of the groups and organizations named herein as criminal
-groups and organizations for the offense set forth in this Count One of
-the Indictment.
-
-
- COUNT TWO—CRIMES AGAINST PEACE
-
- (Charter, Article 6 (_a_))
- V. Statement of the Offense
-
-All the defendants with divers other persons, during a period of years
-preceding 8th May, 1945, participated in the planning, preparation,
-initiation and waging of wars of aggression, which were also wars in
-violation of international treaties, agreements and assurances.
-
- VI. Particulars of the wars planned, prepared, initiated and waged
-
-(_A_) The wars referred to in the Statement of Offense in this Count Two
-of the Indictment and the dates of their initiation were the following:
-against Poland, 1st September, 1939; against the United Kingdom and
-France, 3rd September, 1939; against Denmark and Norway, 9th April,
-1940; against Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg, 10th May, 1940;
-against Yugoslavia and Greece, 6th April, 1941; against the U.S.S.R.,
-22nd June, 1941; and against the United States of America, 11th
-December, 1941.
-
-(_B_) Reference is hereby made to Count One of the Indictment for the
-allegations charging that these wars were wars of aggression on the part
-of the defendants.
-
-(_C_) Reference is hereby made to Appendix C annexed to this Indictment
-for a statement of particulars of the charges of violations of
-international treaties, agreements and assurances caused by the
-defendants in the course of planning, preparing and initiating these
-wars.
-
- VII. Individual, group and organization responsibility for the offense
- stated in Count Two
-
-Reference is hereby made to Appendix A of this Indictment for a
-statement of the responsibility of the individual defendants for the
-offense set forth in this Count Two of the Indictment. Reference is
-hereby made to Appendix B of this Indictment for a statement of the
-responsibility of the groups and organizations named herein as criminal
-groups and organizations for the offense set forth in this Count Two of
-the Indictment.
-
-
- COUNT THREE—WAR CRIMES
-
- (Charter, Article 6, especially 6 (_b_)).
- VIII. Statement of the Offense
-
-All the defendants committed War Crimes between 1st September, 1939, and
-8th May, 1945, in Germany and in all those countries and territories
-occupied by the German armed forces since 1st September, 1939, and in
-Austria, Czechoslovakia, and Italy, and on the High Seas.
-
-All the defendants, acting in concert with others, formulated and
-executed a common plan or conspiracy to commit War Crimes as defined in
-Article 6 (_b_) of the Charter. This plan involved, among other things,
-the practice of “total war” including methods of combat and of military
-occupation in direct conflict with the laws and customs of war, and the
-commission of crimes perpetrated on the field of battle during
-encounters with enemy armies, and against prisoners of war, and in
-occupied territories against the civilian population of such
-territories.
-
-The said War Crimes were committed by the defendants and by other
-persons for whose acts the defendants are responsible (under Article 6
-of the Charter) as such other persons when committing the said War
-Crimes performed their acts in execution of a common plan and conspiracy
-to commit the said War Crimes, in the formulation and execution of which
-plan and conspiracy all the defendants participated as leaders,
-organizers, instigators and accomplices.
-
-These methods and crimes constituted violations of international
-conventions, of internal penal laws and of the general principles of
-criminal law as derived from the criminal law of all civilized nations,
-and were involved in and part of a systematic course of conduct.
-
-(_A_) MURDER AND ILL-TREATMENT OF CIVILIAN POPULATIONS OF OR IN OCCUPIED
- TERRITORY AND ON THE HIGH SEAS
-
-Throughout the period of their occupation of territories overrun by
-their armed forces the defendants, for the purpose of systematically
-terrorizing the inhabitants, murdered and tortured civilians, and
-ill-treated them, and imprisoned them without legal process.
-
-The murders and ill-treatment were carried out by divers means,
-including shooting, hanging, gassing, starvation, gross overcrowding,
-systematic under-nutrition, systematic imposition of labor tasks beyond
-the strength of those ordered to carry them out, inadequate provision of
-surgical and medical services, kickings, beatings, brutality and torture
-of all kinds, including the use of hot irons and pulling out of
-fingernails and the performance of experiments by means of operations
-and otherwise on living human subjects. In some occupied territories the
-defendants interfered with religious services, persecuted members of the
-clergy and monastic orders, and expropriated church property. They
-conducted deliberate and systematic genocide, viz., the extermination of
-racial and national groups, against the civilian populations of certain
-occupied territories in order to destroy particular races and classes of
-people and national, racial or religious groups, particularly Jews,
-Poles and Gypsies and others.
-
-Civilians were systematically subjected to tortures of all kinds, with
-the object of obtaining information.
-
-Civilians of occupied countries were subjected systematically to
-“protective arrests” whereby they were arrested and imprisoned without
-any trial and any of the ordinary protections of the law, and they were
-imprisoned under the most unhealthy and inhumane conditions.
-
-In the concentration camps were many prisoners who were classified
-“Nacht und Nebel”. These were entirely cut off from the world and were
-allowed neither to receive nor to send letters. They disappeared without
-trace and no announcement of their fate was ever made by the German
-authorities.
-
-Such murders and ill-treatment were contrary to International
-Conventions, in particular to Article 46 of the Hague Regulations, 1907,
-the laws and customs of war, the general principles of criminal law as
-derived from the criminal laws of all civilized nations, the internal
-penal laws of the countries in which such crimes were committed, and to
-Article 6 (_b_) of the Charter.
-
-The following particulars and all the particulars appearing later in
-this count are set out herein by way of example only, are not exclusive
-of other particular cases, and are stated without prejudice to the right
-of the Prosecution to adduce evidence of other cases of murder and
-ill-treatment of civilians.
-
-1. _In France, Belgium, Denmark, Holland, Norway, Luxembourg, Italy and
-the Channel Islands (hereinafter called the “Western Countries”) and in
-that part of Germany which lies west of a line drawn due North and South
-through the centre of Berlin (hereinafter called “Western Germany”)._
-
-Such murder and ill-treatment took place in concentration camps and
-similar establishments set up by the defendants and particularly in the
-concentration camps set up at Belsen, Buchenwald, Dachau, Breendonck,
-Grini, Natzweiler, Ravensbruck, Vught and Amersfoort, and in numerous
-cities, towns and villages, including Oradour sur Glane, Trondheim and
-Oslo.
-
-Crimes committed in France or against French citizens took the following
-forms:—
-
-Arbitrary arrests were carried out under political or racial pretexts;
-they were both individual and collective; notably in Paris (round-up of
-the 18th Arrondissement by the Field Gendarmerie, round-up of the Jewish
-population of the 11th Arrondissement in August, 1941, round-up of
-Jewish intellectuals in December, 1941, round-up in July, 1942); at
-Clermont-Ferrand, (round-up of professors and students of the University
-of Strasbourg, who were taken to Clermon-Ferrand[Clermont-Ferrand?] on
-25th November, 1943); at Lyons; at Marseilles (round-up of 40,000
-persons in January, 1943); at Grenoble (round-up on 24th December,
-1943); at Cluny (round-up on 24th December, 1944); at Figeac (round-up
-in May, 1944); at Saint Pol de Leon (round-up in July, 1944); at Locminé
-(round-up on 3rd July, 1944); at Eyzieux (round-up in May, 1944) and at
-Moussey (round-up in September, 1944). These arrests were followed by
-brutal treatment and tortures carried out by the most diverse methods,
-such as immersion in icy water, asphyxiation, torture of the limbs, and
-the use of instruments of torture, such as the iron helmet and electric
-current, and practised in all the prisons of France, notably in Paris,
-Lyons, Marseilles, Rennes, Metz, Clermont-Ferrand, Toulouse, Nice,
-Grenoble, Annecy, Arras, Bethune, Lille, Loos, Valenciennes, Nancy,
-Troyes and Caen, and in the torture chambers fitted up at the Gestapo
-centres.
-
-In the concentration camps, the health regime, and the labour regime,
-were such that the rate of mortality (alleged to be from natural causes)
-attained enormous proportions, for instance:—
-
- 1. Out of a convoy of 230 French women deported from Compiegne to
-Auschwitz in January, 1943, 180 died of exhaustion by the end of four
-months.
-
- 2. 143 Frenchmen died of exhaustion between 23rd March and 6th
-May, 1943, in Block 8 at Dachau.
-
- 3. 1,797 Frenchmen died of exhaustion between 21st November, 1943,
-and 15th March, 1945, in the Block at Dora.
-
- 4. 465 Frenchmen died of general debility in November, 1944, at
-Dora.
-
- 5. 22,761 deportees died of exhaustion at Buchenwald between 1st
-January, 1943, and 15th April, 1945.
-
- 6. 11,560 detainees died of exhaustion at Dachau Camp (most of
-them in Block 30 reserved for the sick and infirm) between 1st January
-and 15th April, 1945.
-
- 7. 780 priests died of exhaustion at Mauthausen.
-
- 8. Out of 2,200 Frenchmen registered at Flossenburg Camp, 1,600
-died from supposedly natural causes.
-
-Methods used for the work of extermination in concentration camps
-were:—bad treatment, pseudo-scientific experiments (sterilization of
-women at Auschwitz and at Ravensbruck, study of the evolution of cancer
-of the womb at Auschwitz, of typhus at Buchenwald, anatomical research
-at Natzweiller, heart injections at Buchenwald, bone grafting and
-muscular excisions at Ravensbruck, etc.), gas-chambers, gas-wagons and
-crematory ovens. Of 228,000 French political and racial deportees in
-concentration camps, only 28,000 survived.
-
-In France also systematic extermination was practised, notably at Asq on
-1st April, 1944, at Colpo on 22nd July, 1944, at Buzet sur Tarn on 6th
-July, 1944 and on 17th August, 1944, at Pluvignier on 8th July, 1944, at
-Rennes on 8th June, 1944, at Grenoble on 8th July, 1944, at Saint Flour
-on 10th June, 1944, at Ruisnes on 10th July, 1944, at Nimes, at Tulle,
-and at Nice, where, in July, 1944, the victims of torture were exposed
-to the population, and at Oradour sur Glane where the entire village
-population was shot or burned alive in the church.
-
-The many charnel pits give proof of anonymous massacres. Most notable of
-these are the charnel pits of Paris (Cascade du Bois de Boulogne),
-Lyons, Saint Genies Laval, Besancon, Petit Saint Bernard, Aulnat, Caen,
-Port Louis, Charleval, Fontainebleau, Bouconne, Gabaudet, L’hermitage,
-Lorges, Morlaas, Bordelongue, Signe.
-
-In the course of a premeditated campaign of terrorism, initiated in
-Denmark by the Germans in the latter part of 1943, 600 Danish subjects
-were murdered and, in addition, throughout the German occupation of
-Denmark, large numbers of Danish subjects were subjected to torture and
-ill-treatment of all sorts. In addition, approximately 500 Danish
-subjects were murdered, by torture and otherwise, in German prisons and
-concentration camps.
-
-In Belgium between 1940 and 1944 tortures by various means, but
-identical in each place, were carried out at Brussels, Liege, Mons,
-Ghent, Namur, Antwerp, Tournai, Arlon, Charleroi and Dinant.
-
-At Vught, in Holland, when the camp was evacuated about 400 persons were
-murdered by shooting.
-
-In Luxembourg, during the German occupation, 500 persons were murdered
-and, in addition, another 521 were illegally executed, by order of such
-special tribunals as the so-called “Sondergericht”. Many more persons in
-Luxembourg were subjected to torture and mistreatment by the Gestapo.
-Not less than 4,000 Luxembourg nationals were imprisoned during the
-period of German occupation, and of these at least 400 were murdered.
-
-Between March, 1944, and April, 1945, in Italy, at least 7,500 men,
-women and children, ranging in years from infancy to extreme old age
-were murdered by the German soldiery at Civitella, in the Ardeatine
-Caves in Rome, and at other places.
-
-2. _In the U.S.S.R., i.e., in the Bielorussian, Ukrainian, Esthonian,
-Latvian, Lithuanian, Karelo-Finnish, and Moldavian Soviet Socialist
-Republics, in 19 regions of the Russian Soviet Federated Socialist
-Republic, and in Poland, Czecho-Slovakia, Yugoslavia, Greece, and the
-Balkans (hereinafter called “the Eastern Countries”) and in that part of
-Germany which lies East of a line drawn North and South through the
-centre of Berlin (hereinafter called “Eastern Germany”)._
-
-From the 1st September, 1939, when the German armed forces invaded
-Poland, and from the 22nd June, 1941, when they invaded the U.S.S.R.,
-the German Government and the German High Command adopted a systematic
-policy of murder and ill-treatment of the civilian populations of and in
-the Eastern Countries as they were successively occupied by the German
-armed forces. These murders and ill-treatments were carried on
-continuously until the German Armed Forces were driven out of the said
-countries.
-
-Such murders and ill-treatments included:—
-
-(_a_) Murders and ill-treatments at concentration camps and similar
-establishments set up by the Germans in the Eastern Countries and in
-Eastern Germany including those set up at Maidanek and Auschwitz.
-
-The said murders and ill-treatments were carried out by divers means
-including all those set out above, as follows:
-
-About 1,500,000 persons were exterminated in Maidanek and about
-4,000,000 persons were exterminated in Auschwitz, among whom were
-citizens of Poland, the U.S.S.R., the United States of America, Great
-Britain, Czechoslovakia, France and other countries.
-
-In the Lwow region and in the city of Lwow the Germans exterminated
-about 700,000 Soviet people, including 70 persons in the field of the
-arts, science and technology, and also citizens of the U. S. A., Great
-Britain, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia and Holland, brought to this region
-from other concentration camps.
-
-In the Jewish ghetto from 7th September, 1941, to 6th July, 1943, over
-133,000 persons were tortured and shot.
-
-Mass shooting of the population occurred in the suburbs of the city and
-in the Livenitz forest.
-
-In the Ganov camp 200,000 peaceful citizens were exterminated. The most
-refined methods of cruelty were employed in this extermination, such as
-disembowelling and the freezing of human beings in tubs of water. Mass
-shootings took place to the accompaniment of the music of an orchestra
-recruited from the persons interned.
-
-Beginning with June, 1943, the Germans carried out measures to hide the
-evidence of their crimes. They exhumed and burned corpses, and they
-crushed the bones with machines and used them for fertilizer.
-
-At the beginning of 1944 in the Ozarichi region of the Bielorussian
-S.S.R., before liberation by the Red Army, the Germans established three
-concentration camps without shelters, to which they committed tens of
-thousands of persons from the neighbouring territories. They brought
-many people to these camps from typhus hospitals intentionally, for the
-purpose of infecting the other persons interned and for spreading the
-disease in territories from which the Germans were being driven by the
-Red Army. In these camps there were many murders and crimes.
-
-In the Esthonian S.S.R. they shot tens of thousands of persons and in
-one day alone, 19th September, 1944, in Camp Kloga, the Germans shot
-2,000 peaceful citizens. They burned the bodies on bonfires.
-
-In the Lithuanian S.S.R. there were mass killings of Soviet citizens,
-namely: in Panerai at least 100,000; in Kaunas more than 70,000; in
-Alitus about 60,000; at Prenai more than 3,000; in Villiampol about
-8,000; in Mariampol about 7,000; in Trakai and neighbouring towns
-37,640.
-
-In the Latvian S.S.R. 577,000 persons were murdered.
-
-As a result of the whole system of internal order maintained in all
-camps, the interned persons were doomed to die.
-
-In a secret instruction entitled “the internal regime in concentration
-camps”, signed personally by Himmler in 1941 severe measures of
-punishment were set forth for the internees. Masses of prisoners of war
-were shot, or died from the cold and torture.
-
-(_b_) Murders and ill-treatments at places in the Eastern Countries and
-in the Soviet Union, other than in the camps referred to in (_a_) above,
-included, on various dates during the occupation by the German Armed
-Forces:
-
-The destruction in the Smolenck region of over 135,000 Soviet citizens.
-
-Among these, near the village of Kholmetz of the Sychev region, when the
-military authorities were required to remove the mines from an area, on
-the order of the Commander of the 101st German Infantry Division,
-Major-General Fisler, the German soldiers gathered the inhabitants of
-the village of Kholmetz and forced them to remove mines from the road.
-All of these people lost their lives as a result of exploding mines.
-
-In the Leningrad region there were shot and tortured over 172,000
-persons, including over 20,000 persons who were killed in the city of
-Leningrad by the barbarous artillery barrage and the bombings.
-
-In the Stavropol region in an anti-tank trench close to the station of
-Mineralny Vody, and in other cities, tens of thousands of persons were
-exterminated.
-
-In Pyatigorsk many were subjected to torture and criminal treatment,
-including suspension from the ceiling and other methods. Many of the
-victims of these tortures were then shot.
-
-In Krasnodar some 6,700 civilians were murdered by poison gas in gas
-vans, or were shot and tortured.
-
-In the Stalingrad region more than 40,000 persons were killed and
-tortured. After the Germans were expelled from Stalingrad, more than a
-thousand mutilated bodies of local inhabitants were found with marks of
-torture. One hundred and thirty-nine women had their arms painfully bent
-backward and held by wires. From some their breasts had been cut off and
-their ears, fingers and toes had been amputated. The bodies bore the
-marks of burns. On the bodies of the men the five pointed star was
-burned with an iron or cut with a knife. Some were disembowelled.
-
-In Orel over 5,000 persons were murdered.
-
-In Novgorod and in the Novgorod region many thousands of Soviet citizens
-were killed by shooting, starvation and torture. In Minsk tens of
-thousands of citizens were similarly killed.
-
-In the Crimea peaceful citizens were gathered on barges, taken out to
-sea and drowned, over 144,000 persons being exterminated in this manner.
-
-In the Soviet Ukraine there were monstrous criminal acts of the Nazi
-conspirators. In Babi Yar, near Kiev, they shot over 100,000 men, women,
-children and old people. In this city in January, 1941, after the
-explosion in German Headquarters on Dzerzhinsky Street the Germans
-arrested as hostages 1,250 persons—old men, minors, women with nursing
-infants. In Kiev they killed over 195,000 persons.
-
-In Rovno and the Rovno region they killed and tortured over 100,000
-peaceful citizens.
-
-In Dnepropetrovsk, near the Transport Institute, they shot or threw
-alive into a great ravine 11,000 women, old men and children.
-
-In Kamenetz-Podolsk Region 31,000 Jews were shot and exterminated,
-including 13,000 persons brought there from Hungary.
-
-In the Odessa Region at least 200,000 Soviet citizens were killed.
-
-In Kharkov about 195,000 persons were either tortured to death, shot or
-gassed in gas vans.
-
-In Gomel the Germans rounded up the population in prison, and tortured
-and tormented them, and then took them to the centre of the city and
-shot them in public.
-
-In the city of Lyda in the Grodenen region on 8th May, 1942, 5,670
-persons were completely undressed, driven into pens in groups of 100 and
-then shot by machine guns. Many were thrown in the graves while they
-were still alive.
-
-Along with adults the Nazi conspirators mercilessly destroyed even
-children. They killed them with their parents, in groups and alone. They
-killed them in children’s homes and hospitals, burying the living in the
-graves, throwing them into flames, stabbing them with bayonets,
-poisoning them, conducting experiments upon them, extracting their blood
-for the use of the German Army, throwing them into prison and Gestapo
-torture chambers and concentration camps, where the children died from
-hunger, torture and epidemic diseases.
-
-From 6th September to 24th November, 1942, in the region of Brest,
-Pinsk, Kobren, Dyvina, Malority and Berezy-Kartuzsky about 400 children
-were shot by German punitive units.
-
-In the Yanov camp in the city of Lwow the Germans killed 8,000 children
-in two months.
-
-In the resort of Tiberda the Germans annihilated 500 children suffering
-from tuberculosis of the bone, who were in the sanatorium for the cure.
-
-On the territory of the Latvian S.S.R. the German usurpers killed
-thousands of children, which they had brought there with their parents
-from the Bielorussian S.S.R., and from the Kalinin, Kaluga and other
-regions of the R.S.F.S.R.
-
-In Czechoslovakia as a result of torture, beating, hanging, and
-shootings, there were annihilated in Gestapo prisons in Brno, Seim and
-other places over 20,000 persons. Moreover many thousands of internees
-were subjected to criminal treatment, beatings and torture.
-
-Both before the war, as well as during the war, thousands of Czech
-patriots, in particular catholics and protestants, lawyers, doctors,
-teachers, etc., were arrested as hostages and imprisoned. A large number
-of these hostages were killed by the Germans.
-
-In Greece in October, 1941, the male populations between 16 and 60 years
-of age of the Greek villages Amelofito, Kliston, Kizonia Mesovunos,
-Selli, Ano-Kerzilion and Kato-Kerzilion were shot—in all 416 persons.
-
-In Yugoslavia many thousands of civilians were murdered. Other examples
-are given under paragraph (_D_), “Killing of Hostages”, below.
-
- (_B_) DEPORTATION FOR SLAVE LABOUR AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES OF THE
- CIVILIAN POPULATIONS OF AND IN OCCUPIED TERRITORIES
-
-During the whole period of the occupation by Germany of both the Western
-and the Eastern Countries it was the policy of the German Government and
-of the German High Command to deport able bodied citizens from such
-occupied countries to Germany and to other occupied countries for the
-purpose of slave labour upon defence works, in factories and in other
-tasks connected with the German War effort.
-
-In pursuance of such policy there were mass deportations from all the
-Western and Eastern countries for such purposes during the whole period
-of the occupation.
-
-Such deportations were contrary to international Conventions, in
-particular to Article 46 of the Hague Regulations, 1907, the laws and
-customs of war, the general principles of criminal law as derived from
-the criminal laws of all civilized nations, the internal penal laws of
-the countries in which such crimes were committed and to Article 6 (_b_)
-of the Charter.
-
-Particulars of deportations, by way of example only and without
-prejudice to the production of evidence of other cases are as follows:
-
-1. From the Western Countries:
-
-From France the following deportations of persons for political and
-racial reasons took place—each of which consisted of from 1,500-2,500
-deportees:
-
- 1940 3 Transports
- 1941 14 Transports
- 1942 104 Transports
- 1943 257 Transports
- 1944 326 Transports
-
-Such deportees were subjected to the most barbarous conditions of
-overcrowding; they were provided with wholly insufficient clothing and
-were given little or no food for several days.
-
-The conditions of transport were such that many deportees died in the
-course of the voyage, for example:
-
-In one of the wagons of the train which left Compiegne for Buchenwald,
-on the 17th September, 1943, 80 men died out of 130;
-
-On 4th June, 1944, 484 bodies were taken out of the train at Sarrebourg;
-
-In a train which left Compiegne on the 2nd July, 1944, for Dachau, more
-than 600 dead were found on arrival, i.e., one-third of the total
-number;
-
-In a train which left Compiegne on the 16th January, 1944, for
-Buchenwald more than 100 men were confined in each wagon, the dead and
-the wounded being heaped in the last wagon during the voyage;
-
-In April, 1945, of 12,000 internees evacuated from Buchenwald, 4,000
-only were still alive when the marching column arrived near Regensburg.
-
-During the German occupation of Denmark, 5,200 Danish subjects were
-deported to Germany and there imprisoned in concentration camps and
-other places.
-
-In 1942 and thereafter 6,000 nationals of Luxembourg were departed from
-their country under deplorable conditions as a result of which many of
-them perished.
-
-From Belgium between 1940 and 1941 at least 190,000 civilians were
-deported to Germany and used as slave labour. Such deportees were
-subjected to ill-treatment and many of them were compelled to work in
-armament factories.
-
-From Holland, between 1940 and 1944 nearly half a million civilians were
-deported to Germany and to other occupied countries.
-
-2. From the Eastern Countries:
-
-The German occupying authorities deported from the Soviet Union to
-slavery about 4,978,000 Soviet citizens.
-
-750,000 Czechoslovakian citizens were taken away for forced labor
-outside the Czechoslovak frontiers in the interior of the German war
-machine.
-
-On June 4, 1941, in the city of Zagreb (Yugoslavia) a meeting of German
-representatives was called with the Councillor Von Troll presiding. The
-purpose was to set up the means of deporting the Yugoslav population
-from Slovenia. Tens of thousands of persons were deported in carrying
-out this plan.
-
-(_C_) MURDER AND ILL-TREATMENT OF PRISONERS OF WAR, AND OF OTHER MEMBERS
- OF THE ARMED FORCES OF THE COUNTRIES WITH WHOM GERMANY WAS AT WAR, AND
- OF PERSONS ON THE HIGH SEAS
-
-The Defendants murdered and ill-treated prisoners of war by denying them
-adequate food, shelter, clothing and medical care and attention; by
-forcing them to labor in inhumane conditions; by torturing them and
-subjecting them to inhuman indignities and by killing them. The German
-Government and the German High Command imprisoned prisoners of war in
-various concentration camps, where they were killed and subjected to
-inhuman treatment by the various methods set forth in paragraph VIII
-(_A_). Members of the armed forces of the countries with whom Germany
-was at war were frequently murdered while in the act of surrendering.
-These murders and ill-treatment were contrary to International
-Conventions, particularly Articles 4, 5, 6, and 7 of the Hague
-Regulations, 1907, and to Articles 2, 3, 4 and 6 of the Prisoners of War
-Convention (Geneva 1929) the laws and customs of war, the general
-principles of criminal law as derived from the criminal laws of all
-civilized nations, the internal penal laws of the countries in which
-such crimes were committed and to Article 6 (_b_) of the Charter.
-
-Particulars by way of examples and without prejudice to the production
-of evidence of other cases, are as follows:
-
-1. In the Western Countries:
-
-French officers who escaped from Oflag X C were handed over to the
-Gestapo and disappeared; others were murdered by their guards; others
-sent to concentration camps and exterminated. Among others, the men of
-Stalag VI C were sent to Buchenwald.
-
-Frequently prisoners captured on the Western Front were obliged to march
-to the camps until they completely collapsed. Some of them walked more
-than 600 kilometers with hardly any food; they marched on for 48 hours
-running, without being fed; among them a certain number died of
-exhaustion or of hunger; stragglers were systematically murdered.
-
-The same crimes have been committed in 1943, 1944 and 1945 when the
-occupants of the camps were withdrawn before the Allied advance;
-particularly during the withdrawal of the prisoners of Sagan on February
-8th, 1945.
-
-Bodily punishments were inflicted upon non-commissioned officers and
-cadets who refused to work. On December 24th, 1943, three French N.C.O’s
-were murdered for that motive in Stalag IV A. Many ill-treatments were
-inflicted without motive on other ranks: stabbing with bayonets,
-striking with rifle-butts and whipping; in Stalag XX B the sick
-themselves were beaten many times by sentries; in Stalag III B and
-Stalag III C, worn-out prisoners were murdered or grievously wounded. In
-military gaols in Graudenz for instance, in reprisal camps as in
-Rava-Ruska, the food was so insufficient that the men lost more than 15
-kilograms in a few weeks. In May, 1942, 1 loaf of bread only was
-distributed in Rava-Ruska to each group of 35 men.
-
-Orders were given to transfer French officers in chains to the camp of
-Mauthausen after they had tried to escape. At their arrival in camp they
-were murdered, either by shooting, or by gas and their bodies destroyed
-in the crematorium.
-
-American prisoners, officers and men, were murdered in Normandy during
-the summer of 1944 and in the Ardennes in December, 1944. American
-prisoners were starved, beaten and otherwise mistreated in numerous
-Stalag in Germany and in the occupied countries, particularly in 1943,
-1944 and 1945.
-
-2. In the Eastern Countries:
-
-At Orel prisoners of war were exterminated by starvation, shooting,
-exposure, and poisoning.
-
-Soviet prisoners of war were murdered en masse on orders from the High
-Command and the Headquarters of the SIPO and SD. Tens of thousands of
-Soviet prisoners of war were tortured and murdered at the “Gross
-Lazaret” at Slavuta.
-
-In addition, many thousands of the persons referred to in paragraph VIII
-(A) 2, above, were Soviet prisoners of war.
-
-Prisoners of war who escaped and were recaptured were handed over to
-SIPO and SD for shooting.
-
-Frenchmen fighting with the Soviet Army who were captured were handed
-over to the Vichy Government for “proceedings”.
-
-In March, 1944, 50 R.A.F. officers who escaped from Stalag Luft III at
-Sagan, when recaptured, were murdered.
-
-In September, 1941, 11,000 Polish officers, who were prisoners of war
-were killed in the Katyn Forest near Smolensk.
-
-In Yugoslavia the German Command and the occupying authorities in the
-person of the chief officials of the Police, the SS troops (Police
-Lieutenant General Rosener) and the Divisional Group Command (General
-Kuebler and others) in the period 1941-43 ordered the shooting of
-prisoners of war.
-
- (_D_) KILLING OF HOSTAGES
-
-Throughout the territories occupied by the German armed forces in the
-course of waging aggressive wars, the defendants adopted and put into
-effect on a wide scale the practice of taking, and of killing, hostages
-from the civilian population. These acts were contrary to International
-Conventions, particularly Article 50 of the Hague Regulations, 1907, the
-laws and customs of war, the general principles of criminal law as
-derived from the criminal laws of all civilized nations, the internal
-penal laws of the countries in which such crimes were committed and to
-Article 6 (_b_) of the Charter.
-
-Particulars by way of example and without prejudice to the production of
-evidence of other cases, are as follows:
-
-1. In the Western Countries:
-
-In France hostages were executed either individually or collectively;
-these executions took place in all the big cities of France, among
-others in Paris, Bordeaux and Nantes, as well as at Chateabriant.
-
-In Holland many hundreds of hostages were shot at the following among
-other places—Rotterdam, Apeldoorn, Amsterdam, Benschop and Haarlem.
-
-In Belgium many hundreds of hostages were shot during the period 1940 to
-1944.
-
-2. In the Eastern Countries:
-
-At Kragnevatz in Yugoslavia 2,300 hostages were shot in October, 1941.
-
-At Kralevo in Yugoslavia 5,000 hostages were shot.
-
- (_E_) PLUNDER OF PUBLIC AND PRIVATE PROPERTY
-
-The defendants ruthlessly exploited the people and the material
-resources of the countries they occupied, in order to strengthen the
-Nazi war machine, to depopulate and impoverish the rest of Europe, to
-enrich themselves and their adherents, and to promote German economic
-supremacy over Europe.
-
-The Defendants engaged in the following acts and practices, among
-others:
-
-1. They degraded the standard of life of the people of occupied
-countries and caused starvation, by stripping occupied countries of
-foodstuffs for removal to Germany.
-
-2. They seized raw materials and industrial machinery in all of the
-occupied countries, removed them to Germany and used them in the
-interest of the German war effort and the German economy.
-
-3. In all the occupied countries, in varying degrees, they confiscated
-businesses, plants and other property.
-
-4. In an attempt to give color of legality to illegal acquisitions of
-property, they forced owners of property to go through the forms of
-“voluntary” and “legal” transfers.
-
-5. They established comprehensive controls over the economies of all of
-the occupied countries and directed their resources, their production
-and their labor in the interests of the German war economy, depriving
-the local populations of the products of essential industries.
-
-6. By a variety of financial mechanisms, they despoiled all of the
-occupied countries of essential commodities and accumulated wealth,
-debased the local currency systems and disrupted the local economies.
-They financed extensive purchases in occupied countries through clearing
-arrangements by which they exacted loans from the occupied countries.
-They imposed occupation levies, exacted financial contributions, and
-issued occupation currency, far in excess of occupation costs. They used
-these excess funds to finance the purchase of business properties and
-supplies in the occupied countries.
-
-7. They abrogated the rights of the local populations in the occupied
-portions of the USSR and in Poland and in other countries to develop or
-manage agricultural and industrial properties, and reserved this area
-for exclusive settlement, development, and ownership by Germans and
-their so-called racial brethren.
-
-8. In further development of their plan of criminal exploitation, they
-destroyed industrial cities, cultural monuments, scientific
-institutions, and property of all types in the occupied territories to
-eliminate the possibility of competition with Germany.
-
-9. From their program of terror, slavery, spoliation and organized
-outrage, the Nazi conspirators created an instrument for the personal
-profit and aggrandizement of themselves and their adherents. They
-secured for themselves and their adherents
-
- (_a_) Positions in administration of business involving power,
-influence and lucrative perquisites.
-
- (_b_) The use of cheap forced labor.
-
- (_c_) The acquisition on advantageous terms of foreign properties,
-business interests, and raw materials.
-
- (_d_) The basis for the industrial supremacy of Germany.
-
-These acts were contrary to International Conventions, particularly
-Articles 46 to 56 inclusive of the Hague Regulations, 1907, the laws and
-customs of war, the general principles of criminal law as derived from
-the criminal laws of all civilized nations, the internal penal laws of
-the countries in which such crimes were committed and to Article 6 (_b_)
-of the Charter.
-
-Particulars (by way of example and without prejudice to the production
-of evidence of other cases) are as follows:
-
-1. Western Countries:
-
-There was plundered from the Western Countries from 1940 to 1944, works
-of art, artistic objects, pictures, plastics, furniture, textiles,
-antique pieces and similar articles of enormous value to the number of
-21,903.
-
-In France statistics show the following:
-
- _Removal of Raw Materials_
- Coal 63,000,000 tons
- Electric energy 20,976 Mkwh
- Petrol and fuel 1,943,750 tons
- Iron ore 74,848,000 tons
- Siderurgical products 3,822,000 tons
- Bauxite 1,211,800 tons
- Cement 5,984,000 tons
- Lime 1,888,000 tons
- Quarry products 25,872,000 tons
-
-and various other products to a total value of 79,961,423,000 francs.
-
- _Removal of Industrial Equipment_
-
-Total: 9,759,861,000 Francs, of which 2,626,479,000 Francs of Machine
-Tools.
-
- _Removal of Agricultural Produce_
-
-Total: 126,655,852,000 francs, i.e., for the principal
-
- Products:
- Wheat 2,947,337 tons
- Oats 2,354,080 tons
- Milk 790,000 hectolitres
- Milk (concentrated 460,000 hectolitres
- and in powder)
- Butter 76,000 tons
- Cheese 49,000 tons
- Potatoes 725,975 tons
- Various vegetables 575,000 tons
- Wine 7,647,000 hectolitres
- Champagne 87,000,000 bottles
- Beer 3,821,520 hectolitres
- Various kinds of 1,830,000 hectolitres
- alcohol
-
- _Removal of Manufactured Products_
-
-to a total of 184,640,000 francs.
-
- _Plundering_
-
-Francs: 257,020,024,000 from private enterprise.
-
-Francs: 55,000,100,000 from the State.
-
- _Financial Exploitation_
-
-From June 1940 to September 1944 the French Treasury was compelled to
-pay to Germany 631,866,000,000 francs.
-
- _Looting and Destruction of Works of Art_
-
-The museums of Nantes, Nancy, Old-Marseilles were looted.
-
-Private collections of great value were stolen. In this way Raphaels,
-Vermeers, Van Dycks and works of Rubens, Holbein, Rembrandt, Watteau,
-Boucher disappeared. Germany compelled France to deliver up “The Mystic
-Lamb” by Van Eyck, which Belgium had entrusted to her.
-
-In Norway and other occupied countries decrees were made by which the
-property of many civilians, societies, etc., was confiscated. An immense
-amount of property of every kind was plundered from France, Belgium,
-Norway, Holland and Luxembourg.
-
-As a result of the economic plundering of Belgium between 1940 and 1944
-the damage suffered amounted to 175 billions of Belgian francs.
-
-2. Eastern Countries:
-
-During the occupation of the Eastern Countries the German Government and
-the German High Command carried out, as a systematic policy, a
-continuous course of plunder and destruction including:—
-
-On the territory of the Soviet Union the Nazi conspirators destroyed or
-severely damaged 1,710 cities and more than 70,000 villages and hamlets,
-more than 6,000,000 buildings and made homeless about 25,000,000
-persons.
-
-Among the cities which suffered most destruction are Stalingrad,
-Sevastopol, Kiev, Minsk, Odessa, Smolensk, Novgorod, Pskov, Orel,
-Kharkov, Voronezh, Rostov-on-Don, Stalino and Leningrad.
-
-As is evident from an official memorandum of the German command, the
-Nazi conspirators planned the complete annihilation of entire Soviet
-cities. In completely secret order of the Chief of the Naval Staff
-(Staff Ia No. 1601/41, dated 29, IX, 1941), addressed only to Staff
-officers, it was said:
-
-“The Fuehrer has decided to erase from the face of the earth St.
-Petersburgh. The existence of this large city will have no further
-interest after Soviet Russia is destroyed. Finland has also said that
-the existence of this city on her new border is not desirable from her
-point of view. The original request of the Navy that docks, harbor, etc.
-necessary for the fleet be preserved—is known to the Supreme Commander
-of the Military Forces, but the basic principles of carrying out
-operations against St. Petersburgh do not make it possible to satisfy
-this request.
-
-It is proposed to approach near to the city and to destroy it with the
-aid of an artillery barrage from weapons of different calibres and with
-long air attacks.
-
-The problem of the life of the population and the provisioning of them
-is a problem which cannot and must not be decided by us.
-
-In this war * * * we are not interested in preserving even a part of the
-population of this large city.”
-
-The Germans destroyed 427 museums, among them the wealthy museums of
-Leningrad, Smolensk, Stalingrad, Novgorod, Poltava and others.
-
-In Pyatigorsk the art objects brought there from the Rostov museum were
-seized.
-
-The losses suffered by the coal mining industry alone in the Stalin
-Region amount to 2,000,000,000 rubles. There was colossal destruction of
-industrial establishments in Makerevka, Carlovka, Yenakievo,
-Konstantinovka, Mariupol, from which most of the machinery and factories
-were removed.
-
-Stealing of huge dimensions and the destruction of industrial, cultural
-and other property was typified in Kiev. More than 4,000,000 books,
-magazines and manuscripts (many of which were very valuable and even
-unique) and a large number of artistic productions and valuables of
-different kinds were stolen and carried away.
-
-Many valuable art productions were taken away from Riga.
-
-The extent of the plunder of cultural valuables is evidenced by the fact
-that 100,000 valuable volumes and 70 cases of ancient periodicals and
-precious monographs were carried away by Rosenberg’s staff alone.
-
-Among further examples of these crimes are:
-
-Wanton devastation of the city of Novgorod and of many historical and
-artistic monuments there. Wanton devastation and plunder of the city of
-Rovno and of its province. The destruction of the industrial, cultural
-and other property in Odessa. The destruction of cities and villages in
-Soviet Karelia. The destruction in Estonia of cultural, industrial and
-other buildings.
-
-The destruction of medical and prophylactic institutes, the destruction
-of agriculture and industry in Lithuania, the destruction of cities in
-Latvia.
-
-The Germans approached monuments of culture, dear to the Soviet people,
-with special hatred. They broke up the estate of the poet Pushkin in
-Mikhailovskoye, desecrating his grave, and destroying the neighboring
-villages and the Svyatogor monastery.
-
-They destroyed the estate and museum of Lev Tolstoy, “Yasnaya Polyana”
-and desecrated the grave of the great writer. They destroyed in Klin the
-museum of Tsaikovsky and in Penaty, the museum of the painter Repin and
-many others.
-
-The Nazi conspirators destroyed 1,670 Greek Orthodox Churches, 237 Roman
-Catholic Churches, 67 Chapels, 532 Synagogues, etc.
-
-They broke up, desecrated and senselessly destroyed also the most
-valuable monuments of the Christian Church, such as Kievo-Pecherskaya
-Lavra, Novy Jerusalem in the Istrin region, and the most ancient
-monasteries and churches.
-
-Destruction in Esthonia of cultural industrial and other premises:
-burning down of many thousands of residential buildings: removal of
-10,000 works of art: destruction of medical and prophylactic
-institutions. Plunder and removal to Germany of immense quantities of
-agricultural stock including horses, cows, pigs, poultry, beehives and
-agricultural machines of all kinds.
-
-Destruction of agriculture, enslavement of peasants and looting of stock
-and produce in Lithuania.
-
-In the Latvian Republic destruction of the agriculture by the looting of
-all stock, machinery and produce.
-
-The result of this policy of plunder and destruction was to lay waste
-the land and cause utter desolation.
-
-The overall value of the material loss which the U.S.S.R. has borne, is
-computed to be 679,000,000,000 rubles, in state prices of 1941.
-
-Following the German occupation of Czechoslovakia on 15 March 1939 the
-defendants seized and stole large stocks of raw materials, copper, tin,
-iron, cotton, and food; caused to be taken to Germany large amounts of
-railway rolling stock, and many engines, carriages, steam vessels and
-trolley buses; plundered libraries, laboratories, and art museums of
-books, pictures, objects of art, scientific apparatus and furniture;
-stole all gold reserves and foreign exchange of Czechoslovakia,
-including 23,000 kilograms of gold of a nominal value of £5,265,000;
-fraudulently acquired control and thereafter looted the Czech banks and
-many Czech industrial enterprises; and otherwise stole, looted and
-misappropriated Czechoslovak public and private property. The total sum
-of defendants’ economic spoliation of Czechoslovakia from 1938 to 1945
-is estimated at 200,000,000,000 Czechoslovak crowns.
-
- (_F_) THE EXACTION OF COLLECTIVE PENALTIES
-
-The Germans pursued a systematic policy of inflicting, in all the
-occupied countries, collective penalties, pecuniary and otherwise, upon
-the population for acts of individuals for which it could not be
-regarded as collectively responsible; this was done at many places,
-including Oslo, Stavanger, Trondheim and Rogaland.
-
-Similar instances occurred in France, among others in Dijon, Nantes and
-as regards the Jewish population in the occupied territories. The total
-amount of fines imposed on French communities add up to 1,157,179,484
-francs made up as follows—
-
- A fine on the Jewish population 1,000,000,000
- Various fines 157,179,484
-
-These acts violated Article 50, Hague Regulations, 1907, the laws and
-customs of war, the general principles of criminal law as derived from
-the criminal laws of all civilized nations, the internal penal laws of
-the countries in which such crimes were committed and Article 6 (_b_) of
-the Charter.
-
- (_G_) WANTON DESTRUCTION OF CITIES, TOWNS AND VILLAGES AND DEVASTATION
- NOT JUSTIFIED BY MILITARY NECESSITY
-
-The Defendants wantonly destroyed cities, towns and villages and
-committed other acts of devastation without military justification or
-necessity. These acts violated Articles 46 and 50 of the Hague
-Regulations, 1907, the laws and customs of war, the general principles
-of criminal law as derived from the criminal laws of all civilized
-nations, the internal penal laws of the countries in which such crimes
-were committed and Article 6 (_b_) of the Charter.
-
-Particulars by way of example only and without prejudice to the
-production of evidence of other cases are as follows:
-
-1. Western Countries:
-
-In March, 1941, part of Lofoten in Norway was destroyed.
-
-In April, 1942, the town of Telerag in Norway was destroyed.
-
-Entire villages were destroyed in France, among others
-Oradour-sur-Glane, Saint-Nizier and, in the Vercors, La Mure, Vassieux,
-La Chapelle en Vercors. The town of Saint Dié was burnt down and
-destroyed. The Old Port District of Marseilles was dynamited in the
-beginning of 1943 and resorts along the Atlantic and the Mediterranean
-coasts, particularly the town of Sanary, were demolished.
-
-In Holland there was most widespread and extensive destruction, not
-justified by military necessity, including the destruction of harbours,
-locks, dykes and bridges: immense devastation was also caused by
-inundations which equally were not justified by military necessity.
-
-2. Eastern Countries:
-
-In the Eastern Countries the Defendants pursued a policy of wanton
-destruction and devastation: some particulars of this (without prejudice
-to the production of evidence of other cases) are set out above under
-the heading—“Plunder of Public and Private Property”.
-
-In Greece in 1941, the villages of Amelofito, Kliston, Kizonia,
-Messovunos, Selli, Ano-Kerzilion and Kato-Kerzilion were utterly
-destroyed.
-
-In Yugoslavia on 15 August, 1941, the German military command officially
-announced that the village of Skela was burned to the ground and the
-inhabitants killed on the order of the command.
-
-On the order of the Field Commander Hoersterberg a punitive expedition
-from the SS troops and the field police destroyed the villages of
-Machkovats, and Kriva Reka in Serbia and all the inhabitants were
-killed.
-
-General Fritz Neidhold (369 Infantry Division) on 11 September, 1944,
-gave an order to destroy the villages of Zagniezde and Udora, hanging
-all the men and driving away all the women and children.
-
-In Czechoslovakia the Nazi conspirators also practised the senseless
-destruction of populated places. Lezaky and Lidice were burned to the
-ground and the inhabitants killed.
-
- (_H_) CONSCRIPTION OF CIVILIAN LABOUR
-
-Throughout the occupied territories the defendants conscripted and
-forced the inhabitants to labour and requisitioned their services for
-purposes other than meeting the needs of the armies of occupation and to
-an extent far out of proportion to the resources of the countries
-involved. All the civilians so conscripted were forced to work for the
-German war effort. Civilians were required to register and many of those
-who registered were forced to join the Todt Organization and the Speer
-Legion, both of which were semi-military organizations involving some
-military training. These acts violated Articles 46 and 52 of the Hague
-Regulations, 1907, the laws and customs of war, the general principles
-of criminal law as derived from the criminal laws of all civilized
-nations, the internal penal laws of the countries in which such crimes
-were committed and Article 6 (_b_) of the Charter.
-
-Particulars, by way of example only and without prejudice to the
-production of evidence of other cases, are as follows:
-
-1. Western Countries:
-
-In France, from 1942 to 1944, 963,813 persons were compelled to work in
-Germany and 737,000 to work in France for the German Army.
-
-In Luxembourg in 1944 alone, 2,500 men and 500 girls were conscripted
-for forced labor.
-
-2. Eastern Countries:
-
-Of the large number of citizens of the Soviet Union and of
-Czechoslovakia referred to under Count Three VIII (_B_) 2 above many
-were so conscripted for forced labor.
-
-(_I_) FORCING CIVILIANS OF OCCUPIED TERRITORIES TO SWEAR ALLEGIANCE TO A
- HOSTILE POWER
-
-Civilians who joined the Speer Legion, as set forth in paragraph (_H_)
-above, were required under threat of depriving them of food, money and
-identity papers, to swear a solemn oath acknowledging unconditional
-obedience to Adolf Hitler, the Fuehrer of Germany, which was to them a
-hostile power.
-
-In Lorraine, Civil Servants were obliged, in order to retain their
-positions, to sign a declaration by which they acknowledged the “return
-of their Country to the Reich”, pledged themselves to obey without
-reservation the orders of their Chiefs and put themselves “at the active
-service of the Fuehrer and the Great National Socialist Germany”.
-
-A similar pledge was imposed on Alsatian Civil Servants by threat of
-deportation or internment.
-
-These acts violated Article 45 of the Hague Regulations, 1907, the laws
-and customs of war, the general principles of international law and
-Article 6 (_b_) of the Charter.
-
- (_J_) GERMANIZATION OF OCCUPIED TERRITORIES
-
-In certain occupied territories purportedly annexed to Germany the
-defendants methodically and pursuant to plan endeavoured to assimilate
-those territories politically, culturally, socially and economically
-into the German Reich. The defendants endeavoured to obliterate the
-former national character of these territories. In pursuance of these
-plans and endeavours, the defendants forcibly deported inhabitants who
-were predominantly non-German and introduced thousands of German
-colonists.
-
-This plan included economic domination, physical conquest, installation
-of puppet Governments, purported de jure annexation and enforced
-conscription into the German Armed Forces.
-
-This was carried out in most of the Occupied Countries including:
-Norway, France (particularly in the departments of Upper Rhine, Lower
-Rhine, Moselle, Ardennes, Aisne, Nord, Meurthe and Moselle), Luxembourg,
-the Soviet Union, Denmark, Belgium, Holland.
-
-In France in the Departments of the Aisne, the Nord, the Meurthe and
-Moselle, and especially in that of the Ardennes, rural properties were
-seized by a German state organization which tried to have them exploited
-under German direction; the landowners of these exploitations were
-dispossessed and turned into agricultural labourers.
-
-In the Department of the Upper Rhine, the Lower Rhine and the Moselle,
-the methods of Germanization were those of annexation followed by
-conscription.
-
-1. From the month of August, 1940, officials who refused to take the
-oath of allegiance to the Reich were expelled. On September 21st
-expulsions and deportation of populations began and on November 22nd,
-1940, more than 70,000 Lorrainers or Alsacians were driven into the
-South zone of France. From July 31, 1941, onwards, more than 100,000
-persons were deported into the Eastern regions of the Reich or to
-Poland. All the property of the deportees or expelled persons was
-confiscated. At the same time, 80,000 Germans coming from the Saar or
-from Westphalia, were installed in Lorraine and 2,000 farms belonging to
-French people were transferred to Germans.
-
-2. From 2nd January, 1942, all the young people of the Departments of
-the Upper Rhine and the Lower Rhine, aged from 10 to 18 years, were
-incorporated in the Hitler Youth. The same thing was done in the Moselle
-from 4th August, 1942. From 1940 all the French schools were closed,
-their staffs expelled, and the German school system was introduced in
-the three departments.
-
-3. On the 28th September, 1940, an order applicable to the Department of
-the Moselle ordained the Germanization of all the surnames and christian
-names which were French in form. The same thing was done from the 15th
-January, 1943, in the Departments of the Upper Rhine and the Lower
-Rhine.
-
-4. Two orders from the 23rd to 24th August, 1942, imposed by force
-German nationality on French citizens.
-
-5. On the 8th May, 1941, for the Upper Rhine and the Lower Rhine, the
-23rd April, 1941, for the Moselle, orders were promulgated enforcing
-compulsory labour service on all French citizens of either sex aged from
-17 to 25 years. From the 1st January, 1942, for young men and from the
-26th January, 1942, for young girls, national labour service was
-effectively organized in the Moselle. It was from the 27th August, 1942,
-in the Upper-Rhine and in the Lower Rhine for young men only. The
-classes 1940, 1941, 1942 were called up.
-
-6. These classes were retained in the Wehrmacht on the expiration of
-their time and labour service. On the 19th August, 1942, an order
-instituted compulsory military service in the Moselle. On the 25th
-August, 1942, the classes 1940-44 were called up in three Departments.
-Conscription was enforced by the German authorities in conformity with
-the provisions of German legislation. The first revision boards took
-place from the 3rd September, 1942. Later in the Upper Rhine and the
-Lower Rhine new levies were effected everywhere on classes 1928 to 1939
-inclusive. The French people who refused to obey these laws were
-considered as deserters and their families were deported, while their
-property was confiscated.
-
-These acts violated Articles 43, 46, 55 and 56 of the Hague Regulations,
-1907, the laws and customs of war, the general principles of criminal
-law as derived from the criminal laws of all civilized nations, the
-internal penal laws of the countries in which such crimes were committed
-and Article 6 (_b_) of the Charter.
-
- IX. Individual, group and organization responsibility for the offense
- stated in Count Three
-
-Reference is hereby made to Appendix A of this Indictment for a
-statement of the responsibility of the individual defendants for the
-offense set forth in this Count Three of the Indictment. Reference is
-hereby made to Appendix B of this Indictment for a statement of the
-responsibility of the groups, and organizations named herein as criminal
-groups and organizations for the offense set forth in this Count Three
-of the Indictment.
-
-
- COUNT FOUR—CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY
-
- (Charter, Article 6, especially 6 (_c_).)
- X. Statement of the Offense
-
-All the defendants committed Crimes against Humanity during a period of
-years preceding 8th May, 1945 in Germany and in all those countries and
-territories occupied by the German armed forces since 1st September,
-1939 and in Austria and Czechoslovakia and in Italy and on the High
-Seas.
-
-All the defendants, acting in concert with others, formulated and
-executed a common plan or conspiracy to commit Crimes against Humanity
-as defined in Article 6(_c_) of the Charter. This plan involved, among
-other things, the murder and persecution of all who were or who were
-suspected of being hostile to the Nazi Party and all who were or who
-were suspected of being opposed to the common plan alleged in Count One.
-
-The said Crimes against Humanity were committed by the defendants and by
-other persons for whose acts the defendants are responsible (under
-Article 6 of the Charter) as such other persons, when committing the
-said War Crimes, performed their acts in execution of a common plan and
-conspiracy to commit the said War Crimes, in the formulation and
-execution of which plan and conspiracy all the defendants participated
-as leaders, organizers, instigators and accomplices.
-
-These methods and crimes constituted violations of international
-conventions, of internal penal laws, of the general principles of
-criminal law as derived from the criminal law of all civilized nations
-and were involved in and part of a systematic course of conduct. The
-said acts were contrary to Article 6 of the Charter.
-
-The prosecution will rely upon the facts pleaded under Count Three as
-also constituting Crimes against Humanity.
-
-(_A_) MURDER, EXTERMINATION, ENSLAVEMENT, DEPORTATION AND OTHER INHUMANE
- ACTS COMMITTED AGAINST CIVILIAN POPULATIONS BEFORE AND DURING THE WAR
-
-For the purposes set out above, the defendants adopted a policy of
-persecution, repression, and extermination of all civilians in Germany
-who were, or who were believed to, or who were believed likely to
-become, hostile to the Nazi Government and the common plan or conspiracy
-described in Count One. They imprisoned such persons without judicial
-process, holding them in “protective custody” and concentration camps,
-and subjected them to persecution, degradation, despoilment,
-enslavement, torture and murder.
-
-Special courts were established to carry out the will of the
-conspirators; favoured branches or agencies of the State and Party were
-permitted to operate outside the range even of nazified law and to crush
-all tendencies and elements which were considered “undesirable”. The
-various concentration camps included Buchenwald, which was established
-in 1933 and Dachau, which was established in 1934. At these and other
-camps the civilians were put to slave labour, and murdered and
-ill-treated by divers means, including those set out in Count Three
-above, and these acts and policies were continued and extended to the
-occupied countries after the 1st September, 1939, and until 8th May,
-1945.
-
- (_B_) PERSECUTION ON POLITICAL, RACIAL AND RELIGIOUS GROUNDS IN
- EXECUTION OF AND IN CONNECTION WITH THE COMMON PLAN MENTIONED IN COUNT
- ONE
-
-As above stated, in execution of and in connection with the common plan
-mentioned in Count One, opponents of the German Government were
-exterminated and persecuted. These persecutions were directed against
-Jews. They were also directed against persons whose political belief or
-spiritual aspirations were deemed to be in conflict with the aims of the
-Nazis.
-
-Jews were systematically persecuted since 1933; they were deprived of
-their liberty, thrown into concentration camps where they were murdered
-and ill-treated. Their property was confiscated. Hundreds of thousands
-of Jews were so treated before the 1st September, 1939.
-
-Since the 1st September, 1939, the persecution of the Jews was
-redoubled: millions of Jews from Germany and from the occupied Western
-Countries were sent to the Eastern Countries for extermination.
-
-Particulars by way of example and without prejudice to the production of
-evidence of other cases are as follows:
-
-The Nazis murdered amongst others Chancellor Dollfuss, the Social
-Democrat Breitscheid and the Communist Thaelmann. They imprisoned in
-concentration camps numerous political and religious personages, for
-example Chancellor Schuschnigg and Pastor Niemoeller.
-
-In November, 1938 by orders of the Chief of the Gestapo, anti-Jewish
-demonstrations all over Germany took place. Jewish property was
-destroyed, 30,000 Jews were arrested and sent to concentration camps and
-their property confiscated.
-
-Under paragraph VIII (_A_), above, millions of the persons there
-mentioned as having been murdered and ill-treated were Jews.
-
-Among other mass murders of Jews were the following:
-
-At Kislovdosk all Jews were made to give up their property: 2,000 were
-shot in an anti-tank ditch at Mineraliye Vodi: 4,300 other Jews were
-shot in the same ditch.
-
- 60,000 Jews were shot on an island on the Dvina
- near Riga.
- 20,000 Jews were shot at Lutsk.
- 32,000 Jews were shot at Sarny.
- 60,000 Jews were shot at Kiev and
- Dniepropetrovsk.
-
-Thousands of Jews were gassed weekly by means of gas-wagons which broke
-down from overwork.
-
-As the Germans retreated before the Soviet Army they exterminated Jews
-rather than allow them to be liberated. Many concentration camps and
-ghettos were set up in which Jews were incarcerated and tortured,
-starved, subjected to merciless atrocities and finally exterminated.
-
-About 70,000 Jews were exterminated in Yugoslavia.
-
- XI. Individual, group and organization responsibility for the offense
- stated in Count Four
-
-Reference is hereby made to Appendix A of this Indictment for a
-statement of the responsibility of the individual defendants for the
-offense set forth in this Count Four of the Indictment. Reference is
-hereby made to Appendix B of this Indictment for a statement of the
-responsibility of the groups and organizations named herein as criminal
-groups and organizations for the offense set forth in this Count Four of
-the Indictment.
-
-Wherefore, this Indictment is lodged with the Tribunal in English,
-French and Russian, each text having equal authenticity, and the charges
-herein made against the above-named defendants are hereby presented to
-the Tribunal.
-
- ROBERT H. JACKSON.
- _Acting on Behalf of the United States of America._
- FRANCOIS DE MENTHON.
- _Acting on Behalf of the French Republic._
- HARTLEY SHAWCROSS.
- _Acting on Behalf of the United Kingdom of Great_
- _Britain and Northern Ireland._
- R. RUDENKO.
- _Acting on Behalf of the Union of Soviet Socialist_
- _Republics._
-
-_Berlin, 6th October, 1945._
-
- * * * * *
-
- APPENDIX A
-
-Statement of Individual Responsibility for Crimes Set Out in Counts One,
- Two, Three and Four
-
-The statements hereinafter set forth following the name of each
-individual defendant constitute matters upon which the prosecution will
-rely _inter alia_ as establishing the individual responsibility of the
-defendant:
-
-GOERING:
-
-The defendant GOERING between 1932-1945 was: a member of the Nazi Party,
-Supreme Leader of the SA, General in the SS, a member and President of
-the Reichstag, Minister of the Interior of Prussia, Chief of the
-Prussian Police and Prussian Secret State Police, Chief of the Prussian
-State Council, Trustee of the Four Year Plan, Reich Minister for Air,
-Commander in Chief of the Air Force, President of the Council of
-Ministers for the Defense of the Reich, member of the Secret Cabinet
-Council, head of the Hermann Goering Industrial Combine, and Successor
-Designate to Hitler. The defendant GOERING used the foregoing positions,
-his personal influence, and his intimate connection with the Fuehrer in
-such a manner that: he promoted the accession to power of the Nazi
-conspirators and the consolidation of their control over Germany set
-forth in Count One of the Indictment; he promoted the military and
-economic preparation for war set forth in Count One of the Indictment;
-he participated in the planning and preparation of the Nazi conspirators
-for Wars of Aggression and Wars in Violation of International Treaties,
-Agreements and Assurances set forth in Counts One and Two of the
-Indictment; and he authorized, directed and participated in the War
-Crimes set forth in Count Three of the Indictment, and the Crimes
-against Humanity set forth in Count Four of the Indictment, including a
-wide variety of crimes against persons and property.
-
-RIBBENTROP:
-
-The defendant RIBBENTROP between 1932-1945 was: a member of the Nazi
-Party, a member of the Nazi Reichstag, Advisor to the Fuehrer on matters
-of foreign policy, representative of the Nazi Party for matters of
-foreign policy, special German delegate for disarmament questions,
-Ambassador extraordinary, Ambassador in London, organizer and director
-of Dienststelle Ribbentrop, Reich Minister for Foreign Affairs, member
-of the Secret Cabinet Council, member of the Fuehrer’s political staff
-at general headquarters, and General in the SS. The defendant RIBBENTROP
-used the foregoing positions, his personal influence, and his intimate
-connection with the Fuehrer in such a manner that: he promoted the
-accession to power of the Nazi conspirators as set forth in Count One of
-the Indictment; he promoted the preparations for war set forth in Count
-One of the Indictment; he participated in the political planning and
-preparation of the Nazi conspirators for Wars of Aggression and Wars in
-Violation of International Treaties, Agreements and Assurances as set
-forth in Counts One and Two of the Indictment; in accordance with the
-Fuehrer Principle he executed and assumed responsibility for the
-execution of the foreign policy plans of the Nazi conspirators set forth
-in Count One of the Indictment; and he authorized, directed and
-participated in the War Crimes set forth in Count Three of the
-Indictment and the Crimes against Humanity set forth in Count Four of
-the Indictment, including more particularly the crimes against persons
-and property in occupied territories.
-
-HESS:
-
-The defendant HESS between 1921 and 1941 was a member of the Nazi Party,
-Deputy to the Fuehrer, Reich Minister without Portfolio, member of the
-Reichstag, member of the Council of Ministers for the Defence of the
-Reich, member of the Secret Cabinet Council, Successor Designate to the
-Fuehrer after the defendant Goering, a General in the SS and a General
-in the SA. The defendant Hess used the foregoing positions, his personal
-influence and his intimate connection with the Fuehrer in such a manner
-that: he promoted the accession to power of the Nazi conspirators and
-the consolidation of their control over Germany set forth in Count One
-of the Indictment; he promoted the military, economic and psychological
-preparations for war set forth in Count One of the Indictment; he
-participated in the political planning and preparation for Wars of
-Aggression and Wars in Violation of International Treaties, Agreements
-and Assurances set forth in Counts One and Two of the Indictment: he
-participated in the preparation and planning of foreign policy plans of
-the Nazi conspirators set forth in Count One of the Indictment; he
-authorized, directed and participated in the War Crimes set forth in
-Count Three of the Indictment and the Crimes against Humanity set forth
-in Count Four of the Indictment, including a wide variety of crimes
-against persons and property.
-
-KALTENBRUNNER:
-
-The defendant KALTENBRUNNER between 1932-1945 was: a member of the Nazi
-Party, a General in the SS, a member of the Reichstag, a General of the
-Police, State Secretary for Security in Austria in charge of the
-Austrian Police, Police Leader of Vienna, Lower and Upper Austria, Head
-of the Reich Main Security Office and Chief of the Security Police and
-Security Service. The defendant KALTENBRUNNER used the foregoing
-positions and his personal influence in such a manner that: he promoted
-the consolidation of control over Austria seized by the Nazi
-conspirators as set forth in Count One of the Indictment; and he
-authorized, directed and participated in the War Crimes set forth in
-Count Three of the Indictment and the Crimes against Humanity set forth
-in Count Four of the Indictment, including particularly the Crimes
-against Humanity involved in the system of concentration camps.
-
-ROSENBERG:
-
-The defendant ROSENBERG between 1920 and 1945 was: a member of the Nazi
-Party, Nazi member of the Reichstag, Reichsleiter in the Nazi Party for
-Ideology and Foreign Policy, the Editor of the Nazi newspaper
-“Voelkischer Beobachter”, and of the “NS Monatshefte”, head of the
-Foreign Political Office of the Nazi Party, Special Delegate for the
-entire Spiritual and Ideological Training of the Nazi Party, Reich
-Minister for the Eastern Occupied Territories, organizer of the
-“Einsatzstab Rosenberg”, a General in the SS and a General in the SA.
-The defendant ROSENBERG used the foregoing positions, his personal
-influence and his intimate connection with the Fuehrer in such a manner
-that: he developed, disseminated and exploited the doctrinal techniques
-of the Nazi conspirators set forth in Count One of the Indictment; he
-promoted the accession to power of the Nazi conspirators and the
-consolidation of their control over Germany set forth in Count One of
-the Indictment; he promoted the psychological preparations for war set
-forth in Count One of the Indictment; he participated in the political
-planning and preparation for Wars of Aggression and Wars, in Violation
-of International Treaties, Agreements and Assurances set forth in Counts
-One and Two of the Indictment; and he authorized, directed and
-participated in the War Crimes set forth in Count Three of the
-Indictment and the Crimes against Humanity set forth in Count Four of
-the Indictment, including a wide variety of crimes against persons and
-property.
-
-FRANK:
-
-The defendant FRANK between 1932-1945 was: a member of the Nazi Party, a
-General in the SS, a member of the Reichstag, Reich Minister without
-Portfolio, Reich Commissar for the Coordination of Justice, President of
-the International Chamber of Law and Academy of German Law, Chief of the
-Civil Administration of Lodz, Supreme Administrative Chief of the
-military district of West Prussia, Poznan, Odz and Krakow and Governor
-General of the Occupied Polish territories. The defendant FRANK used the
-foregoing positions, his personal influence, and his intimate connection
-with the Fuehrer in such a manner that: he promoted the accession to
-power of the Nazi conspirators and the consolidation of their control
-over Germany set forth in Count One of the Indictment; he authorized,
-directed and participated in the War Crimes set forth in Count Three of
-the Indictment and the Crimes against Humanity set forth in Count Four
-of the Indictment, including particularly the War Crimes and Crimes
-against Humanity involved in the administration of occupied territories.
-
-BORMANN:
-
-The defendant BORMANN between 1925 and 1945 was: a member of the Nazi
-Party, member of the Reichstag, a member of the Staff of the Supreme
-Command of the SA, founder and head of “Hilfskasse der NSDAP”,
-Reichsleiter, Chief of Staff Office of the Fuehrer’s Deputy, head of the
-Party Chancery, Secretary of the Fuehrer, member of the Council of
-Ministers for the Defence of the Reich, organizer and head of the
-Volkssturm, a General in the SS and a General in the SA. The defendant
-BORMANN used the foregoing position, his personal influence and his
-intimate connection with the Fuehrer in such a manner that: he promoted
-the accession to power of the Nazi conspirators and the consolidation of
-their control over Germany set forth in Count One of the Indictment; he
-promoted the preparations for war set forth in Count One of the
-Indictment; and he authorized, directed and participated in the War
-Crimes set forth in Count Three of the Indictment and the Crimes against
-Humanity set forth in Count Four of the Indictment, including a wide
-variety of crimes against persons and property.
-
-FRICK:
-
-The defendant FRICK between 1932-1945 was: a member of the Nazi Party,
-Reichsleiter, General in the SS, member of the Reichstag, Reich Minister
-of the Interior, Prussian Minister of the Interior, Reich Director of
-Elections, General Plenipotentiary for the Administration of the Reich,
-head of the Central Office for the Reunification of Austria and the
-German Reich, Director of the Central Office for the Incorporation of
-Sudetenland, Memel, Danzig, the eastern incorporated territories, Eupen,
-Malmedy, and Moresnot, Director of the Central Office for the
-Protectorate of Bohemia, Moravia, the Government General, Lower Styria,
-Upper Carinthia, Norway, Alsace, Lorraine and all other occupied
-territories and Reich Protector for Bohemia and Moravia. The defendant
-FRICK used the foregoing positions, his personal influence, and his
-intimate connection with the Fuehrer in such a manner that: he promoted
-the accession to power of the Nazi conspirators and the consolidation of
-their control over Germany set forth in Count One of the Indictment; he
-participated in the planning and preparation of the Nazi conspirators
-for Wars of Aggression and Wars in Violation of International Treaties,
-Agreements and Assurances set forth in Count One and Two of the
-Indictment; and he authorized, directed and participated in the War
-Crimes set forth in Count Three of the Indictment and the Crimes against
-Humanity set forth in Count Four of the Indictment, including more
-particularly the crimes against persons and property in occupied
-territories.
-
-LEY:
-
-The defendant LEY between 1932-1945 was: a member of the Nazi Party,
-Reichsleiter, Nazi Party Organization Manager, member of the Reichstag,
-leader of the German Labor Front, a General in the SA, and Joint
-Organizer of the Central Inspection for the Care of Foreign Workers. The
-defendant LEY used the foregoing positions, his personal influence and
-his intimate connection with the Fuehrer in such a manner that: he
-promoted the accession to power of the Nazi conspirators and the
-consolidation of their control over Germany as set forth in Count One of
-the Indictment; he promoted the preparation for war set forth in Count
-One of the Indictment; he authorized, directed and participated in the
-War Crimes set forth in Count Three of the Indictment, and in the Crimes
-against Humanity set forth in Count Four of the Indictment, including
-particularly the War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity relating to the
-abuse of human beings for labor in the conduct of the aggressive wars.
-
-SAUCKEL:
-
-The defendant SAUCKEL between 1921 and 1945 was: a member of the Nazi
-Party, Gauleiter and Reichsstatthalter of Thuringia, a member of the
-Reichstag, General Plenipotentiary for the Employment of Labour under
-the Four Year Plan, Joint Organizer with the defendant Ley of the
-Central Inspection for the Care of Foreign Workers, a General in the SS
-and a General in the SA. The defendant SAUCKEL used the foregoing
-positions and his personal influence in such a manner that: he promoted
-the accession to power of the Nazi conspirators set forth in Count One
-of the indictment; he participated in the economic preparations for Wars
-of Aggression and Wars in Violation of Treaties, Agreements and
-Assurances set forth in Counts One and Two of the Indictment; he
-authorized, directed and participated in the War Crimes set forth, in
-Count Three of the Indictment and the Crimes against Humanity set forth
-in Count Four of the Indictment, including particularly the War Crimes
-and Crimes against Humanity involved in forcing the inhabitants of
-occupied countries to work, as slave laborers in occupied countries and
-in Germany.
-
-SPEER:
-
-The defendant SPEER between 1932-1945 was: a member of the Nazi Party,
-Reichsleiter, member of the Reichstag, Reich Minister for Armament and
-Munitions, Chief of the Organization Todt, General Plenipotentiary for
-Armaments in the Office of the Four Year Plan, and Chairman of the
-Armaments Council. The defendant SPEER used the foregoing positions and
-his personal influence in such a manner that: he participated in the
-military and economic planning and preparation of the Nazi conspirators
-for Wars of Aggression and Wars in Violation of International Treaties,
-Agreements and Assurances set forth in Counts One and Two of the
-Indictment; and he authorized, directed and participated in the War
-Crimes set forth in Count Three of the Indictment and the Crimes against
-Humanity set forth in Count Four of the Indictment, including more
-particularly the abuse and exploitation of human beings for forced labor
-in the conduct of aggressive war.
-
-FUNK:
-
-The defendant FUNK between 1932-1945 was: a member of the Nazi Party,
-Economic Adviser of Hitler, National Socialist Deputy to the Reichstag,
-Press Chief of the Reich Government, State Secretary of the Reich
-Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda, Reich Minister of
-Economics, Prussian Minister of Economics, President of the German
-Reichsbank, Plenipotentiary for Economy and member of the Ministerial
-Council for the Defense of the Reich. The defendant FUNK used the
-foregoing positions, his personal influence, and his close connection
-with the Fuehrer in such a manner that: he promoted the accession to
-power of the Nazi conspirators and the consolidation of their control
-over Germany set forth in Count One of the Indictment; he promoted the
-preparations for war set forth in Count One of the Indictment; he
-participated in the military and economic planning and preparation of
-the Nazi conspirators for Wars of Aggression and Wars in Violation of
-International Treaties, Agreements and Assurances set forth in Counts
-One and Two of the Indictment; and he authorized, directed and
-participated in the War Crimes set forth in Count Three of the
-Indictment and the Crimes against Humanity set forth in Count Four of
-the Indictment, including more particularly crimes against persons and
-property in connection with the economic exploitation of occupied
-territories.
-
-SCHACHT:
-
-The defendant SCHACHT between 1932-1945 was: a member of the Nazi Party,
-a member of the Reichstag, Reich Minister of Economics, Reich Minister
-without Portfolio and President of the German Reichsbank. The defendant
-SCHACHT used the foregoing positions, his personal influence, and his
-connection with the Fuehrer in such a manner that: he promoted the
-accession to power of the Nazi conspirators and the consolidation of
-their control over Germany set forth in Count One of the Indictment; he
-promoted the preparations for war set forth in Count One of the
-Indictment; and he participated in the military and economic plans and
-preparation of the Nazi conspirators for Wars of Aggression, and Wars in
-Violation of International Treaties, Agreements and Assurances set forth
-in Counts One and Two of the Indictment.
-
-PAPEN:
-
-The defendant PAPEN between 1932-1945 was: a member of the Nazi Party, a
-member of the Reichstag, Reich Chancellor, Vice-Chancellor under Hitler,
-special Plenipotentiary for the Saar, negotiator of the Concordat with
-the Vatican, Ambassador in Vienna and Ambassador in Turkey. The
-defendant PAPEN used the foregoing positions, his personal influence and
-his close connection with the Fuehrer in such manner that: he promoted
-the accession to power of the Nazi conspirators and participated in the
-consolidation of their control over Germany set forth in Count One of
-the Indictment; he promoted the preparations for war set forth in Count
-One of the Indictment; and he participated in the political planning and
-preparation of the Nazi conspirators for Wars of Aggression and Wars in
-Violation of International Treaties, Agreements and Assurances set forth
-in Counts One and Two of the Indictment.
-
-KRUPP:
-
-The defendant KRUPP was between 1932-1945: head of Friedrich KRUPP A.G.,
-a member of the General Economic Council, President of the Reich Union
-of German Industry, and head of the Group for Mining and Production of
-Iron and Metals under the Reich Ministry of Economics. The defendant
-KRUPP used the foregoing positions, his personal influence, and his
-connection with the Fuehrer in such a manner that: he promoted the
-accession to power of the Nazi conspirators and the consolidation of
-their control over Germany set forth in Count One of the Indictment; he
-promoted the preparation for war set forth in Count One of the
-Indictment; he participated in the military and economic planning and
-preparation of the Nazi conspirators for Wars of Aggression and Wars in
-Violation of International Treaties, Agreements and Assurances set forth
-in Counts One and Two of the Indictment; and he authorized, directed and
-participated in the War Crimes set forth in Count Three of the
-Indictment and the Crimes against Humanity set forth in Count Four of
-the Indictment, including more particularly the exploitation and abuse
-of human beings for labor in the conduct of aggressive wars.
-
-NEURATH:
-
-The defendant NEURATH between 1932-1945 was: a member of the Nazi Party,
-a General in the SS, a member of the Reichstag, Reich Minister, Reich
-Minister of Foreign Affairs, President of the Secret Cabinet Council,
-and Reich Protector for Bohemia and Moravia. The defendant NEURATH used
-the foregoing positions, his personal influence, and his close
-connection with the Fuehrer in such a manner that: he promoted the
-accession to power of the Nazi conspirators set forth in Count One of
-the Indictment; he promoted the preparations for war set forth in Count
-One of the Indictment; he participated in the political planning and
-preparation of the Nazi conspirators for Wars of Aggression and Wars in
-Violation of International Treaties, Agreements and Assurances set forth
-in Counts One and Two of the Indictment; in accordance with the Fuehrer
-Principle he executed, and assumed responsibility for the execution of
-the foreign policy plans of the Nazi conspirators set forth in Count One
-of the Indictment; and he authorized, directed and participated in the
-War Crimes set forth in Count Three of the Indictment and the Crimes
-against Humanity set forth in Count Four of the Indictment, including
-particularly the crimes against persons and property in the occupied
-territories.
-
-SCHIRACH:
-
-The defendant SCHIRACH between 1924 and 1945 was: a member of the Nazi
-Party, a member of the Reichstag, Reich Youth Leader on the Staff of the
-SA Supreme Command, Reichsleiter in the Nazi Party for Youth Education,
-Leader of Youth of the German Reich, head of the Hitler Jugend, Reich
-Defence Commissioner and Reichstatthalter and Gauleiter of Vienna. The
-defendant SCHIRACH used the foregoing positions, his personal influence
-and his intimate connection with the Fuehrer in such a manner that: he
-promoted the accession to power of the Nazi conspirators and the
-consolidation of their control over Germany set forth in Count One of
-the Indictment; he promoted the psychological and educational
-preparations for war and the militarization of Nazi-dominated
-organizations set forth in Count One of the Indictment; and he
-authorized, directed and participated in the Crimes against Humanity set
-forth in Count Four of the Indictment, including, particularly,
-anti-Jewish measures.
-
-SEYSS-INQUART:
-
-The defendant SEYSS-INQUART between 1932-1945 was: a member of the Nazi
-Party, a General in the SS, State Councillor of Austria, Minister of the
-Interior and Security of Austria, Chancellor of Austria, a member of the
-Reichstag, a member of the Reich Cabinet, Reich Minister without
-Portfolio, Chief of the Civil Administration in South Poland, Deputy
-Governor-General of the Polish Occupied Territory, and Reich Commissar
-for the Occupied Netherlands. The defendant SEYSS-INQUART used the
-foregoing positions and his personal influence in such a manner that: he
-prompted the seizure and the consolidation of control over Austria by
-the Nazi conspirators set forth in Count One of the Indictment; he
-participated in the political planning and preparation of the Nazi
-conspirators for Wars of Aggression and Wars in Violation of
-International Treaties, Agreements and Assurances set forth in Counts
-One and Two of the Indictment; and he authorized, directed and
-participated in the War Crimes set forth in Count Three of the
-Indictment and the Crimes against Humanity set forth in Count Four of
-the Indictment, including a wide variety of crimes against persons and
-property.
-
-STREICHER:
-
-The defendant STREICHER between 1932-1945 was: a member of the Nazi
-Party, a member of the Reichstag, a General in the SA, Gauleiter of
-Franconia, Editor in Chief of the anti-Semitic newspaper “Der Stuermer”.
-The defendant STREICHER used the foregoing positions, his personal
-influence, and his close connection with the Fuehrer in such a manner
-that: he promoted the accession to power of the Nazi conspirators and
-the consolidation of their control over Germany set forth in Count One
-of the Indictment: he authorized, directed and participated in the
-Crimes against Humanity set forth in Count Four of the Indictment,
-including particularly the incitement of the persecution of the Jews set
-forth in Count One and Count Four of the Indictment.
-
-KEITEL:
-
-The defendant KEITEL between 1938 and 1945 was: Chief of the High
-Command of the German Armed Forces, member of the Secret Cabinet
-Council, member of the Council of Ministers for the Defence of the
-Reich, and Field Marshal. The defendant KEITEL used the foregoing
-positions, his personal influence and his intimate connection with the
-Fuehrer in such a manner that: he promoted the military preparations for
-war set forth in Count One of the Indictment; he participated in the
-political planning and preparation of the Nazi conspirators for Wars of
-Aggression and Wars in Violations of International Treaties, Agreements
-and Assurances set forth in Counts One and Two of the Indictment; he
-executed and assumed responsibility for the execution of the plans of
-the Nazi conspirators for Wars of Aggression and Wars in Violation of
-International Treaties, Agreements and Assurances set forth in Counts
-One and Two of the Indictment; he authorized, directed and participated
-in the War Crimes set forth in Count Three of the Indictment and the
-Crimes against Humanity set forth in Count Four of the Indictment,
-including particularly the War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity
-involved in the ill-treatment of prisoners of war and of the civilian
-population of occupied territories.
-
-JODL:
-
-The defendant JODL between 1932 and 1945 was: Lt. Colonel, Army
-Operations Department of the Wehrmacht, Colonel, Chief of OKW Operations
-Department, Major-General and Chief of Staff OKW and Colonel-General.
-The defendant JODL used the foregoing positions, his personal influence,
-and his close connection with the Fuehrer in such a manner that: he
-promoted the accession to power of the Nazi conspirators and the
-consolidation of their control over Germany set forth in Count One of
-the Indictment; he promoted the preparations for war set forth in Count
-One of the Indictment; he participated in the military planning and
-preparation of the Nazi conspirators for Wars of Aggression and Wars in
-Violation of International Treaties, Agreements and Assurances set forth
-in Counts One and Two of the Indictment; and he authorized, directed and
-participated in the War Crimes set forth in Count Three of the
-Indictment and the Crimes against Humanity set forth in Count Four of
-the Indictment, including a wide variety of crimes against persons and
-property:
-
-RAEDER:
-
-The defendant RAEDER between 1928 and 1945 was: Commander-in-Chief of
-the German Navy, Generaladmiral, Grossadmiral, Admiralinspekteur of the
-German Navy, and a member of the Secret Cabinet Council. The defendant
-RAEDER used the foregoing positions and his personal influence in such a
-manner that: he promoted the preparations for war set forth in Count One
-of the Indictment; he participated in the political planning and
-preparation of the Nazi conspirators for Wars of Aggression and Wars in
-Violation of International Treaties, Agreements and Assurances set forth
-in Counts One and Two of the Indictment; he executed, and assumed
-responsibility for the execution of the plans of the Nazi conspirators
-for Wars of Aggression and Wars in Violation of International Treaties,
-Agreements and Assurances set forth in Counts One and Two of the
-Indictment; and he authorized, directed, and participated in the war
-crimes, set forth in Count Three of the Indictment, including
-particularly war crimes arising out of sea warfare.
-
-DOENITZ:
-
-The defendant DOENITZ between 1932 and 1945 was: Commanding Officer of
-the Weddigen U-boat flotilla, Commander-in-Chief of the U-boat arm,
-Vice-Admiral, Admiral, Grossadmiral and Commander-in-Chief of the German
-Navy, Advisor to Hitler, and Successor to Hitler as head of the German
-Government. The defendant DOENITZ used the foregoing positions, his
-personal influence, and his intimate connection with the Fuehrer in such
-a manner that: he promoted the preparations for war set forth in Count
-One of the Indictment; he participated in the military planning and
-preparation of the Nazi conspirators for Wars of Aggression and Wars in
-Violation of International Treaties, Agreements and Assurances set forth
-in Counts One and Two of the Indictment; and he authorized, directed and
-participated in the War Crimes set forth in Count Three of the
-Indictment, including particularly the crimes against persons and
-property on the high seas.
-
-FRITZSCHE:
-
-The defendant FRITZSCHE between 1933 and 1945 was: a member of the Nazi
-Party, Editor-in-Chief of the official German news agency, “Deutsche
-Nachrichten Bureo”, Head of the Wireless News Service and of the Home
-Press Division of the Reich Ministry of Propaganda, Ministerialdirektor
-of the Reich Ministry of Propaganda, head of the Radio Division of the
-Propaganda Department of the Nazi Party, and Plenipotentiary for the
-Political Organization of the Greater German Radio. The defendant
-FRITZSCHE used the foregoing positions and his personal influence to
-disseminate and exploit the principal doctrines of the Nazi conspirators
-set forth in Count One of the Indictment, and to advocate, encourage and
-incite the commission of the War Crimes set forth in Count Three of the
-Indictment and the Crimes against Humanity set forth in Count Four of
-the Indictment including, particularly, anti-Jewish measures and the
-ruthless exploitation of occupied territories.
-
- * * * * *
-
- APPENDIX B
-
- Statement of Criminality of Groups and Organizations
-
-The statements hereinafter set forth, following the name of each Group
-or Organization named in the Indictment as one which should be declared
-criminal, constitute matters upon which the prosecution will rely inter
-alia as establishing the criminality of the Group or Organization:
-
- DIE REICHSREGIERUNG (REICH CABINET)
-
-“Die Reichsregierung (Reich Cabinet)” referred to in the Indictment
-consists of persons who were:
-
- (i) Members of the ordinary cabinet after 30 January 1933, the date
-on which Hitler became Chancellor of the German Republic. The term
-“ordinary cabinet” as used herein means the Reich Ministers, i.e., heads
-of departments of the central government; Reich Ministers without
-portfolio; State ministers acting as Reich Ministers; and other
-officials entitled to take part in meetings of this cabinet.
-
- (ii) Members of der Ministerrat fuer die Reichsverteidigung (Council
-of Ministers for the Defence of the Reich).
-
- (iii) Members of der Geheimer Kabinettsrat (Secret Cabinet Council).
-
-Under the Fuehrer, these persons functioning in the foregoing capacities
-and in association as a group, possessed and exercised legislative,
-executive, administrative and political powers and functions of a very
-high order in the system of German government. Accordingly, they are
-charged with responsibility for the policies adopted and put into effect
-by the government including those which comprehended and involved the
-commission of the crimes referred to in Counts, One, Two, Three and Four
-of the Indictment.
-
- DAS KORPS DER POLITISCHEN LEITER DER NATIONALSOZIALISTISCHEN DEUTSCHEN
- ARBEITERPARTEI (LEADERSHIP CORPS OF THE NAZI PARTY)
-
-“Das Korps der Politischen Leiter der Nationalsozialistischen Deutschen
-Arbeiterpartei (Leadership Corps of the Nazi Party)” referred to in the
-Indictment consists of persons who were at any time, according to common
-Nazi terminology, “Politischer Leiter” (Political Leaders) of any grade
-or rank.
-
-The Politischen Leiter comprised the leaders of the various functional
-offices of the Party (for example, the Reichsleitung, or Party Reich
-Directorate, and the Gauleitung, or Party Gau Directorate), as well as
-the territorial leaders of the Party (for example, the Gauleiter).
-
-The Politischen Leiter were a distinctive and elite group within the
-Nazi Party proper and as such were vested with special prerogatives.
-They were organized according to the leadership principle and were
-charged with planning, developing and imposing upon their followers the
-policies of the Nazi Party. Thus the territorial leaders among them were
-called Hoheitstraeger, or bearers of sovereignty, and were entitled to
-call upon and utilize the various Party formations when necessary for
-the execution of Party policies.
-
-Reference is hereby made to the allegations in Count One of the
-Indictment showing that the Nazi Party was the central core of the
-common plan or conspiracy therein set forth. The Politischen Leiter, as
-a major power within the Nazi Party proper, and functioning in the
-capacities above-described and in association as a group, joined in the
-common plan or conspiracy, and accordingly share responsibility for the
-crimes set forth in Counts One, Two, Three and Four of the Indictment.
-
-The prosecution expressly reserves the right to request, at any time
-before sentence is pronounced, that Politischer Leiter of subordinate
-grades or ranks or of other types or classes, to be specified by the
-prosecution, be excepted from further proceedings in this Case No. 1,
-but without prejudice to other proceedings or actions against them.
-
-DIE SCHUTZSTAFFELN DER NATIONALSOZIALISTISCHEN DEUTSCHEN ARBEITERPARTEI
- (COMMONLY KNOWN AS THE SS) INCLUDING DIE SICHERHEITSDIENST (COMMONLY
- KNOWN AS THE SD)
-
-“Die Schutzstaffeln der Nationalsozialistischen Deutschen Arbeiterpartei
-(commonly known as the SS) including Die Sicherheitsdienst (commonly
-known as the SD)” referred to in the Indictment consists of the entire
-corps of the SS and all offices, departments, services, agencies,
-branches, formations, organizations and groups of which it was at any
-time comprised or which were at any time integrated in it, including but
-not limited to, the Allgemeine SS, the Waffen SS, the SS Totenkopf
-Verbaende, SS Polizei Regimente and the Sicherheitsdienst des
-Reichsfuehrers-SS (commonly known as the SD).
-
-The SS, originally established by Hitler in 1925 as an élite section of
-the SA to furnish a protective guard for the Fuehrer and Nazi Party
-leaders, became an independent formation of the Nazi Party in 1934 under
-the leadership of the Reichsfuehrer-SS, Heinrich Himmler. It was
-composed of voluntary members, selected in accordance with Nazi
-biological, racial and political theories, completely indoctrinated in
-Nazi ideology and pledged to uncompromising obedience to the Fuehrer.
-After the accession of the Nazi conspirators to power, it developed many
-departments, agencies, formations and branches and extended its
-influence and control over numerous fields of governmental and Party
-activity. Through Heinrich Himmler, as Reichsfuehrer-SS and Chief of the
-German Police, agencies and units of the SS and of the Reich were joined
-in operation to form a unified repressive police force. The
-Sicherheitsdienst des Reichsfuehrers-SS (commonly known as the SD), a
-department of the SS, was developed into a vast espionage and
-counter-intelligence system which operated in conjunction with the
-Gestapo and criminal police in detecting, suppressing and eliminating
-tendencies, groups and individuals deemed hostile or potentially hostile
-to the Nazi Party, its leaders, principles and objectives, and
-eventually was combined with the Gestapo and criminal police in a single
-security police department, the Reich Main Security Office.
-
-Other branches of the SS developed into an armed force and served in the
-wars of aggression referred to in Counts One and Two of the Indictment.
-Through other departments and branches the SS controlled the
-administration of concentration camps and the execution of Nazi racial,
-biological and resettlement policies. Through its numerous functions and
-activities it served as the instrument for insuring the domination of
-Nazi ideology and protecting and extending the Nazi regime over Germany
-and occupied territories. It thus participated in and is responsible for
-the crimes referred to in Counts One, Two, Three and Four of the
-Indictment.
-
- DIE GEHEIME STAATSPOLIZEI (SECRET STATE POLICE, COMMONLY KNOWN AS THE
- GESTAPO)
-
-“Die Geheime Staatspolizei (Secret State Police, commonly known as the
-Gestapo)” referred to in the Indictment consists of the headquarters,
-departments, offices, branches and all the forces and personnel of the
-Geheime Staatspolizei organized or existing at any time after 30 January
-1933, including the Geheime Staatspolizei of Prussia and equivalent
-secret or political police forces of the Reich and the components
-thereof.
-
-The Gestapo was created by the Nazi conspirators immediately after their
-accession to power, first in Prussia by the defendant GOERING and
-shortly thereafter in all other states in the Reich. These separate
-secret and political police forces were developed into a centralized,
-uniform organization operating through a central headquarters and
-through a network of regional offices in Germany and in occupied
-territories. Its officials and operatives were selected on the basis of
-unconditional acceptance of Nazi ideology, were largely drawn from
-members of the SS, and were trained in SS and SD schools. It acted to
-suppress and eliminate tendencies, groups and individuals deemed hostile
-or potentially hostile to the Nazi Party, its leaders, principles and
-objectives, and to repress resistance and potential resistance to German
-control in occupied territories. In performing these functions it
-operated free from legal control, taking any measures it deemed
-necessary for the accomplishment of its missions.
-
-Through its purposes, activities and the means it used, it participated
-in and is responsible for the commission of the crimes set forth in
-Counts One, Two, Three and Four of the Indictment.
-
- DIE STURMABTEILUNGEN DER NATIONALSOZIALISTISCHEN DEUTSCHEN
- ARBEITERPARTEI (COMMONLY KNOWN AS THE SA)
-
-“Die Sturmabteilungen der Nationalsozialistischen Deutschen
-Arbeiterpartei (commonly known as the SA)” referred to in the Indictment
-was a formation of the Nazi Party under the immediate jurisdiction of
-the Fuehrer, organized on military lines, whose membership was composed
-of volunteers serving as political soldiers of the Party. It was one of
-the earliest formations of the Nazi Party and the original guardian of
-the National Socialist movement. Founded in 1921 as a voluntary militant
-formation, it was developed by the Nazi conspirators before their
-accession to power into a vast private army and utilized for the purpose
-of creating disorder, and terrorizing and eliminating political
-opponents. It continued to serve as an instrument for the physical,
-ideological and military training of Party members and as a reserve for
-the German armed forces. After the launching of the wars of aggression,
-referred to in Counts One and Two of the Indictment, the SA not only
-operated as an organization for military training but provided auxiliary
-police and security forces in occupied territories, guarded
-prisoner-of-war camps and concentration camps and supervised and
-controlled persons forced to labour in Germany and occupied territories.
-
-Through its purposes and activities and the means it used, it
-participated in and is responsible for the commission of the crimes set
-forth in Counts One, Two, Three and Four of the Indictment.
-
- GENERAL STAFF AND HIGH COMMAND OF THE GERMAN ARMED FORCES
-
-The “General Staff and High Command of the German Armed Forces” referred
-to in the Indictment consist of those individuals who between February
-1938 and May 1945 were the highest commanders of the Wehrmacht, the
-Army, the Navy, and the Air Forces. The individuals comprising this
-group are the persons who held the following appointments:
-
- Oberbefehlshaber der Kriegsmarine (Commander in Chief of the
- Navy)
-
- Chef (and, formerly, Chef des Stabes) der Seekriegsleitung
- (Chief of Naval War Staff)
-
- Oberbefehlshaber des Heeres (Commander in Chief of the Army)
-
- Chef des Generalstabes des Heeres (Chief of the General Staff of
- the Army)
-
- Oberbefehlshaber der Luftwaffe (Commander in Chief of the Air
- Force)
-
- Chef des Generalstabes der Luftwaffe (Chief of the General Staff
- of the Air Force)
-
- Chef des Oberkommandos der Wehrmacht (Chief of the High Command
- of the Armed Forces)
-
- Chef des Fuehrungstabes des Oberkommandos der Wehrmacht (Chief
- of the Operations Staff of the High Command of the Armed Forces)
-
- Stellvertretender Chef des Fuehrungstabes des Oberkommandos der
- Wehrmacht (Deputy Chief of the Operations Staff of the High
- Command of the Armed Forces)
-
- Commanders-in-Chief in the field, with the status of
- Oberbefehlshaber, of the Wehrmacht, Navy, Army, Air Force.
-
-Functioning in such capacities and in association as a group at the
-highest level in the German Armed Forces Organization, these persons had
-a major responsibility for the planning, preparation, initiation and
-waging of illegal wars as set forth in Counts One and Two of the
-Indictment and for the War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity involved
-in the execution of the common plan or conspiracy set forth in Counts
-Three and Four of the Indictment.
-
- * * * * *
-
- APPENDIX C
-
- Charges and Particulars of Violations of International Treaties,
- Agreements and Assurances Caused by the Defendants in the Course of
- Planning, Preparing and Initiating the Wars
-
- I
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of the Convention for the Pacific Settlement of
-International Disputes signed at The Hague, 29 July, 1899._
-
-PARTICULARS: In that Germany did, by force and arms, on the dates
-specified in Column 1, invade the territory of the sovereigns specified
-in Column 2, respectively, without first having attempted to settle its
-disputes with said sovereigns by pacific means.
-
- _Column 1_ _Column 2_
- 6 April 1941 Kingdom of Greece
- 6 April 1941 Kingdom of Yugoslavia
-
- II
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of the Convention for the Pacific Settlement of
-International Disputes signed at The Hague, 18 October 1907._
-
-PARTICULARS: In that Germany did, on or about the dates specified in
-Column 1, by force of arms invade the territory of the sovereigns
-specified in Column 2, respectively, without having first attempted to
-settle its dispute with said sovereigns by pacific means.
-
- _Column 1_ _Column 2_
- 1 September 1939 Republic of Poland
- 9 April 1940 Kingdom of Norway
- 9 April 1940 Kingdom of Denmark
- 10 May 1940 Grand-Duchy of Luxembourg
- 10 May 1940 Kingdom of Belgium
- 10 May 1940 Kingdom of the Netherlands
- 22 June 1941 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
-
- III
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of Hague Convention III Relative to the Opening of
-Hostilities, signed 18 October 1907._
-
-PARTICULARS: In that Germany did, on or about the dates specified in
-Column 1, commence hostilities against the countries specified in Column
-2, respectively, without previous warning in the form of a reasoned
-declaration of war or an ultimatum with conditional declaration of war.
-
- _Column 1_ _Column 2_
- 1 September 1939 Republic of Poland
- 9 April 1940 Kingdom of Norway
- 9 April 1940 Kingdom of Denmark
- 10 May 1940 Kingdom of Belgium
- 10 May 1940 Kingdom of the Netherlands
- 10 May 1940 Grand-Duchy of Luxembourg
- 22 June 1941 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
-
- IV
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of Hague Convention V Respecting the Rights and
-Duties of Neutral Powers and Persons in Case of War on Land, signed 18
-October 1907._
-
-PARTICULARS: In that Germany did, on or about the dates specified in
-Column 1, by force and arms of its military forces, cross into, invade,
-and occupy the territories of the sovereigns specified in, Column 2,
-respectively, then and thereby violating the neutrality of said
-sovereigns.
-
- _Column 1_ _Column 2_
- 9 April 1940 Kingdom of Norway
- 9 April 1940 Kingdom of Denmark
- 10 May 1940 Grand-Duchy of Luxembourg
- 10 May 1940 Kingdom of Belgium
- 10 May 1940 Kingdom of the Netherlands
- 22 June 1941 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
-
- V
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of the Treaty of Peace between the Allied and
-Associated Powers and Germany, signed at Versailles, 28 June 1919, known
-as the Versailles Treaty._
-
-PARTICULARS: (1) In that Germany did, on and after 7 March 1936,
-maintain and assemble armed forces and maintain and construct military
-fortifications in the demilitarized zone of the Rhineland in violation
-of the provisions of Articles 42 to 44 of the Treaty of Versailles.
-
-(2) In that Germany did, on or about 13 March 1938, annex Austria into
-the German Reich in violation of the provisions of Article 80 of the
-Treaty of Versailles.
-
-(3) In that Germany did, on or about 22 March 1939, incorporate the
-district of Memel into the German Reich in violation of the provisions
-of Article 99 of the Treaty of Versailles.
-
-(4) In that Germany did, on or about 1 September 1939, incorporate the
-Free City of Danzig into the German Reich in violation of the provisions
-of Article 100 of the Treaty of Versailles.
-
-(5) In that Germany did, on or about 16 March 1939, incorporate the
-provinces of Bohemia and Moravia, formerly part of Czechoslovakia, into
-the German Reich in violation of the provisions of Article 81 of the
-Treaty of Versailles.
-
-(6) In that Germany did, at various times in March 1935 and thereafter,
-repudiate various parts of Part V, Military, Naval and Air Clauses of
-the Treaty of Versailles, by creating an air force, by use of compulsory
-military service, by increasing the size of the army beyond treaty
-limits, and by increasing the size of the navy beyond treaty limits,
-
- VI
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of the Treaty between the United States and Germany
-Restoring Friendly Relations, signed at Berlin, 25 August 1921._
-
-PARTICULARS: In that Germany did, at various times in March 1935 and
-thereafter, repudiate various parts of Part V, Military, Naval and Air
-Clauses of the Treaty Between the United States and Germany Restoring
-Friendly Relations by creating an air force, by use of compulsory
-military service, by increasing the size of the army beyond treaty
-limits, and by increasing the size of the navy beyond treaty limits.
-
- VII
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of the Treaty of Mutual Guarantee between Germany,
-Belgium, France, Great Britain and Italy, done at Locarno, 16 October
-1925._
-
-PARTICULARS: (1) In that Germany did, on or about 7 March 1936,
-unlawfully send armed forces into the Rhineland demilitarized zone of
-Germany, in violation of Article 1 of the Treaty of Mutual Guarantee.
-
-(2) In that Germany did, on or about March 1936, and thereafter,
-unlawfully maintain armed forces in the Rhineland demilitarized zone of
-Germany, in violation of Article 1 of the Treaty of Mutual Guarantee.
-
-(3) In that Germany did, on or about 7 March 1936, and thereafter,
-unlawfully construct and maintain fortifications in the Rhineland
-demilitarized zone of Germany, in violation of Article 1 of the Treaty
-of Mutual Guarantee.
-
-(4) In that Germany did, on or about 10 May 1940, unlawfully attack and
-invade Belgium, in violation of Article 2 of the Treaty of Mutual
-Guarantee.
-
-(5) In that Germany did, on or about 10 May 1940, unlawfully attack and
-invade Belgium, without first having attempted to settle its dispute
-with Belgium by peaceful means, in violation of Article 3 of the Treaty
-of Mutual Guarantee.
-
- VIII
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of the Arbitration Treaty between Germany and
-Czechoslovakia, done at Locarno, 16 October 1925._
-
-PARTICULARS: In that Germany did, on or about 15 March 1939, unlawfully
-by duress and threats of military might force Czechoslovakia to deliver
-the destiny of Czechoslovakia and its inhabitants into the hands of the
-Fuehrer and Reichschancellor of Germany without having attempted to
-settle its dispute with Czechoslovakia by peaceful means.
-
- IX
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of the Arbitration Convention between Germany and
-Belgium, done at Locarno, 16 October 1925._
-
-PARTICULARS: In that Germany did, on or about 10 May 1940, unlawfully
-attack and invade Belgium without first having attempted to settle its
-dispute with Belgium by peaceful means.
-
- X
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of the Arbitration Treaty between Germany and Poland,
-done at Locarno, 16 October 1925._
-
-PARTICULARS: In that Germany did, on or about 1 September 1939,
-unlawfully attack and invade Poland without first having attempted to
-settle its dispute with Poland by peaceful means.
-
- XI
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of Convention of Arbitration and Conciliation entered
-into between Germany and the Netherlands on 20 May 1926._
-
-PARTICULARS: In that Germany, without warning and notwithstanding its
-solemn covenant to settle by peaceful means all disputes of any nature
-whatever which might arise between it and the Netherlands which were not
-capable of settlement by diplomacy and which had not been referred by
-mutual agreement to the Permanent Court of International Justice, did,
-on or about 10 May 1940, with a Military force, attack, invade, and
-occupy the Netherlands, thereby violating its neutrality and territorial
-integrity and destroying its sovereign independence.
-
- XII
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of Convention of Arbitration and Conciliation entered
-into between Germany and Denmark on 2 June 1926._
-
-PARTICULARS: In that Germany, without warning, and notwithstanding its
-solemn covenant to settle by peaceful means all disputes of any nature
-whatever which might arise between it and Denmark which were not capable
-of settlement by diplomacy and which had not been referred by mutual
-agreement to the Permanent Court of International Justice, did, on or
-about 9 April, 1940, with a Military Force, attack, invade, and occupy
-Denmark, thereby violating its neutrality and territorial integrity and
-destroying its sovereign independence.
-
- XIII
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of Treaty between Germany and other Powers providing
-for Renunciation of War as an Instrument of National Policy, signed at
-Paris 27 August 1928, known as the Kellogg-Briand Pact._
-
-PARTICULARS: In that Germany did, on or about the dates specified in
-Column 1, with a military force, attack the sovereigns specified in
-Column 2, respectively, and resort to war against such sovereigns, in
-violation of its solemn declaration condemning recourse to war for the
-solution of international controversies, its solemn renunciation of war
-as an instrument of national policy in its relations with such
-sovereigns, and its solemn covenant that settlement or solution of all
-disputes or conflicts of whatever nature or origin arising between it
-and such sovereigns should never be sought except by pacific means.
-
- _Column 1_ _Column 2_
- 1 September 1939 Republic of Poland
- 9 April 1940 Kingdom of Norway
- 9 April 1940 Kingdom of Denmark
- 10 May 1940 Kingdom of Belgium
- 10 May 1940 Grand-Duchy of Luxembourg
- 10 May 1940 Kingdom of the Netherlands
- 6 April 1941 Kingdom of Greece
- 6 April 1941 Kingdom of Yugoslavia
- 22 June 1941 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
- 11 December 1941 United States of America
-
- XIV
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of Treaty of Arbitration and Conciliation entered
-into between Germany and Luxembourg on 11 September 1929._
-
-PARTICULARS: In that Germany, without warning, and notwithstanding its
-solemn covenant to settle by peaceful means all disputes which might
-arise between it and Luxembourg which were not capable of settlement by
-diplomacy, did, on or about 10 May 1940, with a military force, attack,
-invade, and occupy Luxembourg, thereby violating its neutrality and
-territorial integrity and destroying its sovereign independence.
-
- XV
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of the Declaration of Non-Aggression entered into
-between Germany and Poland on 26 January 1934._
-
-PARTICULARS: In that Germany proceeding to the application of force for
-the purpose of reaching a decision did, on or about 1 September 1939, at
-various places along the German-Polish frontier employ military forces
-to attack, invade and commit other acts of aggression against Poland.
-
- XVI
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of German Assurance given on 21 May 1935 that the
-Inviolability and Integrity of the Federal State of Austria would be
-Recognized._
-
-PARTICULARS: In that Germany did, on or about 12 March 1938, at various
-points and places along the German-Austrian frontier, with a military
-force and in violation of its solemn declaration and assurance, invade
-and annex to Germany the territory of the Federal State of Austria.
-
- XVII
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of Austro-German Agreement of 11 July 1936._
-
-PARTICULARS: In that Germany during the period from 12 February 1938 to
-13 March 1938 did by duress and various aggressive acts, including the
-use of military force, cause the Federal State of Austria to yield up
-its sovereignty to the German State in violation of Germany’s agreement
-to recognize the full sovereignty of the Federal State of Austria.
-
- XVIII
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of German Assurances given on 30 January 1937, 28
-April 1939, 26 August 1939 and 6 October 1939 to Respect the Neutrality
-and Territorial Inviolability of the Netherlands._
-
-PARTICULARS: In that Germany, without warning, and without recourse to
-peaceful means of settling any considered differences did, on or about
-10 May 1940, with a military force and in violation of its solemn
-assurances, invade, occupy, and attempt to subjugate the sovereign
-territory of the Netherlands.
-
- XIX
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of German Assurances given on 30 January 1937, 13
-October 1937, 28 April 1939, 26 August 1939 and 6 October 1939 to
-Respect the Neutrality and Territorial Integrity and Inviolability of
-Belgium._
-
-PARTICULARS: In that Germany, without warning, did on or about 10 May
-1940, with a military force and in violation of its solemn assurances
-and declarations, attack, invade, and occupy the sovereign territory of
-Belgium.
-
- XX
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of Assurances given on 11 March 1938 and 26 September
-1938 to Czechoslovakia._
-
-PARTICULARS: In that Germany, on or about 15 March 1939 did, by
-establishing a Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, under duress and by
-the threat of force, violate the assurance given on 11 March 1938 to
-respect the territorial integrity of the Czechoslovak Republic and the
-assurance given on 26 September 1938 that, if the so-called Sudeten
-territories were ceded to Germany, no further German territorial claims
-on Czechoslovakia would be made.
-
- XXI
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of the Munich Agreement and Annexes of 29 September
-1938._
-
-PARTICULARS: (1) In that Germany on or about 15 March 1939, did by
-duress and the threat of military intervention force the Republic of
-Czechoslovakia to deliver the destiny of the Czech people and country
-into the hands of the Fuehrer of the German Reich.
-
-(2) In that Germany refused and failed to join in an international
-guarantee of the new boundaries of the Czechoslovakia state as provided
-for in Annex No. 1 to the Munich Agreement.
-
- XXII
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of the Solemn Assurance of Germany given on 3
-September 1939, 28 April 1939 and 6 October 1939 that they would not
-violate the Independence or Sovereignty of the Kingdom of Norway._
-
-PARTICULARS: In that Germany, without warning did, on or about 9 April
-1940, with its military and naval forces attack, invade and commit other
-acts of aggression against the Kingdom of Norway.
-
- XXIII
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of German Assurances given on 28 April 1939 and 26
-August 1939 to Respect the Neutrality and Territorial Inviolability of
-Luxembourg._
-
-PARTICULARS: In that Germany, without warning, and without recourse to
-peaceful means of settling any considered differences, did, on or about
-10 May 1940, with a military force and in violation of the solemn
-assurances, invade, occupy, and absorb into Germany the sovereign
-territory of Luxembourg.
-
- XXIV
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of the Treaty of Non-Aggression between Germany and
-Denmark signed at Berlin 31 May 1939._
-
-PARTICULARS: In that Germany, without prior warning did, on or about 9
-April 1940, with its military forces attack, invade and commit other
-acts of aggression against the Kingdom of Denmark.
-
- XXV
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of Treaty of Non-Aggression entered into between
-Germany and U.S.S.R. on 23 August 1939._
-
-PARTICULARS: (1) In that Germany did, on or about 22 June 1941, employ
-military forces to attack and commit acts of aggression against the
-U.S.S.R.
-
-(2) In that Germany without warning or recourse to a friendly exchange
-of views or arbitration did, on or about 22 June 1941, employ military
-forces to attack and commit acts of aggression against the U.S.S.R.
-
- XXVI
-
-CHARGE: _Violation of German Assurance given on 6 October 1939 to
-Respect the Neutrality and Territorial Integrity of Yugoslavia._
-
-PARTICULARS: In that Germany, without prior warning did, on or about 6
-April 1941, with its military forces attack, invade and commit other
-acts of aggression against the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
-
- * * * * *
-
- STATEMENT OF RESERVATION TO THE INDICTMENT
-
-Upon the signing of the Indictment in Berlin on 6 October 1945, Justice
-Jackson, on behalf of the United States, filed the following statement
-of reservation with the Tribunal and with the Chief Prosecutors of
-France, Great Britain, and Soviet Russia:
-
- Berlin
- 6 October 1945
-
-M. Francois de Menthon,
-Sir Hartley Shawcross,
-General R. A. Rudenko.
-
-Dear Sirs:
-
-In the Indictment of German War Criminals signed today, reference is
-made to Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and certain other territories as
-being within the area of the USSR. This language is proposed by Russia
-and is accepted to avoid the delay which would be occasioned by
-insistence on an alteration in the text. The Indictment is signed
-subject to this reservation and understanding.
-
-I have no authority either to admit or to challenge, on behalf of the
-United States of America, Soviet claims to sovereignty over such
-territories. Nothing, therefore, in this Indictment is to be construed
-as a recognition by the United States of such sovereignty or as
-indicating any attitude, either on the part of the United States or on
-the part of the undersigned, toward any claim to recognition of such
-sovereignty.
-
- Respectfully submitted,
- [signed] Robert H. Jackson
- ROBERT H. JACKSON
- Chief of Counsel for the United States
-
- * * * * *
-
-To the Clerk or Recording Officer,
- International Military Tribunal:
-
-The representative of the United States has found it necessary to make
-certain reservations as to the possible bearing of certain language in
-the Indictment upon political questions which are considered to be
-irrelevant to the proceedings before this Tribunal. However, it is
-considered appropriate to disclose such reservations that they may not
-be unknown to the Tribunal in the event they should at any time be
-considered relevant. For that purpose, the foregoing copy is filed.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter IV
- MOTIONS, RULINGS, AND EXPLANATORY MATERIAL
- RELATING TO CERTAIN OF THE DEFENDANTS
-
-
-Although 24 individuals were named as defendants in the Indictment
-signed in Berlin on 6 October 1945, only 22 remained as defendants when
-the trial commenced on 20 November. The number had been reduced by the
-suicide of Robert Ley and by the Tribunal’s severance of Gustav Krupp
-von Bohlen und Halbach from the proceedings. Of the 22 surviving
-defendants only 20 appeared in the prisoners’ dock at the opening of
-court. Martin Bormann, in the absence of clear evidence to the contrary,
-was presumed to be alive and at large. Ernst Kaltenbrunner had been
-hospitalized by a cranial hemorrhage, and as a consequence was unable to
-be present at the trial save for one period of a few days.
-
-Defense counsel for two of the twenty men in the prisoners’ dock, Hess
-and Streicher, sought to have the proceedings against their clients
-dismissed on the grounds of their mental incapacity to stand trial.
-Expert medical examiners concluded that both defendants were fit to
-defend themselves, and the proceedings against them were resumed. One of
-them, Hess, who had claimed to be a victim of amnesia, created something
-of a sensation by confessing in open court that he had only been
-pretending to suffer from amnesia and that his memory was actually in
-good repair.
-
-Fuller explanatory notes concerning the positions taken by the
-prosecution and the defense and the actions of the Tribunal in the cases
-of each of these six defendants, together with significant papers
-bearing on these matters, are printed hereinafter.
-
-
- 1. ROBERT LEY
-
-Pending the opening of the trial on 20 November 1945 the defendants were
-held in the prison at the Palace of Justice in Nurnberg, under the
-custody of the United States Army. In the evening of October 25 the
-guard on watch before the cell of Robert Ley noticed that the prisoner
-had maintained the same position for some time without moving. The guard
-entered the cell to find that although the prison officials had taken
-every known precaution, Ley had succeeded in committing suicide. Ley had
-ripped the hemmed edge from a towel, twisted it, soaked it in water, and
-fashioned it into a crude noose which he fastened to an overhead toilet
-flush pipe. He had then stuffed his mouth with rags, apparently torn
-from his own underwear. When he seated himself, strangulation was
-produced, and Robert Ley had succeeded in accomplishing his exit from
-the court of judgment, and from the world of living men. A farewell
-message written by Ley, together with other statements made by him
-during imprisonment, may be found at the end of the last volume
-(_Statements_ XI-XIII).
-
-
- 2. GUSTAV KRUPP von BOHLEN und HALBACH
-
-The name of Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach stood thirteenth on the
-list of twenty-four defendants accused in the Indictment signed in
-Berlin on 6 October 1945. On 4 November counsel for Krupp filed a motion
-requesting that the Tribunal defer proceedings against the defendant
-until his health permitted him to stand trial, and that he should not be
-tried in his absence. The Tribunal on 5 November appointed a medical
-commission consisting of representatives of the Soviet Union, France,
-Great Britain, and the United States, to examine Krupp and determine
-whether he was fit to stand trial. On 12 November the Chief of Counsel
-for the United States filed an answer opposing the motion of defense
-counsel and proposing that Gustav Krupp should not be dismissed from the
-proceedings unless Alfried Krupp, the son and sole owner of the Krupp
-Works, were substituted as a defendant. On 14 November, before the
-opening of the trial itself, the Tribunal heard oral argument by the
-prosecution and defense, in which substantially the same views were
-presented as had been previously expressed in the written motions.
-
-The Tribunal on 15 November announced its ruling postponing the
-proceedings against Gustav Krupp, but retaining the Indictment charges
-against him on the docket for later trial if his physical and mental
-condition should permit. The ruling stated that the question of adding
-another name to the Indictment would be considered later. Thereupon, on
-16 November, the American Chief of Counsel filed a memorandum with the
-Tribunal stating as a matter of record that the United States was not
-committed to participate in any subsequent four-power trial. On the same
-day the Soviet and French Chief Prosecutors joined the United States
-Chief of Counsel in a motion formally designating Alfried Krupp a
-defendant. On the following day the Tribunal announced its ruling
-rejecting the motion to add the name of Alfried Krupp as a defendant.
-
-The significant papers pertaining to these questions are set forth
-below.
-
- A. _MOTION BY DEFENSE COUNSEL FOR POSTPONEMENT OF PROCEEDINGS AGAINST
- GUSTAV KRUPP VON BOHLEN UND HALBACH_
-
- Nurnberg, 4 November 1945
-
-THEODOR KLEFISCH
-LAWYER
-COLOGNE, 43, BLUMENTHALSTRASSE
-
-To: The International Military Tribunal Nurnberg.
-
-As defending counsel to the accused Dr. Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und
-Halbach I beg to state that the proceedings against this accused be
-deferred until he is again fit for trial.
-
-At any rate I request that the accused be not tried in his absence.
-
- _Reasons_
-
-By Article 12 of the Statute of the International Military Tribunal this
-court has the right to try an accused in his absence if he cannot be
-found, or if the court deem this necessary for other reasons in the
-interest of justice.
-
-The 75 year old accused Krupp von Bohlen has for a long time been
-incapable of trial or examination owing to his severe physical and
-mental infirmities. He is not in a position to be in contact with the
-outside world nor to make or receive statements. The indictment was
-served on him on the 19th October 1945 by a representative of the
-International Military Tribunal by placing the document on his bed. The
-accused had no knowledge of this event. Consequently he is not aware of
-the existence of an indictment. Naturally therefore he is not capable of
-communicating either with his defense counsel nor with other persons on
-the subject of his defense.
-
-To prove the above, 2 medical certificates are enclosed viz. that of the
-court medical expert Doctor Karl Gersdorf of Werfen Salzburg of 9th
-September 1945 and that of the Professor Doctor Otto Gerke of Bedgnstein
-of 13th September.
-
-Latterly Herr Krupp von Bohlen has been examined several times by
-American military doctors. As far as it is possible I should like to
-request for another complete medical examination. If the accused is
-unable to appear before the court, then according to article 12 of the
-statute he could only be tried if the court deemed it necessary in the
-interests of justice.
-
-Whatever may be understood by the phrase “in the interests of justice”
-it would hardly be objective justice to try a defendant accused of such
-serious crimes, if he were not informed of the contents of the
-accusations or if he were not given the chance to conduct his own
-defense or instruct a defense counsel. Particularly is he in no
-condition to comprehend the following rights of an accused set out in
-the statute:
-
-1. By article 16 Section (a) of the statute a copy of the indictment in
-a language which he understands will be served on the accused at a
-suitably appointed time. In the first place this concerns the statement
-which the accused has to render on inquiry as to whether he admits his
-guilt or not, a statement which is of particular importance for the
-course of the trial and for the decision of the tribunal. This is all
-the more important as this statement regarding guilt or innocence can
-only be made exclusively by the accused himself according to his own
-judgment and after examining his conscience. So far as the procedure is
-admissible at all, the defense counsel could not at the request of the
-court express himself on the question of guilt as such a declaration
-presupposes the possibility of communication and understanding with the
-accused.
-
-Also the defendant could not exercise the right to the last word to
-which he is entitled according to Article 24 Section f.
-
-The legislators who set up these guarantees for the defense, cannot wish
-to deny them undeservedly to an accused who cannot make use of them
-owing to illness. If by Article 12 of the statute the trial of an absent
-defendant is allowed then this exception to the rule can only be applied
-to a defendant who is unwilling to appear though able to do so. As is
-the case with the criminal procedure rules of nearly all countries, it
-is on this principle that the rules and regulations concerning the trial
-of absent defendants are based.
-
- [signed] Klefisch
- Lawyer
-B. _ANSWER FOR THE UNITED STATES TO THE MOTION FILED IN BEHALF OF KRUPP
- VON BOHLEN_
-
-To the International Military Tribunal:
-
-The United States respectfully opposes the application on behalf of
-Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach that his trial be “deferred until he
-is again fit for trial.”
-
-If the Tribunal should grant this application, the practical effect
-would be to quash all proceedings, for all time, against Krupp von
-Bohlen.
-
-It appears that Krupp should not be arrested and brought to the court
-room for trial. But the plea is that the Tribunal also excuse him from
-being tried _in absentia_. This form of trial admittedly is authorized
-by Article 12 of the Charter of the Tribunal. Of course, trial _in
-absentia_ in the circumstances of the case is an unsatisfactory
-proceeding either for prosecution or for defense. But the request that
-Krupp von Bohlen be neither brought to court nor tried in his absence is
-based on the contention that “the interest of justice” requires that he
-be thus excused from any form of trial. Public interests, which
-transcend all private considerations, require that Krupp von Bohlen
-shall not be dismissed unless some other representative of the Krupp
-armament and munitions interests be substituted. These public interests
-are as follows:
-
-Four generations of the Krupp family have owned and operated the great
-armament and munitions plants which have been the chief source of
-Germany’s war supplies. For over 130 years this family has been the
-focus, the symbol, and the beneficiary of the most sinister forces
-engaged in menacing the peace of Europe. During the period between the
-two World Wars the management of these enterprises was chiefly in
-defendant Krupp von Bohlen. It was at all times, however, a Krupp family
-enterprise. Krupp von Bohlen was only a nominal owner himself; his wife,
-Bertha Krupp, owned the bulk of the stock. About 1937 their son, Alfried
-Krupp, became plant manager and was actively associated in policy-making
-and executive management thereafter. In 1940, Krupp von Bohlen, getting
-on in years, became Chairman of the Board of the concerns, thus making
-way for Alfried, who became President. In 1943, Alfried became sole
-owner of the Krupp enterprises by agreement between the family and the
-Nazi government, for the purpose of perpetuating this business in Krupp
-family control. It is evident that the future menace of this concern
-lies in continuance of the tradition under Alfried, now reported to be
-an internee of the British Army of the Rhine.
-
-To drop Krupp von Bohlen from this case without substitution of Alfried,
-drops from the case the entire Krupp family, and defeats any effective
-judgment against the German armament makers. Whether this would be “in
-the interests of justice” will appear from the following recital of only
-the most significant items of evidence now in possession of the United
-States as to the activities of Krupp von Bohlen, in which his son
-Alfried at all times aided, as did other associates in the vast armament
-enterprises, all plotting to bring about the second World War, and to
-aid in its ruthless and illegal conduct.
-
-After the first World War, the Krupp family and their associates failed
-to comply with Germany’s disarmament agreements, but all secretly and
-knowingly conspired to evade them.
-
-In the March 1, 1940 issue of the Krupp Magazine, the defendant Krupp
-stated:
-
- “I wanted and had to maintain Krupp in spite of all opposition,
- as an armament plant for the later future, even if in
- camouflaged form. I could only speak in the smallest, most
- intimate circles, about the real reasons which made me undertake
- the changeover of the plants for certain lines of production. *
- * * Even the Allied snoop commissioners were duped. * * * After
- the accession to power of Adolf Hitler, I had the satisfaction
- of reporting to the Fuehrer that Krupp stood ready, after a
- short warming-up period, to begin rearmament of the German
- people without any gaps of experience * * *”
-
-Krupp von Bohlen (and Alfried Krupp as well) lent his name, prestige,
-and financial support to bring the Nazi Party, with an avowed program of
-renewing the war, into power over the German State. On April 25, 1931
-von Bohlen acted as chairman of the Association of German Industry to
-bring it into line with Nazi policies. On May 30, 1933 he wrote to
-Schacht that “it is proposed to initiate a collection in the most
-far-reaching circles of German industry, including agriculture and the
-banking world, which is to be put at the disposal of the Fuehrer of the
-NSDAP in the name of ‘The Hitler Fund’ * * * I have accepted the
-chairmanship of the management council.” Krupp contributed from the
-treasury of the main Krupp company 4,738,446 Marks to the Nazi Party
-fund. In June, 1935 he contributed 100,000 Marks to the Nazi Party out
-of his personal account.
-
-The Nazi Party did not succeed in obtaining control of Germany until it
-obtained support of the industrial interests, largely through the
-influence of Krupp. Alfried first became a Nazi Party member and later
-von Bohlen did also. The Krupp influence was powerful in promoting the
-Nazi plan to incite aggressive warfare in Europe.
-
-Krupp von Bohlen strongly advocated and supported Germany’s withdrawal
-from the Disarmament Conference and from the League of Nations. He
-personally made repeated public speeches approving and inciting Hitler’s
-program of aggression; on April 6th and 7th, 1938 two speeches approved
-annexation of Austria; on October 13, 1938 he publicly approved Nazi
-occupation of the Sudetenland; on September 4, 1939 he approved the
-invasion of Poland; on May 6, 1941 he spoke commemorating the success of
-Nazi arms in the West. Alfried Krupp also made speeches to the same
-general effect. The Krupps were thus one of the most persistent and
-influential forces that made this war.
-
-The Krupps also were the chief factor in getting ready for the war. In
-January, 1944 in a speech at the University of Berlin, von Bohlen
-boasted, “Through years of secret work, scientific and basic groundwork
-was laid in order to be ready again to work for the German Armed Forces
-at the appointed hour without loss of time or experience.” In 1937,
-before Germany went to war, the Krupps booked orders to equip satellite
-governments on approval of the German High Command. Krupp contributed
-20,000 Marks to the defendant Rosenberg for the purpose of spreading
-Nazi propaganda abroad. In a memorandum of October 12, 1939, a Krupp
-official wrote offering to mail propaganda pamphlets abroad at Krupp
-expense.
-
-Once the war was on, Krupps, both von Bohlen and Alfried being directly
-responsible therefor, led German industry in violating treaties and
-International Law by employing enslaved laborers, impressed and imported
-from nearly every country occupied by Germany, and by compelling
-prisoners of war to make arms and munitions for use against their own
-countries. There is ample evidence that in Krupp’s custody and service
-they were underfed and overworked, misused and inhumanly treated.
-Captured records show that in September, 1944, Krupp concerns were
-working 54,990 foreign workers and 18,902 prisoners of war.
-
-Moreover, the Krupp companies profited greatly from destroying the peace
-of the world through support of the Nazi program. The rearmament of
-Germany gave Krupp huge orders and corresponding profits. Before this
-Nazi menace to the peace began, the Krupps were operating at a
-substantial loss. But the net profits after taxes, gifts and reserves
-steadily rose with rise of Nazi rearmament, being as follows:
-
- _Marks_
- For year ending Sept. 30, 1935 57,216,392
- For year ending Sept. 30, 1938 97,071,632
- For year ending Sept. 30, 1941 111,555,216
-
-The book value of the Krupp concerns mounted from 75,962,000 Marks on
-October 1, 1933 to 237,316,093 Marks on October 1, 1943. Even this
-included many going concerns in occupied countries carried at a book
-value of only 1 Mark each. These figures are subject to the adjustments
-and controversies usual with financial statements of each vast
-enterprise but approximately reflect the facts about property and
-operations.
-
-The services of Alfried Krupp and of von Bohlen and their family to the
-war aims of the Nazi Party were so outstanding that the Krupp
-enterprises were made a special exception to the policy of
-nationalization of industries. Hitler said that he would be “prepared to
-arrange for any possible safeguarding for the continued existence of the
-works as a family enterprise; it would be simplest to issue ‘lex Krupp’
-to start with.” After short negotiations, this was done. A decree of
-November 12, 1943 preserves the Krupp works as a family enterprise in
-Alfried Krupp’s control and recites that it is done in recognition of
-the fact that “for 132 years the firm of Fried. Krupp, as a family
-enterprise has achieved outstanding and unique merits for the armed
-strength of the German people.”
-
-It has at all times been the position of the United States that the
-great industrialists of Germany were guilty of the crimes charged in
-this Indictment quite as much as its politicians, diplomats, and
-soldiers. Its Chief of Counsel on June 7, 1945, in a report to President
-Truman, released by him and with his approval, stated that the
-accusations of crimes include individuals in authority in the financial,
-industrial, and economic life of Germany, as well as others.
-
-Pursuant thereto, the United States, with approval of the Secretary of
-State, proposed to indict Alfried Krupp, son of Krupp von Bohlen, and
-President and owner of the Krupp concern. The Prosecutors representing
-the Soviet Union, the French Republic, and the United Kingdom
-unanimously opposed inclusion of Alfried Krupp. This is not said in
-criticism of them or their judgment. The necessity of limiting the
-number of defendants was considered by representatives of the other
-three nations to preclude the addition of Alfried Krupp. Learning the
-serious condition of Krupp von Bohlen, immediately upon service of the
-Indictment, the United States again called a meeting of Prosecutors and
-proposed an amendment to include Alfried Krupp. Again the proposal of
-the United States was defeated by a vote of three-to-one. If now the
-Tribunal shall exercise its discretion to excuse from trial the one
-indicted member of the Krupp family, one of the chief purposes of the
-United States will be defeated, and it is submitted that such a result
-is not “in the interests of justice.”
-
-The United States respectfully submits that no greater disservice to the
-future peace of the world could be done than to excuse the entire Krupp
-family and the armament enterprise from this trial in which aggressive
-war-making is sought to be condemned. The “interests of justice” cannot
-be determined without taking into account justice to the men of four
-generations whose lives have been taken or menaced by Krupp munitions
-and Krupp armament, and those of the future who can feel no safety if
-such persons as this escape all condemnation in proceedings such as
-this.
-
-While of course the United States can not, without the concurrence of
-one other power, indict a new defendant, it can under the Charter alone
-oppose this Motion. The United States respectfully urges that if the
-favor now sought by Krupp von Bohlen is to be granted, it be upon the
-condition that Alfried Krupp be substituted or added as a defendant so
-that there may be a representative of the Krupp interests before the
-Tribunal.
-
-It may be suggested that bringing in a new defendant would result in
-delay. Admitting, however, that a delay which cannot exceed a few days
-may be occasioned, it is respectfully suggested that the precise day
-that this trial will start is a less important consideration than
-whether it is to fail of one of its principal purposes. The American
-Prosecution Staff has been by long odds the longest and farthest away
-from home in this endeavor. On personal, as well as public interest
-considerations, it deplores delay. But we think the future, as well as
-the contemporary world, cannot fail to be shocked if, in a trial in
-which it is sought to condemn aggressive war-making, the Krupp
-industrial empire is completely saved from condemnation.
-
-The complete trial brief of the United States on Krupp von Bohlen, with
-copies of the documents on which his culpability is asserted, will be
-made available to the Tribunal if it is desired as evidence concerning
-him and Alfried Krupp and the Krupp concerns.
-
-Respectfully submitted:
-
- [signed] Robert H. Jackson
- ROBERT H. JACKSON,
- Chief of Counsel for the United States of America.
- 12 November 1945.
- C. _RULING OF THE TRIBUNAL ON 15 NOVEMBER 1945_
-
- IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF COUNSEL FOR KRUPP VON BOHLEN FOR
- POSTPONEMENT OF THE PROCEEDINGS AGAINST THIS DEFENDANT
-
-Council for Gustav Krupp von Bohlen has applied to the Tribunal for
-postponement of the proceedings against this defendant on the ground
-that his physical and mental condition are such that he is incapable of
-understanding the proceedings against him and of presenting any defence
-that he may have.
-
-On November 5, the Tribunal appointed a medical commission composed of
-the following physicians: R. E. Tunbridge, Brigadier, O.B.E., M.D.,
-M.Sc., F.R.C.P., Consulting Physician, British Army of the Rhine; Rene
-Piedelievre, M.D., professor a la Faculte de Medicine de Paris; Expert
-pres les Tribuneaux; Nicolas Kurshakov, M.D., Professor of Medicine,
-Medical Institute of Moscow; Chief Internist, Commissariat of Public
-Health, U.S.S.R.; Eugene Sepp, M.D., Emeritus Professor of Neurology,
-Medical Institute of Moscow; Member, Academy of Sciences, U.S.S.R.;
-Eugene Krasnushkin, M.D.; Professor of Psychiatry, Medical Institute of
-Moscow; Bertram Schaffner, Major, Medical Corps, Neuropsychiatrist, Army
-of the United States.
-
-The Commission has reported to the Tribunal that it is unanimously of
-the opinion that Krupp von Bohlen suffers from senile softening of the
-brain; that his mental condition is such that he is incapable of
-understanding court procedure and of understanding or cooperating in
-interrogations; that his physical state is such that he cannot be moved
-without endangering his life; and that his condition is unlikely to
-improve but rather will deteriorate further.
-
-The Tribunal accepts the findings of the medical commission to which
-exception is taken neither by the Prosecution nor by the Defense.
-
-Article 12 of the Charter authorizes the trial of a defendant _in
-absentia_ if found by the Tribunal to be “necessary in the interests of
-justice”. It is contended on behalf of the Chief Prosecutors that in the
-interests of justice Krupp von Bohlen should be tried _in absentia_,
-despite his physical and mental condition.
-
-It is the decision of the Tribunal that upon the facts presented the
-interests of justice do not require that Krupp von Bohlen be tried _in
-absentia_. The Charter of the Tribunal envisages a fair trial in which
-the Chief Prosecutors may present the evidence in support of an
-indictment and the defendants may present such defence as they may
-believe themselves to have. Where nature rather than flight or contumacy
-has rendered such a trial impossible, it is not in accordance with
-justice that the case should proceed in the absence of a defendant.
-
-For the foregoing reasons, the Tribunal _Orders that_:
-
-1. The application for postponement of the proceeding against Gustav
-Krupp von Bohlen is granted.
-
-2. The charges in the indictment against Gustav Krupp von Bohlen shall
-be retained upon the docket of the Tribunal for trial hereafter, if the
-physical and mental condition of the Defendant should permit.
-
-Further questions raised by the Chief Prosecutors, including the
-question of adding another name to the Indictment, will be considered
-later.
-
- D. _MEMORANDUM FILED BY THE UNITED STATES CHIEF OF COUNSEL_
-
-TO THE INTERNATIONAL MILITARY TRIBUNAL
-
-The United States, by its Chief of Counsel, respectfully shows:
-
-The order of the Tribunal, that “The charges in the indictment against
-Gustav Krupp von Bohlen shall be retained upon the docket of the
-Tribunal for trial hereafter, if the physical and mental condition of
-the Defendant should permit,” requires the United States to make clear
-its attitude toward subsequent trials, which may have been
-misapprehended by the Tribunal, in order that no inference be drawn from
-its silence.
-
-The United States never has committed itself to participate in any Four
-Power trial except the one now pending. The purpose of accusing
-organizations and groups as criminal was to reach, through subsequent
-and more expeditious trials before Military Government or military
-courts, a large number of persons. According to estimates of the United
-States Army, a finding that the organizations presently accused are
-criminal organizations would result in the trial of approximately
-130,000 persons now held in the custody of the United States Army; and I
-am uninformed as to those held by others. It has been the great purpose
-of the United States from the beginning to bring into this one trial all
-that is necessary by way of defendants and evidence to reach the large
-number of persons responsible for the crimes charged without going over
-the entire evidence again. We, therefore, desire that it be a matter of
-record that the United States has not been, and is not by this order,
-committed to participate in any subsequent Four Power trial. It reserves
-freedom to determine that question after the capacity to handle one
-trial under difficult conditions has been tested.
-
-Respectfully submitted:
-
- [signed] Robert H. Jackson
- ROBERT H. JACKSON,
- Chief of Counsel for the United States
- 16 November 1945
- E. _MOTION BY THE SOVIET, FRENCH, AND AMERICAN CHIEF PROSECUTORS TO
- DESIGNATE ALFRIED KRUPP AS A DEFENDANT_
-
-TO THE INTERNATIONAL MILITARY TRIBUNAL:
-
-Upon the Indictment, the motion of Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach
-and the answers thereto, and all proceedings had thereunder, the
-Committee of Prosecutors created under the Charter hereby designates
-Alfried Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach as a defendant and respectfully
-moves that the Indictment be amended by adding the name of Alfried Krupp
-von Bohlen und Halbach as a defendant, and by the addition of
-appropriate allegations in reference to him in the Appendix A thereof.
-It also moves that the time of Alfried Krupp be shortened from thirty
-days to December 2, 1945. For this purpose, the Committee of Prosecutors
-adopts and ratifies the Answer filed on behalf of the United States on
-November 12, 1945 in response to the Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach
-motion, and the motion made by Robert H. Jackson in open Court on behalf
-of the United States of America, The Soviet Union, and The Provisional
-Government of France. This motion is authorized by a resolution adopted
-at a meeting of the Committee of Prosecutors held on November 16, 1945.
-
- [signed] Pokrovsky
- For the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
- [signed] Francois de Menthon
- For the Provisional Government of France
- [signed] Robert H. Jackson
- For the United States of America.
- 16 November 1945.
- F. _RULING OF THE TRIBUNAL REJECTING THE PROSECUTION’S MOTION TO NAME
- ALFRIED KRUPP AS A DEFENDANT_
-
- INTERNATIONAL MILITARY TRIBUNAL
- Sitting at Nurnberg, Germany, on 17 November 1945,
- In session 1500 hours
-
-THE PRESIDENT: The motion to amend the indictment by adding the name of
-Alfried Krupp has been considered by the Tribunal in all its aspects and
-the application is rejected.
-
-The Tribunal will now adjourn.
-
-(Whereupon at 1505 the Tribunal adjourned.)
-
-
- 3. MARTIN BORMANN
-
-As the day of the trial approached, Martin Bormann, although named as a
-defendant in the Indictment, had not yet been apprehended despite the
-efforts of numerous special investigators. On 17 November 1945 the
-Tribunal requested the views of the prosecution on the question of trial
-_in absentia_. Sir David Maxwell-Fyfe, Deputy Chief Prosecutor of Great
-Britain, reviewed the information available and, on behalf of the United
-States and France as well as Great Britain, stated that: “The
-prosecution cannot say that the matter is beyond a probability that
-Bormann is dead. There is still the clear possibility that he is alive.”
-Notice had been publicly given, in the manner prescribed by the
-Tribunal, that Bormann had been named a defendant, and it was therefore
-suggested that the case fell within Article 12 of the Charter
-authorizing trial _in absentia_. The Soviet representative expressed
-concurrence; whereupon Lord Justice Lawrence, presiding, orally
-announced the Tribunal’s ruling, on the same date:
-
- “The Tribunal has decided that, in pursuance of Article 12 of
- the Charter, it will try the Defendant Bormann in his absence,
- and it announces that counsel for the Defendant Bormann will be
- appointed to defend him.”
-
-Thereafter, the counsel named to defend Bormann moved for postponement
-of the proceedings against the defendant. The Tribunal announced on 22
-November through Lord Justice Lawrence, presiding, that:
-
- “* * * in view of the fact that the provisions of the Charter
- and the Tribunal’s rule of procedure have been strictly carried
- out in the notices which have been given, and the fact that
- counsel for Bormann will have ample time before they are called
- upon to present defense on his behalf, the motion is denied.”
-
-
- 4. ERNST KALTENBRUNNER
-
-On 18 November 1945, two days before the opening of the trial,
-Kaltenbrunner suffered a spontaneous subarachanoid hemorrhage and was
-taken to the hospital for treatment. He remained there until 6 December,
-when he was returned to the jail. He attended the 10 December session of
-the Tribunal and was in court for several days thereafter, but his
-condition deteriorated so that it was necessary to return him to the
-hospital for further treatment. Medical opinion expects at this writing
-(23 January), that he will be required to remain under hospital care for
-a considerable period.
-
-On 2 January Kaltenbrunner’s counsel, Dr. Kauffmann, requested the
-Tribunal to postpone the case against his client because of his illness.
-The Tribunal ruled (1) that the prosecution should proceed with any
-evidence which it proposed to direct against the criminality of
-organizations with which Kaltenbrunner was connected, (2) that any
-prosecution evidence directed against Kaltenbrunner as an individual
-should be withheld until the prosecution reached that part of its case
-in which it had planned to trace the responsibility of individual
-defendants, and (3) that Kaltenbrunner’s case should properly be left
-until the end of this section of the evidence. If at that time the
-defendant should be still unable to be present in court, the Tribunal
-ruled that “the evidence will have to be given in his absence.”
-
-A closed session followed at which the Tribunal heard both the
-prosecution and defense counsel, as a result of which the Tribunal
-modified its ruling. Since the prosecution’s evidence was so
-inextricably mingled that it was impossible to divide it between that
-which bore against Kaltenbrunner as an individual and that which bore
-against the organizations which he headed, the Tribunal ruled that it
-would hear the prosecution’s evidence in its entirety. Counsel for
-Kaltenbrunner, however, was given the privilege of cross-examining at a
-later date any witnesses which the prosecution might call against
-Kaltenbrunner. The Tribunal pointed out that defense counsel would also,
-of course, have an opportunity to deal with any documentary evidence
-against Kaltenbrunner when the time came for the presentation of the
-defense case.
-
-
- 5. JULIUS STREICHER
-
-Counsel for Streicher orally requested the Tribunal, on 15 November
-1945, to appoint a commission to make a psychiatric examination of the
-defendant. This was requested for the Defense Counsel’s “own
-protection”, although the defendant thought himself normal and did not
-wish an examination. The Tribunal directed the Defense Counsel to make
-his motion in writing. The Soviet prosecutor suggested to the Tribunal
-the desirability of having such an examination, if it were necessary at
-all, while medical experts from the Soviet Union remained in Nurnberg.
-Subsequently a panel of three medical experts examined Streicher and
-reported that he was fit to stand trial. The Tribunal thereupon ruled,
-Lord Justice Lawrence making the announcement orally in court on 22
-November, that
-
- “* * * the Tribunal wishes me to announce the decision on the
- application made on behalf of the Defendant Julius Streicher by
- his counsel that his condition should be examined. It has been
- examined by three medical experts on behalf of the Tribunal and
- their report has been submitted to and considered by the
- Tribunal; and it is as follows:
-
- “‘1. The Defendant Julius Streicher is sane.
-
- “‘2. The Defendant Julius Streicher is fit to appear before the
- Tribunal, and to present his defense.
-
- “‘3. It being the unanimous conclusion of the examiners that
- Julius Streicher is sane, he is for that reason capable of
- understanding the nature and policy of his acts during the
- period of time covered by the indictment.’
-
- “The Tribunal accepts the report of the medical experts and the
- trial against Julius Streicher will, therefore, proceed.”
-
-
- 6. RUDOLF HESS
-
-Through his pre-trial confinement in the Nurnberg prison, Hess had
-consistently maintained that he was suffering from amnesia and therefore
-could not remember facts concerning his previous activities. In order to
-determine Hess’ mental state the Tribunal appointed a commission of
-psychiatric experts from the United States, Great Britain, Russia, and
-France, to examine the defendant and furnish a report. After receiving
-the medical report the Tribunal directed that oral argument by the
-prosecution and defense counsel should be heard on 30 November 1945
-concerning the issues raised by the medical report. Prior to the oral
-argument, both the prosecution and defense filed written motions which
-outlined substantially the positions later taken in court.
-
-At the conclusion of the oral arguments, the Tribunal called upon Hess
-for a statement. Hess thereupon announced that he had simulated loss of
-memory for tactical reasons and that his memory was “again in order.” On
-the following day the Tribunal ruled that Hess was capable of standing
-trial and that his case would proceed.
-
-The papers pertaining to these matters are set out below.
-
-A. _RULING OF THE TRIBUNAL ORDERING ARGUMENT ON THE ISSUES PRESENTED BY
- THE MEDICAL REPORTS_
-
-1. Counsel for the defendant Hess has made application to the Tribunal
-to appoint an expert designated by the medical faculty of the University
-of Zurich or of Lausanne to examine the defendant Hess with reference to
-his mental competence and capacity to stand trial. This application is
-denied.
-
-2. The Tribunal has designated a commission composed of the following
-members:
-
- Eugene Krasnuchkin, M.D., Professor Psychiatry,
- Medical Institute of Moscow, assisted by
- Eugene Sepp, M.D., Professor Neurology,
- Medical Institute of Moscow
- Member, Academy of Medical Sciences, USSR; and,
- Nicolas Kuraskov, M.D., Professor of Medicine
- Medical Institute of Moscow,
- Chief Internist, Commissariat of Public Health, USSR.
- Lord Moran, M.D., F.R.C.P.
- President of the Royal College of Physicians, assisted by
- Dr. T. Reece, M.D., F.R.C.P.
- Chief Consultant Psychiatrist to the War Office, and
- Dr. George Ruddock, M.D., F.R.C.P.
- Director of Neurology to the London Hospital and
- Chief Consultant Neurologist to the War Office
- Dr. Nolan D. C. Lewis, assisted by
- Dr. D. Ewen Cameron and
- Col. Paul Schroeder, M.D.
- Professor Jean Delay.
-
-The Tribunal has requested the commission to examine the defendant Hess
-and furnish a report on the mental state of the defendant with
-particular reference to the question whether he is able to take his part
-in the trial, specifically: (1) Is the defendant able to plead to the
-indictment? (2) Is the defendant sane or not, and on this last issue the
-Tribunal wishes to be advised whether the defendant is of sufficient
-intellect to comprehend the course of the proceedings of the trial so as
-to make a proper defense, to challenge a witness to whom he might wish
-to object and to understand the details of the evidence.
-
-3. The examiners have presented their reports to the Tribunal in the
-form which commends itself to them. It is directed that copies of the
-reports be furnished to each of the Chief Prosecutors and to defense
-counsel. The Tribunal will hear argument by the Prosecution and by
-defense counsel on the issues presented by the reports on Friday,
-November 30 at 4 P. M.
-
- INTERNATIONAL MILITARY TRIBUNAL
- [signed] Geoffrey Lawrence
- Geoffrey Lawrence
- President
- Dated Nurnberg, Germany this 24th day of November, 1945
- Copies of four (4) Medical Reports attached:
- _(1) British Medical Report_
-
-REPORT on Rudolf Hess, telephoned from London.
-
-“The undersigned, having seen and examined Rudolf Hess, have come to the
-following conclusion:
-
-1. There are no relevant physical abnormalities.
-
-2. His mental state is of a mixed type. He is an unstable man, and what
-is technically called a psychopathic personality. The evidence of his
-illness in the past four years, as presented by one of us who has had
-him under his care in England, indicates that he has had a delusion of
-poisoning, and other similar paranoid ideas.
-
-Partly as a reaction to the failure of his mission, these abnormalities
-got worse, and led to suicidal attempts.
-
-In addition, he has a marked hysterical tendency, which has led to the
-development of various symptoms, notably a loss of memory, which lasted
-from November 1943 to June 1944, and which resisted all efforts at
-treatment. A second loss of memory began in February 1945 and lasted
-till the present. This amnesic symptom will eventually clear, when
-circumstances change.
-
-3. At the moment he is not insane in the strict sense. His loss of
-memory will not entirely interfere with his comprehension of the
-proceedings, but it will interfere with his ability to make his defense,
-and to understand details of the past, which arise in evidence.
-
-4. We recommend that further evidence should be obtained by
-narco-analysis and that if the Court decides to proceed with the Trial,
-the question should afterwards be reviewed on psychiatric grounds.”
-
- [signed] Moran
- J. Rees, MD, FRCP
- George Riddoch
- Dated 19th November, 1945
- _(2) Joint American and French Medical Report_
- 20 November 1945
-
-MEMORANDUM TO: Brigadier General Wm. L. Mitchell, General Secretary for
-the International Military Tribunal.
-
-In response to request of the Tribunal that the defendant Rudolf Hess be
-examined, the undersigned psychiatrists examined Rudolf Hess on November
-15th and 19th, 1945, in his cell in the Military Prison in Nurnberg.
-
-The following examinations were made: physical, neurological and
-psychological.
-
-In addition, documents were studied bearing information concerning his
-personal development and career. Reports concerning the period of his
-stay in England were scrutinized. The results of all psychological,
-special psychometric examinations and observations carried out by the
-prison psychiatrist and his staff were studied. Information was also
-derived from the official interrogation of the defendant on November
-14th and November 16th, 1945.
-
-(1) We find, as a result of our examinations and investigations, that
-Rudolf Hess is suffering from hysteria characterized in part by loss of
-memory. The nature of this loss of memory is such that it will not
-interfere with his comprehension of the proceedings, but it will
-interfere with his response to questions relating to his past and will
-interfere with his undertaking his defense.
-
-In addition there is a conscious exaggeration of his loss of memory and
-a tendency to exploit it to protect himself against examination.
-
-(2) We consider that the existing hysterical behaviour which the
-defendant reveals was initiated as a defense against the circumstances
-in which he found himself while in England; that it has now become in
-part habitual and that it will continue as long as he remains under the
-threat of imminent punishment, even though it may interfere with his
-undertaking a more normal form of defense.
-
-(3) It is the unanimous conclusion of the undersigned that Rudolf Hess
-is not insane at the present time in the strict sense of the word.
-
- (s) D. Ewen Cameron
- DR. D. EWEN CAMERON
- Professor of Psychiatrie, McGill University
- (s) Paul L. Schroeder
- COL. PAUL L. SCHROEDER
- A.U.S. Neuropsychiatric Consultant
- (s) Jean Delay
- DR. JEAN DELAY
- Professor of Psychiatrie at the Faculty of Medicine in Paris
- (s) Nolan D. C. Lewis
- DR. NOLAN D. C. LEWIS
- Professor Psychiatry, Columbia University
- _(3) Soviet Medical Report_
-
-TO THE INTERNATIONAL MILITARY TRIBUNAL
-
-In pursuance of the assignment by the Tribunal, we, the medical experts
-of the Soviet Delegation, together with the physicians of the English
-Delegation and in the presence of one representative of the American
-Medical Delegation, have examined Rudolf Hess and made a report on our
-examination of Mr. Hess together with our conclusions and interpretation
-of the behavior of Mr. Hess.
-
-The statement of the general conclusions has been signed only by the
-physicians of the Soviet Delegation and by Professor Delay, the medical
-expert of the French Delegation.
-
-Appendix: 1 Conclusions and 2 the Report on the examination of Mr. Hess.
-
- (signed) Professor Krasnushkin,
- Doctor of Medicine
- (signed) Professor Sepp,
- Honorary Scientist, Regular Member of the
- Academy of Medicine
- (signed) Professor Kushakov,
- Doctor of Medicine, Chief Therapeutist of the
- Commissariat of Health of the U.S.S.R.
- November 17, 1945
- (_a_) Conclusions
-
-After observation and an examination of Rudolf Hess the undersigned have
-reached the following conclusions:
-
-1. No essential physical deviations from normality were observed.
-
-2. His mental conditions are of a mixed type. He is an unstable person,
-which in technical terms is called a psychopathic personality. The data
-concerning his illness during the period of the last four years
-submitted by one of us who had him under observation in England, show
-that he had a delusion of being poisoned and other similar paranoic
-notions.
-
-Partly as a reaction to the failure of his mission there, the abnormal
-manifestations increased and led to attempts at suicide. In addition to
-the above-mentioned he has noticeable hysterical tendencies which caused
-a development of various symptoms, primarily, of amnesia that lasted
-from November 1943 to June of 1944 and resisted all attempts to be
-cured.
-
-The amnesia symptom may disappear with changing circumstances.
-
-The second period of amnesia started in February of 1945 and has lasted
-up through the present.
-
-3. At present he is not insane in the strict sense of the word. His
-amnesia does not prevent him completely from understanding what is going
-on around him but it will interfere with his ability to conduct his
-defense and to understand details of the past which would appear as
-factual data.
-
-4. To clarify the situation we recommend that a narco-analysis be
-performed on him and, if the Court decides to submit him to trial, the
-problem should be subsequently reexamined again from a psychiatric point
-of view.
-
-The conclusion reached on November 14 by the physicians of the British
-Delegation, Lord Moran, Dr. T. Rees and Dr. G. Riddoch, and the
-physicians of the Soviet Delegation, Professors Krasnushkin, Sepp, and
-Kurshakov, was also arrived at on November 15 by the representative of
-the French Delegation, Professor Jean Delay.
-
-After an examination of Mr. Hess which took place on November 15, 1945,
-the undersigned Professors and experts of the Soviet Delegation,
-Krasnushkin, Sepp and Kurshakov, and Professor Jean Delay, the expert
-from the French Delegation, have agreed on the following statement:
-
-Mr. Hess categorically refused to be submitted to narco-analysis and
-resisted all other procedures intended to effect a cure of his amnesia,
-and stated that he would agree to undergo treatment only after the
-trial. The behavior of Mr. Hess makes it impossible to apply the methods
-suggested in Paragraph 4 of the report of November 14 and to follow the
-suggestion of that Paragraph in present form.
-
- (signed) Professor Krasnushkin,
- Doctor of Medicine
- (signed) Professor Sepp,
- Honorary Scientist, Regular Member of the
- Academy of Medicine
- (signed) Professor Kurshakov,
- Doctor of Medicine, Chief Theraputist of the
- Commissariat of Health of the U.S.S.R.
- (signed) Professor Jean Delay
- of the School of Medicine in Paris
- November 16, 1945
- (_b_) Record of Examination of Rudolf Hess
-
-According to the information obtained on Nov. 16, 1945, during the
-interrogation of Rosenberg who had seen Hess immediately before the
-latter’s flight to England, Hess gave no evidence of any abnormality
-either in appearance or conversation. He was, as usual, quiet and
-composed. Nor was it apparent that he might have been nervous. Prior to
-this, he was a calm person, habitually suffering pains in the region of
-the stomach.
-
-As can be judged on the basis of the report of the English psychiatrist,
-Doctor Rees, who had Hess under observation from the first days of his
-flight to England, Hess, after the airplane crash, disclosed no evidence
-of a brain injury, but, upon arrest and incarceration, he began to give
-expression to ideas of persecution. He feared that he would be poisoned,
-or killed and his death represented as a suicide, and that all this
-would be done by the English under the hypnotic influence of the Jews.
-Furthermore, these delusions of persecution were maintained up to the
-news of the catastrophe suffered by the German Army at Stalingrad when
-the manifestations were replaced by amnesia. According to Doctor Rees,
-the delusions of persecution and the amnesia were observed not to take
-place simultaneously. Furthermore, there were two attempts at suicide. A
-knife wound, inflicted during the second attempt, in the skin near the
-heart gave evidence of a clearly hysterico-demonstrative character.
-After this there was again observed a change from amnesia to delusions
-of persecution, and during this period he wrote that he was simulating
-his amnesia, and, finally, again entered into a state of amnesia which
-has been prolonged up to the present.
-
-According to the examination of Rudolf Hess on Nov. 14, 1945, the
-following was disclosed.
-
-Hess complains of frequent cramping pains in the region of the stomach
-which appear independent of the taking of food, and headaches in the
-frontal lobes during mental strain, and, finally, of loss of memory.
-
-In general his condition is marked by a pallor of the skin and a
-noticeable reduction in food intake.
-
-Regarding the internal organs of Hess, the pulse is 92, and a shakening
-of the heart tone is noticeable. There has been no change in the
-condition of the other internal organs.
-
-Concerning the neurological aspect, there are no symptoms of organic
-impairment of the nervous system.
-
-Psychologically, Hess is in a state of clear consciousness; knows that
-he is in prison at Nurnberg under indictment as a war criminal; has
-read, and, according to his own words, is acquainted with the charges
-against him. He answers questions rapidly and to the point. His speech
-is coherent, his thoughts formed with precision and correctness and they
-are accompanied by sufficient emotionally expressive movements. Also,
-there is no kind of evidence of paralogism. It should also be noted
-here, that the present psychological examination, which was conducted by
-Lieut. Gilbert, M.D., bears out the testimony that the intelligence of
-Hess is normal and in some instances above the average. His movements
-are natural and not forced.
-
-He has expressed no delirious fancies nor does he give any delirious
-explanation for the painful sensation in his stomach or the loss of
-memory, as was previously attested to by Doctor Rees, namely, when Hess
-ascribed them to poisoning. At the present time, to the question about
-the reason for his painful sensations and the loss of memory, Hess
-answers that this is for the doctors to know. According to his own
-assertions, he can remember almost nothing of his former life. The gaps
-in Hess’ memory are ascertained only on the basis of the subjective
-changing of his testimony about his inability to remember this or that
-person or event given at different times. What he knows at the present
-time is, in his own words, what he allegedly learned only recently from
-the information of those around him and the films which have been shown
-him.
-
-On Nov. 14 Hess refused the injection of narcotics which were offered
-for the purpose of making an analysis of his psychological condition. On
-Nov. 15, in answer to Prof. Delay’s offer, he definitely and firmly
-refused narcosis and explained to him that, in general, he would take
-all measures to cure his amnesia only upon completion of the trial.
-
-All that has been exposed above, we are convinced, permits, of the
-interpretation that the deviation from the norm in the behavior of Hess
-takes the following forms:
-
-I. In the psychological personality of Hess there are no changes typical
-of the progressive schizophrenic disease, and therefore the delusions,
-from which he suffered periodically while in England, cannot be
-considered as manifestations of a schizophrenic paranoia, and must be
-recognized as the expression of a psychogenic paranoic reaction, that
-is, the psychologically comprehensible reaction of an unstable
-(psychologically) personality to the situation (the failure of his
-mission, arrest and incarceration). Such an interpretation of the
-delirious statements of Hess in England is bespoken by their
-disappearance, appearance and repeated disappearance depending on
-external circumstances which affected the mental state of Hess.
-
-II. The loss of memory of Hess is not the result of some kind of mental
-disease but represents hysterical amnesia, the basis of which is a
-subconscious inclination toward self-defense as well as a deliberate and
-conscious tendency toward it. Such behavior often terminates when the
-hysterical person is faced with an unavoidable necessity of conducting
-himself correctly. Therefore, the amnesia of Hess may end upon his being
-brought to trial.
-
-III. Rudolf Hess, prior to his flight to England, did not suffer from
-any kind of insanity, nor is he now suffering from it. At the present
-time he exhibits hysterical behavior with signs of a
-conscious-intentional (simulated) character, which does not exonerate
-him from his responsibility under the indictment.
-
- (signed) Professor Krasnushkin,
- Doctor of Medicine
- (signed) Professor Sepp,
- Honorary Scientist, Regular Member of the
- Academy of Medicine
- (signed) Professor Kurshakov,
- Doctor of Medicine, Chief Theraputist of the
- Commissariat of Health of the U.S.S.R.
- 17 November 1945
- B. _MOTION BY DEFENSE COUNSEL FOR POSTPONEMENT OF PROCEEDINGS AGAINST
- HESS_
-
-Attorney-at-law von Rohrscheidt
-Defense Counsel for Rudolf Hess
-
- Nurnberg, 29 November 1945
-
-To the General Secretary of the International Military Tribunal,
-Nurnberg:
-
-_Reference: Rudolf Hess—Session of 30 November 1945._
-
-I. Reply to the request of the Tribunal of 28 November 1945.
-
-II. Preparatory statement for the trial.
-
- I
-
-I, as Counsel for the Defendant Hess, answer the request of the Tribunal
-of 28 November 1945 as follows:
-
-1. No formal objection is being raised by Defense against presentation
-and use of the expert opinions obtained by the Tribunal.
-
-2. The Defense does not think the defendant Hess to be
-“verhandlungsfaehig” (in a state of health to be tried).
-
-3. Material objections are being raised by the Defense, inasmuch as the
-expert opinion denies the competence of the defendant as a consequence
-of a mental disorder.
-
- II
-
-For the proceedings, I, as Counsel for the Defendant Hess, wish to make
-the following statement:
-
-1. _I move_:
-
-_a._ That a decision be made to adjourn the proceedings against the
-defendant temporarily.
-
-_b._ That in case incapacity to be tried is asserted, proceedings in
-absentia against the defendant should not be carried on.
-
-_c._ That in case my motion _ad a_ is rejected, a super expert opinion
-be obtained from additional eminent psychiatrists.
-
-2. I _argue_ these motions as follows:
-
-_ad 1-a_: The adjournment of the proceedings is necessary because of the
- unfitness of the defendant to follow them.
-
-In this respect the (medical) opinions state unanimously upon the
-questions asked by the Tribunal, that “the ability of the Defendant Hess
-is impaired to the extent that he cannot defend himself, nor oppose a
-witness, nor understand the details of evidence.” Even if the amnesia
-does not keep him from understanding what happens about him or to
-understand the course of the trial, this amnesia nevertheless has a
-disturbing effect on his defense.
-
-The impairment of the defendant in his defense, through his amnesia,
-recognized by all opinions as a mental defect, has to be acknowledged as
-such, in view of the statements in the opinions of the Soviet, English
-and American Delegations of 14 November 1945, which designate the mental
-condition as one of a mixed kind, but more as one of a sort of mental
-abnormality. This will not make a pertinent defense possible for him
-(Hess).
-
-In this respect, it does not have to be considered that the defendant is
-not mentally ill “in the literal meaning of the word” and that he can
-follow the proceedings. The question whether the defendant is at present
-incapable, as a result of the diminution of his “mental powers,” to
-understand all occurrences and to defend himself properly, has nothing
-to do with his mental derangement when committing the crime.
-
-In the opinion of counsel, the defendant is in no case in a position to
-make himself understood or to understand argument, because he is
-impaired in his mental clarity through the loss of his memory and
-because he has completely lost the knowledge of previous events and of
-people of former acquaintance.
-
-Since the expert establishment of his mental disorder which impairs the
-defendant in the full execution of his defense, makes proceedings
-against him inadmissible, the statement of the defendant that he thinks
-himself capable of being tried has no significance.
-
-According to expert opinion, the impairment of the defendant cannot be
-removed within a measurable space of time. It is not sure whether
-treatment through Narco-Analysis, as proposed by the medical experts,
-will have the desired result. The defendant has refused to submit to
-this treatment only because he thinks of himself as capable of being
-tried and consequently not in need of such treatment. Furthermore,
-because he is opposed to any forcible influence upon the body, and
-finally, he is afraid of physical disturbances which would prevent him
-from participating in the trial if such method of treatment is used at
-this time. The proceedings would have to be dropped in case of an
-illness of long duration which excludes his fitness to be tried.
-
-_ad 1-b_: According to Article 12 of the Statutes, the Tribunal has the
- right to proceed against a defendant in absentia if
-
-he, the defendant, cannot be located or if the Tribunal thinks it
-necessary, for other reasons, in the interests of justice. If the
-Tribunal, on the basis of convincing expert opinions, establishes that
-the defendant is not in a position to put up a pertinent defense and
-consequently decides not to proceed against him, proceedings in
-absentia, according to Article 12, could then only be carried on if this
-is in the interest of justice. It would not be compatible with objective
-justice, in case that actual proof of this fact is available, if the
-defendant is impeded by an impairment based upon health reasons, in
-personally standing up for his rights and in being present at the trial.
-
-In proceedings which accuse the defendant of such serious crimes and
-possibly carry the death penalty, it would not be compatible with
-objective justice if he were personally denied the opportunity to look
-after his rights as stated in Article 16 of the Statutes. These rights
-provide for his self-defense. The possibility to “personally present
-evidence for one’s defense and to cross-examine each witness of the
-prosecution” is of such importance that any exclusion of such rights has
-to be considered an injustice toward the defendant. Proceedings in
-absentia can, under no circumstances, be accepted as a “fair trial.”
-
-The same is true for the exclusion of the defendant from the rights
-which are granted him during the proceedings according to Article 24.
-
-If the defendant is impaired in his ability to defend himself for the
-reasons of the expert opinions, and to the extent explained therein,
-then he is just as little in a position to give his Counsel the
-necessary information and to enable him to take care of the defense in
-his absence.
-
-Since the Statutes establish the rights for the defense in this precise
-manner, it does not seem fair to withhold these from a defendant in a
-case when he is prevented from personally taking care of his defense
-during the proceedings. The rules in Article 12, regarding the
-proceedings against an absent defendant, have to be considered as an
-exception which should only be used against a defendant who tries to
-dodge in spite of his being in a position to be tried. The Defendant
-Hess has always been prepared to be tried in order to avoid proceedings
-in absentia, which he considers an injustice of the highest measure.
-
-_ad 1-c_: In case the Court should not agree with the explanations and
- should not consider the statements of the expert
-
-opinion in the sense of the defense, and therefore come to a denial of
-the Application ad a, it seems necessary to obtain the super opinion
-because the opinions testify to the fact that the defendant is a
-psychopathic personality who suffers from hallucinations and still today
-shows, in the loss of memory, clear signs of a serious hysteria. If the
-Tribunal does not consider these sentiments alone as sufficient for the
-establishment of incapability to be tried, a more intensive examination
-would have to follow which would not be confined to an examination of
-only one or two hours on several days, but require a clinical
-observation.
-
-The opinions, themselves, provide for another examination of the mental
-condition of the defendant, which seems to prove that the experts
-possibly have a “disturbance of the mental capacity” in mind if the
-condition of the defendant lasts and the Tribunal, against expectations,
-declares the defendant unfit to be tried and therewith incompetent under
-all circumstances.
-
- /Signed/ von Rohrscheidt
- Attorney-at-Law
- Translator: Dr. H. v. V. Veith
- C. _ANSWER BY THE FOUR CHIEF PROSECUTORS_
-
-TO THE INTERNATIONAL MILITARY TRIBUNAL:
-MATTER OF RUDOLF HESS
-
-The undersigned representatives of their respective nations answer the
-request of the Tribunal of 28 November, 1945 respectfully as follows:
-
-1. We do not challenge or question the report of the Committee.
-
-2. It is our position that the defendant Rudolf Hess is fit to stand
-trial.
-
-3. Observations may be filed by any of the undersigned based on their
-respective relationships to the subject matter.
-
- [signed] R. RUDENKO
- For the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
- [signed] C. DUBOST
- For the Provisional Government of France
- [signed] DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE
- For the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
- [signed] ROBERT H. JACKSON
- For the United States of America
- 29 November 1945
- _(1) Answer by the United States Chief of Counsel_
-
-TO THE INTERNATIONAL MILITARY TRIBUNAL:
-
-The United States respectfully files the following observations on the
-application of RUDOLF HESS:
-
-Hess’ condition was known to the undersigned representative of the
-United States immediately after his delivery to the Nurnberg prison and
-was the subject of a report by Major Douglas McG. Kelley of the Medical
-Corps of the United States Army, which report is attached hereto.
-
-The report of Major Kelley and his recommendation for treatment were
-submitted to me and on October 20, 1945, I advised that “any treatment
-of this case involving the use of drugs which might cause injury to the
-subject is disapproved.” This was not because I disapproved of the
-treatment. I approve of the treatment and would insist on its being
-employed if the victim were a member of my own family. But I was of the
-opinion that the private administration of any kind of drug to Hess
-would be dangerous because if he should thereafter die, even of natural
-causes, it would become the subject of public controversy. This
-completely agreed with the opinion of the Security Officer, Colonel B.
-C. Andrus, whose report is attached.
-
-In view of the statements contained in the medical report of the
-Commission and in view of the facts which I have recited, the United
-States must regard Hess as a victim, at most, of a voluntary amnesia and
-presenting no case for excuse from trial.
-
-Respectfully submitted
-
- [signed] Robert H. Jackson
- Chief of Counsel for the United States.
- 29 November 1945.
-
- * * * * *
-
- [Enclosure]
-
- HEADQUARTERS
- INTERNAL SECURITY DETACHMENT
- OFFICE US CHIEF OF COUNSEL
- APO 403, US ARMY
-
- 16 October 1945
-
-SUBJECT: Psychiatric Status of Internee.
-TO: Commanding Officer, Internal Security Detachment.
-
-1. Internee Rudolf HESS has been carefully studied since his admission
-to Nurnberg Prison.
-
-2. On entry HESS manifested a spotty amnesia. The British psychiatrist
-accompanying him stated that from 4 October 43 to 4 February 45 HESS
-presented symptoms of total amnesia. From 4 February 45 to 12 July 45 he
-recovered, and is said to have made a statement that his previous
-amnesia was simulated. On 12 July 45 he again developed amnesia which
-has lasted to the present. Also while in England HESS claimed he was
-being poisoned and sealed up numerous samples of food, chocolate,
-medicine, etc. as “evidence” to be analyzed prior to his trials. Such
-behavior could be either simulated or a true paranoid reaction.
-
-3. Present examination reveals a normal mental status with the exception
-of the amnesia. Attitude and general behavior are normal, mood and
-affect, while slightly depressed, are intact and normal. Sensorium is
-intact and insight is good. Content reveals vague paranoid trends, but
-there is no evidence of any actual psychosis. His reactions to his
-suspicions are not fixed—and delusioned trends—are distinctly spotty
-and disconnected. His reactions are those of an individual who has given
-up a simulated behavior pattern rather than those of the psychotic.
-Oddly enough his memory for this phase of behavior is excellent.
-
-4. Special examinations with Rorschach cards indicate some neurotic
-patterns. They point to a highly schizoid personality with hysterical
-and obsessive components. Such findings are confirmed in the patient’s
-present reactions. He complains bitterly of “stomach cramps” which are
-obviously neurotic manifestations. He is over-dramatic in his actions
-presenting typical hysterical gestures, complaints and symptoms. His
-amnesia is at present limited to personal events concerning his history
-after joining the party. The amnesia however shifts in a highly
-suspicious fashion. Such amnesias may be hysterical in nature but in
-such cases do not change in depth from day to day and facts recently
-learned are not lost as with Hess.
-
-5. In HESS’ case there is also the factor of his long amnesia in
-England. It is quite possible that he has suggested an amnesia to
-himself for so long that he partially believes in it. In a person of
-hysterical make-up such auto suggestion could readily produce an amnesic
-state. Also the “gain” or protection found in amnesia, fancied or real,
-would be a bar to its easy clearance. Finally a large conscious element
-may well be present.
-
-6. In this case I believe all those factors are present. Treatment will
-have to be formulated along lines attacking the suggestive factors and
-overcoming conscious restraints. Hypnosis would be a value but probably
-chemical hypnosis will be required. Such narco-hypnosis and analysis
-require the use of intra venous drugs of the barbitol series, either
-sodium amytol or sodium pentothal. Such treatment is in general
-innocuous if proper precautions are taken. It must be borne in mind,
-however, that occasional accidents happen in any intravenous technique.
-With the drugs mentioned above rare fatalities have been reported
-although in more than 1000 such cases personally treated, I have never
-seen one.
-
-7. Essentially the present situation is as follows:
-
-_a._ Internee HESS is sane and responsible.
-
-_b._ Internee HESS is a profound neurotic of the hysterical type.
-
-_c._ His amnesia is of mixed etiology, stemming from auto suggestions
-and conscious malingering in a hysterical personality.
-
-_d._ Treatment will be required if it is felt desirable to remove this
-amnesia.
-
-_e._ Such treatment, though it cannot eliminate the conscious element is
-of great value in estimating its importance. With such techniques
-accurate estimates of malingering can be made. If this is a true
-amnesia, total recovery can be predicted.
-
-_f._ Such treatment is essentially harmless except in extremely rare
-instances. In ordinary practice the value of the treatment far outweighs
-any of its hazards.
-
-8. Clarification as to the desired degree of treatment in this case is
-requested.
-
- [signed] DOUGLAS McG. KELLEY
- Major, MC
-
- * * * * *
-
- 1st Ind
-
-HEADQUARTERS, INTERNAL SECURITY DETACHMENT, OFFICE US CHIEF OF
-COUNSEL—APO 403, U. S. ARMY—17 OCTOBER 1945
-
-TO: Mr. Justice Jackson’s Office US Chief of Counsel
- APO 403, U. S. Army
- (Attention: Colonel Gill)
-
-HESS believes or has pretended that the British attempted to poison him.
-Treatment with drugs might call forth the same suspicion or allegation
-against us by him. Undue alarm might be injurious to the patient.
-
- /s/ B. C. Andrus
- /t/ B. C. ANDRUS
- Colonel Cav
- Commandant
-
- * * * * *
-
- 2nd Ind
-
-OFFICE US CHIEF OF COUNSEL, EXECUTIVE OFFICE, APO, 403, U. S. ARMY
-
- 20 October 1945
-
-TO: Headquarters, Internal Security Detachment.
- Office US Chief of Counsel
-
-Any treatment of this case involving the use of drugs which might cause
-injury to the subject is disapproved.
-
- ROBT. J. GILL
- Colonel, CMP
- Executive
-
- D. _STATEMENT BY HESS TO THE TRIBUNAL CONCERNING HIS MEMORY_
-
- 30 November 1945
- Afternoon Session
-
-“Mr. President: At the beginning of this afternoon’s proceedings, I
-handed my defense counsel a note stating that I am of the opinion that
-these proceedings could be shortened if I could speak briefly. What I
-have to say is as follows: In order to prevent any possibility of my
-being declared incapable of pleading—although I am willing to take part
-in the rest of the proceedings with the rest of them, I would like to
-make the following declaration to the Tribunal although I originally
-intended not to make this declaration until a later time. My memory is
-again in order. The reason why I simulated loss of memory was tactical.
-In fact, it is only that my power for concentration is slightly reduced
-but in conflict to that my capacity to follow the trial, my capacity to
-defend myself, to put questions to witnesses or even to answer
-questions—in these, my capacities are not influenced. I emphasize the
-fact that I bear full responsibility for everything that I have done,
-signed or have signed as co-signatory. My fundamental attitude that the
-Tribunal is not legally competent, is not affected by the statement I
-have just made. Hitherto, in my conversations with my official defense
-counsel, I have maintained my loss of memory. He was, therefore, acting
-in good faith when he asserted I had lost my memory.”
-
- E. _RULING OF THE TRIBUNAL_
-
-The ruling of the International Military Tribunal was announced orally
-by Lord Justice Lawrence, presiding, on 1 December 1945:
-
-“The Tribunal has given careful consideration to the motion of Counsel
-for the Defendant Hess, and it has had the advantage of hearing full
-argument upon it both from the Defense and from 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 Counsel for the Defense is, therefore, denied, and the
-trial will proceed.”
-
-
-
-
- Chapter V
- OPENING ADDRESS FOR THE UNITED STATES
-
-
-_The following address, opening the American case under Count I of the
-Indictment, was delivered by Justice Robert H. Jackson, Chief of Counsel
-for the United States, before the Tribunal on 21 November 1945:_
-
-May it please Your Honors,
-
-The privilege of opening the first trial in history for crimes against
-the peace of the world imposes a grave responsibility. The wrongs which
-we seek to condemn and punish have been so calculated, so malignant and
-so devastating, that civilization cannot tolerate their being ignored
-because it cannot survive their being repeated. That four great nations,
-flushed with victory and stung with injury stay the hand of vengeance
-and voluntarily submit their captive enemies to the judgment of the law
-is one of the most significant tributes that Power ever has paid to
-Reason.
-
-This tribunal, while it is novel and experimental, is not the product of
-abstract speculations nor is it created to vindicate legalistic
-theories. This inquest represents the practical effort of four of the
-most mighty of nations, with the support of seventeen more, to utilize
-International Law to meet the greatest menace of our times—aggressive
-war. The common sense of mankind demands that law shall not stop with
-the punishment of petty crimes by little people. It must also reach men
-who possess themselves of great power and make deliberate and concerted
-use of it to set in motion evils which leave no home in the world
-untouched. It is a cause of this magnitude that the United Nations will
-lay before Your Honors.
-
-In the prisoners’ dock sit twenty-odd broken men. Reproached by the
-humiliation of those they have led almost as bitterly as by the
-desolation of those they have attacked, their personal capacity for evil
-is forever past. It is hard now to perceive in these miserable men as
-captives the power by which as Nazi leaders they once dominated much of
-the world and terrified most of it. Merely as individuals, their fate is
-of little consequence to the world.
-
-What makes this inquest significant is that those prisoners represent
-sinister influence that will lurk in the world long after their bodies
-have returned to dust. They are living symbols of racial hatreds, of
-terrorism and violence, and of the arrogance and cruelty of power. They
-are symbols of fierce nationalisms and militarism, of intrigue and
-war-making which have embroiled Europe generation after generation,
-crushing its manhood, destroying its homes, and impoverishing its life.
-They have so identified themselves with the philosophies they conceived
-and with the forces they directed that any tenderness to them is a
-victory and an encouragement to all the evils which are attached to
-their names. Civilization can afford no compromise with the social
-forces which would gain renewed strength if we deal ambiguously or
-indecisively with the men in whom those forces now precariously survive.
-
-What these men stand for we will patiently and temperately disclose. We
-will give you undeniable proofs of incredible events. The catalogue of
-crimes will omit nothing that could be conceived by a pathological
-pride, cruelty, and lust for power. These men created in Germany, under
-the _Fuehrerprinzip_, a National Socialist despotism equalled only by
-the dynasties of the ancient East. They took from the German people all
-those dignities and freedoms that we hold natural and inalienable rights
-in every human being. The people were compensated by inflaming and
-gratifying hatreds toward those who were marked as “scape-goats.”
-Against their opponents, including Jews, Catholics, and free labor the
-Nazis directed such a campaign of arrogance, brutality, and annihilation
-as the world has not witnessed since the pre-Christian ages. They
-excited the German ambition to be a “master race,” which of course
-implies serfdom for others. They led their people on a mad gamble for
-domination. They diverted social energies and resources to the creation
-of what they thought to be an invincible war machine. They overran their
-neighbors. To sustain the “master race” in its war-making, they enslaved
-millions of human beings and brought them into Germany, where these
-hapless creatures now wander as “displaced persons”. At length
-bestiality and bad faith reached such excess that they aroused the
-sleeping strength of imperiled civilization. Its united efforts have
-ground the German war machine to fragments. But the struggle has left
-Europe a liberated yet prostrate land where a demoralized society
-struggles to survive. These are the fruits of the sinister forces that
-sit with these defendants in the prisoners’ dock.
-
-In justice to the nations and the men associated in this prosecution, I
-must remind you of certain difficulties which may leave their mark on
-this case. Never before in legal history has an effort been made to
-bring within the scope of a single litigation the developments of a
-decade, covering a whole Continent, and involving a score of nations,
-countless individuals, and innumerable events. Despite the magnitude of
-the task, the world has demanded immediate action. This demand has had
-to be met, though perhaps at the cost of finished craftsmanship. In my
-country, established courts, following familiar procedures, applying
-well thumbed precedents, and dealing with the legal consequences of
-local and limited events seldom commence a trial within a year of the
-event in litigation. Yet less than eight months ago today the courtroom
-in which you sit was an enemy fortress in the hands of German SS troops.
-Less than eight months ago nearly all our witnesses and documents were
-in enemy hands. The law had not been codified, no procedure had been
-established, no Tribunal was in existence, no usable courthouse stood
-here, none of the hundreds of tons of official German documents had been
-examined, no prosecuting staff had been assembled, nearly all the
-present defendants were at large, and the four prosecuting powers had
-not yet joined in common cause to try them. I should be the last to deny
-that the case may well suffer from incomplete researches and quite
-likely will not be the example of professional work which any of the
-prosecuting nations would normally wish to sponsor. It is, however, a
-completely adequate case to the judgment we shall ask you to render, and
-its full development we shall be obliged to leave to historians.
-
-Before I discuss particulars of evidence, some general considerations
-which may affect the credit of this trial in the eyes of the world
-should be candidly faced. There is a dramatic disparity between the
-circumstances of the accusers and of the accused that might discredit
-our work if we should falter, in even minor matters, in being fair and
-temperate.
-
-Unfortunately, the nature of these crimes is such that both prosecution
-and judgment must be by victor nations over vanquished foes. The
-worldwide scope of the aggressions carried out by these men has left but
-few real neutrals. Either the victors must judge the vanquished or we
-must leave the defeated to judge themselves. After the First World War,
-we learned the futility of the latter course. The former high station of
-these defendants, the notoriety of their acts, and the adaptability of
-their conduct to provoke retaliation make it hard to distinguish between
-the demand for a just and measured retribution, and the unthinking cry
-for vengeance which arises from the anguish of war. It is our task, so
-far as humanly possible, to draw the line between the two. We must never
-forget that the record on which we judge these defendants today is the
-record on which history will judge us tomorrow. To pass these defendants
-a poisoned chalice is to put it to our own lips as well. We must summon
-such detachment and intellectual integrity to our task that this trial
-will commend itself to posterity as fulfilling humanity’s aspirations to
-do justice.
-
-At the very outset, let us dispose of the contention that to put these
-men to trial is to do them an injustice entitling them to some special
-consideration. These defendants may be hard pressed but they are not ill
-used. Let us see what alternative they would have to being tried.
-
-More than a majority of these prisoners surrendered to or were tracked
-down by forces of the United States. Could they expect us to make
-American custody a shelter for our enemies against the just wrath of our
-Allies? Did we spend American lives to capture them only to save them
-from punishment? Under the principles of the Moscow Declaration, those
-suspected war criminals who are not to be tried internationally must be
-turned over to individual governments for trial at the scene of their
-outrages. Many less responsible and less culpable American-held
-prisoners have been and will be turned over to other United Nations for
-local trial. If these defendants should succeed, for any reason, in
-escaping the condemnation of this Tribunal, or if they obstruct or abort
-this trial, those who are American-held prisoners will be delivered up
-to our continental Allies. For these defendants, however, we have set up
-an International Tribunal and have undertaken the burden of
-participating in a complicated effort to give them fair and
-dispassionate hearings. That is the best known protection to any man
-with a defense worthy of being heard.
-
-If these men are the first war leaders of a defeated nation to be
-prosecuted in the name of the law, they are also the first to be given a
-chance to plead for their lives in the name of the law. Realistically,
-the Charter of this Tribunal, which gives them a hearing, is also the
-source of their only hope. It may be that these men of troubled
-conscience, whose only wish is that the world forget them, do not regard
-a trial as a favor. But they do have a fair opportunity to defend
-themselves—a favor which these men, when in power, rarely extended to
-their fellow countrymen. Despite the fact that public opinion already
-condemns their acts, we agree that here they must be given a presumption
-of innocence, and we accept the burden of proving criminal acts and the
-responsibility of these defendants for their commission.
-
-When I say that we do not ask for convictions unless we prove crime, I
-do not mean mere technical or incidental transgression of international
-conventions. We charge guilt on planned and intended conduct that
-involves moral as well as legal wrong. And we do not mean conduct that
-is a natural and human, even if illegal, cutting of corners, such as
-many of us might well have committed had we been in the defendants’
-positions. It is not because they yielded to the normal frailties of
-human beings that we accuse them. It is their abnormal and inhuman
-conduct which brings them to this bar.
-
-We will not ask you to convict these men on the testimony of their foes.
-There is no count of the Indictment that cannot be proved by books and
-records. The Germans were always meticulous record keepers, and these
-defendants had their share of the Teutonic passion for thoroughness in
-putting things on paper. Nor were they without vanity. They arranged
-frequently to be photographed in action. We will show you their own
-films. You will see their own conduct and hear their own voices as these
-defendants reenact for you, from the screen, some of the events in the
-course of the conspiracy.
-
-We would also make clear that we have no purpose to incriminate the
-whole German people. We know that the Nazi Party was not put in power by
-a majority of the German vote. We know it came to power by an evil
-alliance between the most extreme of the Nazi revolutionists, the most
-unrestrained of the German reactionaries, and the most aggressive of the
-German militarists. If the German populace had willingly accepted the
-Nazi program, no Stormtroopers would have been needed in the early days
-of the Party and there would have been no need for concentration camps
-or the Gestapo, both of which institutions were inaugurated as soon as
-the Nazis gained control of the German state. Only after these lawless
-innovations proved successful at home were they taken abroad.
-
-The German people should know by now that the people of the United
-States hold them in no fear, and in no hate. It is true that the Germans
-have taught us the horrors of modern warfare, but the ruin that lies
-from the Rhine to the Danube shows that we, like our Allies, have not
-been dull pupils. If we are not awed by German fortitude and proficiency
-in war, and if we are not persuaded of their political maturity, we do
-respect their skill in the arts of peace, their technical competence,
-and the sober, industrious and self-disciplined character of the masses
-of the German people. In 1933, we saw the German people recovering
-prestige in the commercial, industrial and artistic world after the
-set-back of the last war. We beheld their progress neither with envy nor
-malice. The Nazi regime interrupted this advance. The recoil of the Nazi
-aggression has left Germany in ruins. The Nazi readiness to pledge the
-German word without hesitation and to break it without shame has
-fastened upon German diplomacy a reputation for duplicity that will
-handicap it for years. Nazi arrogance has made the boast of the “master
-race” a taunt that will be thrown at Germans the world over for
-generations. The Nazi nightmare has given the German name a new and
-sinister significance throughout the world which will retard Germany a
-century. The German, no less than the non-German world, has accounts to
-settle with these defendants.
-
-The fact of the war and the course of the war, which is the central
-theme of our case, is history. From September 1st, 1939, when the German
-armies crossed the Polish frontiers, until September, 1942, when they
-met epic resistance at Stalingrad, German arms seemed invincible.
-Denmark and Norway, The Netherlands and France, Belgium and Luxembourg,
-the Balkans and Africa, Poland and the Baltic States, and parts of
-Russia, all had been overrun and conquered by swift, powerful,
-well-aimed blows. That attack upon the peace of the world is the crime
-against international society which brings into international cognizance
-crimes in its aid and preparation which otherwise might be only internal
-concerns. It was aggressive war, which the nations of the world had
-renounced. It was war in violation of treaties, by which the peace of
-the world was sought to be safeguarded.
-
-This war did not just happen—it was planned and prepared for over a
-long period of time and with no small skill and cunning. The world has
-perhaps never seen such a concentration and stimulation of the energies
-of any people as that which enabled Germany twenty years after it was
-defeated, disarmed, and dismembered to come so near carrying out its
-plan to dominate Europe. Whatever else we may say of those who were the
-authors of this war, they did achieve a stupendous work in organization,
-and our first task is to examine the means by which these defendants and
-their fellow conspirators prepared and incited Germany to go to war.
-
-In general, our case will disclose these defendants all uniting at some
-time with the Nazi Party in a plan which they well knew could be
-accomplished only by an outbreak of war in Europe. Their seizure of the
-German state, their subjugation of the German people, their terrorism
-and extermination of dissident elements, their planning and waging of
-war, their calculated and planned ruthlessness in the conduct of
-warfare, their deliberate and planned criminality toward conquered
-peoples, all these are ends for which they acted in concert; and all
-these are phases of the conspiracy, a conspiracy which reached one goal
-only to set out for another and more ambitious one. We shall also trace
-for you the intricate web of organizations which these men formed and
-utilized to accomplish these ends. We will show how the entire structure
-of offices and officials was dedicated to the criminal purposes and
-committed to use of the criminal methods planned by these defendants and
-their co-conspirators, many of whom war and suicide have put beyond
-reach.
-
-It is my purpose to open the case, particularly under Count One of the
-Indictment, and to deal with the common plan or conspiracy to achieve
-ends possible only by resort to crimes against peace, war crimes, and
-crimes against humanity. My emphasis will not be on individual
-barbarities and perversions which may have occurred independently of any
-central plan. One of the dangers ever-present is that this trial may be
-protracted by details of particular wrongs and that we will become lost
-in a “wilderness of single instances.” Nor will I now dwell on the
-activity of individual defendants except as it may contribute to
-exposition of the common plan.
-
-The case as presented by the United States will be concerned with the
-brains and authority back of all the crimes. These defendants were men
-of a station and rank which does not soil its own hands with blood. They
-were men who knew how to use lesser folk as tools. We want to reach the
-planners and designers, the inciters and leaders without whose evil
-architecture the world would not have been for so long scourged with the
-violence and lawlessness, and wracked with the agonies and convulsions,
-of this terrible war.
-
- THE LAWLESS ROAD TO POWER
-
-The chief instrumentality of cohesion in plan and action was the
-National Socialist German Workers Party, known as the Nazi Party. Some
-of the defendants were with it from the beginning. Others joined only
-after success seemed to have validated its lawlessness or power had
-invested it with immunity from the processes of the law. Adolf Hitler
-became its supreme leader or _fuehrer_ in 1921.
-
-On the 24th of February, 1920, at Munich, it publicly had proclaimed its
-program (_1708-PS_). Some of its purposes would commend themselves to
-many good citizens, such as the demands for “profit-sharing in the great
-industries,” “generous development of provision for old age,” “creation
-and maintenance of a healthy middle class,” “a land reform suitable to
-our national requirements,” and “raising the standard of health.” It
-also made a strong appeal to that sort of nationalism which in ourselves
-we call patriotism and in our rivals chauvinism. It demanded “equality
-of rights for the German people in its dealing with other nations and
-the evolution of the peace treaties of Versailles and St. Germaine.” It
-demanded the “union of all Germans on the basis of the right of
-self-determination of peoples to form a Great Germany.” It demanded
-“land and territory (colonies) for the enrichment of our people and the
-settlement of our surplus population.” All these, of course, were
-legitimate objectives if they were to be attained without resort to
-aggressive warfare.
-
-The Nazi Party from its inception, however, contemplated war. It
-demanded “the abolition of mercenary troops and the formation of a
-national army.” It proclaimed that “In view of the enormous sacrifice of
-life and property demanded of a nation by every war, personal enrichment
-through war must be regarded as a crime against the nation. We demand,
-therefore, the ruthless confiscation of all war profits.” I do not
-criticise this policy. Indeed, I wish it were universal. I merely point
-out that in a time of peace, war was a preoccupation of the Party, and
-it started the work of making war less offensive to the masses of the
-people. With this it combined a program of physical training and sports
-for youth that became, as we shall see, the cloak for a secret program
-of military training.
-
-The Nazi Party declaration also committed its members to an anti-Semitic
-program. It declared that no Jew or any person of non-German blood could
-be a member of the nation. Such persons were to be disfranchised,
-disqualified for office, subject to the alien laws, and entitled to
-nourishment only after the German population had first been provided
-for. All who had entered Germany after August 2, 1914 were to be
-required forthwith to depart, and all non-German immigration was to be
-prohibited.
-
-The Party also avowed, even in those early days, an authoritarian and
-totalitarian program for Germany. It demanded creation of a strong
-central power with unconditional authority, nationalization of all
-businesses which had been “amalgamated,” and a “reconstruction” of the
-national system of education which “must aim at teaching the pupil to
-understand the idea of the State (state sociology).” Its hostility to
-civil liberties and freedom of the press was distinctly announced in
-these words: “It must be forbidden to publish newspapers which do not
-conduce to the national welfare. We demand the legal prosecution of all
-tendencies in art or literature of a kind likely to disintegrate our
-life as a nation and the suppression of institutions which might
-militate against the above requirements.”
-
-The forecast of religious persecution was clothed in the language of
-religious liberty, for the Nazi program stated, “We demand liberty for
-all religious denominations in the State.” But, it continues with the
-limitation, “so far as they are not a danger to it and do not militate
-against the morality and moral sense of the German race.”
-
-The Party program foreshadowed the campaign of terrorism. It announced,
-“We demand ruthless war upon those whose activities are injurious to the
-common interests”, and it demanded that such offenses be punished with
-death.
-
-It is significant that the leaders of this Party interpreted this
-program as a belligerent one certain to precipitate conflict. The Party
-platform concluded, “The leaders of the Party swear to proceed
-regardless of consequences—if necessary, at the sacrifice of their
-lives—toward the fulfillment of the foregoing points.” It is this
-Leadership Corps of the Party, not its entire membership, that stands
-accused as a criminal organization.
-
-Let us now see how the leaders of the Party fulfilled their pledge to
-proceed regardless of consequences. Obviously, their foreign objectives,
-which were nothing less than to undo international treaties and to wrest
-territory from foreign control, as well as most of their internal
-program, could be accomplished only by possession of the machinery of
-the German State. The first effort, accordingly, was to subvert the
-Weimar Republic by violent revolution. An abortive putsch at Munich in
-1923 landed many of them in jail. The period of meditation which
-followed produced _Mein Kampf_, henceforth the source of law for the
-Party workers and a source of considerable revenue to its supreme
-leader. The Nazi plans for the violent overthrow of the feeble Republic
-then turned to plans for its capture.
-
-No greater mistake could be made than to think of the Nazi Party in
-terms of the loose organizations which we of the western world call
-“political parties.” In discipline, structure, and method the Nazi Party
-was not adapted to the democratic process of persuasion. It was an
-instrument of conspiracy and of coercion. The Party was not organized to
-take over power in the German State by winning support of a majority of
-the German people. It was organized to seize power in defiance of the
-will of the people.
-
-The Nazi Party, under the _Fuehrerprinzip_, was bound by an iron
-discipline into a pyramid, with the Fuehrer, Adolf Hitler, at the top
-and broadening into a numerous Leadership Corps, composed of overlords
-of a very extensive Party membership at the base. By no means all of
-those who may have supported the movement in one way or another were
-actual Party members. The membership took the Party oath which in
-effect, amounted to an abdication of personal intelligence and moral
-responsibility. This was the oath: “I vow inviolable fidelity to Adolf
-Hitler; I vow absolute obedience to him and to the leaders he designates
-for me.” The membership in daily practice followed its leaders with an
-idolatry and self-surrender more Oriental than Western.
-
-We will not be obliged to guess as to the motives or goal of the Nazi
-Party. The immediate aim was to undermine the Weimar Republic. The order
-to all Party members to work to that end was given in a letter from
-Hitler of August 24, 1931 to Rosenberg, of which we will produce the
-original. Hitler wrote,
-
- “I am just reading in the VOELKISCHER BEOBACHTER, edition
- 235/236, page 1, an article entitled “Does Wirth intend to come
- over?” The tendency of the article is to prevent on our part a
- crumbling away from the present form of government. I myself am
- travelling all over Germany to achieve exactly the opposite. May
- I therefore ask that my own paper will not stab me in the back
- with tactically unwise articles * * *” (_047-PS_).
-
-Captured film enables us to present the defendant, Alfred Rosenberg, who
-from the screen will himself tell you the story. The SA practiced
-violent interference with elections. We have the reports of the SD
-describing in detail how its members later violated the secrecy of
-elections in order to identify those who opposed them. One of the
-reports makes this explanation:
-
- “The control was effected in the following way: some members of
- the election-committee marked all the ballot papers with
- numbers. During the ballot itself, a voters’ list was made up.
- The ballot-papers were handed out in numerical order, therefore
- it was possible afterwards with the aid of this list to find out
- the persons who cast no-votes or invalid votes. One sample of
- these marked ballot-papers is enclosed. The marking was done on
- the back of the ballot-papers with skimmed milk * * *”
- (_R-142_).
-
-The Party activity, in addition to all the familiar forms of political
-contest, took on the aspect of a rehearsal for warfare. It utilized a
-Party formation, _DIE STURMABTEILUNGEN_, commonly known as the SA. This
-was a voluntary organization of youthful and fanatical Nazis trained for
-the use of violence under semi-military discipline. Its members began by
-acting as bodyguards for the Nazi leaders and rapidly expanded from
-defensive to offensive tactics. They became disciplined ruffians for the
-breaking up of opposition meetings and the terrorization of adversaries.
-They boasted that their task was to make the Nazi Party “master of the
-streets.” The SA was the parent organization of a number of others. Its
-offspring include _DIE SCHUTZSTAFFELN_, commonly known as the SS, formed
-in 1925 and distinguished for the fanaticism and cruelty of its members;
-_DER SICHERHEITSDIENST_, known as the SD; and _DIE GEHEIME
-STAATSPOLIZEI_, the Secret State Police, the infamous Gestapo formed in
-1934 after Nazi accession to power.
-
-A glance at a chart of the Party organization (_Chart No. 1_) is enough
-to show how completely it differed from the political parties we know.
-It had its own source of law in the fuehrer and sub-fuehrers. It had its
-own courts and its own police. The conspirators set up a government
-within the Party to exercise outside the law every sanction that any
-legitimate state could exercise and many that it could not. Its chain of
-command was military, and its formations were martial in name as well as
-in function. They were composed of battalions set up to bear arms under
-military discipline, motorized corps, flying corps, and the infamous
-“Death Head Corps”, which was not misnamed. The Party had its own secret
-police, its security units, its intelligence and espionage division, its
-raiding forces, and its youth forces. It established elaborate
-administrative mechanisms to identify and liquidate spies and informers,
-to manage concentration camps, to operate death vans, and to finance the
-whole movement. Through concentric circles of authority, the Nazi Party,
-as its leadership later boasted, eventually organized and dominated
-every phase of German life—but not until they had waged a bitter
-internal struggle characterized by brutal criminality. In preparation
-for this phase of their struggle, they created a party police system.
-This became the pattern and the instrument of the police state, which
-was the first goal in their plan.
-
-The Party formations, including the Leadership Corps of the Party, the
-SD, the SS, the SA and the infamous Secret State Police, or Gestapo—all
-these stand accused before you as criminal organizations; organizations
-which, as we will prove from their own documents, were recruited only
-from recklessly devoted Nazis, ready in conviction and temperament to do
-the most violent of deeds to advance the common program. They terrorized
-and silenced democratic opposition and were able at length to combine
-with political opportunists, militarists, industrialists, monarchists,
-and political reactionaries.
-
-On January 30, 1933 Adolf Hitler became Chancellor of the German
-Republic. An evil combination, represented in the prisoners’ dock, by
-its most eminent survivors, had succeeded in possessing itself of the
-machinery of the German Government, a facade behind which they
-thenceforth would operate to make a reality of the war of conquest they
-so long had plotted. The conspiracy had passed into its second phase.
-
- THE CONSOLIDATION OF NAZI POWER
-
-We shall now consider the steps, which embraced the most hideous of
-crimes against humanity, to which the conspirators resorted in
-perfecting control of the German State and in preparing Germany for the
-aggressive war indispensable to their ends.
-
-The Germans of the 1920’s were a frustrated and baffled people as a
-result of defeat and the disintegration of their traditional government.
-The democratic elements, which were trying to govern Germany through the
-new and feeble machinery of the Weimar Republic, got inadequate support
-from the democratic forces of the rest of the world. It is not to be
-denied that Germany, when worldwide depression was added to her other
-problems, was faced with urgent and intricate pressure in her economic
-and political life which necessitated bold measures.
-
-The internal measures by which a nation attempts to solve its problems
-are ordinarily of no concern to other nations. But the Nazi program from
-the first was recognized as a desperate program for a people still
-suffering the effects of an unsuccessful war. The Nazi policy embraced
-ends always recognized as attainable only by a renewal and a more
-successful outcome of war. The conspirators’ answer to Germany’s
-problems was nothing less than to plot the regaining of territories lost
-in the First World War and the acquisition of other fertile lands of
-Central Europe by dispossessing or exterminating those who inhabited
-them. They also contemplated destroying or permanently weakening all
-other neighboring peoples so as to win virtual domination of Europe and
-probably of the world. The precise limits of their ambition we need not
-define for it was and is as illegal to wage aggressive war for small
-stakes as for large ones.
-
-We find at this period two governments in Germany—the real and the
-ostensible. The forms of the German Republic were maintained for a time,
-and it was the outward and visible government. But the real authority in
-the State was outside of and above the law and rested in the Leadership
-Corps of the Nazi Party.
-
-On February 27, 1933, less than a month after Hitler became Chancellor,
-the Reichstag building was set on fire. The burning of this symbol of
-free parliamentary government was so providential for the Nazis that it
-was believed they staged the fire themselves. Certainly when we
-contemplate their known crimes, we cannot believe they would shrink from
-mere arson. It is not necessary, however, to resolve the controversy as
-to who set the fire. The significant point is in the use that was made
-of the fire and of the state of public mind it produced. The Nazis
-immediately accused the Communist Party of instigating and committing
-the crime, and turned every effort to portray this single act of arson
-as the beginning of a Communist revolution. Then, taking advantage of
-the hysteria, the Nazi met this phantom revolution with a real one. In
-the following December, the German Supreme Court with commendable
-courage and independence acquitted the accused Communists, but it was
-too late to influence the tragic course of events which the Nazi
-conspirators had set rushing forward.
-
-Hitler, on the morning after the fire, obtained from the aged and ailing
-President von Hindenburg a Presidential decree suspending the extensive
-guarantees of individual liberty contained in the Constitution of the
-Weimar Republic. The decree provided that:
-
- “Sections 114, 115, 117, 118, 123, 124 and 153 of the
- Constitution of the German Reich are suspended until further
- notice. Thus, restrictions on personal liberty, on the right of
- free expression of opinion, including freedom of the press, on
- the right of assembly and the right of association, and
- violations of the privacy of postal, telegraphic, and telephonic
- communications, and warrants for house-searches, orders for
- confiscations as well as restrictions on property, are also
- permissible beyond the legal limits otherwise prescribed.”
- (_1390-PS_).
-
-The extent of the restriction on personal liberty under the decree of
-February 28, 1933 may be understood by reference to the rights under the
-Weimar Constitution which were suspended:
-
- “_Article 114._ The freedom of the person is inviolable.
- Curtailment or deprivation of personal freedom by a public
- authority is only permissible on a legal basis.
-
- “Persons who have been deprived of their freedom must be
- informed at the latest on the following day by whose authority
- and for what reasons the deprivation of freedom was ordered;
- opportunity shall be afforded them without delay of submitting
- objections to their deprivation of freedom.
-
- “_Article 115._ Every German’s home is his sanctuary and
- inviolable. Exceptions may only be made as provided by law.
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “_Article 117._ The secrecy of letters and all postal,
- telegraphic and telephone communications is inviolable.
- Exceptions are inadmissible except by Reich law.
-
- “_Article 118._ Every German has the right, within the limits of
- the general laws, to express his opinions freely in speech, in
- writing, in print, in picture form or in any other way. No
- conditions of work or employment may detract from this right and
- no disadvantage may accrue to him from any person for making use
- of this right. * * *
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “_Article 123._ All Germans have the right to assemble
- peacefully and unarmed without giving notice and without special
- permission.
-
- “A Reich law may make previous notification obligatory for
- assemblies in the open air, and may prohibit them in the case of
- immediate danger to the public safety.
-
- “_Article 124._ All the Germans have the right to form
- associations or societies for purposes not contrary to criminal
- law. This right may not be curtailed by preventive measures. The
- same provisions apply to religious associations and societies.
-
- “Every association may become incorporated (Erwerb der
- Rechtsfaehigkeit) according to the provisions of the civil law.
- The right may not be refused to any association on the grounds
- that its aims are political, social-political or religious.
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “_Article 153._ Property is guaranteed by the Constitution. Its
- content and limits are defined by the laws.
-
- “Expropriation can only take place for the public benefit and on
- a legal basis. Adequate compensation shall be granted, unless a
- Reich law orders otherwise. In the case of dispute concerning
- the amount of compensation, it shall be possible to submit the
- matter to the ordinary civil courts, unless Reich laws determine
- otherwise. Compensation must be paid if the Reich expropriates
- property belonging to the Lands, Communes, or public utility
- associations.
-
- “Property carries obligations. Its use shall also serve the
- common good.” (_2050-PS_).
-
-It must be said in fairness to von Hindenburg that the Constitution
-itself authorized him temporarily to suspend these fundamental rights
-“if the public safety and order in the German Reich are considerably
-disturbed or endangered.” It must also be acknowledged that President
-Ebert previously had invoked this power.
-
-But the National Socialist coup was made possible because the terms of
-the Hitler-Hindenburg decree departed from all previous ones in which
-the power of suspension had been invoked. Whenever Ebert had suspended
-constitutional guarantees of individual rights, his decree had expressly
-revived the Protective Custody Act adopted by the Reichstag in 1916
-during the previous war. This Act guaranteed a judicial hearing within
-24 hours of arrest, gave a right to have counsel and to inspect all
-relevant records, provided for appeal, and authorized compensation from
-Treasury funds for erroneous arrests.
-
-The Hitler-Hindenburg decree of February 28, 1933 contained no such
-safeguards. The omission may not have been noted by von Hindenburg.
-Certainly he did not appreciate its effect. It left the Nazi police and
-party formations, already existing and functioning under Hitler,
-completely unrestrained and irresponsible. Secret arrest and indefinite
-detention, without charges, without evidence, without hearing, without
-counsel, became the method of inflicting inhuman punishment on any whom
-the Nazi police suspected or disliked. No court could issue an
-injunction, or writ of _habeas corpus_, or _certiorari_. The German
-people were in the hands of the police, the police were in the hands of
-the Nazi Party, and the Party was in the hands of a ring of evil men, of
-whom the defendants here before you are surviving and representative
-leaders.
-
-The Nazi conspiracy, as we shall show, always contemplated not merely
-overcoming current opposition but exterminating elements which could not
-be reconciled with its philosophy of the state. It not only sought to
-establish the Nazi “new order” but to secure its sway, as Hitler
-predicted, “for a thousand years.” Nazis were never in doubt or
-disagreement as to what these dissident elements were. They were
-concisely described by one of them, Col. General von Fritsch, on
-December 11, 1938, in these words:
-
- “Shortly after the first war I came to the conclusion that we
- should have to be victorious in three battles if Germany were to
- become powerful again: 1. The battle against the working
- class—Hitler has won this. 2. Against the Catholic Church,
- perhaps better expressed against Ultramontanism. 3. Against the
- Jews.” (_1947-PS_).
-
-The warfare against these elements was continuous. The battle in Germany
-was but a practice skirmish for the worldwide drive against them. We
-have in point of geography and of time two groups of crimes against
-humanity—one within Germany before and during the war, the other in
-occupied territory during the war. But the two are not separated in Nazi
-planning. They are a continuous unfolding of the Nazi plan to
-exterminate peoples and institutions which might serve as a focus or
-instrument for overturning their “new world order” at any time. We
-consider these Crimes against Humanity in this address as manifestations
-of the one Nazi plan and discuss them according to General von Fritsch’s
-classification.
-
- 1. The Battle Against the Working Class
-
-When Hitler came to power, there were in Germany three groups of trade
-unions. The General German Trade Union Confederation (ADGB) with
-twenty-eight affiliated unions, and the General Independent Employees
-Confederation (AFA) with thirteen federated unions together numbered
-more than 4,500,000 members. The Christian Trade Union had over
-1,250,000 members.
-
-The working people of Germany, like the working people of other nations,
-had little to gain personally by war. While labor is usually brought
-around to the support of the nation at war, labor by and large is a
-pacific, though by no means a pacifist force in the world. The working
-people of Germany had not forgotten in 1933 how heavy the yoke of the
-war lord can be. It was the workingmen who had joined the sailors and
-soldiers in the revolt of 1918 to end the First World War. The Nazis had
-neither forgiven nor forgotten. The Nazi program required that this part
-of the German population not only be stripped of power to resist
-diversion of its scanty comforts to armament, but also be wheedled or
-whipped into new and unheard of sacrifices as part of the Nazi war
-preparation. Labor must be cowed, and that meant its organizations and
-means of cohesion and defense must be destroyed.
-
-The purpose to regiment labor for the Nazi Party was avowed by Ley in a
-speech to workers on May 2, 1933, as follows:
-
- “You may say what else do you want, you have the absolute power.
- True we have the power, but we do not have the whole people, we
- do not have you workers 100%, and it is you whom we want; we
- will not let you be until you stand with us in complete, genuine
- acknowledgment.” (_614-PS_).
-
-The first Nazi attack was upon the two larger unions. On April 21, 1933
-an order not even in the name of the Government, but of the Nazi Party
-was issued by the conspirator Robert Ley as “Chief of Staff of the
-political organization of the NSDAP,” applicable to the Trade Union
-Confederation and the Independent Employees Confederation. It directed
-seizure of their properties and arrest of their principal leaders. The
-party order directed party organs which we here denounce as criminal
-associations, the SA and SS “to be employed for the occupation of the
-trade union properties, and for the taking into custody of personalities
-who come into question.” And it directed the taking into “protective
-custody” of all chairmen and district secretaries of such unions and
-branch directors of the labor bank (_392-PS_).
-
-These orders were carried out on May 2, 1933. All funds of the labor
-unions, including pension and benefit funds, were seized. Union leaders
-were sent to concentration camps. A few days later, on May 10, 1933,
-Hitler appointed Ley leader of the German Labor Front (_DEUTSCHE
-ARBEITSFRONT_), which succeeded to the confiscated union funds. The
-German Labor Front, a Nazi controlled labor bureau, was set up under Ley
-to teach the Nazi philosophy to German workers and to weed out from
-industrial employment all who were backward in their lessons
-(_1940-PS_). “Factory Troops” were organized as an “ideological shock
-squad within the factory” (_1817-PS_). The Party order provided that
-“outside of the German Labor Front, no other organization (whether of
-workers or of employees) is to exist.” On June 24, 1933 the remaining
-Christian Trade Unions were seized pursuant to an order of the Nazi
-Party signed by Ley.
-
-On May 19, 1933, this time by government decree, it was provided that
-“trustees” of labor, appointed by Hitler, should regulate the conditions
-of all labor contracts, replacing the former process of collective
-bargaining (_405-PS_). On January 20, 1934 a decree “regulating national
-labor” introduced the fuehrer-principle into industrial relations. It
-provided that the owners of enterprises should be the “fuehrers” and the
-workers should be the followers. The enterpriser-fuehrers should “make
-decisions for employees and laborers in all matters concerning the
-enterprise” (_1861-PS_). It was by such bait that the great German
-industrialists were induced to support the Nazi cause, to their own
-ultimate ruin.
-
-Not only did the Nazis dominate and regiment German labor, but they
-forced the youth into the ranks of the laboring people they had thus led
-into chains. Under a compulsory labor service decree on 26 June, 1935,
-young men and women between the ages of 18 and 25 were conscripted for
-labor (see _1654-PS_). Thus was the purpose to subjugate German labor
-accomplished. In the words of Ley, this accomplishment consisted “in
-eliminating the association character of the trade union and employees’
-associations, and in its place we have substituted the conception
-‘soldiers of work’.” The productive manpower of the German nation was in
-Nazi control. By these steps the defendants won the battle to liquidate
-labor unions as potential opposition and were enabled to impose upon the
-working class the burdens of preparing for aggressive warfare.
-
-Robert Ley, the field marshal of the battle against labor, answered our
-indictment with suicide. Apparently he knew no better answer.
-
- 2. The Battle Against the Churches
-
-The Nazi Party always was predominantly anti-Christian in its ideology.
-But we who believe in freedom of conscience and of religion base no
-charge of criminality on anybody’s ideology. It is not because the Nazi
-themselves were irreligious or pagan, but because they persecuted others
-of the Christian faith that they become guilty of crime, and it is
-because the persecution was a step in the preparation for aggressive
-warfare that the offense becomes one of international consequence. To
-remove every moderating influence among the German people and to put its
-population on a total war footing, the conspirators devised and carried
-out a systematic and relentless repression of all Christian sects and
-churches.
-
-We will ask you to convict the Nazis on their own evidence. Martin
-Bormann in June, 1941, issued a secret decree on the relation of
-Christianity and National Socialism. The decree provided:
-
- “For the first time in German history the Fuehrer consciously
- and completely has the leadership of the people in his own hand.
- With the party, its components and attached units the Fuehrer
- has created for himself and thereby the German Reich leadership
- an instrument which makes him independent of the church. All
- influences which might impair or damage the leadership of the
- people exercised by the Fuehrer with help of the NSDAP, must be
- eliminated. More and more the people must be separated from the
- churches and their organs, the pastors. Of course, the churches
- must and will, seen from their viewpoint, defend themselves
- against this loss of power. But never again must an influence on
- leadership of the people be yielded to the churches. This
- (influence) must be broken completely and finally.
-
- “Only the Reich government and by its direction the party, its
- components and attached units have a right to leadership of the
- people. Just as the deleterious influences of astrologers, seers
- and other fakers are eliminated and suppressed by the state, so
- must the possibility of church influence also be totally
- removed. Not until this has happened, does the state leadership
- have influence on the individual citizens. Not until then are
- people and Reich secure in their existence for all the future”
- (_D-75_).
-
-And how the party had been securing the Reich from Christian influence,
-will be proved by such items as this teletype from the Gestapo, Berlin,
-to the Gestapo, Nurnberg, on July 24, 1938. Let us hear their own
-account of events in Rottenburg.
-
- “The Party on 23 July 1939 from 2100 on carried out the third
- demonstration against Bishop Sproll. Participants about
- 2500-3000 were brought in from outside by bus, etc. The
- Rottenburg populace again did not participate in the
- demonstration. This town took rather a hostile attitude to the
- demonstrations. The action got completely out of hand of the
- Party Member responsible for it. The demonstrators stormed the
- palace, beat in the gates and doors. About 150 to 200 people
- forced their way into the palace, searched the rooms, threw
- files out of the windows and rummaged through the beds in the
- rooms of the palace. One bed was ignited. Before the fire got to
- the other objects of equipment in the rooms and the palace, the
- flaming bed could be thrown from the window and the fire
- extinguished. The Bishop was with Archbishop Groeber of Freiburg
- and the ladies and gentlemen of his menage in the chapel at
- prayer. About 25 to 30 people pressed into this chapel and
- molested those present. Bishop Groeber was taken for Bishop
- Sproll. He was grabbed by the robe and dragged back and forth.
- Finally the intruders realized that Bishop Groeber is not the
- one they are seeking. They could then be persuaded to leave the
- building. After the evacuation of the palace by the
- demonstrators I had an interview with Archbishop Groeber, who
- left Rottenburg in the night. Groeber wants to turn to the
- Fuehrer and Reich Minister of the Interior, Dr. Frick, anew. On
- the course of the action, the damage done as well as the homage
- of the Rottenburg populace beginning today for the Bishop I
- shall immediately hand in a full report, after I am in the act
- of suppressing counter mass meetings. * * *
-
- “In case the Fuehrer has instructions to give in this matter, I
- request that these be transmitted most quickly * * *”
- (_848-PS_).
-
-Later, defendant Rosenberg wrote to Bormann reviewing the proposal of
-Kerrl as Church Minister to place the Protestant Church under State
-tutelage and proclaim Hitler its Supreme head. Rosenberg was opposed,
-hinting that Naziism was to suppress the Christian Church completely
-after the war (see _098-PS_).
-
-The persecution of all pacifist and dissenting sects, such as Jehovah’s
-Witnesses and the Pentecostal Association, was peculiarly relentless and
-cruel. The policy toward the Evangelical Churches, however, was to use
-their influence for the Nazis’ own purposes. In September, 1933, Mueller
-was appointed the Fuehrer’s representative with power to deal with the
-“affairs of the Evangelical Church” in its relations to the State.
-Eventually, steps were taken to create a Reich Bishop vested with power
-to control this Church. A long conflict followed, Pastor Niemoeller was
-sent to concentration camp, and extended interference with the internal
-discipline and administration of the Churches occurred.
-
-A most intense drive was directed against the Roman Catholic Church.
-After a strategic concordat with the Holy See, signed in July, 1933 in
-Rome, which never was observed by the Nazi Party, a long and persistent
-persecution of the Catholic Church, its priesthood and its members, was
-carried out. Church Schools and educational institutions were suppressed
-or subjected to requirements of Nazi teaching inconsistent with the
-Christian faith. The property of the Church was confiscated and inspired
-vandalism directed against Church property was left unpunished.
-Religious instruction was impeded and the exercise of religion made
-difficult. Priests and bishops were laid upon, riots were stimulated to
-harass them, and many were sent to concentration camps.
-
-After occupation of foreign soil, these persecutions went on with
-greater vigor than ever. We will present to you from the files of the
-Vatican the earnest protests made by the Vatican to Ribbentrop
-summarizing the persecutions to which the priesthood and the Church had
-been subjected in this Twentieth Century under the Nazi regime.
-Ribbentrop never answered them. He could not deny. He dared not justify.
-
- 3. Crimes Against the Jews
-
-The most savage and numerous crimes planned and committed by the Nazis
-were those against the Jews. These in Germany, in 1933, numbered about
-500,000. In the aggregate, they had made for themselves positions which
-excited envy, and had accumulated properties which excited the avarice
-of the Nazis. They were few enough to be helpless and numerous enough to
-be held up as a menace.
-
-Let there be no misunderstanding about the charge of persecuting Jews.
-What we charge against these defendants is not those arrogances and
-pretensions which frequently accompany the intermingling of different
-peoples and which are likely despite the honest efforts of government,
-to produce regrettable crimes and convulsions. It is my purpose to show
-a plan and design, to which all Nazis were fanatically committed, to
-annihilate all Jewish people. These crimes were organized and promoted
-by the Party Leadership, executed and protected by the Nazi officials,
-as we shall convince you by written orders of the Secret State Police
-itself.
-
-The persecution of the Jews was a continuous and deliberate policy. It
-was a policy directed against other nations as well as against the Jews
-themselves. Anti-Semitism was promoted to divide and embitter the
-democratic peoples and to soften their resistance to the Nazi
-aggression. As Robert Ley declared in _Der Angriff_ on 14 May 1944, “The
-second German secret weapon is Anti-Semitism because if it is constantly
-pursued by Germany, it will become a universal problem which all nations
-will be forced to consider.”
-
-Anti-Semitism also has been aptly credited with being a “spearhead of
-terror.” The ghetto was the laboratory for testing repressive measures.
-Jewish property was the first to be expropriated, but the custom grew
-and included similar measures against Anti-Nazi Germans, Poles, Czechs,
-Frenchmen, and Belgians. Extermination of the Jews enabled the Nazis to
-bring a practiced hand to similar measures against Poles, Serbs, and
-Greeks. The plight of the Jew was a constant threat to opposition or
-discontent among other elements of Europe’s population—pacifists,
-conservatives, communists, Catholics, Protestants, socialist. It was, in
-fact, a threat to every dissenting opinion and to every non-Nazi’s life.
-
-The persecution policy against the Jews commenced with non-violent
-measures, such as disfranchisement and discriminations against their
-religion, and the placing of impediments in the way of success in
-economic life. It moved rapidly to organized mass violence against them,
-physical isolation in ghettos, deportation, forced labor, mass
-starvation, and extermination. The Government, the Party formation
-indicated before you as criminal organizations, the Secret State Police,
-the Army, private and semi-public associations, and “spontaneous” mobs
-that were carefully inspired from official sources, were all agencies
-concerned in this persecution. Nor was it directed against individual
-Jews for personal bad citizenship or unpopularity. The avowed purpose
-was the destruction of the Jewish people as a whole, as an end in
-itself, as a measure of preparation for war, and as a discipline of
-conquered peoples.
-
-The conspiracy or common plan to exterminate the Jew was so methodically
-and thoroughly pursued that despite the German defeat and Nazi
-prostration, this Nazi aim largely has succeeded. Only remnants of the
-European Jewish population remain in Germany, in the countries which
-Germany occupied, and in those which were her satellites or
-collaborators. Of the 9,600,000 Jews who lived in Nazi-dominated Europe,
-60 percent are authoritatively estimated to have perished. 5,700,000
-Jews are missing from the countries in which they formerly lived, and
-over 4,500,000 cannot be accounted for by the normal death rate nor by
-immigration; nor are they included among displaced persons. History does
-not record a crime ever perpetrated against so many victims or one ever
-carried out with such calculated cruelty.
-
-You will have difficulty, as I have, to look into the faces of these
-defendants and believe that in this Twentieth Century human beings could
-inflict such sufferings as will be proved here on their own countrymen
-as well as upon their so-called “inferior” enemies. Particular crimes,
-and the responsibility of defendants for them, are to be dealt with by
-the Soviet Government’s Counsel, when committed in the East, and by
-Counsel for the Republic of France when committed in the West. I advert
-to them only to show their magnitude as evidence of a purpose and a
-knowledge common to all defendants, of an official plan rather than of a
-capricious policy of some individual commander, and to show such a
-continuity of Jewish persecution from the rise of the Nazi conspiracy to
-its collapse as forbids us to believe that any person could be
-identified with any part of Nazi action without approving this most
-conspicuous item of its program.
-
-The Indictment itself recites many evidences of the anti-Semitic
-persecutions. The defendant Streicher led the Nazis in anti-Semitic
-bitterness and extremism. In an article appearing in _Der Stuermer_ on
-19 March, 1942 he complained that Christian teachings have stood in the
-way of “radical solution of the Jewish question in Europe,” and quoted
-enthusiastically as the Twentieth Century solution the Fuehrer’s
-proclamation of February 24, 1942 that “the Jew will be exterminated.”
-And on November 4, 1943, Streicher declared in _Der Stuermer_ that the
-Jews “have disappeared from Europe and that the Jewish ‘Reservoir of the
-East’ from which the Jewish plague has for centuries beset the people of
-Europe, has ceased to exist.” Streicher now has the effrontery to tell
-us he is “only a Zionist”—he says he wants only to return the Jews to
-Palestine. But on May 7, 1942 his newspaper, _Der Stuermer_, had this to
-say:
-
- “It is also not only an European problem! _The Jewish question
- is a world question!_ Not only is Germany not safe in the face
- of the Jews as long as one Jew lives in Europe, but also the
- Jewish question is hardly solved in Europe so long as Jews live
- in the rest of the world.”
-
-And the defendant Hans Frank, a lawyer by profession I say with shame,
-summarized in his Diary in 1944 the Nazi policy thus: “The Jews are a
-race which has to be eliminated; whenever we catch one, it is his end.”
-(Frank Diary, 4 March 1944, p. 26). And earlier, speaking of his
-function as Governor-General of Poland, he confided to his diary this
-sentiment: “Of course I cannot eliminate all lice and Jews in only a
-year’s time.” (_2233-C-PS_) I could multiply endlessly this kind of Nazi
-ranting but I will leave it to the evidence and turn to the fruit of
-this perverted thinking.
-
-The most serious of the actions against Jews were outside of any law,
-but the law itself was employed to some extent. There were the infamous
-Nurnberg decrees of September 15, 1935 (_Reichsgesetzblatt_ 1935, Part
-I, p. 1146). The Jews were segregated into ghettos and put into forced
-labor; they were expelled from their professions; their property was
-expropriated; all cultural life, the press, the theatre, and schools
-were prohibited them; and the SD was made responsible for them
-(_212-PS_; _069-PS_). This was an ominous guardianship, as the following
-order for “The Handling of the Jewish Question” shows:
-
- “The competency of the Chief of the Security Police and Security
- Service, who is charged with the mission of solving the European
- Jewish question, extends even to the occupied eastern provinces.
- * * *
-
- “An eventual act by the civilian population against the Jews is
- not to be prevented as long as this is compatible with the
- maintenance of order and security in the rear of the fighting
- troops * * *
-
- “The first main goal of the German measures must be strict
- segregation of Jewry from the rest of the population. In the
- execution of this, first of all is the seizing of the Jewish
- populace by the introduction of a registration order and similar
- appropriate measures * * *
-
- “Then immediately, the wearing of the recognition sign
- consisting of a yellow Jewish star is to be brought about and
- 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 in case labor
- needs are present * * *
-
- “The entire Jewish property is to be seized and confiscated with
- exception of that which is necessary for a bare existence. As
- far as the economical situation permits, the power of disposal
- of their property is to be taken from the Jews as soon as
- possible through orders and other measures given by the
- commissariate, so that the moving of property will quickly
- cease.
-
- “Any cultural activity will be completely forbidden, to the Jew.
- This includes the outlawing of the Jewish press, the Jewish
- theatres and schools.
-
- “The slaughtering of animals according to Jewish rites is also
- to be prohibited * * *” (_212-PS_).
-
-The anti-Jewish campaign became furious in Germany following the
-assassination in Paris of the German Legation Councillor von Rath.
-Heydrich, Gestapo head, sent a teletype to all Gestapo and SD offices
-with directions for handling “spontaneous” uprising anticipated for the
-nights of November 9 and 10, 1938, so as to aid in destruction of
-Jewish-owned property and protect only that of Germans (_374-PS_;
-_765-PS_). No more cynical document ever came into evidence. Then there
-is a report by an SS Brigade Leader, Dr. Stahlecher, to Himmler, which
-recites that:
-
- “Similarly, native anti-Semitic forces were induced to start
- pogroms against Jews during the first hours after capture,
- though this inducement proved to be very difficult. Following
- our orders, the Security Police was determined to solve the
- Jewish question with all possible means and most decisively. But
- it was desirable that the Security Police should not put in an
- immediate appearance, at least in the beginning, since the
- extraordinarily harsh measures were apt to stir even German
- circles. It had to be shown to the world that the native
- population itself took the first action by way of natural
- reaction against the suppression by Jews during several decades
- and against the terror exercised by the Communists during the
- preceding period.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “In view of the extension of the area of operations and the
- great number of duties which had to be performed by the Security
- Police, it was intended from the very beginning to obtain the
- cooperation of the reliable population for the fight against
- vermin—that is mainly the Jews and Communists. Beyond our
- directing of the first spontaneous actions of self-cleansing,
- which will be reported elsewhere, care had to be taken that
- reliable people should be put to the cleansing job and that they
- were appointed auxiliary members of the Security Police.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Kowno * * * To our surprise it was not easy at first to set in
- motion an extensive pogrom against 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
- Kowno, 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 26.6 the Lithuanian partisans
- did away with more than 1,500 Jews, set fire to several
- synagogues or destroyed them by other means and burned down a
- Jewish dwelling district consisting of about 60 houses. During
- the following nights about 2,300 Jews were made harmless in a
- similar way. In other parts of Lithuania similar actions
- followed the example of Kowno, though smaller and extending to
- the Communists who had been left behind.
-
- “These self-cleansing actions went smoothly because the Army
- authorities who had been informed showed understanding for this
- procedure. From the beginning it was obvious that only the first
- days after the occupation would offer the opportunity for
- carrying out pogroms. After the disarmament of the partisans the
- self-cleansing actions ceased necessarily.
-
- “It proved much more difficult to set in motion similar
- cleansing actions in Latvia.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “From the beginning it was to be expected that the Jewish
- problem in the East could not be solved by pogroms alone. In
- accordance with the basic orders received, however, the
- cleansing activities of the Security Police had to aim at a
- complete annihilation of the Jews * * *
-
- “The sum total of the Jews liquidated in Lithuania amounts to
- 71,105.” (_L-180_).
-
-Of course, it is self-evident that these “uprisings” were managed by the
-government and the Nazi Party. If we were in doubt, we could resort to
-Streicher’s memorandum of April 14, 1939, which says, “The anti-Jewish
-action of November, 1938 did not arise spontaneously from the people. *
-* * Part of the party formation have been charged with the execution of
-the anti-Jewish action.” (_406-PS_). Jews as a whole were fined a
-billion Reichsmarks. They were excluded from all businesses, and claims
-against insurance companies for their burned properties were
-confiscated, all by decree of the defendant Goering
-(_Reichsgesetzblatt_, 1938, Part I, Pp. 1579-1582).
-
-Synagogues were the objects of a special vengeance. On November 10,
-1938, the following order was given: “By order of the Group Commander,
-all Jewish Synagogues in the area of Brigade 50 have to be blown up or
-set afire. * * * The operation will be carried out in civilian clothing.
-* * * Execution of the order will be reported * * *.” (_1721-PS_). Some
-40 teletype messages from various police headquarters will tell the fury
-with which all Jews were pursued in Germany on those awful November
-nights. The SS troops were turned loose and the Gestapo supervised.
-Jewish-owned property was authorized to be destroyed. The Gestapo
-ordered twenty to thirty thousand “well-to-do Jews” to be arrested.
-Concentration camps were to receive them. Healthy Jews, fit for labor,
-were to be taken (_3051-PS_).
-
-As the German frontiers were expanded by war, so the campaign against
-the Jews expanded. The Nazi plan never was limited to extermination in
-Germany; always it contemplated extinguishing the Jew in Europe and
-often in the world. In the west, the Jews were killed and their property
-taken over. But the campaign achieved its zenith of savagery in the
-East. The Eastern Jew has suffered as no people ever suffered. Their
-sufferings were carefully reported to the Nazi authorities to show
-faithful adherence to the Nazi design. I shall refer only to enough of
-the evidence of these to show the extent of the Nazi design for killing
-Jews.
-
-If I should recite these horrors in words of my own, you would think me
-intemperate and unreliable. Fortunately, we need not take the word of
-any witness but the Germans themselves. I invite you now to look at a
-few of the vast number of captured German orders and reports that will
-be offered in evidence, to see what a Nazi invasion meant. We will
-present such evidence as the report of _Einsatzgruppe_ (Action Group) A
-of October 15, 1941, which boasts that in overrunning the Baltic States,
-“Native Anti-Semitic forces were induced to start pogroms against the
-Jews during the first hours after occupation * * *.” The report
-continues:
-
- “From the beginning it was to be expected that the Jewish
- problem in the East could not be solved by pogroms alone. In
- accordance with the basic orders received, however, the
- cleansing activities of the Security Police had to aim at a
- complete annihilation of the Jews. Special detachments
- reinforced by selected units—in Lithuania partisan detachments,
- in Latvia units of the Latvian auxiliary police—therefore
- performed extensive executions both in the towns and in rural
- areas. The actions of the execution detachments were performed
- smoothly.
-
- “The sum total of the Jews liquidated in Lithuania amounts to
- 71,105. During the pogroms in Kowno 3,800 Jews were eliminated,
- in the smaller towns about 1,200 Jews.
-
- “In Latvia, up to now a total of 30,000 Jews were executed. 500
- were eliminated by pogroms in Riga.” (_L-180_).
-
-This is a captured report from the Commissioner of Sluzk on October 30,
-1941, which describes the scene in more detail. It says:
-
- “The first lieutenant explained that the police battalion had
- received the assignment to effect the liquidation of all Jews
- here in the town of Sluzk, within two days. Then I requested him
- to postpone the action one day. However, he rejected this with
- the remark that he had to carry out this action everywhere and
- in all towns and that only two days were allotted for Sluzk.
- Within these two days, the town of Sluzk had to be cleared of
- Jews by all means. * * * All Jews without exception were taken
- out of the factories and shops and deported in spite of our
- agreement. It is true that part of the Jews was moved by way of
- the ghetto where many of them were processed and still
- segregated by me, but a large part was loaded directly on trucks
- and liquidated without further delay outside of the town. * * *
- For the rest, as regards the execution of the action, I must
- point out to my deepest regret that the latter bordered already
- on sadism. The town itself offered a picture of horror during
- the action. With indescribable brutality on the part of both the
- German police officers and particularly the Lithuanian
- partisans, the Jewish people, but also among them White
- Ruthenians, were taken out of their dwellings and herded
- together. Everywhere in the town shots were to be heard and in
- different streets the corpses of shot Jews accumulated. The
- White Ruthenians were in greatest distress to free themselves
- from the encirclement. Regardless of the fact that the Jewish
- people, among whom were also tradesmen, were mistreated in a
- terribly barbarous way in the face of the White Ruthenian
- people, the White Ruthenians themselves were also worked over
- with rubber clubs and rifle butts. There was no question of an
- action against the Jews any more. It rather looked like a
- revolution. * * *” (_1104-PS_).
-
-There are reports which merely tabulate the numbers slaughtered. An
-example is an account of the work of _Einsatzgruppen_ of Sipo and SD in
-the East, which relates that—
-
- In Estonia, all Jews were arrested immediately upon the arrival
- of the Wehrmacht. Jewish men and women above the age of 16 and
- capable of work were drafted for forced labor. Jews were
- subjected to all sorts of restrictions and all Jewish property
- was confiscated.
-
- All Jewish males above the age of 16 were executed, with the
- exception of doctors and elders. Only 500 of an original 4,500
- Jews remained.
-
- 37,180 persons have been liquidated by the Sipo and SD in White
- Ruthenia during October.
-
- In one town, 337 Jewish women were executed for demonstrating a
- “provocative attitude.” In another, 380 Jews were shot for
- spreading vicious propaganda.
-
-And so the report continues, listing town after town, where hundreds
-upon hundreds of Jews were murdered.
-
- In Witebsk 3,000 Jews were liquidated because of the danger of
- epidemics.
-
- In Kiew, 33,771 Jews were executed on September 29 and 30 in
- retaliation for some fires which were set off there.
-
- In Shitomir, 3,145 Jews “had to be shot” because, judging from
- experience they had to be considered as the carriers of
- Bolshevik propaganda.
-
- In Cherson, 410 Jews were executed in reprisal against acts of
- sabotage.
-
- In the territory east of the Djnepr, the Jewish problem was
- “solved” by the liquidation of 4,891 Jews and by putting the
- remainder into labor battalions of up to 1,000 persons
- (_R-102_).
-
-Other accounts tell not of the slaughter so much as of the depths of
-degradation to which the tormentors stooped. For example, we will show
-the reports made to defendant Rosenberg about the army and the SS in the
-area under Rosenberg’s jurisdiction, which recited the following:
-
- “Details: In presence of SS man, a Jewish dentist has to break
- all gold teeth and fillings out of mouth of German and Russian
- Jews _before_ they are executed.”
-
- Men, women and children are locked into barns and burned alive.
-
- Peasants, women and children are shot on pretext that they are
- suspected of belonging to bands (_R-135_).
-
-We of the Western World heard of Gas Wagons in which Jews and political
-opponents were asphyxiated. We could not believe it. But here we have
-the report of May 16, 1942 from the German SS officer, Becker, to his
-supervisor in Berlin which tells this story:
-
- Gas vans in C. group can be driven to execution spot, which is
- generally stationed 10 to 15 kms. from main road only in dry
- weather. Since those to be executed become frantic if conducted
- to this place, such vans become immobilized in wet weather.
-
- Gas vans in D. group camouflaged as cabin trailers, but vehicles
- well known to authorities and civilian population which calls
- them “Death Vans”.
-
- Writer of letter (Becker) ordered all men to keep as far away as
- possible during gassing. Unloading van has “atrocious spiritual
- and physical effect” on men and they should be ordered not to
- participate in such work (_501-PS_).
-
-I shall not dwell on this subject longer than to quote one more
-sickening document which evidences the planned and systematic character
-of the Jewish persecutions. I hold a report written with Teutonic
-devotion to detail, illustrated with photographs to authenticate its
-almost incredible text, and beautifully bound in leather with the loving
-care bestowed on a proud work. It is the original report of the SS
-Brigadier General Stroop in charge of the destruction of the Warsaw
-Ghetto, and its title page carries the inscription, “The Jewish Ghetto
-in Warsaw no longer exists.” It is characteristic that one of the
-captions explains that the photograph concerned shows the driving out of
-Jewish “bandits”; those whom the photograph shows being driven out are
-almost entirely women and little children. It contains a day-by-day
-account of the killings mainly carried out by the SS organization, too
-long to relate, but let me quote General Stroop’s summary:
-
- “The resistance put up by the Jews and bandits could only be
- suppressed by energetic actions of our troops day and night.
- _The Reichsfuehrer SS ordered, therefore on 23 April 1943 the
- cleaning out of the ghetto with utter ruthlessness and merciless
- tenacity._ I, therefore, decided to destroy and burn down the
- entire ghetto without regard to the armament factories. These
- factories were systematically dismantled and then burned. Jews
- usually left their hideouts, but frequently remained in the
- burning buildings and jumped out of the windows only when the
- heat became unbearable. They then tried to crawl with broken
- bones across the street into buildings which were not afire.
- Sometimes they changed their hideouts during the night into the
- ruins of burned buildings. Life in the sewers was not pleasant
- after the first week. Many times we could hear loud voices in
- the sewers. SS men or policemen climbed bravely through the
- manholes to capture these Jews. Sometimes they stumbled over
- Jewish corpses; sometimes they were shot at. Tear gas bombs were
- thrown into the manholes and the Jews driven out of the sewers
- and captured. Countless numbers of Jews were liquidated in
- sewers and bunkers through blasting. The longer the resistance
- continued the tougher became the members of the Waffen SS police
- and Wehrmacht who always discharged their duties in an exemplary
- manner. Frequently Jews who tried to replenish their food
- supplies during the night or to communicate with neighboring
- groups were exterminated.” (_1061-PS_).
-
-This action eliminated, says the SS commander, “a proved total of
-56,065. To that we have to add the number of those killed through
-blasting, fire, etc., which cannot be counted.”
-
-We charge that all atrocities against Jews were the manifestation and
-culmination of the Nazi plan to which every defendant here was a party.
-I know very well that some of these men did take steps to spare some
-particular Jew for some personal reason from the horrors that awaited
-the unrescued Jew. Some protested that particular atrocities were
-excessive, and discredited the general policy. While a few defendants
-may show efforts to make specific exceptions to the policy of Jewish
-extermination, I have found no instance in which any defendant opposed
-the policy itself or sought to revoke or even modify it.
-
-Determination to destroy the Jews was a binding force which at all times
-cemented the elements of this conspiracy. On many internal policies
-there were differences among the defendants. But there is not one of
-them who has not echoed the rallying cry of Naziism—_DEUTSCHLAND
-ERWACHE JUDA VERRECKE!_ (GERMANY AWAKE, JEWRY PERISH!)
-
- TERRORISM AND PREPARATION FOR WAR
-
-How a Government treats its own inhabitants generally is thought to be
-no concern of other Governments or of international society. Certainly
-few oppressions or cruelties would warrant the intervention of foreign
-powers. But the German mistreatment of Germans is now known to pass in
-magnitude and savagery any limits of what is tolerable by modern
-civilization. Other nations, by silence, would take a consenting part in
-such crimes. These Nazi persecutions, moreover, take character as
-international crimes because of the purpose for which they were
-undertaken.
-
-The purpose, as we have seen, of getting rid of the influence of free
-labor, the churches, and the Jews was to clear their obstruction to the
-precipitation of aggressive war. If aggressive warfare in violation of
-treaty obligation is a matter of international cognizance, the
-preparations for it must also be of concern to the international
-community. Terrorism was the chief instrument for securing the cohesion
-of the German people in war purposes. Moreover, these cruelties in
-Germany served as atrocity practice to discipline the membership of the
-criminal organization to follow the pattern later in occupied countries.
-
-Through the police formations that before you are accused as criminal
-organizations, the Nazi Party leaders, aided at some point in their
-basic and notorious purpose by each of the individual defendants
-instituted a reign of terror. These espionage and police organizations
-were utilized to hunt down every form of opposition and to penalize
-every nonconformity. These organizations early founded and administered
-concentration camps—Buchenwald in 1933, Dachau in 1934. But these
-notorious names were not alone. Concentration camps came to dot the
-German map and to number scores. At first they met with resistance from
-some Germans. We have a captured letter from Minister of Justice
-Guertner to Hitler which is revealing. A Gestapo official had been
-prosecuted for crimes committed in the camp at Hohnstein, and the Nazi
-Governor of Saxony had promptly asked that the proceeding be quashed.
-The Minister of Justice in June of 1935 protested because, as he said:
-
- “In this camp unusually grave mistreatments of prisoners have
- occurred at least since Summer 1933. The prisoners not only were
- beaten with whips without cause, similarly as in the
- Concentration Camp Bredow near Stettin till they lost
- consciousness, but they were also tortured in other manners,
- e.g. with the help of a dripping apparatus constructed
- exclusively for this purpose, under which prisoners had to stand
- until they were suffering from serious purulent wounds of the
- scalp * * *” (_787-PS_).
-
-I shall not take time to detail the ghastly proceedings in these
-concentration camps. Beatings, starvings, tortures, and killings were
-routine—so routine that the tormenters became blase and careless. We
-have a report of discovery that in Ploetzens one night, 186 persons were
-executed while there were orders for only 180. Another report describes
-how the family of one victim received two urns of ashes by mistake.
-Inmates were compelled to execute each other. In 1942, they were paid
-five Reichsmarks per execution, but on June 27, 1942, SS General Gluecks
-ordered commandants of all concentration camps to reduce this honorarium
-to three cigarettes. In 1943, the Reichsleader of the SS and Chief of
-German Police ordered the corporal punishments on Russian women to be
-applied by Polish women and vice versa, but the price was not frozen.
-“As reward, a few cigarettes” was authorized. Under the Nazis, human
-life had been progressively devalued until it finally became worth less
-than a handful of tobacco—ersatz tobacco. There were, however, some
-traces of the milk of human kindness. On August 11, 1942, an order went
-from Himmler to the commanders of fourteen concentration camps that
-“only German prisoners are allowed to beat other German prisoners.”
-(_2189-PS_).
-
-Mystery and suspense was added to cruelty in order to spread torture
-from the inmate to his family and friends. Men and women disappeared
-from their homes or business or from the streets, and no word came of
-them. The omission of notice was not due to overworked staff; it was due
-to policy. The Chief of the SD and Sipo reported that in accordance with
-orders from the Fuehrer anxiety should be created in the minds of the
-family of the arrested person (_668-PS_). Deportations and secret
-arrests were labeled, with a Nazi wit which seems a little ghoulish,
-_Nacht und Nebel_ (Night and Fog) (_L-90, 833-PS_). One of the many
-orders for these actions gave this explanation:
-
- “The decree carries a basic innovation. The Fuehrer and
- Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces commands that crimes of
- the specified sort committed by civilians of the occupied
- territories are to be punished by the pertinent courts-martial
- in the occupied territories _only_ when
-
- _a._ the sentence calls for the death penalty, and
-
- _b._ the sentence is pronounced within 8 days after the arrest.
-
- “Only when both conditions are met does the Fuehrer and
- Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces hope for the desired
- deterrent effect from the conduct of punitive proceedings in the
- occupied territories.
-
- “In other cases in the future the accused are to be secretly
- brought to Germany and the further conduct of the trial carried
- on here. The deterrent effect of those measures lies
-
- _a._ in allowing the disappearance of the accused without a
- trace,
-
- _b._ therein, that no information whatsoever may be given about
- their whereabouts and their fate.” (_833-PS_).
-
-To clumsy cruelty, scientific skill was added. “Undesirables” were
-exterminated by injection of drugs into the bloodstream, by asphyxiation
-in gas chambers. They were shot with poison bullets, to study the
-effects (_L-103_).
-
-Then, to cruel experiments the Nazi added obscene ones. These were not
-the work of underling degenerates but of master minds high in the Nazi
-conspiracy. In May 20, 1942, General Field Marshal Milch authorized SS
-General Wolff to go ahead at Dachau Camp with so-called “cold
-experiments”; and four female gypsies were supplied for the purpose.
-Himmler gave permission to carry on these “experiments” also in other
-camps (_1617-PS_). At Dachau, the reports of the “doctor” in charge show
-that victims were immersed in cold water until their body temperature
-was reduced to 28 degrees centigrade (82.4 degrees Fahrenheit), when
-they all died immediately (_1618-PS_). This was in August 1942. But the
-“doctor’s” technique improved. By February, 1943, he was able to report
-that thirty persons were chilled to 27 to 29 degrees, their hands and
-feet frozen white, and their bodies “rewarmed” by a hot bath. But the
-Nazi scientific triumph was “rewarming with animal heat.” The victim,
-all but frozen to death, was surrounded with bodies of living women
-until he revived and responded to his environment by having sexual
-intercourse (_1616-PS_). Here Nazi degeneracy reached its nadir.
-
-I dislike to encumber the record with such morbid tales, but we are in
-the grim business of trying men as criminals, and these are the things
-their own agents say happened. We will show you these concentration
-camps in motion pictures, just as the Allied armies found them when they
-arrived, and the measures General Eisenhower had to take to clean them
-up. Our proof will be disgusting and you will say I have robbed you of
-your sleep. But these are the things which have turned the stomach of
-the world and set every civilized hand against Nazi Germany.
-
-Germany became one vast torture chamber. Cries of its victims were heard
-round the world and brought shudders to civilized people everywhere. I
-am one who received during this war most atrocity tales with suspicion
-and skepticism. But the proof here will be so overwhelming that I
-venture to predict not one word I have spoken will be denied. These
-defendants will only deny personal responsibility or knowledge.
-
-Under the clutch of the most intricate web of espionage and intrigue
-that any modern state has endured, and persecution and torture of a kind
-that has not been visited upon the world in many centuries, the elements
-of the German population which were both decent and courageous were
-annihilated. Those which were decent but weak were intimidated. Open
-resistance, which had never been more than feeble and irresolute,
-disappeared. But resistance, I am happy to say, always remained,
-although it was manifest in only such events as the abortive effort to
-assassinate Hitler on July 20, 1944. With resistance driven underground,
-the Nazi had the German State in his own hands.
-
-But the Nazis not only silenced discordant voices. They created positive
-controls as effective as their negative ones. Propaganda organs, on a
-scale never before known, stimulated the party and party formations with
-a permanent enthusiasm and abandon such as we democratic people can work
-up only for a few days before a general election. They inculcated and
-practiced the _fuehrerprinzip_, which centralized control of the Party
-and of the Party-controlled state over the lives and thought of the
-German people, who are accustomed to look upon the German State by
-whomever controlled with a mysticism that is incomprehensible to my
-people.
-
-All these controls from their inception were exerted with unparalleled
-energy and singlemindedness to put Germany on a war footing. We will
-show from the Nazis’ own documents their secret training of military
-personnel, their secret creation of a military air force. Finally, a
-conscript army was brought into being. Financiers, economists,
-industrialists, joined in the plan and promoted elaborate alterations in
-industry and finance to support an unprecedented concentration of
-resources and energies upon preparations for war. Germany’s rearmament
-so outstripped the strength of her neighbors that in about a year she
-was able to crush the whole military force of Continental Europe,
-exclusive of that of Soviet Russia, and then to push the Russian armies
-back to the Volga. These preparations were of a magnitude which
-surpassed all need of defense and every defendant, and every intelligent
-German, well understood them to be for aggressive purposes.
-
- EXPERIMENTS IN AGGRESSION
-
-Before resorting to open aggressive warfare, the Nazis undertook some
-rather cautious experiments to test the spirit and resistance of those
-who lay across their path. They advanced, but only as others yielded,
-and kept in a position to draw back if they found a temper that made
-persistence dangerous.
-
-On 7 March 1936, the Nazis reoccupied the Rhineland and then proceeded
-to fortify it in violation of the Treaty of Versailles and the Pact of
-Locarno. They encountered no substantial resistance and were emboldened
-to take the next step, which was the acquisition of Austria. Despite
-repeated assurances that Germany had no designs on Austria, invasion was
-perfected. Threat of attack forced Schuschnigg to resign as Chancellor
-of Austria and put the Nazi defendant Seyss-Inquart in his place. The
-latter immediately opened the frontier and invited Hitler to invade
-Austria “to preserve order.” On March 12th the invasion began. The next
-day, Hitler proclaimed himself Chief of the Austrian State, took command
-of its armed forces, and a law was enacted annexing Austria to Germany.
-
-Threats of aggression had succeeded without arousing resistance. Fears
-nevertheless had been stirred. They were lulled by an assurance to the
-Czechoslovak Government that there would be no attack on that country.
-We will show that the Nazi Government already had detailed plans for the
-attack. We will lay before you the documents in which these conspirators
-planned to create an incident to justify their attack. They even gave
-consideration to assassinating their own Ambassador at Prague in order
-to create a sufficiently dramatic incident. They did precipitate a
-diplomatic crisis which endured through the summer. Hitler set September
-30th as the day when troops should be ready for action. Under the threat
-of immediate war, the United Kingdom and France concluded a pact with
-Germany and Italy at Munich on September 29, 1938 which required
-Czechoslovakia to acquiesce in the cession of the Sudetenland to
-Germany. It was consummated by German occupation on October 1, 1938.
-
-The Munich Pact pledged no further aggression against Czechoslovakia,
-but the Nazi pledge was lightly given and quickly broken. On the 15th of
-March, 1939, in defiance of the treaty of Munich itself, the Nazis
-seized and occupied Bohemia and Moravia, which constituted the major
-part of Czechoslovakia not already ceded to Germany. Once again the West
-stood aghast, but it dreaded war, it saw no remedy except war, and it
-hoped against hope that the Nazi fever for expansion had run its course.
-But the Nazi world was intoxicated by these unresisted successes in open
-alliance with Mussolini and covert alliance with Franco. Then, having
-made a deceitful, delaying peace with Russia, the conspirators entered
-upon the final phase of the plan to renew war.
-
- WAR OF AGGRESSION
-
-I will not prolong this address by detailing the steps leading to the
-war of aggression which began with the invasion of Poland on September,
-1, 1939. The further story will be unfolded to you from documents
-including those of the German High Command itself. The plans had been
-laid long in advance. As early as 1935 Hitler appointed the defendant
-Schacht to the position of “General Deputy for the War Economy.”
-(_2261-PS_). We have the diary of General Jodl (_1780-PS_); the “Plan
-Otto,” Hitler’s own order for attack on Austria in case trickery failed
-(_C-102_); the “Plan Green” which was the blueprint for attack on
-Czechoslovakia (_388-PS_); plans for the War in the West (_376-PS_,
-_375-PS_); Funk’s letter to Hitler dated August 25, 1939, detailing the
-long course of economic preparation (_699-PS_); Keitel’s top secret
-mobilization order for 1939-40 prescribing secret steps to be taken
-during a “period of tension” during which no “‘state of war’ will be
-publicly declared even if open war measures against the foreign enemy
-will be taken.” This latter order (_1639-A-PS_) is in our possession
-despite a secret order issued on March 16, 1945, when Allied troops were
-advancing into the heart of Germany, to burn these plans. We have also
-Hitler’s directive, dated December 18, 1940, for the “Barbarossa
-Contingency” outlining the strategy of the attack upon Russia
-(_446-PS_). That plan in the original bears the initials of the
-defendants Keitel and Jodl. They were planning the attack and planning
-it long in advance of the declaration of war. We have detailed
-information concerning “Case White,” the plan for attack on Poland
-(_C-120_). That attack began the war. The plan was issued by Keitel on
-April 3rd, 1939. The attack did not come until September. Steps in
-preparation for the attack were taken by subordinate commanders, one of
-whom issued an order on June 14, providing that:
-
- “The Commander-in-Chief of the Army has ordered the working out
- of a _plan of deployment against Poland_ which takes in account
- the demands of the political leadership _for the opening of war
- by surprise and for quick success_ * * *
-
- “I declare it the duty of the Commanding Generals, the
- divisional commanders and the commandants to limit as much as
- possible the number of persons who will be informed, and to
- limit the extent of the information, and ask that all suitable
- measures be taken to prevent persons not concerned from getting
- information.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “The operation, in order to forestall an orderly Polish
- mobilization and concentration, is to be opened by surprise with
- forces which are for the most part armored and motorized, placed
- on alert in the neighborhood of the border. The initial
- superiority over the Polish frontier-guards and surprise that
- can be expected with certainty are to be maintained by quickly
- bringing up other parts of the army as well to counteract the
- marching up of the Polish Army.
-
- “If the development of the Political situation should show that
- a surprise at the beginning of the war is out of question,
- because of well advanced defense preparations on the part of the
- Polish Army, the Commander-in-Chief of the Army will order the
- opening of the hostilities only after the assembling of
- sufficient additional forces. The basis of all preparations will
- be to surprise the enemy.” (_2327-PS_).
-
-We have also the order for the invasion of England, signed by Hitler and
-initialed by Keitel and Jodl. It is interesting that it commences with a
-recognition that although the British military position is “hopeless,”
-they show not the slightest sign of giving in (_442-PS_).
-
-Not the least incriminating are the minutes of Hitler’s meeting with his
-high advisers. As early as November 5, 1937, Hitler told defendants
-Goering, Raeder, and Neurath, among others, that German rearmament was
-practically accomplished and that he had decided to secure by force,
-starting with a lightning attack on Czechoslovakia and Austria, greater
-living space for Germans in Europe no later than 1943-45 and perhaps as
-early as 1938 (_386-PS_). On the 23rd of May, 1939, the Fuehrer advised
-his staff that—
-
- “It is a question of expanding our living space in the East and
- of securing our food supplies * * * over and above the natural
- fertility, thorough-going German exploitation will enormously
- increase the surplus.”
-
- “There is therefore no question of sparing Poland, and we are
- left with the decision: _To attack Poland at the first suitable
- opportunity_. We cannot expect a repetition of the Czech affair.
- There will be war.” (_L-79_).
-
-On August 22nd, 1939 Hitler again addressed members of the High Command,
-telling them when the start of military operations would be ordered. He
-disclosed that for propaganda purposes, he would provocate a good
-reason. “It will make no difference,” he announced, “whether this reason
-will sound convincing or not. After all, the victor will not be asked
-whether he talked the truth or not. We have to proceed brutally. The
-stronger is always right.” (_1014-PS_). On 23 November 1939 after the
-Germans had invaded Poland, Hitler made this explanation:
-
- “For the first time in history we have to fight on only one
- front, the other front is at present free. But no one can know
- how long that will remain so. I have doubted for a long time
- whether I should strike in the east and then in the west.
- Basically I did not organize the armed forces in order not to
- strike. The decision to strike was always in me. Earlier or
- later I wanted to solve the problem. Under pressure it was
- decided that the east was to be attacked first * * *”
- (_789-PS_).
-
-We know the bloody sequel. Frontier incidents were staged. Demands were
-made for cession of territory. When Poland refused, the German forces
-invaded on September 1st, 1939. Warsaw was destroyed; Poland fell. The
-Nazis, in accordance with plan, moved swiftly to extend their aggression
-throughout Europe and to gain the advantage of surprise over their
-unprepared neighbors. Despite repeated and solemn assurances of peaceful
-intentions, they invaded Denmark and Norway on 9th April, 1940; Belgium,
-The Netherlands and Luxembourg on 10th May, 1940; Yugoslavia and Greece
-on 6th April, 1941.
-
-As part of the Nazi preparation for aggression against Poland and her
-allies, Germany, on 23rd August, 1939 had entered into a nonaggression
-pact with Soviet-Russia. It was only a delaying treaty intended to be
-kept no longer than necessary to prepare for its violation. On June 22,
-1941, pursuant to long matured plans, the Nazis hurled troops into
-Soviet territory without any declaration of war. The entire European
-world was aflame.
-
- CONSPIRACY WITH JAPAN
-
-The Nazi plans of aggression called for use of Asiatic allies and they
-found among the Japanese men of kindred mind and purpose. They were
-brothers, under the skin.
-
-Himmler records a conversation he had on January 31, 1939 with General
-Oshima, Japanese Ambassador at Berlin. He wrote:
-
- “Furthermore, he (Oshima) had succeeded up to now to send 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.” (_2195-PS_).
-
-On September 27th, 1940, the Nazis concluded a German-Italian-Japanese
-ten-year military and economic alliance by which those powers agreed “to
-stand by and cooperate with one another in regard to their efforts in
-Greater East Asia and regions of Europe respectively wherein it is their
-prime purpose to establish and maintain a new order of things * * *.”
-
-On March 5, 1941, a top secret directive was issued by defendant Keitel.
-It stated that “The Fuehrer has ordered instigation of Japan’s active
-participation in the war” and directed that “Japan’s military power has
-to be strengthened by the disclosure of German war experiences and
-support of a military, economic and technical nature has to be given.”
-The aim was stated to be to crush England quickly, “thereby keeping the
-United States out of the war.” (_C-75_).
-
-On March 29, 1941, Ribbentrop told Matsuoka, the Japanese Foreign
-Minister, that the German Army was ready to strike against Russia.
-Matsuoka reassured Ribbentrop about the Far East. Japan, he reported,
-was acting at the moment as though she had no interest whatever in
-Singapore, but “intends to strike when the right moment comes.”
-(_1877-PS_). On April 5, 1941, Ribbentrop urged Matsuoka that entry of
-Japan into the war would “hasten the victory” and would be more in the
-interest of Japan that of Germany since it would give Japan a unique
-chance to fulfill her national aims and to play a leading part in
-Eastern Asia (_1882-PS_).
-
-The proofs in this case will also show that the leaders of Germany were
-planning war against the United States from its Atlantic as well as
-instigating it from its Pacific approaches. A captured memorandum from
-the Fuehrer’s headquarters, dated October 29, 1940, asks certain
-information as to air bases and supply and reports further that
-
- “The Fuehrer is at present occupied with the question of the
- occupation of the Atlantic islands with a view to the
- prosecution of war against America at a later date.
- Deliberations on this subject are being embarked upon here.”
- (_376-PS_).
-
-On December 7, 1941, a day which the late President Roosevelt declared
-“will live in infamy,” victory for German aggression seemed certain. The
-Wehrmacht was at the gates of Moscow. Taking advantage of the situation,
-and while her plenipotentiaries were creating a diplomatic diversion in
-Washington, Japan without declaration of war treacherously attacked the
-United States at Pearl Harbor and the Philippines. Attacks followed
-swiftly on the British Commonwealth and The Netherlands in the Southwest
-Pacific. These aggressions were met in the only way they could be met,
-with instant declarations of war and with armed resistance which mounted
-slowly through many long months of reverse until finally the Axis was
-crushed to earth and deliverance for its victims was won.
-
- CRIMES IN THE CONDUCT OF WAR
-
-Even the most warlike of peoples have recognized in the name of humanity
-some limitations on the savagery of warfare. Rules to that end have been
-embodied in international conventions to which Germany became a party.
-This code had prescribed certain restraints as to the treatment of
-belligerents. The enemy was entitled to surrender and to receive quarter
-and good treatment as a prisoner of war. We will show by German
-documents that these rights were denied, that prisoners of war were
-given brutal treatment and often murdered. This was particularly true in
-the case of captured airmen, often my countrymen.
-
-It was ordered that captured English and American airmen should no
-longer be granted the status of prisoners of war. They were to be
-treated as criminals and the Army was ordered to refrain from protecting
-them against lynching by the populace (_R-118_). The Nazi Government,
-through its police and propaganda agencies, took pains to incite the
-civilian population to attack and kill airmen who crash-landed. The
-order, given by the Reichsfuehrer SS, Himmler, on 10 August 1943,
-directed that,
-
- “It is not the task of the police to interfere in clashes
- between German and English and American fliers who have bailed
- out.”
-
-This order was transmitted on the same day by SS Obersturmbannfuhrer
-Brand of Himmler’s Personal Staff to all Senior Executive SS and Police
-officers, with these directions:
-
- “I am sending you the inclosed order with the request that the
- Chief of the Regular Police and of the Security Police be
- informed. They are to make this instruction known to their
- subordinate officers verbally.” (_R-110_).
-
-Similarly, we will show Hitler’s top secret order, dated 18 October
-1942, that commandos, regardless of condition, were “to be slaughtered
-to the last man” after capture (_498-PS_). We will show the circulation
-of secret orders, one of which was signed by Hess, to be passed orally
-to civilians, that enemy fliers or parachutists were to be arrested or
-liquidated (_062-PS_). By such means were murders incited and directed.
-
-This Nazi campaign of ruthless treatment of enemy forces assumed its
-greatest proportions in the fight against Russia. Eventually all
-prisoners of war were taken out of control of the Army and put in the
-hands of Himmler and the SS (_058-PS_). In the East, the German fury
-spent itself. Russian prisoners were ordered to be branded. They were
-starved. I shall quote passages from a letter written February 28, 1942
-by defendant Rosenberg to defendant Keitel:
-
- “The fate of the Soviet prisoners of war in Germany is on the
- contrary a tragedy of the greatest extent. Of 3.6 millions of
- prisoners of war, only several hundred thousand are still able
- to work fully. A large part of them has starved, or died,
- because of the hazards of the weather. Thousands also died from
- spotted fever.
-
- “The camp commanders have forbidden the civilian population to
- put food at the disposal of the prisoners, and they have rather
- let them starve to death.
-
- “In many cases, when prisoners of war could no longer keep up on
- the march because of hunger and exhaustion, they were shot
- before the eyes of the horrified civilian population, and the
- corpses were left.
-
- “In numerous camps, no shelter for the prisoners of war was
- provided at all. They lay under the open sky during rain or
- snow. Even tools were not made available to dig holes or caves.
-
- “Finally, the shooting of prisoners of war must be mentioned.
- For instance, in various camps, all the ‘Asiatics’ were shot.”
- (_081-PS_).
-
-Civilized usage and conventions to which Germany was a party had
-prescribed certain immunities for civilian populations unfortunate
-enough to dwell in lands overrun by hostile armies. The German
-occupation forces, controlled or commanded by men on trial before you,
-committed a long series of outrages against the inhabitants of occupied
-territory that would be incredible except for captured orders and the
-captured reports showing the fidelity with which these orders were
-executed.
-
-We deal here with a phase of common criminality designed by the
-conspirators as part of the common plan. We can appreciate why these
-crimes against their European enemies were not of a casual character but
-were planned and disciplined crimes when we get at the reason for them.
-Hitler told his officers on August 22, 1939 that “The main objective in
-Poland is the destruction of the enemy and not the reaching of a certain
-geographical line.” (_1014-PS_). The project of deporting promising
-youth from occupied territories was approved by Rosenberg on the theory
-that “a desired weakening of the biological force of the conquered
-people is being achieved.” (_031-PS_). To Germanize or to destroy was
-the program. Himmler announced, “Either we win over any good blood that
-we can use for ourselves and give it a place in our people or,
-gentlemen—you may call this cruel, but nature is cruel—we destroy this
-blood.” As to “racially good types” Himmler further advised, “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.”
-(_L-70_). He urged deportation of Slavic children to deprive potential
-enemies of future soldiers.
-
-The Nazi purpose was to leave Germany’s neighbors so weakened that even
-if she should eventually lose the war, she would still be the most
-powerful nation in Europe. Against this background, we must view the
-plan for ruthless warfare, which means a plan for the commission of war
-crimes and crimes against humanity.
-
-Hostages in large numbers were demanded and killed. Mass punishments
-were inflicted, so savage that whole communities were extinguished.
-Rosenberg was advised of the annihilation of three unidentified villages
-in Slovakia. In May of 1943, another village of about 40 farms and 220
-inhabitants was ordered wiped out. The entire population was ordered
-shot, the cattle and property impounded, and the order required that
-“the village will be destroyed totally by fire.” A secret report from
-Rosenberg’s Reich Ministry of Eastern territory reveals that:
-
- “Food rations allowed the Russian population are so low that
- they fail to secure their existence and provide only for minimum
- subsistence of limited duration. The population, does not know
- if they will still live tomorrow. They are faced with death by
- starvation.
-
- “The roads are clogged by hundreds of thousands of people,
- sometime as many as one million according to the estimate of
- experts, who wander around in search of nourishment.
-
- “Sauckel’s action has caused great unrest among the civilians.
- Russian girls were deloused by men, nude photos in forced
- positions were taken, women doctors were locked into freight
- cars for the pleasure of the transport commanders, women in
- night shirts were fettered and forced through the Russian towns
- to the railroad station, etc. All this material has been sent to
- the OKH.”
-
-Perhaps the deportation to slave labor was the most horrible and
-extensive slaving operation in history. On few other subjects is our
-evidence so abundant or so damaging. In a speech made on January 25,
-1944, the defendant Frank, Governor-General of Poland, boasted, “I have
-sent 1,300,000 Polish workers into the Reich.” The defendant Sauckel
-reported that “out of the five million foreign workers who arrived in
-Germany not even 200,000 came voluntarily.” This fact was reported to
-the Fuehrer and defendants Speer, Goering, and Keitel (_R-124_).
-Children of 10 to 14 years were impressed into service by telegraphic
-order of Rosenberg’s Ministry for the Occupied Eastern Territories:
-
- “The Command is further charged with the transferring of
- worthwhile Russian youth between 10-14 years of age, to the
- Reich. The authority is not affected by the changes connected
- with the evacuation and transportation to the reception camps of
- Pialystok, Krajewo, and Olitei. The Fuehrer wishes that this
- activity be increased even more.” (_200-PS_).
-
-When enough labor was not forthcoming, prisoners of war were forced in
-war work in flagrant violation of international conventions (_016-PS_).
-Slave labor came from France, Belgium, Holland, Italy, and the East.
-Methods of recruitment were violent (_R-124, 018-PS, 204-PS_). The
-treatment of these slave laborers was stated in general terms, not
-difficult to translate into concrete deprivations, in a letter to the
-defendant Rosenberg from the defendant Sauckel, which stated:
-
- “All _prisoners of war_, from the _territories_ of the West as
- well of the East, actually in Germany, must be completely
- incorporated into the German armament and munition industries.
- Their production must be brought to the highest possible level.
-
- “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 undisputable necessity for the solution
- of the mobilization of labor program in this war.
-
- “All the men must be fed, sheltered and treated in such a way as
- to exploit them to the highest possible extent at the lowest
- conceivable degrees of expenditure.” (_016-PS_).
-
-In pursuance of the Nazi plan permanently to reduce the living standards
-of their neighbors and to weaken them physically and economically, a
-long series of crimes were committed. There was extensive destruction,
-serving no military purpose, of the property of civilians. Dikes were
-thrown open in Holland almost at the close of the war not to achieve
-military ends but to destroy the resources and retard the economy of the
-thrifty Netherlanders.
-
-There was carefully planned economic syphoning off of the assets of
-occupied countries. An example of the planning is shown by a report on
-France dated December 7, 1942 made by the Economic Research Department
-of the Reichsbank. The question arose whether French occupation costs
-should be increased from 15 million Reichsmarks per day to 25 million
-Reichsmarks per day. The Reichsbank analyzed French economy to determine
-whether it could bear the burden. It pointed out that the armistice had
-burdened France to that date to the extent of 18½ billion Reichsmarks,
-equalling 370 billion Francs. It pointed out that the burden of these
-payments within two and a half years equalled the aggregate French
-national income in the year 1940, and that the amount of payments handed
-over to Germany in the first six months of 1942 corresponded to the
-estimate for the total French revenue for that whole year. The report
-concluded, “In any case, the conclusion is inescapable that relatively
-heavier tributes have been imposed on France since the armistice in
-June, 1940 than upon Germany after the World War. In this connection, it
-must be noted that the economic powers of France never equalled those of
-the German Reich and that vanquished France could not draw on foreign
-economic and financial resources in the same degree as Germany after the
-last World War.”
-
-The defendant Funk was the Reichs Minister of Economics and President of
-the Reichsbank; the defendant Ribbentrop was Foreign Minister; the
-defendant Goering was Plenipotentiary for the Four-Year Plan, and all of
-them participated in the exchange of views of which this captured
-document is a part (_2149-PS_). Notwithstanding this analysis by the
-Reichsbank, they proceeded to increase the imposition on France from 15
-million Reichsmarks daily to 25 million daily.
-
-It is small wonder that the bottom has been knocked out of French
-economy. The plan and purpose of the thing appears in a letter from
-General Stulpnagle, head of the German Armistice Commission, to the
-defendant Jodl as early as 14th September, 1940 when he wrote, “The
-slogan ‘Systematic weakening of France’ has already been surpassed by
-far in reality.”
-
-Not only was there a purpose to debilitate and demoralize the economy of
-Germany’s neighbors for the purpose of destroying their competitive
-position, but there was looting and pilfering on an unprecedented scale.
-We need not be hypocritical about this business of looting. I recognize
-that no army moves through occupied territory without some pilfering as
-it goes. Usually the amount of pilfering increases as discipline wanes.
-If the evidence in this case showed no looting except of that sort, I
-certainly would ask no conviction of these defendants for it.
-
-But we will show you that looting was not due to the lack of discipline
-or to the ordinary weaknesses of human nature. The German organized
-plundering, planned it, disciplined it, and made it official just as he
-organized everything else, and then he compiled the most meticulous
-records to show that he had done the best job of looting that was
-possible under the circumstances. And we have those records.
-
-The defendant Rosenberg was put in charge of a systematic plundering of
-the art objects of Europe by direct order of Hitler dated 29 January
-1940 (_136-PS_). On the 16th of April, 1943 Rosenberg reported that up
-to the 7th of April, 92 railway cars with 2,775 cases containing art
-objects had been sent to Germany; and that 53 pieces of art had been
-shipped to Hitler direct, and 594 to the defendant Goering. The report
-mentioned something like 20,000 pieces of seized art and the main
-locations where they were stored (_015-PS_).
-
-Moreover, this looting was glorified by Rosenberg. Here we have 39
-leather-bound tabulated volumes of his inventory, which in due time we
-will offer in evidence. One cannot but admire the artistry of this
-Rosenberg report. The Nazi taste was cosmopolitan. Of the 9,455 articles
-inventoried, there were included 5,255 paintings, 297 sculptures, 1,372
-pieces of antique furniture, 307 textiles, and 2,224 small objects of
-art. Rosenberg observed that there were approximately 10,000 more
-objects still to be inventoried (_015-PS_). Rosenberg himself estimated
-that the values involved would come close to a billion dollars
-(_090-PS_).
-
-I shall not go into further details of the war crimes and crimes against
-humanity committed by the Nazi gangster ring whose leaders are before
-you. It is not the purpose in my part of this case to deal with the
-individual crimes. I am dealing with the common plan or design for crime
-and will not dwell upon individual offenses. My task is only to show the
-scale on which these crimes occurred, and to show that these are the men
-who were in the responsible positions and who conceived the plan and
-design which renders them answerable, regardless of the fact that the
-plan was actually executed by others.
-
-At length, this reckless and lawless course outraged the world. It
-recovered from the demoralization of surprise attack, assembled its
-forces, and stopped these men in their tracks. Once success deserted
-their banners, one by one the Nazi satellites fell away. Sawdust Caesar
-collapsed. Resistance forces in every occupied country arose to harry
-the invader. Even at home, Germans saw that Germany was being led to
-ruin by these mad men, and the attempt on July 20, 1944 to assassinate
-Hitler, an attempt fostered by men of highest station, was a desperate
-effort by internal forces to stop short of ruin. Quarrels broke out
-among the failing conspirators, and the decline of the Nazi power was
-more swift than its ascendancy. German armed forces surrendered, its
-government disintegrated, its leaders committed suicide by the dozen,
-and by the fortunes of war these defendants fell into our hands.
-Although they are not by any means all the guilty ones, they are
-survivors among the most responsible. Their names appear over and over
-in the documents and their faces grace the photographic evidence. We
-have here the surviving top politicians, militarists, financiers,
-diplomats, administrators, and propagandists of the Nazi movement. Who
-was responsible for these crimes if they were not?
-
- THE LAW OF THE CASE
-
-The end of the war and capture of these prisoners presented the
-victorious Allies with the question whether there is any legal
-responsibility on high-ranking men for acts which I have described. Must
-such wrongs either be ignored or redressed in hot blood? Is there no
-standard in the law for a deliberate and reasoned judgment on such
-conduct?
-
-The Charter of this Tribunal evidences a faith that the law is not only
-to govern the conduct of little men, but that even rulers are, as Lord
-Chief Justice Coke put it to King James, “under God and the law.” The
-United States believed that the law long has afforded standards by which
-a juridical hearing could be conducted to make sure that we punish only
-the right men and for the right reasons. Following the instructions of
-the late President Roosevelt and the decision of the Yalta conference,
-President Truman directed representatives of the United States to
-formulate a proposed International Agreement, which was submitted during
-the San Francisco Conference to Foreign Ministers of the United Kingdom,
-the Soviet Union, and the Provisional Government of France. With many
-modifications, that proposal has become the Charter of this Tribunal.
-
-But the Agreement which sets up the standards by which these prisoners
-are to be judged does not express the views of the signatory nations
-alone. Other nations with diverse but highly respected systems of
-jurisprudence also have signified adherence to it. These are Belgium,
-The Netherlands, Denmark, Norway, Czechoslovakia, Luxembourg, Poland,
-Greece, Yugoslavia, Ethiopia, Australia, Haiti, Honduras, Panama, New
-Zealand, Venezuela, and India. You judge, therefore, under an organic
-act which represents the wisdom, the sense of justice, and the will of
-twenty-one governments, representing an overwhelming majority of all
-civilized people.
-
-The Charter by which this Tribunal has its being embodies certain legal
-concepts which are inseparable from its jurisdiction and which must
-govern its decision. These, as I have said, also are conditions attached
-to the grant of any hearing to defendants. The validity of the
-provisions of the Charter is conclusive upon us all whether we have
-accepted the duty of judging or of prosecuting under it, as well as upon
-the defendants, who can point to no other law which gives them a right
-to be heard at all. My able and experienced colleagues believe, as do I,
-that it will contribute to the expedition and clarity of this trial if I
-expound briefly the application of the legal philosophy of the Charter
-to the facts I have recited.
-
-While this declaration of the law by the Charter is final, it may be
-contended that the prisoners on trial are entitled to have it applied to
-their conduct only most charitably if at all. It may be said that this
-is new law, not authoritatively declared at the time they did the acts
-it condemns, and that this declaration of the law has taken them by
-surprise.
-
-I cannot, of course, deny that these men are surprised that this is the
-law; they really are surprised that there is any such thing as law.
-These defendants did not rely on any law at all. Their program ignored
-and defied all law. That this is so will appear from many acts and
-statements, of which I cite but a few. In the Fuehrer’s speech to all
-military commanders on November 23, 1939, he reminded them that at the
-moment Germany had a pact with Russia, but declared, “Agreements are to
-be kept only as long as they serve a certain purpose.” Later on in the
-same speech he announced, “A violation of the neutrality of Holland and
-Belgium will be of no importance.” (_789-PS_). A Top Secret document,
-entitled “Warfare as a Problem of Organization,” dispatched by the Chief
-of the High Command to all Commanders on April 19, 1938, declared that
-“the normal rules of war toward neutrals may be considered to apply on
-the basis whether operation of rules will create greater advantages or
-disadvantages for belligerents.” (_L-211_). And from the files of the
-German Navy Staff, we have a “Memorandum on Intensified Naval War,”
-dated October 15, 1939, which begins by stating a desire to comply with
-International Law. “However,” it continues, “if decisive successes are
-expected from any measure considered as a war necessity, it must be
-carried through even if it is not in agreement with international law.”
-(_UK-65_). International Law, natural law, German law, any law at all
-was to these men simply a propaganda device to be invoked when it helped
-and to be ignored when it would condemn what they wanted to do. That men
-may be protected in relying upon the law at the time they act is the
-reason we find laws of retrospective operation unjust. But these men
-cannot bring themselves within the reason of the rule which in some
-systems of jurisprudence prohibits _ex post facto_ laws. They cannot
-show that they ever relied upon International Law in any state or paid
-it the slightest regard.
-
-The Third Count of the Indictment is based on the definition of war
-crimes contained in the Charter. I have outlined to you the systematic
-course of conduct toward civilian populations and combat forces which
-violates international conventions to which Germany was a party. Of the
-criminal nature of these acts at least, the defendants had, as we shall
-show, clear knowledge. Accordingly, they took pains to conceal their
-violations. It will appear that the defendants Keitel and Jodl were
-informed by official legal advisors that the orders to brand Russian
-prisoners of war, to shackle British prisoners of war, and to execute
-commando prisoners were clear violations of International Law.
-Nevertheless, these orders were put into effect. The same is true of
-orders issued for the assassination of General Giraud and General
-Weygand, which failed to be executed only because of a ruse on the part
-of Admiral Canaris, who was himself later executed for his part in the
-plot to take Hitler’s life on July 20, 1944 (_Affidavit A_).
-
-The Fourth Count of the Indictment is based on crimes against humanity.
-Chief among these are mass killings of countless human beings in cold
-blood. Does it take these men by surprise that murder is treated as a
-crime?
-
-The First and Second Counts of the Indictment add to these crimes the
-crime of plotting and waging wars of aggression and wars in violation of
-nine treaties to which Germany was a party. There was a time, in fact I
-think the time of the first World War, when it could not have been said
-that war-inciting or war-making was a crime in law, however
-reprehensible in morals.
-
-Of course, it was under the law of all civilized peoples a crime for one
-man with his bare knuckles to assault another. How did it come that
-multiplying this crime by a million, and adding fire arms to bare
-knuckles, made a legally innocent act? The doctrine was that one could
-not be regarded as criminal for committing the usual violent acts in the
-conduct of legitimate warfare. The age of imperialistic expansion during
-the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries added the foul doctrine,
-contrary to the teachings of early Christian and International Law
-scholars such as Grotius, that all wars are to be regarded as legitimate
-wars. The sum of these two doctrines was to give war-making a complete
-immunity from accountability to law.
-
-This was intolerable for an age that called itself civilized. Plain
-people, with their earthly common sense, revolted at such fictions and
-legalisms so contrary to ethical principles and demanded checks on war
-immunity. Statesmen and international lawyers at first cautiously
-responded by adopting rules of warfare designed to make the conduct of
-war more civilized. The effort was to set legal limits to the violence
-that could be done to civilian populations and to combatants as well.
-
-The common sense of men after the First World War demanded, however,
-that the law’s condemnation of war reach deeper, and that the law
-condemn not merely uncivilized ways of waging war, but also the waging
-in any way of uncivilized wars—wars of aggression. The world’s
-statesmen again went only as far as they were forced to go. Their
-efforts were timid and cautious and often less explicit than we might
-have hoped. But the 1920’s did outlaw aggressive war.
-
-The reestablishment of the principle that there are unjust wars and that
-unjust wars are illegal is traceable in many steps. One of the most
-significant is the Briand-Kellogg Pact of 1928, by which Germany, Italy,
-and Japan, in common with practically all the nations of the world,
-renounced war as an instrument of national policy, bound themselves to
-seek the settlement of disputes only by pacific means, and condemned
-recourse to war for the solution of international controversies. This
-pact altered the legal status of a war of aggression. As Mr. Stimson,
-the United States Secretary of State put it in 1932, such a war “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. * * * By that very act, we have
-made obsolete many legal precedents and have given the legal profession
-the task of reexamining many of its codes and treaties.”
-
-The Geneva Protocol of 1924 for the Pacific Settlement of International
-Disputes, signed by the representatives of forty-eight governments,
-declared that “a war of aggression constitutes * * * an international
-crime.” The Eighth Assembly of the League of Nations in 1927, on
-unanimous resolution of the representatives of forty-eight member
-nations, including Germany, declared that a war of aggression
-constitutes an international crime. At the Sixth Pan-American Conference
-of 1928, the twenty-one American Republics unanimously adopted a
-resolution stating that “war of aggression constitutes an international
-crime against the human species.”
-
-A failure of these Nazis to heed, or to understand the force and meaning
-of this evolution in the legal thought of the world is not a defense or
-a mitigation. If anything, it aggravates their offense and makes it the
-more mandatory that the law they have flouted be vindicated by juridical
-application to their lawless conduct. Indeed, by their own law—had they
-heeded any law—these principles were binding on these defendants.
-Article 4 of the Weimar Constitution provided that “The generally
-accepted rules of international law are to be considered as binding
-integral parts of the law of the German Reich.” (_2050-PS_). Can there
-be any doubt that the outlawry of aggressive war was one of the
-“generally accepted rules of international law” in 1939?
-
-Any resort to war—to any kind of a war—is a resort to means that are
-inherently criminal. War inevitably is a course of killings, assaults,
-deprivations of liberty, and destruction of property. An honestly
-defensive war is, of course, legal and saves those lawfully conducting
-it from criminality. But inherently criminal acts cannot be defended by
-showing that those who committed them were engaged in a war, when war
-itself is illegal. The very minimum legal consequence of the treaties
-making aggressive wars illegal is to strip those who incite or wage them
-of every defense the law ever gave, and to leave warmakers subject to
-judgment by the usually accepted principles of the law of crimes.
-
-But if it be thought that the Charter, whose declarations concededly
-bind us all, does contain new law I still do not shrink from demanding
-its strict application by this Tribunal. The rule of law in the world,
-flouted by the lawlessness incited by these defendants, had to be
-restored at the cost to my country of over a million casualties, not to
-mention those of other nations. I cannot subscribe to the perverted
-reasoning that society may advance and strengthen the rule of law by the
-expenditure of morally innocent lives but that progress in the law may
-never be made at the price of morally guilty lives.
-
-It is true, of course, that we have no judicial precedent for the
-Charter. But International Law is more than a scholarly collection of
-abstract and immutable principles. It is an outgrowth of treaties and
-agreements between nations and of accepted customs. Yet every custom has
-its origin in some single act, and every agreement has to be initiated
-by the action of some state. Unless we are prepared to abandon every
-principle of growth for International Law, we cannot deny that our own
-day has the right to institute customs and to conclude agreements that
-will themselves become sources of a newer and strengthened International
-Law. International Law is not capable of development by the normal
-processes of legislation for there is no continuing international
-legislative authority. Innovations and revisions in International Law
-are brought about by the action of governments designed to meet a change
-in circumstances. It grows, as did the Common Law, through decisions
-reached from time to time in adapting settled principles to new
-situations. The fact is that when the law evolves by the case method, as
-did the Common Law and as International Law must do if it is to advance
-at all, it advances at the expense of those who wrongly guessed the law
-and learned too late their error. The law, so far as International Law
-can be decreed, had been clearly pronounced when these acts took place.
-Hence, I am not disturbed by the lack of judicial precedent for the
-inquiry we propose to conduct.
-
-The events I have earlier recited clearly fall within the standards of
-crimes, set out in the Charter, whose perpetrators this Tribunal is
-convened to judge and punish fittingly. The standards for war crimes and
-crimes against humanity are too familiar to need comment. There are,
-however, certain novel problems in applying other precepts of the
-Charter which I should call to your attention.
-
- THE CRIME AGAINST PEACE
-
-A basic provision of the Charter is that to plan, prepare, initiate, or
-wage a war of aggression, or a war in violation of international
-treaties, agreements, and assurances, or to conspire or participate in a
-common plan to do so is a crime.
-
-It is perhaps a weakness in this Charter that it fails itself to define
-a war of aggression. Abstractly, the subject is full of difficulty and
-all kinds of troublesome hypothetical cases can be conjured up. It is a
-subject which, if the defense should be permitted to go afield beyond
-the very narrow charge in the Indictment, would prolong the trial and
-involve the Tribunal in insoluble political issues. But so far as the
-question can properly be involved in this case, the issue is one of no
-novelty and is one on which legal opinion has well crystalized.
-
-One of the most authoritative sources of International Law on this
-subject is the Convention for the Definition of Aggression signed at
-London on July 3, 1933 by Rumania, Estonia, Latvia, Poland, Turkey, The
-Soviet Union, Persia, and Afghanistan. The subject has also been
-considered by international committees and by commentators whose views
-are entitled to the greatest respect. It had been little discussed prior
-to the First World War but has received much attention as International
-Law has evolved its outlawry of aggressive war. In the light of these
-materials of International Law, and so far as relevant to the evidence
-in this case, I suggest that an “aggressor” is generally held 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
- 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) Provision of support to armed bands formed in 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.
-
-And I further suggest that it is the general view that no political,
-military, economic or other considerations shall serve as an excuse or
-justification for such actions; but exercise of the right of legitimate
-self-defense, that is to say, resistance to an act of aggression, or
-action to assist a State which has been subjected to aggression, shall
-not constitute a war of aggression.
-
-It is upon such an understanding of the law that our evidence of a
-conspiracy to provoke and wage an aggressive war is prepared and
-presented. By this test each of the series of wars begun by these Nazi
-leaders was unambiguously aggressive.
-
-It is important to the duration and scope of this trial that we bear in
-mind the difference between our charge that this war was one of
-aggression and a position that Germany had no grievances. We are not
-inquiring into the conditions which contributed to causing this war.
-They are for history to unravel. It is no part of our task to vindicate
-the European _status quo_ as of 1933, or as of any other date. The
-United States does not desire to enter into discussion of the
-complicated pre-war currents of European politics, and it hopes this
-trial will not be protracted by their consideration. The remote
-causations avowed are too insincere and inconsistent, too complicated
-and doctrinaire to be the subject of profitable inquiry in this trial. A
-familiar example is to be found in the _Lebensraum_ slogan, which
-summarized the contention that Germany needed more living space as a
-justification for expansion. At the same time that the Nazis were
-demanding more space for the German people, they were demanding more
-German people to occupy space. Every known means to increase the birth
-rate, legitimate and illegitimate, was utilized. _Lebensraum_
-represented a vicious circle of demand—from neighbors more space, and
-from Germans more progeny. We do not need to investigate the verity of
-doctrines which led to constantly expanding circles of aggression. It is
-the plot and the act of aggression which we charge to be crimes.
-
-Our position is that whatever grievances a nation may have, however
-objectionable it finds the _status quo_, aggressive warfare is an
-illegal means for settling those grievances or for altering those
-conditions. It may be that the Germany of the 1920’s and 1930’s faced
-desperate problems, problems that would have warranted the boldest
-measures short of war. All other methods—persuasion, propaganda,
-economic competition, diplomacy—were open to an aggrieved country, but
-aggressive warfare was outlawed. These defendants did make aggressive
-war, a war in violation of treaties. They did attack and invade their
-neighbors in order to effectuate a foreign policy which they knew could
-not be accomplished by measures short of war. And that is as far as we
-accuse or propose to inquire.
-
- THE LAW OF INDIVIDUAL RESPONSIBILITY
-
-The Charter also recognizes individual responsibility on the part of
-those who commit acts defined as crimes, or who incite others to do so,
-or who join a common plan with other persons, groups or organizations to
-bring about their commission. The principle of individual responsibility
-for piracy and brigandage, which have long been recognized as crimes
-punishable under International Law, is old and well established. That is
-what illegal warfare is. This principle of personal liability is a
-necessary as well as logical one if International Law is to render real
-help to the maintenance of peace. An International Law which operates
-only on states can be enforced only by war because the most practicable
-method of coercing a state is warfare. Those familiar with American
-history know that one of the compelling reasons for adoption of our
-Constitution was that the laws of the Confederation, which operated only
-on constituent states, were found ineffective to maintain order among
-them. The only answer to recalcitrance was impotence or war. Only
-sanctions which reach individuals can peacefully and effectively be
-enforced. Hence, the principle of the criminality of aggressive war is
-implemented by the Charter with the principle of personal
-responsibility.
-
-Of course, the idea that a state, any more than a corporation, commits
-crimes is a fiction. Crimes always are committed only by persons. While
-it is quite proper to employ the fiction of responsibility of a state or
-corporation for the purpose of imposing a collective liability, it is
-quite intolerable to let such a legalism become the basis of personal
-immunity.
-
-The Charter recognizes that one who has committed criminal acts may not
-take refuge in superior orders nor in the doctrine that his crimes were
-acts of states. These twin principles working together have heretofore
-resulted in immunity for practically everyone concerned in the really
-great crimes against peace and mankind. Those in lower ranks were
-protected against liability by the orders of their superiors. The
-superiors were protected because their orders were called acts of state.
-Under the Charter, no defense based on either of these doctrines can be
-entertained. Modern civilization puts unlimited weapons of destruction
-in the hands of men. It cannot tolerate so vast an area of legal
-irresponsibility.
-
-Even the German Military Code provides that:
-
- “If the execution of a military order in the course of duty
- violates the criminal law, then the superior officer giving the
- order will bear the sole responsibility therefor. However, the
- obeying subordinate will share the punishment of the
- participant: (1) if he has exceeded the order given to him, or
- (2) if it was within his knowledge that the order of his
- superior officer concerned an act by which it was intended to
- commit a civil or military crime or transgression.”
- (_Reichsgesetzblatt_, 1926, No. 37, p. 278, Art. 47).
-
-Of course, we do not argue that the circumstances under which one
-commits an act should be disregarded in judging its legal effect. A
-conscripted private on a firing squad cannot expect to hold an inquest
-on the validity of the execution. The Charter implies common sense
-limits to liability just as it places common sense limits upon immunity.
-But none of these men before you acted in minor parts. Each of them was
-entrusted with broad discretion and exercised great power. Their
-responsibility is correspondingly great and may not be shifted to that
-fictional being, “the State”, which can not be produced for trial, can
-not testify, and can not be sentenced.
-
-The Charter also recognized a vicarious liability, which responsibility
-is recognized by most modern systems of law, for acts committed by
-others in carrying out a common plan or conspiracy to which a defendant
-has become a party. I need not discuss the familiar principles of such
-liability. Every day in the courts of countries associated in this,
-prosecution, men are convicted for acts that they did not personally
-commit but for which they were held responsible because of membership in
-illegal combinations or plans or conspiracies.
-
- THE POLITICAL, POLICE, AND MILITARY ORGANIZATIONS
-
-Accused before this Tribunal as criminal organizations are certain
-political and police organizations which the evidence will show to have
-been instruments of cohesion in planning and executing the crimes I have
-detailed. Perhaps the worst of the movement were the Leadership Corps of
-the NSDAP, the Schutzstaffeln or “SS”, and the Sturmabteilungen or “SA”,
-and the subsidiary formations which these include. These were the Nazi
-Party leadership, espionage, and policing groups. They were the real
-government, above and outside of any law. Also accused as organizations
-are the Reich Cabinet and the Secret State Police or Gestapo, which were
-fixtures of the Government but animated solely by the Nazi Party.
-
-Except for a late period when some compulsory recruiting was done in the
-SS, membership in all these militarized formations was voluntary. The
-police organizations were recruited from ardent partisans who enlisted
-blindly to do the dirty work the leaders planned. The Reich Cabinet was
-the governmental facade for Nazi Party Government and in its members
-legal as well as actual responsibility was vested for the entire
-program. Collectively they were responsible for the program in general,
-individually they were especially responsible for segments of it. The
-finding which we ask you to make, that these are criminal organizations,
-will subject members to punishment to be hereafter determined by
-appropriate tribunals, unless some personal defense—such as becoming a
-member under threat to person, to family, or inducement by false
-representation, or the like—be established. Every member will have a
-chance to be heard in the subsequent forum on his personal relation to
-the organization, but your finding in this trial will conclusively
-establish the criminal character of the organization as a whole.
-
-We have also accused as criminal organizations the High Command and the
-General Staff of the German Armed Forces. We recognize that to plan
-warfare is the business of professional soldiers in every country. But
-it is one thing to plan strategic moves in the event war comes, and it
-is another thing to plot and intrigue to bring on that war. We will
-prove the leaders of the German General Staff and of the High Command to
-have been guilty of just that. Military men are not before you because
-they served their country. They are here because they mastered it, along
-with these others, and drove it to war. They are not here because they
-lost the war but because they started it. Politicians may have thought
-of them as soldiers, but soldiers know they were politicians. We ask
-that the General Staff and the High Command, as defined in the
-Indictment, be condemned as a criminal group whose existence and
-tradition constitute a standing menace to the peace of the world.
-
-These individual defendants did not stand alone in crime and will not
-stand alone in punishment. Your verdict of “guilty” against these
-organizations will render _prima facie_ guilty, as nearly as we can
-learn, thousands upon thousands of members now in custody of United
-States forces and of other Armies.
-
- THE RESPONSIBILITY OF THIS TRIBUNAL
-
-To apply the sanctions of the law to those whose conduct is found
-criminal by the standards I have outlined, is the responsibility
-committed to this Tribunal. It is the first court ever to undertake the
-difficult task of overcoming the confusion of many tongues and the
-conflicting concepts of just procedure among divers systems of law, so
-as to reach a common judgment. The tasks of all of us are such as to
-make heavy demands on patience and good will. Although the need for
-prompt action has admittedly resulted in imperfect work on the part of
-the prosecution, four great nations bring you their hurriedly assembled
-contributions of evidence. What remains undiscovered we can only guess.
-We could, with witnesses’ testimony, prolong the recitals of crime for
-years—but to what avail? We shall rest the case when we have offered
-what seems convincing and adequate proof of the crimes charged without
-unnecessary cumulation of evidence. We doubt very much whether it will
-be seriously denied that the crimes I have outlined took place. The
-effort will undoubtedly be to mitigate or escape personal
-responsibility.
-
-Among the nations which unite in accusing these defendants the United
-States is perhaps in a position to be the most dispassionate, for,
-having sustained the least injury, it is perhaps the least animated by
-vengeance. Our American cities have not been bombed by day and night, by
-humans and by robots. It is not our temples that have been laid in
-ruins. Our countrymen have not had their homes destroyed over their
-heads. The menace of Nazi aggression, except to those in actual service,
-has seemed less personal and immediate to us than to European peoples.
-But while the United States is not first in rancor, it is not second in
-determination that the forces of law and order be made equal to the task
-of dealing with such international lawlessness as I have recited here.
-
-Twice in my lifetime, the United States has sent its young manhood
-across the Atlantic, drained its resources, and burdened itself with
-debt to help defeat Germany. But the real hope and faith that has
-sustained the American people in these great efforts was that victory
-for ourselves and our Allies would lay the basis for an ordered
-international relationship in Europe and would end the centuries of
-strife on this embattled continent.
-
-Twice we have held back in the early stages of European conflict in the
-belief that it might be confined to a purely European affair. In the
-United States, we have tried to build an economy without armament, a
-system of government without militarism, and a society where men are not
-regimented for war. This purpose, we know now, can never be realized if
-the world periodically is to be embroiled in war. The United States
-cannot, generation after generation, throw its youth or its resources
-onto the battlefields of Europe to redress the lack of balance between
-Germany’s strength and that of her enemies, and to keep the battles from
-our shores.
-
-The American dream of a peace and plenty economy, as well as the hopes
-of other nations, can never be fulfilled if those nations are involved
-in a war every generation so vast and devastating as to crush the
-generation that fights and burden the generation that follows. But
-experience has shown that wars are no longer local. All modern wars
-become world wars eventually. And none of the big nations at least can
-stay out. If we cannot stay out of wars, our only hope is to prevent
-wars.
-
-I am too well aware of the weaknesses of juridical action alone to
-contend that in itself your decision under this Charter can prevent
-future wars. Judicial action always comes after the event. Wars are
-started only on the theory and in the confidence that they can be won.
-Personal punishment, to be suffered only in the event the war is lost,
-will probably not be a sufficient deterrent to prevent a war where the
-warmakers feel the chances of defeat to be negligible.
-
-But the ultimate step in avoiding periodic wars, which are inevitable in
-a system of international lawlessness, is to make statesmen responsible
-to law. And let me make clear that while this law is first applied
-against German aggressors, the law includes, and if it is to serve a
-useful purpose it must condemn aggression by any other nations,
-including those which sit here now in judgment. We are able to do away
-with domestic tyranny and violence and aggression by those in power
-against the rights of their own people only when we make all men
-answerable to the law. This trial represents mankind’s desperate effort
-to apply the discipline of the law to statesmen who have used their
-powers of state to attack the foundations of the world’s peace and to
-commit aggressions against the rights of their neighbors.
-
-The usefulness of this effort to do justice is not to be measured by
-considering the law or your judgment in isolation. This trial is part of
-the great effort to make the peace more secure. One step in this
-direction is the United Nations organization, which may take joint
-political action to prevent war if possible, and joint military action
-to insure that any nation which starts a war will lose it. This Charter
-and this trial, implementing the Kellogg-Briand Pact, constitute another
-step in the same direction—juridical action of a kind to ensure that
-those who start a war will pay for it personally.
-
-While the defendants and the prosecutors stand before you as
-individuals, it is not the triumph of either group alone that is
-committed to your judgment. Above all personalities there are anonymous
-and impersonal forces whose conflict makes up much of human history. It
-is yours to throw the strength of the law back of either the one or the
-other of these forces for at least another generation. What are the real
-forces that are contending before you?
-
-No charity can disguise the fact that the forces, which these defendants
-represent, the forces that would advantage and delight in their
-acquittal, are the darkest and most sinister forces in
-society—dictatorship and oppression, malevolence and passion,
-militarism and lawlessness. By their fruits we best know them. Their
-acts have bathed the world in blood and set civilization back a century.
-They have subjected their European neighbors to every outrage and
-torture, every spoliation and deprivation that insolence, cruelty, and
-greed could inflict. They have brought the German people to the lowest
-pitch of wretchedness, from which they can entertain no hope of early
-deliverance. They have stirred hatreds and incited domestic violence on
-every continent. These are the things that stand in the dock shoulder to
-shoulder with these prisoners.
-
-The real complaining party at your bar is Civilization. In all our
-countries it is still a struggling and imperfect thing. It does not
-plead that the United States, or any other country, has been blameless
-of the conditions which made the German people easy victims to the
-blandishments and intimidations of the Nazi conspirators.
-
-But it points to the dreadful sequence of aggressions and crimes I have
-recited, it points to the weariness of flesh, the exhaustion of
-resources, and the destruction of all that was beautiful or useful in so
-much of the world, and to greater potentialities for destruction in the
-days to come. It is not necessary among the ruins of this ancient and
-beautiful city, with untold members of its civilian inhabitants still
-buried in its rubble, to argue the proposition that to start or wage an
-aggressive war has the moral qualities of the worst of crimes. The
-refuge of the defendants can be only their hope that International Law
-will lag so far behind the moral sense of mankind that conduct which is
-crime in the moral sense must be regarded as innocent in law.
-
-Civilization asks whether law is so laggard as to be utterly helpless to
-deal with crimes of this magnitude by criminals of this order of
-importance. It does not expect that you can make war impossible. It does
-expect that your juridical action will put the forces of International
-Law, its precepts, its prohibitions and, most of all, its sanctions, on
-the side of peace, so that men and women of good will in all countries
-may have “leave to live by no man’s leave, underneath the law.”
-
- * * * * *
-
- [In most instances, documents referred to or quoted from have
- been cited by number, even though some of them have not been
- introduced in evidence as part of the American case. Where they
- were not offered as evidence it was chiefly for the reason that
- documents subsequently discovered covered the point more
- adequately, and because the pressure of time required the
- avoidance of cumulative evidence.
-
- In some instances, no citations are given of documents quoted
- from or referred to. These are documents which for a variety of
- reasons were not introduced in evidence during the American
- case. The length of some of them was disproportionate to the
- value of their contents, and hence instead of full translations
- only summaries were prepared in English. In some cases a
- translation of the document referred to was made only for use in
- the address and was not included in the evidence which it was
- proposed to offer in court. In other cases the document,
- although translated, was turned over to the French or Russian
- delegations for use in the proof of Counts III and IV, and hence
- forms no part of the American case.]
-
-
-
-
- Chapter VI
- ORGANIZATION OF THE NAZI PARTY AND STATE
-
-
- I. THE NAZI PARTY
-
-In the opinion of the prosecution, some preliminary references must be
-made to the National Socialist German Labor Party, the NSDAP
-(_Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei_) which is not itself
-one of the defendant organizations in this proceeding, but which is
-represented among the defendant organizations by its most important
-formations, viz., the Leadership Corps of the Nazi Party (_Das Korps der
-Politischen Leiter der NSDAP_), the SS (_Die Schutzstaffeln der NSDAP_),
-and the SA (_Die Sturmabteilungen der NSDAP_).
-
-The prosecution has prepared a chart (_Chart No. 1_) showing the
-structure and organization of the NSDAP substantially as it existed at
-the peak of its development in March 1945. This chart has been prepared
-on the basis of information contained in important publications of the
-National Socialist Party, with which the defendants must be presumed to
-have been well acquainted. Particular reference is made to the
-Organization Book of the Party (_Das Organisationsbuch der NSDAP_) and
-to the National Socialist Year Book (_Nationalsozialistisches
-Jahrbuch_), of both of which Robert Ley was publisher. Both books were
-printed in many editions and appeared in hundreds of thousands of
-copies, throughout the period when the National Socialist party was in
-control of the German Reich and of the German people. This chart has
-been certified on its face as correct by a high official of the Nazi
-party, viz. Franz Xaver Schwarz, its Treasurer (_Reichsschatzmeister der
-NSDAP_), and its official in charge of party administration, whose
-affidavit is submitted with the chart.
-
-Certain explanatory remarks concerning the organization of the National
-Socialist party may be useful.
-
-The _Leadership Corps of the NSDAP_, named as a defendant organization,
-comprised the sum of the officials of the Nazi party. It was divided
-into seven categories:
-
- 1. The Fuehrer
- 2. Reichsleiter
- { 3. Gauleiter
- { 4. Kreisleiter
- _Hoheitstraeger_ { 5. Ortsgruppenleiter
- { 6. Zellenleiter
- { 7. Blockleiter
-
-The _Fuehrer_ was the supreme and only leader who stood at the top of
-the party hierarchy. His successor designate was first, Hermann Goering,
-and second, Rudolf Hess.
-
-The _Reichsleiter_, of whom 16 are shown on the chart, made up the Party
-Directorate (_Reichsleitung_). Through them, coordination of party and
-state machinery was assured. A number of these _Reichsleiter_, each of
-whom, at some time, was in charge of at least one office within the
-Party Directorate, were also the heads of party formations and of
-affiliated or supervised organizations of the party, or of agencies of
-the state, or even held ministerial positions. The _Reichsleitung_ may
-be said to have represented the horizontal organization of the party
-according to functions, within which all threads controlling the varied
-life of the German people met. Each office within the _Reichsleitung_ of
-the NSDAP executed definite tasks assigned to it by the Fuehrer, or by
-the leader of the Party Chancellory (_Chef der Parteikanzlei_), who in
-1945 was Martin Bormann and before him, Rudolph Hess.
-
-It was the duty of the _Reichsleitung_ to make certain these tasks were
-carried out so that the will of the Fuehrer was quickly communicated to
-the lowliest _Zelle_ or _Block_. The individual offices of the
-_Reichsleitung_ had the mission to remain in constant and closest
-contact with the life of the people through the subdivisions of the
-party organization, in the _Gaue_, _Kreisen_, and _Ortsgruppen_. These
-leaders had been taught that the right to organize human beings accrued
-through appreciation of the fact that a people must be educated
-ideologically (_weltanschaulich_), that is to say, according to the
-philosophy of National Socialism. Among the former _Reichsleiter_ on
-trial in this cause are the following defendants:
-
- _Alfred Rosenberg_—The delegate to the Fuehrer for Ideological
- Training and Education of the Party. (_Der Beauftragte des
- Fuehrer’s fuer die Ueberwachung der gesammten geistigen und
- weltanschaulichen Schulung und Erziehung der NSDAP_).
-
- _Hans Frank_—At one time head of the Legal Office of the party
- (_Reichsleiter des Reichsrechtsamtes_).
-
- _Baldur von Schirach_—Leader of Youth Education (_Leiter fuer
- die Jugenderziehung_).
-
-and the late
-
- _Robert Ley_—Leader of the Party Organization
- (_Reichsorganisationsleiter der NSDAP_) and Leader of the German
- Labor Front (_Leiter der Deutschen Arbeitsfront_).
-
-The next categories to be considered are the _Hoheitstraeger_, the
-“bearers of sovereignty.” To them was assigned political sovereignty
-over specially designated subdivisions of the state of which they were
-the appointed leaders. The _Hoheitstraeger_ may be said to represent the
-vertical organization of the party. These leaders included all:
-
- _a. Gauleiter_, of which there were 42 within the Reich in 1945.
- A _Gauleiter_ was the political leader of the largest
- subdivision of the State. He was charged by the Fuehrer with
- political, cultural, and economic control over the life of the
- people, which he was to coordinate with the National Socialist
- ideology. A number of the defendants before the bar of the
- Tribunal were former _Gauleiter_ of the NSDAP. Among them are
- Julius Streicher (Franconia) whose seat was in Nurnberg, Baldur
- von Schirach (Vienna), and Fritz Sauckel (Thuringia).
-
- _b. Kreisleiter_, the political leaders of the largest
- subdivision of a _Gau_.
-
- _c. Ortsgruppenleiter_, the political leaders of the largest
- subdivision of a _Kreis_ consisting of several towns or
- villages, or of a part of a larger city, and including from 1500
- to 3000 households.
-
- _d. Zellenleiter_, the political leaders of a group of from 4 to
- 8 city blocks or of a corresponding grouping of households in
- the country.
-
- _e. Blockleiter_, the political leaders of from 40 to 60
- households.
-
-Each of these _Hoheitstraeger_, or “bearers of sovereignty,” was
-directly responsible to the next highest leader in the Nazi hierarchy.
-The _Gauleiter_ was directly subordinate to the _Fuehrer_ himself, the
-_Kreisleiter_ was directly subordinate to the _Gauleiter_, the
-_Ortsgruppenleiter_ to the _Kreisleiter_, and so on. The _Fuehrer_
-himself appointed all _Gauleiter_ and _Kreisleiter_, all _Reichsleiter_,
-and all other political leaders within the Party Directorate
-(_Reichsleitung_) down to the grade of _Gauamtsleiter_, the head of a
-subdivision of the party organization within a _Gau_.
-
-The _Hoheitstraeger_ and _Reichsleitung_ together constituted the
-all-powerful group of leaders by means of which the Nazi party reached
-into the lives of the people, consolidated its control over them, and
-compelled them to conform to the National Socialist pattern. For this
-purpose, broad powers were given them, including the right to call upon
-all party machinery to effectuate their plans. They could requisition
-the services of the SA and of the SS, as well as of the HJ and the NSKK.
-
-The controlled party organizations (_Gliederungen der NSDAP_) actually
-constituted the party itself, and substantially the entire party
-membership was contained within these organizations, viz.:
-
- SA—NS Storm Troops (_Sturmabteilungen_).
-
- SS—NS Elite Corps (_Schutzstaffeln_).
-
- NSKK—NS Motor Corps (_Kraftfahrkorps_).
-
- HJ—Hitler Youth (_Hitlerjugend_).
-
- NS Women’s Organization (_Frauenschaft_).
-
- NS German Students’ Bund (_Deutscher Studentenbund_).
-
- NS University Teachers’ Bund (_Deutscher Dozentenbund_).
-
-There were additional affiliated organizations (_Angeschlossene
-Verbaende der NSDAP_). Among these were included the following:
-
- DAF—German Labor Front (_Deutsche Arbeitsfront_).
-
- NS Public Welfare Organization (_Volkswohlfahrt_).
-
- NS War Victims’ Organization (_Kriegsopferversorgung_).
-
- NS Bund for German Technology (_Bund Deutscher Technik_).
-
- German Civil Service (_Reichsbund der Deutschen Beamten_).
-
- NS Physicians’ Bund (_Deutscher Aerztebund_).
-
- NS Teachers’ Bund (_Lehrerbund_).
-
- NS League of Legal Officials (_Rechtswahrerbund_).
-
-A third group of organizations was officially known as supervised
-organizations (_Betreute Organisationen der NSDAP_). These included the
-following:
-
- German Women’s Work (_Deutsches Frauenwerk_).
-
- German Students’ Society (_Deutsche Studentenschaft_).
-
- NS Bund of Former German Students (_Altherrenbund der Deutschen
- Studenten_).
-
- Reich League “German Family” (_Reichsbund Deutsche Familie_).
-
- German Communal Congress (_Deutscher Gemeindetag_).
-
- NS Bund for Physical Exercise (_Reichsbund fuer
- Leibesuebungen_).
-
-According to the official party designations, there was a fourth
-classification known as _Weitere Nationalsozialistische Organisationen_,
-and in this category the following organizations appeared:
-
- RAD—Reich Labor Service (_Reichsarbeitsdienst_), at one time
- subordinate to the Reich Labor leader (_Reichsarbeitsfuehrer_).
-
- NSFK—NS Flying Corps (_NS-Fliegerkorps_), which was subordinate
- to the Reich Minister for Aviation.
-
- 2. THE GOVERNMENT OF THE THIRD REICH
-
-The prosecution has prepared another chart (_Chart No. 18_) delineating
-substantially the organizational structure of the government of the
-Third Reich, as it existed in March 1945, and “the chief leadership
-personnel of the Reich Government and the Reich Administration during
-said years.” This chart has been prepared on the basis of information
-contained in two well known official publications: The _Taschenbuch fuer
-Verwaltungsbeamte_, and the _Nationalsozialistischer Jahrbuch_,
-above-mentioned, of which Robert Ley was publisher. The chart has been
-examined, corrected, and certified by Wilhelm Frick, whose affidavit is
-submitted with it. It seems plain that Frick, a former Minister of
-Interior of the Reich from January 1933 to August 1943, was well
-qualified, by reason of his position and long service in public office
-during the National Socialist regime, to certify to the substantial
-accuracy of the facts disclosed in this chart.
-
-It may be useful to commence with consideration of the
-_Reichsregierung_, a word which may not be translated literally as
-“government of the Reich.” The word _Reichsregierung_ was a word of art
-applied collectively to the ministers who composed the German cabinet.
-The _Reichsregierung_, which has been named as a defendant group in this
-proceeding, includes the following:
-
- _a._ Members of the ordinary cabinet after 30 January 1933, i.e.
- Reich ministers with and without portfolio and all other
- officials entitled to participate in the meetings of this
- cabinet.
-
- _b._ Members of the Council of Ministers for the Defense of the
- Reich (_Ministerrat fuer die Reichsverteidigung_).
-
- _c._ Members of the Secret Cabinet Council (_Geheimer
- Kabinettsrat_).
-
-Unlike the cabinets and ministerial councils in countries not within the
-orbit of the former Axis, the _Reichsregierung_, after 30 January 1933
-when Adolf Hitler became Chancellor of the German Republic, did not
-remain merely the executive branch of the government. In short order it
-also came to possess, and it exercised, legislative and other functions
-in the governmental system developed under the domination of the
-National Socialist party.
-
-It is proper to observe here that, unlike such NS party organizations as
-the SS and the SA, the _Reichsregierung_ before 1933 was not a body
-created exclusively or predominantly for the purpose of committing
-illegal acts. The _Reichsregierung_ was an instrument of government
-provided for by the Weimar Constitution. Under the Nazi regime, however,
-the _Reichsregierung_ gradually became a primary agent of the party with
-functions formulated in accordance with the objectives and methods of
-the party. The party was intended to be a _Fuehrerorden_, an order of
-_Fuehrers_, a pool of political leaders; and whole the party was—in the
-words of a German law—“the bearer of the concept of the German State,”
-it was not identical with the State. Hence, in order to realize its
-ideological and political objectives and to reach the German people, the
-party had to avail itself of official state channels. The
-_Reichsregierung_, and the agencies and offices established by it, were
-the chosen instruments by means of which party policies were converted
-into legislative and administrative acts binding upon the German people
-as a whole.
-
-In order to accomplish this result, the _Reichsregierung_ was thoroughly
-remodelled so as to coordinate party and state machinery, in order to
-impose the will of the _Fuehrer_ on the German people. On 30 January
-1933 the _Reichsregierung_ contained but few National Socialists. But as
-the power of the party in the Reich grew, the composition of the cabinet
-came to include an ever-increasing number of Nazis until, by January
-1937, no non-party member remained in the _Reichsregierung_. New cabinet
-posts were created and Nazis appointed to fill them. Many of these
-cabinet members were also in the _Reichsleitung_ of the party.
-
-To give a few examples: Rosenberg, the Delegate of the _Fuehrer_ for
-Ideological Training and Education of the Party, was a member of the
-_Reichsregierung_ as Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories
-(_Reichsminister f. d. b. Ostgebiete_). Frick, the leader of the
-National Socialist faction in the Reichstag, was also Minister of the
-Interior (_Reichsinnenminister_). Goebbels, the _Reichsleiter_ for
-Propaganda, also sat in the cabinet as Minister for Public Enlightenment
-and Propaganda (_Reichsminister fuer Volksaufklaerung und Propaganda_).
-
-After 25 July 1934, party participation in the work of the cabinet was
-at all times attained through Rudolf Hess, the Deputy of the _Feuhrer_.
-By a decree of the _Fuehrer_, Hess was invested with power to take part
-in the editing of bills dealing with all departments of the Reich. Later
-this power of the Fuehrer’s Deputy was expanded to include all executive
-decisions and orders published in the _Reichsgesetzblatt_. After Hess’
-flight to England in 1941, Martin Bormann took over, as his successor,
-the same function and, in addition, was given the authority of a Reich
-minister and made a member of the cabinet.
-
-On 30 January 1937 Hitler accepted into the party those last few members
-of the cabinet who were not then party members. Only one cabinet member
-had the strength of character to reject membership in the party; he was
-the Minister of Ports and of Transportation, von Eltz-Ruebenach, who
-stated at the time that he was unable to reconcile membership in the
-NSDAP with his beliefs in Christianity. But such was not the case with
-Constantin von Neurath. He did not reject party membership. Nor did
-Erich Raeder reject party membership. And if Hjalmar Schacht was not
-already a party member at that time, then he too did not reject
-membership on 30 January 1937.
-
-The chart shows many other instances where party members on the highest
-as well as on subordinate levels occupied corresponding or other
-positions in the organization of the state.
-
-_a._ Hitler himself, the _Fuehrer_ of the NSDAP, was also the Chancellor
-of the Reich, with which office the office of President of the German
-Republic was united after the death of President von Hindenburg in 1934.
-
-_b._ Goering, the successor designate of Hitler as Fuehrer of the NSDAP,
-was a member of the cabinet as Minister for Air (_Luftfahrtminister_),
-and he also held many other important positions, including that of
-Commander in Chief of the _Luftwaffe_, the German air force, and
-Delegate for the Four Year Plan (_Beauftragter f. d. Vierjahresplan_).
-
-_c._ Heinrich Himmler, the notorious head of the SS (_Reichsfuehrer
-SS_), was also Chief of the German Police, reporting to Frick. He
-himself later became Minister of the Interior after the attempted
-assassination of Hitler on 20 June 1944, which event also catapulted him
-into the position of Commander in Chief of the German Reserve Army.
-
-The _Reichstag_, which was the German parliament, presents an anomaly in
-this picture. Under the Republic it had been the supreme law-making body
-of the Reich, subject only to a limited check by the _Reichsrat_
-(Council of the Reich), the President, and the German people themselves,
-by way of initiative and referendum. Putting their opposition to all
-forms of parliamentarism at once into effect, the Nazis proceeded to
-curtail these legislative powers of the _Reichstag_, the _Reichsrat_,
-and the _Reichspraesident_.
-
-By the Act of 24 March 1933 the cabinet was given unlimited legislative
-powers, including the right to deviate from the constitution.
-Subsequently the _Reichsrat_ was abolished; and later, upon the death of
-President von Hindenburg in 1934, the posts of Chancellor and President
-were merged.
-
-The development of the _Reichstag_ into an emasculated legislative body
-was an intermediate step on the road to rule by Fuehrer decree, the
-ultimate goal of the National Socialist party—and one which it
-achieved.
-
-The Nazis then proceeded to delegate some of the functions of the
-_Reichsregierung_ to various newly-created agencies. Cabinet functions
-were delegated:
-
-1. To the _Reichsverteidigungsrat_, the Reich Defense Council, possibly
-as early as 4 April 1933 but certainly not later than May 1935. This was
-a large war-planning group of which Hitler was chairman and Goering
-alternate. The group included many cabinet members, and a working
-committee, presided over by Fieldmarshal Wilhelm Keitel, was also
-composed of cabinet members and Reich defense officials, the majority of
-whom were appointed by cabinet members and subordinate to them.
-
-2. To the Plenipotentiary for War Economy (_Generalbevollmaechtigter f.
-d. Kriegswirtschaft_), Hjalmar Schacht (and later Walter Funk), who by
-the Secret Reich Defense Law of May 1935 was authorized to “begin his
-work already in peacetime.”
-
-3. To the Plenipotentiary for Administration (_Generalbevollmaechtigter
-f. d. Reichsverwaltung_), Wilhelm Frick, whose deputy, Himmler, later
-succeeded him, and who was appointed by a Secret Reich Defense Law.
-Subordinate to Frick as Plenipotentiary were the ministries of the
-Interior, Justice, Education, Church Affairs and _Raumordnung_ (Spatial
-Planning).
-
-4. To the Delegate for the Four Year Plan (_Beauftragter f. d.
-Vierjahresplan_), Goering.
-
-5. To the _Dreierkollegium_, the College of Three, consisting of the two
-Plenipotentiaries for War Economy and Administration, and Fieldmarshal
-Keitel as chief of the OKW. The duties of this _Dreierkollegium_ appear
-to have included the drafting of decrees in preparation of and for use
-during the war.
-
-6. To the _Geheime Kabinettsrat_, the Secret Cabinet Council, created by
-Fuehrer decree in February 1938, of which von Neurath was president; and
-
-7. To the _Ministerrat f. d. Reichsverteidigung_, the Council of
-Ministers for the Defense of the Reich, established by _Fuehrer_ decree
-on 30 August 1939 and responsible to him alone. Its membership was taken
-from the Reich Defense Council. It had broad powers to issue decrees
-with force of law insofar as the _Reichsregierung_ itself had not
-legislated on the subject.
-
-It should be stressed that this delegation of cabinet functions and
-authority to various secret and semi-secret groups composed largely of
-its own members, helped to conceal some of the most important policies
-of the _Reichsregierung_, particularly those relating to preparation for
-war.
-
-Thus, step by step, the National Socialist party succeeded in putting
-its policies into effect through the machinery of the state, the
-_Reichsregierung_, in its revised form.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter VII
- MEANS USED BY THE NAZI CONSPIRATORS IN GAINING
- CONTROL OF THE GERMAN STATE
-
-
- I. COMMON OBJECTIVES, METHODS, AND DOCTRINES OF
- THE CONSPIRACY
-
-In 1921 Adolf Hitler became the supreme leader or _Fuehrer_ of the
-_Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei_ (National Socialist
-German Workers Party), also known as the Nazi Party, which had been
-founded in Germany in 1920. He continued as such throughout the period
-covered by the Indictment. As will be shown, the Nazi Party, together
-with certain of its subsidiary organizations, became the instrument of
-cohesion among the defendants and their co-conspirators and an
-instrument for the carrying out of the aims and purposes of the
-conspiracy. And as will also be shown, each defendant became a member of
-the Nazi Party and of the conspiracy, with knowledge of their aims, and
-purposes, or, with such knowledge, became an accessory to their aims and
-purposes at some stage of the development of the conspiracy.
-
-A. _Aims, and Purposes._ The aims and purposes of the Nazi conspirators
-were:
-
-(1) _To abrogate and overthrow the Treaty of Versailles and its
-restrictions upon the military armament and activity of Germany._ The
-first major public meeting of the NSDAP took place in Munich on 24
-February 1920. At that meeting Hitler publicly announced the Program of
-the Party. That program, consisting of 25 points (annually reprinted in
-the National Socialist Yearbook), was referred to as “The political
-foundation of the NSDAP and therewith the fundamental political law of
-the state,” and “has remained unaltered” since the date of its
-promulgation. Section 2 of the Program provided as follows:
-
- “We demand equality of rights for the German people with respect
- to other nations, and abolition of the Peace Treaties of
- Versailles and St. Germain.” (_1708-PS_)
-
-In a speech at Munich on 13 April 1923, Hitler said:
-
- “It was no Peace Treaty which they have signed, but a betrayal
- of Peace. So long as this Treaty stands there can be no
- resurrection of the German people: no social reform of any kind
- is possible. The Treaty was made in order to bring 20 million
- Germans to their deaths and to ruin the German nation. But those
- who made the Treaty cannot set it aside. At its foundation our
- movement formulated three demands:
-
- 1. Setting aside of the Peace Treaty
-
- 2. Unification of all Germans
-
- 3. Land and soil (_Grund und Boden_) to feed our
- nation.” (_2405-PS_)
-
-On August 1, 1923 Hitler declared:
-
- “The day must come when a German government shall summon up the
- courage to declare to the foreign powers: ‘The Treaty of
- Versailles is founded on a monstrous lie.’ We fulfill nothing
- more. Do what you will! If you want battle, look for it! Then we
- shall see whether you can turn 70 million Germans into serfs and
- slaves!” (_2405-PS_; see also additional statements of Hitler
- contained in _2405-PS_ castigating those Germans who shared
- responsibility for the Treaty of Versailles, viz; the “November
- criminals.”)
-
-In his speech of 30 January 1941 Hitler alluded to the consistency of
-his record concerning the aims of National Socialist foreign policy:
-
- “My foreign policy had identical aims. My program was to abolish
- the Treaty of Versailles. It is futile nonsense for the rest of
- the world to pretend today that I did not reveal this program
- until 1933 or 1935 or 1937. Instead of listening to the foolish
- chatter of emigrés, these gentlemen would have been wiser to
- read what I have written thousands of times.
-
- “No human being has declared or recorded what he wanted more
- than I. Again and again I wrote these words: ‘The abolition of
- the Treaty of Versailles’. * * *” (_2541-PS_)
-
-Similar views were expressed by other Nazi conspirators. Rosenberg
-stated that the lie of Germany’s war guilt was the basis of the Treaties
-of Versailles and St. Germain. He rejected the idea of a “revision” of
-those Treaties and demanded outright cancellation. (_2433-PS_)
-
-Hess, in advocating rearmament in violation of treaty restrictions,
-stated in 1986 that “guns instead of butter” were necessary lest “one
-day our last butter be taken from us.” (_2426-PS_)
-
-(2) _To acquire the territories lost by Germany as the result of the
-World War of 1914-1918, and other territories in Europe asserted to be
-occupied by so-called “racial Germans.”_ Section I of the Nazi Party
-Platform gave advance notice of the intentions of the Nazi conspirators
-to claim territories occupied by so-called racial Germans. It provided:
-
- “We demand the unification of all Germans in the Greater Germany
- on the basis of the right of self-determination of people.”
- (_1708-PS_)
-
-While Rosenberg pointed out in 1922 that it was not possible at that
-time to designate “such European and non European territories which
-would be taken into consideration for colonization” he nevertheless
-stated that the following could be laid down as a basic objective,
-namely that
-
- “* * * German Foreign Policy must make its most important
- primary goal the consolidation of all Germans living closely
- together in Europe in one state and to secure the territory of
- what today is the Polish-Czech East.” (_2433-PS_)
-
-In his Reichstag speech of 20 February 1928 Hitler said:
-
- “The claim, therefore, for German colonial possession will be
- voiced from year to year with increasing vigor, possessions
- which Germany did not take away from other countries, and which
- today are virtually of no value to these powers, but appear
- indispensable for our own people.” (_2772-PS_)
-
-Again, in his Reichstag speech of 30 January 1939 Hitler declared:
-
- “The theft of the German colonies was morally unjustified.
- Economically, it was utter insanity. The political motives
- advanced were so mean that one is tempted to call them silly. In
- 1918, after the end of the war, the victorious Powers really
- would have had the authority to bring about a reasonable
- settlement of international problems. * * *
-
- “The great German colonial possessions, which the Reich once
- acquired peacefully by treaties and by paying for them, have
- been stolen—contrary indeed to the solemn assurance given by
- President Wilson, which was the basic condition on which Germany
- laid down her arms. The objection that these colonial
- possessions are of no importance in any case should only lead to
- their being returned to us with an easy mind.” (_2773-PS_)
-
-(3) _To acquire further territories in colonial Europe and elsewhere
-claimed to be required by “racial Germans” as “Lebensraum” or living
-space, at the expense of neighboring and other countries._ Hitler made
-it clear that the two objectives of the Nazi conspirators set forth
-above were only preliminary steps in a more ambitious plan of
-territorial aggrandizement. Thus he stated:
-
- “One must take the point of view, coolly and soberly, that it
- certainly cannot be the intention of Heaven to give one people
- fifty times as much space (_Grund und Boden_) on this earth as
- to another. One should not permit himself to be diverted in this
- case by political boundaries from the boundaries of eternal
- justice.
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “The boundaries of 1914 do not mean anything for the future of
- the German nation. They did not represent either a defense of
- the past nor would they represent a power in the future. The
- German people will not obtain either its inner compactness by
- them, nor will its nutrition be secured by them, nor do these
- boundaries appear from a military standpoint as appropriate or
- even satisfactory. * * *” (_2760-A-PS_)
-
-While the precise limits of German expansion were only vaguely defined
-by the Nazi conspirators, they clearly indicated that the _lebensraum_
-to which they felt they were entitled would be acquired primarily in the
-East. Rosenberg was particularly insistent in his declarations that
-Russia would have to “move over” to make way for German living space. He
-underlined this demand as follows:
-
- “The understanding that the German nation, if it is not to
- perish in the truest sense of the word, needs ground and soil
- for itself and its future generations, and the second sober
- perception that this soil can no more be conquered in Africa,
- but in Europe and first of all in the East—these organically
- determine the German foreign policy for centuries. (_2777-PS_)
-
- “The Russians * * * will have to confine themselves so as to
- remove their center of gravity to Asia.” (_2426-PS_)
-
-A similar view was expressed by Hitler in _Mein Kampf_:
-
- “If one wanted territory in Europe, this could be done on the
- whole at the expense of Russia, and the new Reich would have to
- set out to march over the road of the former Knights, in order
- to give soil to the German plow by means of the German sword,
- and to give daily bread to the nation.” (_2760-A-PS_)
-
-In _Mein Kampf_ Hitler threatened war as a means of attaining additional
-space:
-
- “If this earth really has space (_Raum_) for all to live in,
- then we should be given the territory necessary. Of course, one
- will not do that gladly. Then, however, the right of
- self-preservation comes into force; that which is denied to
- kindness, the fist will have to take. If our forefathers had
- made their decisions dependent on the same pacifistic nonsense
- as the present, then we would possess only a third of our
- present territory.
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “In contrast, we, National Socialists, have to hold on steadily
- to our foreign political goals, namely, _to secure on this earth
- the territory due to the German people_. And this action is the
- only one which will make bloody sacrifice before God and our
- German posterity appear justified.” (_2760-A-PS_)
-
-B. _Methods. The Nazi conspirators advocated the accomplishment of the
-foregoing aims and purposes by any means deemed opportune, including
-illegal means and resort to threat of force, force, and aggressive war._
-The use of force was distinctly sanctioned, in fact guaranteed, by
-official statements and directives of the conspirators which made
-activism and aggressiveness a political quality obligatory for Party
-members.
-
-Hitler stated in _Mein Kampf_:
-
- “* * * The lack of a great creative idea means at all times an
- impairment of the fighting spirit. The conviction that it is
- right to use even the most brutal weapons is always connected
- with the existence of a fanatical belief that it is necessary
- that a revolutionary new order of this earth should become
- victorious. A movement which does not fight for these highest
- aims and ideals will therefore never resort to the ultimate
- weapon.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “* * * It is not possible to undertake a task half-heartedly or
- hesitatingly if its execution seems to be feasible only by
- expending the very last ounce of energy . . . One had to become
- clear in one’s mind that this goal [i.e. acquisition of new
- territory in Europe] could be achieved by fight alone and then
- had to face this armed conflict with calmness and composure.”
- (_2760-A-PS_)
-
-In 1934 Hitler set out the duties of Party members in the following
-terms:
-
- “Only a part of the people will be really active fighters. But
- they were the fighters of the National Socialist struggle. They
- were the fighters for the National Socialist revolution, and
- they are the millions of the rest of the population. For them it
- is not sufficient to confess: ‘I believe,’ but to swear: ‘_I
- fight_’.” (_2775-PS_)
-
-This same theme is expressed in the Party Organization Book:
-
- “The Party includes _only fighters_ who are ready to accept and
- sacrifice everything in order to carry through the National
- Socialist ideology.” (_2774-PS_)
-
-At the trial of _Reichswehr_ officers at Leipzig in September 1930
-Hitler testified:
-
- “Germany is being strangled by Peace Treaties. * * * The
- National Socialists do not regard the Treaty as a law, but as
- something forced upon us. We do not want future generations, who
- are completely innocent, to be burdened by this. When we fight
- this with all means at our disposal, then we are on the way to a
- revolution.”
-
-President of the Court: ‘Even by illegal means?’
-
- Hitler: “I will declare here and now, that when we have become
- powerful (_gesiegt haben_), then we shall fight against the
- Treaty with all the means at our disposal, even from the point
- of view of the world, with illegal means.” (_2512-PS_)
-
-Moreover, Hitler stated the true reason for rearmament as follows:
-
- “It is impossible to build up an army and give it a sense of
- worth if the object of its existence is not the preparation for
- war. Armies for the preservation of peace do not exist; they
- exist only for the triumphant exertion of war.” (_2541-PS_)
-
-C. _Doctrines. The Nazi conspirators adopted and published the following
-doctrines:_
-
-(1) _That persons of so-called “German blood” were a master race and
-were accordingly entitled to subjugate, dominate, or exterminate other
-“races” and “peoples.”_ The Nazi doctrine of racial supremacy was
-incorporated as Point 4 in the Party Program of 24 February 1920, which
-provided as follows:
-
- “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 creed. Consequently no Jew can be a member of
- the race.” (_1708-PS_)
-
-The Nazi conspirators’ dogma of the racial supremacy of the Germanic
-peoples was fully elucidated in the writings of Rosenberg:
-
- “The meaning of world history has radiated out from the north
- over the whole world, borne by a blue-eyed blond race which in
- several great waves determined the spiritual face of the world *
- * *
-
- “We stand today before a definitive decision. Either through a
- new experience and cultivation of the old blood, coupled with an
- enhanced fighting will, we will rise to a purificatory action,
- or the last Germanic-western values of morality and
- state-culture shall sink away in the filthy human masses of the
- big cities, become stunted on the sterile burning asphalt of a
- bestialized inhumanity, or trickle away as a morbific agent in
- the form of emigrants bastardizing themselves in South America,
- China, Dutch East India, Africa.
-
- “A new faith is arising today: the myth of the blood, the faith,
- to defend with the blood the divine essence of man. The faith,
- embodied in clearest knowledge that the Nordic blood represents
- that mysterium which has replaced and overcome the old
- sacraments.” (_2771-PS_)
-
-Thus, the Nazi conspirators acclaimed the “master race” doctrine as a
-new religion—the faith of the blood—superseding in individual
-allegiance all other religions and institutions. According to Rosenberg:
-
- “The new thought puts folk and race higher than the state and
- its forms. It declares protection of the folk more important
- than protection of a religious denomination, a class, the
- monarchy, or the republic; it sees in treason against the folk a
- greater crime than treason against the state.” (_2771-PS_; see
- also further excerpts from Rosenberg’s writings contained in
- _2405-PS_.)
-
-Illustrative of the Nazi conspirators’ continued espousal and
-exploitation of racial dogmas following their accession to power was the
-discriminatory legislation which they caused to be enacted. These laws,
-with particular reference to Jews, are set forth in Section 7 of this
-Chapter on the Program for Persecution of Jews.
-
-The logical consequence of the “master race” dogma, in its bearing on
-the right of Germany to dominate other “inferior” peoples and to acquire
-such of their territory as was considered necessary for German living
-space, was disclosed by the Nazi conspirators. In a speech concluding
-the _Reichsparteitag_ at Nurnberg on 3 September 1933 Hitler said:
-
- “But long ago man has proceeded in the same way with his
- fellowman. The higher race—at first ‘higher’ in the sense of
- possessing a greater gift for organization—subjects to itself a
- lower race and thus constitutes a relationship which now
- embraces races of unequal value. Thus there results the
- subjection of a number of people under the will often of only a
- few persons, a subjection based simply on the right of the
- stronger, a right which, as we see it in Nature, can be regarded
- as the sole conceivable right because founded on reason. The
- wild mustang does not take upon itself the yoke imposed by man
- either voluntarily or joyfully; neither does one people welcome
- the violence of another.” (_2584-PS_)
-
-(2) _The Fuehrerprinzip (Fuehrer Principle)._
-
-(_a_) _Essential elements._
-
- _1. Complete and total authority is vested in the Fuehrer._
-
- “The Fuehrer Principle requires a pyramidal organization
- structure in its details as well as in its entirety.
-
- “The Fuehrer is at the top.
-
- “He nominates the necessary leaders for the various
- spheres of work of the Reich’s direction, the Party
- apparatus and the State administration.” (_1814-PS_)
-
- “He shapes the collective will of the people within
- himself and he enjoys the political unity and entirety
- of the people in opposition to individual interests.
-
- “The Fuehrer unites in himself all the sovereign
- authority of the Reich; all public authority in the
- state as well as in the movement is derived from the
- authority of the Fuehrer. We must speak not of the
- state’s authority but of the Fuehrer’s authority if we
- wish to designate the character of the political
- authority within the Reich correctly. The state does not
- hold political authority as an impersonal unit but
- receives it from the Fuehrer as the executor of the
- national will. The authority of the Fuehrer is complete
- and all-embracing; it unites in itself all the means of
- political direction; it extends into all fields of
- national life; it embraces the entire people, which is
- bound to the Fuehrer in loyalty and obedience. The
- authority of the Fuehrer is not limited by checks and
- controls, by special autonomous bodies or individual
- rights, but it is free and independent, all-inclusive
- and unlimited.
-
- “The Fuehrer-Reich of the (German) people is founded on
- the recognition that the true will of the people cannot
- be disclosed through parliamentary votes and plebiscites
- but that the will of the people in its pure and
- uncorrupted form can only be expressed through the
- Fuehrer.” (_2771-PS_)
-
- “Thus at the head of the Reich, stands a single Fuehrer,
- who in his personality embodies the idea which sustains
- all and whose spirit and will therefore animate the
- entire community.” (_2780-PS_)
-
-As stated in the Organization Book of the Nazi Party:
-
- “The will of the Fuehrer is the Party’s law.”
- (_1814-PS_)
-
- The first commandment for the Party members declares:
-
- “The Fuehrer is always right.” (_1814-PS_)
-
- “He (the Fuehrer) is responsible only to his conscience
- and the German people.” (_1814-PS_)
-
- Hess, in a speech broadcast at Cologne on 25 June 1934,
- characterized the position of the Fuehrer as follows:
-
- “It is with pride that we see that one man is kept above
- all criticism—that is the Fuehrer.
-
- “The reason is that everyone feels and knows: he was
- always right and will always be right. The National
- Socialism of us all is anchored in the uncritical
- loyalty, in the devotion to the Fuehrer that does not
- ask for the wherefore in the individual case, in the
- tacit performance of his commands. We believe that the
- Fuehrer is fulfilling a divine mission to German
- destiny! This belief is beyond challenge.” (_2426-PS_;
- see also additional statements of the Nazi conspirators
- designed to condition the German people to blind
- acceptance of the decisions of the Fuehrer and his
- co-conspirators, as translated in _2373-PS_.)
-
- _2. The Fuehrer’s power descends to sub-leaders in a hierarchial
- order._ In the words of the Organization Book of the NSDAP:
-
- “The Party is the order of fuehrers.
-
- “All political directors (_Politische Leiter_) stand as
- appointed by the Fuehrer and are responsible to him.
- They possess full authority towards the lower echelons.
- (_1893-PS_)
-
- “He (The Fuehrer) nominates the necessary leaders for
- the various spheres of work of the Reichs’ direction,
- the Party apparatus, and the State administration.”
- (_1814-PS_)
-
- The effect of this was aptly expressed by Hitler in 1933:
-
- “When our opponents said, ‘It is easy for you: you are a
- dictator’—We answer them, ‘No, gentlemen, you are
- wrong; there is no single dictator, but ten thousand,
- each in his own place.’ And even the highest authority
- in the hierarchy has itself only one wish, never to
- transgress against the supreme authority to which it,
- too, is responsible.” (_2771-PS_)
-
- _3. Each subleader is bound to unconditional obedience to his
- immediate superior and to the Fuehrer._ As Hitler said,
-
- “We have in our movement developed this loyalty in
- following the leader, this blind obedience of which all
- the others know nothing and which gave to us the power
- to surmount everything.” (_2771-PS_)
-
- The duty of obedience is so fundamental that it is incorporated
- as the second of the NSDAP commandments for party members:
-
- “Never go against discipline!” (_2771-PS_)
-
- As Ley said:
-
- “Our conscience is clearly and exactly defined. Only
- what Adolf Hitler, our Fuehrer, commands, allows, or
- does not allow is our conscience.” (_2771-PS_)
-
- The obedience required was not the loyalty of a soldier to the
- Fatherland, as was the case prior to the Nazi regime. On the
- contrary, the obedience exacted was unconditional and absolute,
- regardless of the legality or illegality of the order. The oath
- taken by political leaders (_Politische Leiter_) yearly was as
- follows:
-
- “I pledge eternal allegiance to Adolf Hitler. I pledge
- unconditional obedience to him and the Fuehrers
- appointed by him.” (_1893-PS_)
-
- _4. Each subleader is absolute in his own sphere of
- jurisdiction._ The Nazi Party Organization Book lays down the
- same principle with respect to the successive tiers of its
- leaders:
-
- “The Fuehrer Principle represented by the Party imposes
- complete responsibility on all party leaders for their
- respective spheres of activity * * * The responsibility
- for all tasks within a major sphere of jurisdiction
- rests with the respective leader of the NSDAP: i.e.,
- with the Fuehrer for the territory of the Reich, the
- Gauleiter for the territory of the Gau, the district
- leader for the territory of the district, the local
- leader for the territory of the local group, etc.
-
- “The Party leader has responsibility for the entire
- territory under his jurisdiction on the one hand, and on
- the other hand, his own political fields of activity
- appertaining thereto.
-
- “This responsibility for the complete or partial
- performance of task entails a relationship of
- subordination of the leaders among themselves,
- corresponding to the fuehrer principle.” (_2771-PS_)
-
-(3) _Glorification of War as a noble and necessary activity of Germans._
-The Nazi conspirators disseminated dogmas designed to engender in the
-masses a deep reverence for the vocation of the warrior and to induce
-acceptance of the postulate that the waging of war was good and
-desirable _per se_. The motive underlying the concerted program of the
-Nazis to glorify war was disclosed by Hitler in _Mein Kampf_:
-
- “Thus the question of how to regain German power is not: How
- shall we manufacture arms?, but: How do we create the spirit
- which enables a nation to bear arms? If this spirit governs a
- people, the will finds thousands of ways, each of which ends
- with a weapon!”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “* * * Oppressed countries are led back into the lap of a common
- Reich by a mighty sword and not by flaming protests. It is the
- task of the inner political leaders of a people to forge this
- sword; to safeguard the work of the smith and to seek comrades
- in arms in the task of the foreign policy.” (_2760-A-PS_)
-
-Hitler’s writings and public utterances are full of declarations
-rationalizing the use of force and glorifying war. The following are
-typical:
-
- “Always before God and the world, the stronger has the right to
- carry through his will. History proves it: He who has no might,
- has no use for might. (_2405-PS_)
-
- “The political testament of the German People for its foreign
- policy should and must always follow this line of thought: Never
- tolerate the rise of two continental powers in Europe. See in
- every attempt to organize a second military power, * * * an
- attack against Germany and take therefrom not only the right but
- the duty to prevent by all means, including the use of arms, the
- rise of such a state, respectively to destroy such a state if it
- has already arisen. Take care that the strength of our people
- should have its foundation not in colonies but in the soil of
- the home country in Europe. Never consider the Reich as secured
- as long as it cannot give to every descendant of our people his
- own bit of soil for centuries to come; never forget that the
- most sacred right on this earth is the right to own the soil
- which one wants to cultivate and the most sacred sacrifice, the
- blood which is shed for this soil.” (_2760-A-PS_)
-
-(4) _The leadership of the Nazi Party._
-
-(_a_) _The Nazi Party leadership was the sole bearer of the doctrines of
-the Nazi Party._ The Party Organization Book declares:
-
- “The Party as an instrument of ideological education, must grow
- to be the Leader Corps (_Fuehrer Korps_) of the German Nation.
-
- “This Leader Corps is responsible for the complete penetration
- of the German Nation with the National Socialist spirit * * *”
- (_1893-PS_)
-
- “The Party is the order of fuehrers. It is furthermore
- responsible for the spiritual ideological National Socialist
- direction of the German people.” (_1814-PS_)
-
-Referring to the mission of the _Ortsgruppenleiter_ (local chapter
-leader) of the NSDAP, the Party Organization Book states:
-
- “As Hoeheitstraeger (bearer of sovereignty) all expressions of
- the party will emanate from him; he is responsible for the
- political and ideological leadership and organization within his
- zone of sovereignty.” (_1893-PS_)
-
-Similar statements are made with regard to the _Kreisleiter_ (county
-leader) and the _Gauleiter_ (Gau leader) and the Reich Directorate
-(1893-PS).
-
-(_b_) _The Nazi Party leadership was entitled to control and dominate
-the German state and all related institutions and all individuals
-therein._ Hitler said at the 1935 Nurnberg Party Congress:
-
- “It is not the State which gives orders to us, it is we who give
- orders to the State.” (_2775-PS_)
-
-Frick declared in a similar vein:
-
- “In National Socialist Germany, leadership is in the hands of an
- organized community, the National Socialist Party; and as the
- latter represents the will of the nation, the policy adopted by
- it in harmony with the vital interests of the nation is at the
- same time the policy adopted by the country. * * *” (_2771-PS_)
-
-Goebbels declared:
-
- “The Party must always continue to represent the hierarchy of
- National Socialist leadership. This minority must always insist
- upon its prerogative to control the state. * * * It is
- responsible for the leadership of the state and it solemnly
- relieves the people of this responsibility.” (_2771-PS_)
-
-Hess remarked that the Party was a “necessity” in the German state and
-constituted the cohesive mechanism with which to “organize and direct
-offensively and defensively the spiritual and political strength of the
-people.” (_2426-PS_)
-
-Nazi interpreters of constitutional law expressed the same idea:
-
- “The NSDAP is not a structure which stands under direct state
- control, to which single tasks of public administration are
- entrusted by the state, but it holds and maintains its claim to
- totality as the ‘bearer of the German state-idea’ in all fields
- relating to the community—regardless of how various single
- functions are divided between the organization of the Party and
- the organization of the State.” (_2771-PS_)
-
-This doctrine was incorporated into laws which established the NSDAP as
-“the only political party in Germany” and declared the NSDAP “The bearer
-of the German state-idea” and “indissolubly linked to the state.”
-(_1388-A-PS_; _1395-PS_)
-
-(_c_) _The Nazi Party leadership was entitled to destroy all opponents._
-Reference is made generally to Sections2 and 3 on the Acquisition and
-Consolidation of Political Control of Germany for proof of this
-allegation.
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO COMMON OBJECTIVES,
- METHODS, AND DOCTRINES OF THE CONSPIRACY
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6, especially 6 (a).│ I │ 5
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Sections IV (B, │ │
- │ C). │ I │ 16, 17
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document was referred to during the │ │
- │trial but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
- 1388-A-PS │Law against the establishment of │ │
- │ Parties, 14 July 1933. 1933 │ │
- │ Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 479. │ III │ 962
- │ │ │
-*1395-PS │Law to insure the unity of Party and │ │
- │ State, 1 December 1933. 1933 │ │
- │ Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 1016. │ │
- │ (GB 252) │ III │ 978
- │ │ │
-*1708-PS │The Program of the NSDAP. National │ │
- │ Socialistic Yearbook, 1941, p. 153. │ │
- │ (USA 255; USA 324). │ IV │ 208
- │ │ │
-*1814-PS │The Organization of the NSDAP and its │ │
- │ affiliated associations, from │ │
- │ Organization book of the NSDAP, │ │
- │ editions of 1936, 1938, 1940 and 1943,│ │
- │ pp. 86-88. (USA 328) │ IV │ 411
- │ │ │
-*1893-PS │Extracts from Organization Book of the │ │
- │ NSDAP, 1943 edition. (USA 323) │ IV │ 529
- │ │ │
- 2373-PS │Extracts from German Publications. │ IV │ 1106
- │ │ │
- 2405-PS │Extracts from German Publications. │ V │ 79
- │ │ │
-*2426-PS │Extracts from Speeches, by Hess. (GB │ │
- │ 253) │ V │ 90
- │ │ │
-*2433-PS │Extracts from “Nature, Foundation and │ │
- │ Aims of NSDAP” by Rosenberg, 1934. │ │
- │ (USA 596) │ V │ 93
- │ │ │
- 2512-PS │Hitler’s Testimony Before the Court for │ │
- │ High Treason, published in Frankfurter│ │
- │ Zeitung, 26 September 1931. │ V │ 246
- │ │ │
- 2541-PS │Extracts from German Publications. │ V │ 285
- │ │ │
- 2584-PS │Hitler’s speech concluding the │ │
- │ Reichsparteitag, 3 September 1933. The│ │
- │ First Reichstag of the United German │ │
- │ Nation, 1933. │ V │ 311
- │ │ │
- 2760-A-PS │Extract from Mein Kampf by Adolf Hitler,│ │
- │ 41st edition, 1933. │ V │ 407
- │ │ │
- 2771-PS │U. S. State Department, National │ │
- │ Socialism, published by U. S. │ │
- │ Government Printing Office, 1943. │ V │ 417
- │ │ │
- 2772-PS │Speech of Hitler, published in Documents│ │
- │ of German Politics, Vol. IV, Part I, │ │
- │ p. 37. │ V │ 417
- │ │ │
- 2773-PS │Speech of Hitler, published in Documents│ │
- │ of German Politics, Vol. VII, 1939, │ │
- │ pp. 466-7. │ V │ 417
- │ │ │
- 2774-PS │Extract from Organization Book of the │ │
- │ NSDAP, 1937, 4th Edition, p. 86. │ V │ 418
- │ │ │
-*2775-PS │Hitler’s speech, published in Nurnberg │ │
- │ Party Congress, 1934. (USA 330) │ V │ 418
- │ │ │
-*2777-PS │Article: Space Policy by Rosenberg, │ │
- │ published in National Socialist │ │
- │ Monthly, May 1932, p. 199. (USA 594). │ V │ 418
- │ │ │
- 2780-PS │Extract from Constitution and │ │
- │ Administration in the Third Reich, by │ │
- │ Paul Schmidt, Berlin, 1937. │ V │ 419
- │ │ │
-*3863-PS │Extracts from Operations in the Third │ │
- │ Reich by Lammers. (GB 320) │ VI │ 786
-
-
- 2. ACQUISITION OF TOTALITARIAN POLITICAL CONTROL
-
-A. _First Steps in Acquiring Control of State Machinery._
-
-(1) _The Nazi conspirators first sought control of State machinery by
-force. The Munich Putsch of 1923, aimed at the overthrow of the Weimar
-Republic by direct action, failed._ On 8 November 1923 the so-called
-Munich Putsch occurred. During the evening, von Kahr, State Commissioner
-General of Bavaria, was speaking at the _Buergerbraeukeller_ in Munich.
-Hitler and other Nazi leaders appeared, supported by the
-_Sturmabteilungen_ (Storm Troops) and other fighting groups. Hitler
-fired a shot and announced that a Nationalist Revolution setting up a
-dictatorship had taken place. There followed a conference after which
-von Kahr, von Lossow, and Colonel of Police von Seisser, announced they
-would cooperate with Hitler and that a “Provisional National Government”
-was established, as follows:
-
- Reich Chancellor Adolf Hitler
- Leader of the National Army Gen. von Ludendorff
- Reich Minister of War von Lossow
- Reich Minister of Police von Seisser
- Reich Finance Minister Feder
-
-It was also announced that Kahr would be State Administrator for
-Bavaria, Poehner would be Bavarian Prime Minister, and Frick would be
-Munich Police President. Kahr, Lossow and Seisser then departed. During
-the night the latter group alerted the police, brought troops to Munich,
-and announced that their consent to the Putsch had been obtained by
-force. On the afternoon of the next day, Hitler, Ludendorff, and their
-supporters attempted to march into the center of Munich. At the
-_Feldherrnhalle_ the procession met a patrol of police, shots were
-exchanged, and men on both sides were killed. Hermann Goering was
-wounded, the Putsch was broken up, the Party and its organization were
-declared illegal, and its leaders, including Hitler, Frick, and
-Streicher were arrested. Rosenberg, together with Amann and Drexler,
-tried to keep the Party together after it had been forbidden. Hitler and
-others later were tried for high treason. At the trial Hitler admitted
-his participation in the foregoing attempt to seize control of the State
-by force. He was convicted and sentenced to imprisonment. (_2532-PS_;
-_2404-PS_)
-
-(2) _The Nazi Conspirators then set out through the Nazi Party to
-undermine and capture the German Government by “legal” forms supported
-by terrorism._
-
-(_a_) _In 1925, the conspirators reorganized the Nazi Party and began a
-campaign to secure support from Germany voters throughout the nation._
-On 26 February 1925, the _Voelkischer Beobachter_, the official
-newspaper of the National Socialist German Workers’ Party (NSDAP)
-appeared for the first time after the Munich Putsch, and on the
-following day Hitler made his first speech after his release from
-prison. He then began to rebuild the Party organization. The
-conspirators, through the Nazi Party, participated in election campaigns
-and other political activity throughout Germany and secured the election
-of members of the Reichstag. (_2532-PS_)
-
-As a reflection of this activity the Nazi Party in May 1928, received
-2.6% of the total vote and obtained 12 out of 491 seats in the
-Reichstag. In September 1930, the Nazi Party polled 18.3% of the total
-vote and won 107 out of 577 seats in the Reichstag. In July 1932, it
-received 37.3% of the total vote east and won 230 out of 608 seats. In
-November 1932, it polled 33.1% of the vote and won 196 out of 584 seats
-in the Reichstag. (_2514-PS_)
-
-(_b_) _The Nazi conspirators asserted they sought power only by legal
-forms._ In November 1934, Hitler, speaking of the Munich Putsch of 1923
-said:
-
- “It gave me the opportunity to lay down the new tactics of the
- Party and to pledge it to legality”. (_2741-PS_)
-
-In September 1931, three officers of the _Reichswehr_ were tried at
-Leipzig for high treason. At the request of Hans Frank, Hitler was
-invited to testify at this trial that the NSDAP was striving to attain
-its goal by purely legal means. He was asked: “How do you imagine the
-setting up of a Third Reich?” His reply was, “This term only describes
-the basis of the struggle but not the objective. We will enter the legal
-organizations and will make our Party a decisive factor in this way. But
-when we do possess constitutional rights then we will form the State in
-the manner which we consider to be the right one.” The President then
-asked: “This too by constitutional means?” Hitler replied: “Yes.”
-(_2512-PS_)
-
-(_c_) _The purpose of the Nazi conspirators in participating in
-elections and in the Reichstag was to undermine the parliamentary system
-of the Republic and to replace it with a dictatorship of their own._
-This the Nazi conspirators themselves made clear. Frick wrote in 1927:
-
- “There is no National Socialist and no racialist who expects any
- kind of manly German deed from that gossip club on the
- Koenigsplatz and who is not convinced of the necessity for
- direct action by the unbroken will of the German people to bring
- about their spiritual and physical liberation. But there is a
- long road ahead. After the failure of November, 1923, there was
- no choice but to begin all over again and to strive to bring
- about a change in the spirit and determination of the most
- valuable of our racial comrades, as the indispensable
- prerequisite for the success of the coming fight for freedom.
- Our activities in parliament must be evaluated as merely part of
- this propaganda work.
-
- “Our participation in the parliament does not indicate a
- support, but rather an undermining of the parliamentarian
- system. It does not indicate that we renounce our
- anti-parliamentarian attitude, but that we are fighting the
- enemy with his own weapons and that we are fighting for our
- National Socialist goal from the parliamentary platform.”
- (_2742-PS_)
-
-On 30 April 1928, Goebbels wrote in his paper “_Der Angriff_”;
-
- “We enter parliament in order to supply ourselves, in the
- arsenal of democracy, with its own weapons. We become members of
- the Reichstag in order to paralyze the Weimar sentiment with its
- own assistance. If democracy is so stupid as to give us free
- tickets and _per diem_ for the this “blockade” (_Barendienst_),
- that is its own affair.”
-
-Later in the same article he continued:
-
- “We do not come as friends, nor even as neutrals. We come as
- enemies: As the wolf bursts into the flock, so we come.”
- (_2500-PS_)
-
-In a pamphlet published in 1935, Goebbels said:
-
- “When democracy granted democratic methods for us in the times
- of opposition, this was bound to happen in a democratic system.
- However, we National Socialists never asserted that we
- represented a democratic point of view, but we have declared
- openly that we used democratic methods only in order to gain the
- power and that, after assuming the power, we would deny to our
- adversaries without any consideration the means which were
- granted to us in the times of opposition. (_2412-PS_)
-
-A leading Nazi writer on Constitutional Law, Ernst Rudolf Huber, later
-wrote of this period:
-
- “The parliamentary battle of the NSDAP had the single purpose of
- destroying the parliamentary system from within through its own
- methods. It was necessary above all to make formal use of the
- possibilities of the party-state system but to refuse real
- cooperation and thereby to render the parliamentary system,
- which is by nature dependent upon the responsible cooperation of
- the opposition, incapable of action.” (_2633-PS_)
-
-The Nazi members of the Reichstag conducted themselves as a storm troop
-unit. Whenever representatives of the government or the democratic
-parties spoke, the Nazi members marched out in a body in studied
-contempt of the speaker, or entered in a body to interrupt the speaker,
-thus making it physically impossible for the Reichstag President to
-maintain order. In the case of speakers of opposition parties, the Nazi
-members constantly interrupted, often resorting to lengthy and spurious
-parliamentary maneuvers, with the result that the schedule of the
-session was thrown out of order. The tactics finally culminated in
-physical attacks by the Nazis upon members of the house as well as upon
-visitors. (_L-83_)
-
-In a letter of 24 August 1931 to Rosenberg, Hitler deplored an article
-in “_Voelkischer Beobachter_” the effect of which was to prevent
-undermining of support for the then existing form of government, and
-said: “I myself am travelling all over Germany to achieve exactly the
-opposite. (_047-PS_)
-
-(_d_) _The Nazi conspirators supported their “legal” activities by
-terrorism._
-
- _1. The Nazi conspirators created and utilized as a Party
- formation the Sturmabteilungen (SA) a semi-military voluntary
- organization of young men trained for and committed to the use
- of violence, whose mission was to make the Party the master of
- the streets._ The SA was organized in 1921. As indicated by its
- name, it was a voluntary organization of young men trained for
- and committed to the use of violence. To quote from a pamphlet
- compiled on order of the Supreme SA Headquarters:
-
- “The SA was not founded as one forms just any sort of
- club. It was born in midst of strife and received from
- the Fuehrer himself the name “Storm Troops” after that
- memorable hall battle in Hofbraeuhaus at Munich on the
- 4th of November 1921. * * * Blood and sacrifice were the
- most faithful companions of the young SA on its hard
- path to power. The Storm Troops were and still are today
- the fist and propaganda arm of the movement”.
- (_2168-PS_)
-
- It was organized along semi-military lines from the beginning.
- To quote again from the same official pamphlet:
-
- “It is one of the greatest historical services of the SA
- that at the time when the German People’s Army had to
- undergo a dissolution, it held high those virtues which
- marked the German soldier: personal courage, idealism,
- willingness to sacrifice, consciousness of
- responsibility, power to decide, and leadership. Thus,
- the SA became among the people the messenger and bearer
- of German armed strength and German armed spirit.
-
- “The 4th of November 1921 was not only the birth hour of
- the SA by itself, but was the day from which the young
- fighting troop of the Movement took its stand at the
- focal point of political events. With the clear
- recognition that now the unity (_Geschlossenheit_) of a
- troop led to victory, the SA was systematically
- reorganized and so-called “Centuries”
- (_Hundertschaften_) were established * * *” (_2168-PS_)
-
- In March 1928, Goering took command of the entire SA. In
- November 1923, SA units were used in the Munich Putsch. When the
- Party was reorganized in 1925, the SA continued to be the
- fighting organization of the Party. Again to quote the official
- pamphlet on the SA:
-
- “And now a fight for Germany began of such a sort as was
- never before fought. What are names, what are words or
- figures which are not indeed able to express the
- magnitude of belief and of idealism on one side and the
- magnitude of hate on the other side. 1925: the Party
- lives again, and its iron spearhead is the SA. With it
- the power and meaning of the National Socialist movement
- grows. Around the central events of the whole Movement,
- the Reich Party Days, dates, decisions, fights and
- victory roll themselves into a long list of German men
- of undenying willingness to sacrifice.” (_2168-PS_)
-
- Mastery of the streets was at all times the mission of the SA.
- While discussing his ideas as to the part which this
- organization should play in the political activity of his Party,
- Hitler stated:
-
- “What we needed and still need were and are not a
- hundred or two hundred reckless conspirators, but a
- hundred thousand and a second hundred thousand fighters
- for our philosophy of life. We should not work in secret
- conventicles, but in mighty mass demonstrations, and it
- is not by dagger and poison or pistol that the road can
- be cleared for the movement but by the conquest of the
- streets. We must teach the Marxists that the future
- master of the streets is National Socialism, just as it
- will some day be the master of the state.” (_404-PS_)
-
- To quote again from the official SA pamphlet:
-
- “Possession of the streets is the key to power in the
- state—for this reason the SA marched and fought. The
- public would have never received knowledge from the
- agitative speeches of the little Reichstag faction and
- its propaganda or from the desires and aims of the
- Party, if the martial tread and battle song of the SA
- companies had not beat the measure for the truth of a
- relentless criticism of the state of affairs in the
- governmental system. * * *
-
- “The SA conquered for itself a place in public opinion
- and the leadership of the National Socialist Movement
- dictated to its opponents the law for quarrels. The SA
- was already a state within a state; a part of the future
- in a sad present.” (_2168-PS_; for further material
- concerning the SA, see Section 4 of Chapter XV.)
-
- _2. The Nazi conspirators constantly used physical violence and
- terror to break up meetings of political opponents, and to
- suppress opposition in their own meetings._ The following facts
- are indicative of the methods constantly used by the Nazi
- conspirators during this period: On numerous occasions meetings
- of the _Deutsche Friedensgesellschaft_ (Peace Society) were
- broken up and terrorized by shock troops and SA units. Groups of
- National Socialists invaded meetings of the society, interrupted
- the speaker, attempted to attack him, and endeavored to make
- sufficient disturbance so that the meetings would have to be
- cancelled. (_L-83_)
-
- To quote once again from the official SA pamphlet:
-
- “* * * As an example of a seemingly impossible deed, the
- 11th of February 1927 should be firmly preserved. It is
- the day on which the SA broke the Red Terror, with heavy
- sacrifice, in the hall battle at the Pharoah’s Hall
- (_Pharussaelen_) in Berlin, the stronghold of the
- Communists, and thereby established itself decisively in
- the capitol city of the Reich. In considering the badly
- wounded SA men, Dr. Goebbels coined the phrase “unknown
- SA Man”, who silently fights and bleeds, obeying only
- his duty.” (_2168-PS_)
-
- In Berlin, under the leadership of Goebbels, so-called
- _Rollkommandos_, were organized for the purpose of disrupting
- political meetings of all non-Nazi groups. These _Rollkommandos_
- were charged with interrupting, making noise, and unnerving the
- speaker. Finally the Nazis broke up meetings by _Rollkommando_
- raids. In many cases, fights resulted, during which furniture
- was destroyed and a number of persons hurt. The Nazis armed
- themselves with blackjacks, brass knuckles, rubber truncheons,
- walking sticks, and beer bottles. After the Reichstag election
- of 1930, Nazi terrorism became more overt, and from then on
- scarcely a day went by when the Chief of the Security Police in
- Berlin did not receive a minimum of five to ten reports, and
- often more, of riots instigated by Nazis. (_2955-PS_)
-
- During the campaign for the Reichstag election of 14 September
- 1930, Nazi conspirators made it a practice to send speakers
- accompanied by many Storm Troopers to meetings of other
- political parties, often physically taking over the meetings. On
- one such occasion a large detachment of Storm Troopers, some of
- whom were armed with pistols and clubs, attended a meeting
- called by the Social Democratic Party, succeeded in forcibly
- excluding everybody not in sympathy with their views, and
- concluded the meeting as their own. Such violent tactics,
- repeated many times, were an integral part of the political
- creed of the Nazi. (_L-83_)
-
- Ultimately, in Berlin, just before the Nazis seized power, it
- was necessary to devote the entire Police Force to the job of
- fighting the Nazis, thus leaving little time for other Police
- duties. (_2955-PS_)
-
- _3. The Nazi conspirators constantly threatened their opponents
- with organized reprisals and terror._ During the course of the
- trial of three officers of the _Reichswehr_ for high treason in
- Leipzig in September 1931, Hitler said:
-
- “But I may assure you that if the Nazi movement’s
- struggle is successful, then there will be a Nazi Court
- of Law too, the November 1918 revolution will be atoned,
- and there’ll be some heads chopped off.” (_2512-PS_)
-
- Frick wrote in the National Socialist Yearbook for 1930:
-
- “No wonder that as the situation of the entire German
- people, as well as that of the individual racial
- comrade, grows rapidly worse, increased numbers are
- realizing the incompetence of the parliamentarian
- system, and no wonder that even some who are responsible
- for the present system desperately cry for a
- dictatorship. This however, will not save them from
- their fate of one day being called to account before a
- German State Tribunal.” (_2743-PS_)
-
- On 7 October 1929, the National Socialist District leader
- Terboven said in a meeting in Essen:
-
- “This weakness is especially known to Severing, who
- symbolizes the present State, and he intends to render a
- service to the State, which is breathing its last; but
- this too will no longer save the present corrupt
- parliamentarian system. * * * But I give such a
- dictatorship only four weeks. Then the people will
- awaken, then the National Socialists will come to power,
- and then there will not be enough lamp posts in Germany.
-
- “The National Socialists will march into the new
- Reichstag with thirty members; then there will be black
- eyes every day in this Reichstag; thus this corrupt
- parliamentarian system will be further discredited;
- disorder and chaos will set in, and then the National
- Socialists will judge the moment to have arrived in
- which they are to seize the political power.”
- (_2513-PS_)
-
- On 18 October 1929, Frick, while discussing the Young Plan in a
- meeting in Pyritz said:
-
- “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
- this 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.” (_2513-PS_)
-
- In December 1932, Frick, at that time Chairman of the Foreign
- Affairs Committee of the Reichstag, stated to a fellow member of
- that committee:
-
- “Don’t worry, when we are in power we shall put all of
- you guys into concentration camps.” (_L-83_)
-
- _4. The Nazi conspirators openly approved acts of terrorist
- committed by their subordinates._ On 22 August 1932, five
- National Socialists were condemned to death for a murder in the
- town of Potempa. Hitler wired to the condemned men:
-
- “My Comrades! Faced with this terrible blood sentence, I
- feel myself bound to you in unlimited faithfulness. Your
- liberty is from this moment a question of our honor. To
- fight against a Government under which such a thing
- could happen is our duty.” (_2532-PS_; _2511-PS_)
-
- Goering, two days later sent the following telegram to the
- condemned men:
-
- “In nameless embitterment and rage against the terror
- sentence which has struck you, I promise you, My
- Comrades, that our whole fight from now on will be for
- your freedom. You are no murderers. You have defended
- the life and the honor of your Comrades. I send to your
- families today 1,000 Marks which I have received from
- your friends. Be courageous. More than 14,000,000 of the
- best Germans have made your interest their own.”
- (_2634-PS_)
-
- On 2 September 1932, the death sentences were commuted to
- imprisonment for life. In 1933, after the Nazis came into power,
- the five were set free. (_2532-PS_)
-
- Soon after coming to power the Nazi conspirators took steps to
- grant a general amnesty for all unlawful acts, including acts of
- violence, committed by their adherents in the course of their
- struggle for power. On 21 March 1933 a decree was promulgated,
- signed by von Hindenburg, Hitler, Frick, and von Papen granting
- amnesty “For penal acts committed in the national revolution of
- the German People, in its preparation or in the fight for the
- German soil”. (_2059-PS_)
-
-B. _Control Acquired_
-
-(1) _On 30 January 1933, Hitler became Chancellor of the German
-Republic._
-
-(2) _After the Reichstag fire of 28 February 1933, clauses of the Weimar
-Constitution guaranteeing personal liberty and freedom of speech, of the
-press, of association and assembly, were suspended._ The Weimar
-Constitution contained certain guarantees as to personal freedom
-(Article 114), as to inviolability of the home (Article 115), and as to
-the secrecy of letters and other communications (Article 117). It also
-had provisions safeguarding freedom of speech and of the press (Article
-118), and of assembly (Article 123), and of association (Article 124).
-The Reich President was authorized, “if public safety and order in the
-German Reich are considerably disturbed or endangered,” to take steps to
-suspend “the Fundamental Rights” established in Articles 114, 115, 117,
-118, 123, 124, and 153. (Article 48 (2)). (_2050-PS_)
-
-On 28 February 1933, the Nazi conspirators, taking as their excuse a
-fire which had just destroyed the Reichstag building, caused to be
-promulgated a Decree of the Reich President suspending the
-constitutional guarantees of freedom. This decree, which purported to be
-an exercise of the powers of the Reich President under Article 48 (2) of
-the Constitution, and which was signed by the Reich President,
-Hindenburg, the Reich Chancellor, Hitler, the Reich Minister of the
-Interior, Frick, and the Reich Minister of Justice, Guertner, provided
-in part:
-
- “Sections 114, 115, 117, 118, 123, 124, and 153 of the
- Constitution of the German Reich are suspended until further
- notice. Thus, restrictions on personal liberty, on the right of
- free expression of opinion, including freedom of the press, on
- the right of assembly and the right of association, and
- violations of the privacy of postal, telegraphic, and telephonic
- communications, and warrants for house-searchers, orders for
- confiscations as well as restrictions on property, are also
- permissible beyond the legal limits otherwise prescribed.”
- (_1390-PS_)
-
-(3) _The Nazi conspirators secured the passage by the Reichstag of a
-“Law for the Protection of the People and the Reich”, giving Hitler and
-the members of his then Cabinet plenary powers of legislation._ At the
-first meeting of Hitler’s Cabinet on 30 January 1933, passage of an
-Enabling Law (_Ermaechtigungsgesetz_) was discussed, and suppression of
-the Communist Party was considered as a means for securing the majority
-requisite for this and other purposes. (_351-PS_) Since such a law
-involved a change in the Constitution it was governed by Article 76 of
-the Weimar Constitution which provided: “The Constitution may be amended
-by law. The acts of the Reichstag amending the Constitution can only
-take effect if two-thirds of the regular number of members are present
-and at least two-thirds of those present consent.” (_2050-PS_) At the
-first meeting of the Hitler Cabinet on 30 January 1933, both Hitler and
-Goering favored early dissolution of the Reichstag and new elections in
-an effort to achieve a majority for the new Cabinet. (_351-PS_) This
-course was followed and new elections for the Reichstag were held on 5
-March 1933, at which 288 Nazi were elected out of 647 members
-(_2514-PS_).
-
-Taking advantage of the Presidential decree of 28 February 1933
-suspending constitutional guarantees of freedom, Goering and other Nazi
-conspirators immediately caused a large number of Communists, including
-party officials and Reichstag deputies, and a smaller number of Social
-Democratic officials and deputies to be placed in “protective custody”.
-(_2324-PS_; _2573-PS_; _L-83_) Thus all Communist deputies and a number
-of Social Democratic deputies were prevented from attending the new
-session of the Reichstag. On 9 March 1933, Frick announced that the
-Communists would be prevented from participating in the first session of
-the Reichstag on March 21st, because of their being more usefully
-occupied. (_2403-PS_) As Frick cynically stated:
-
- “When the Reichstag meets the 21st of March, the Communists will
- be prevented by urgent labor elsewhere from participating in the
- session. In concentration camps they will be re-educated for
- productive work. We will know how to render harmless permanently
- sub-humans who do not want to be re-educated.” (_2651-PS_)
-
-At a meeting of the Reich Cabinet on 15 March 1933, the problem of
-securing the necessary two-thirds majority in favor of an Enabling Act
-was again considered. Frick stated his belief that the Act would have to
-be broadly-conceived, in a manner to allow for any deviation from the
-clauses of the Constitution of the Reich. Goering thought the two-thirds
-majority would be forthcoming and that if necessary some of the Social
-Democrats could be excluded from the room during the voting. (_2962-PS_)
-
-At a meeting of the Cabinet on 20 March 1933, there was further
-discussion of means for securing the majority and quorum necessary to
-secure passage of the Act (_2963-PS_). On 23 March, Hitler spoke in
-favor of an Enabling Law proposed by the Nazi conspirators and in the
-course of the debate said:
-
- “The Government insists on the passage of this law. It expects a
- clear decision in any case. It offers to all the Parties in the
- Reichstag the possibility of a peaceful development and a
- possible conciliation in the future. But it is also determined
- to consider a disapproval of this law as a declaration of
- resistance. It is up to you, gentlemen, to make the decision
- now. It will be either peace or war.” (_2652-PS_)
-
-Thus subject to the full weight of Nazi pressure and terror, the
-Reichstag passed the proposed law, 441 deputies voting in its favor, and
-94 Social Democrats being opposed (_2579-PS_). The following day, the
-law was promulgated. It provided:
-
- “The Reichstag has resolved the following law, which is, with
- the approval of the Reichsrat, herewith promulgated, after it
- has been established that the requirements have been satisfied
- for legislation altering the Constitution.
-
- “SECTION 1. Reich laws can be enacted by the Reich Cabinet as
- well as in accordance with the Procedure established in the
- Constitution. This applies also to the laws referred to in
- article 85, paragraph 2, and in article 87 of the Constitution.
-
- “SECTION 2. The national laws enacted by the Reich Cabinet may
- deviate from the Constitution so far as they do not affect the
- position of the Reichstag and the Reichsrat. The powers of the
- President remain undisturbed.
-
- “SECTION 3. The national laws enacted by the Reich Cabinet are
- prepared by the Chancellor and published in the
- Reichsgesetzblatt. They come into effect, unless otherwise
- specified, upon the day following their publication. Articles 68
- to 77 of the Constitution do not apply to the laws enacted by
- the Reich Cabinet.
-
- “SECTION 4. Treaties of the Reich with foreign states which
- concern matters of national legislation do not require the
- consent of the bodies participating in legislation. The Reich
- Cabinet is empowered to issue the necessary provisions for the
- execution of these treaties.
-
- “SECTION 5. This law becomes effective on the day of its
- publication. It becomes invalid on April 1, 1937; it further
- becomes invalid when the present Reich Cabinet is replaced by
- another.” (_2001-PS_)
-
-The time limit stated in the law was twice extended by action of the
-Reichstag and once by decree of Hitler. (_2047-PS_; _2048-PS_;
-_2103-PS_)
-
-On 29 June 1933, Dr. Hugenberg resigned as Reich Minister of Economy and
-as Reich Minister for Food and Agriculture (_351-PS_). Thereafter, other
-members of the Cabinet resigned from time to time, and new members were
-added. The Reich Cabinet continued to exercise, on numerous occasions
-the plenary powers conferred on it by the law of 24 March 1933. (See
-Section 3 of Chapter XV for further material on the Reich Cabinet.)
-
-(4) _The Nazi conspirators caused all political parties, except the Nazi
-Party, to be prohibited._ After the Reichstag fire of 27 February 1933,
-the organization of the Communist Party was destroyed. On 9 March 1933,
-the Reich Minister of the Interior, Frick, announced that the Communists
-would be prevented from taking part in the opening of the Reichstag on
-21 March 1933, because of their seditious activity. On 26 May 1933, a
-law was promulgated, signed by Hitler and Frick, providing for the
-confiscation of Communist property. (_2403-PS_; _1396-PS_)
-
-After suspension of the Constitutional guarantees of freedom on 28
-February 1933, numerous restraints were imposed on the Social Democratic
-Party, including the arrest of a number of its leaders and Reichstag
-deputies. The backbone of this Party was broken by the occupation of the
-trade union buildings and the smashing of free trade unions in May 1933.
-On 22 June 1933, the Social Democratic Party was suppressed in Prussia
-(_2403-PS_). On 7 July 1933 a Reich decree eliminated Social Democrats
-from the Reichstag and from the governing bodies of Provinces and
-Municipalities. (_2058-PS_)
-
-On 14 July 1933, provisions of the Law of 26 May 1933 confiscating
-Communist property were made applicable to assets and interests of the
-Social Democratic Party and its affiliated organizations, “and also to
-assets and interests which are used or destined to promote Marxist or
-other activities found by the Reich Minister of the Interior to be
-subversive to people and state.” (_1388-PS_) Faced with similar
-pressure, the other German Parties either dissolved or combined with the
-Nazis (_2403-PS_).
-
-The Nazi conspirators then promulgated a law declaring the Nazi Party to
-be the only political party in Germany and making it criminal to
-maintain any other political party or to form a new political party.
-This law, which was signed by Hitler, Frick, and Guertner, provided in
-part:
-
- “Art. 1
-
- The National Socialist German Worker’s Party
- (_National-Sozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei_) constitutes
- the only political party in Germany.
-
- “Art. 2
-
- Whoever undertakes to maintain the organizational structure of
- another political party or to form a new political party will be
- punished with penal servitude up to three years or with
- imprisonment of from six months to three years, if the deed is
- not subject to a greater penalty according to other
- regulations.” (_1388-PS_)
-
-In a speech on 6 July 1933 Hitler stated:
-
- “The political parties have finally been abolished. This is a
- historical occurrence, the meaning and implication of which one
- cannot yet be fully conscious of. Now, we must set aside the
- last vestige of democracy, particularly the methods of voting
- and making majority decisions which today are used in local
- governments, in economic organizations and in labor boards; in
- its place we must validate the responsibility of the individual.
- The achievement of external power must be followed by the
- inner-education of the people * * *”
-
-Later in the same speech, Hitler said:
-
- “The Party has become the State. All power lies with the Reich
- Authorities.” (_2632-PS_)
-
-(5) _The Nazi conspirators caused the Nazi Party to be established as a
-para-governmental organization with extensive and extraordinary
-privileges._ On 1 December 1933 the Reich Cabinet promulgated a law
-designed for “Securing the Unity of Party and State”. It was signed by
-Hitler and Frick, and provided:
-
- “Art. 1
-
- 1. After the victory of the National Socialistic Revolution, the
- National Socialistic German Labor Party is the bearer of the
- concept of the German State and is inseparably the state.
-
- 2. It will be a part of the public law. Its organization will be
- determined by the Fuehrer.
-
- “Art. 2
-
- The deputy of the Fuehrer and the Chief of Staff of the SA will
- become members of the Reichs government in order to insure close
- cooperation of the offices of the party and SA with the public
- authorities.
-
- “Art. 3
-
- 1. The members of the National Socialistic German Labor Party
- and the SA (including their subordinate organizations) as the
- leading and driving force of the National Socialist State will
- bear greater responsibility toward Fuehrer, people and state.
-
- 2. In case they violate these duties, they will be subject to
- special jurisdiction by party and state.
-
- 3. The Fuehrer may extend these regulations in order to include
- members of other organizations.
-
- “Art. 4
-
- Every action or neglect on the part of members of the SA
- (including their subordinate organizations) attacking or
- endangering the existence, organization, activity or reputation
- of the National Socialistic German Labor Party, in particular
- any infraction against discipline and order, will be regarded as
- a violation of duty.
-
- “Art. 5
-
- Custody and arrest may be inflicted in addition to the usual
- penalties.
-
- “Art. 6
-
- The public authorities have to grant legal and administrative
- assistance to the offices of the Party and the SA which are
- entrusted with the execution of the jurisdiction of the Party
- and SA.
-
- “Art. 7
-
- The law regarding the authority to inflict penalties on members
- of the SA and SS, of the 28 April 1933 (RGBl, p. 230), will be
- invalidated.
-
- “Art. 8
-
- The Reichs Chancellor, as Fuehrer of the National Socialistic
- German Labor Party and as the supreme commander of SA will issue
- the regulation necessary for the execution and augmentation of
- this law, particularly with respect to the organization and
- procedure of the Jurisdiction of the Party and SA. He will
- determine the time at which the regulations concerning this
- jurisdiction will be effective.” (_1395-PS_)
-
-Thus the Nazi Party became a para-governmental organization in Germany.
-
-The Nazi conspirators granted the Nazi Party and its components
-extensive and extraordinary privileges. On 19 May 1933, they passed a
-law to protect and insure respect for Party symbols (_2759-PS_). On 20
-December 1934 the Nazi conspirators caused a law to be promulgated,
-signed by Hitler, Guertner, Hess, and Frick, making it a crime to make
-false or grievous statements to injure the prestige of the Government of
-the Reich, the NSDAP, or its agencies. This law also declared it to be a
-crime to wear the uniform or the insignia of the NSDAP without authority
-to do so, and controlled the manufacture and sale of Party uniforms,
-flags, and insignia (_1393-PS_). A decree of 29 March 1935, defining the
-legal status of the NSDAP and of its components and affiliated
-organizations, is a further indication of the extraordinary privileges
-enjoyed by the Nazi Party. (_1725-PS_)
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO ACQUISITION OF
- TOTALITARIAN POLITICAL CONTROL
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6, especially 6 (a).│ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Sections IV (D) │ │
- │ 1, 2. │ I │ 17, 18
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document was referred to during the │ │
- │trial but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
- *047-PS │Letter to Rosenberg signed by Hitler, 24│ │
- │ August 1931. (USA 725) │ III │ 82
- │ │ │
- *351-PS │Minutes of First Meeting of Cabinet of │ │
- │ Hitler, 30 January 1933. (USA 389) │ III │ 270
- │ │ │
- *404-PS │Excerpts from Hitler, Mein Kampf, pp. │ │
- │ 456, 475. (USA 256) │ III │ 385
- │ │ │
- 1388-PS │Law concerning confiscation of Property │ │
- │ subversive to People and State, 14 │ │
- │ July 1933. 1933 Reichsgesetzblatt, │ │
- │ Part I, p. 479. │ III │ 962
- │ │ │
- 1388-A-PS │Law against the establishment of │ │
- │ Parties, 14 July 1933. 1933 │ │
- │ Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 479. │ III │ 962
- │ │ │
- 1390-PS │Decree of the Reich President for the │ │
- │ Protection of the People and State, 28│ │
- │ February 1933. 1933 Reichsgesetzblatt,│ │
- │ Part I, p. 83. │ III │ 968
- │ │ │
- 1393-PS │Law on treacherous attacks against State│ │
- │ and Party, and for the Protection of │ │
- │ Party Uniforms, 20 December 1934. 1934│ │
- │ Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 1269. │ III │ 973
- │ │ │
-*1395-PS │Law to insure the unity of Party and │ │
- │ State, 1 December 1933. 1933 │ │
- │ Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 1016. │ │
- │ (GB 252) │ III │ 978
- │ │ │
- 1396-PS │Law concerning the confiscation of │ │
- │ Communist property, 26 May 1933. 1933 │ │
- │ Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 293. │ III │ 979
- │ │ │
- 1725-PS │Decree enforcing law for securing the │ │
- │ unity of Party and State, 29 March │ │
- │ 1935. 1935 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, │ │
- │ p. 502. │ IV │ 224
- │ │ │
- 2001-PS │Law to Remove the Distress of People and│ │
- │ State, 24 March 1933. 1933 │ │
- │ Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 141. │ IV │ 638
- │ │ │
- 2047-PS │Law for the extension of the law │ │
- │ concerning the removal of the distress│ │
- │ of People and Reich, 30 January 1937. │ │
- │ 1937 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. │ │
- │ 105. │ IV │ 660
- │ │ │
- 2048-PS │Law for the extension of the law │ │
- │ concerning the removal of the distress│ │
- │ of the People and Reich, 30 January │ │
- │ 1939. 1939 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, │ │
- │ p. 95. │ IV │ 660
- │ │ │
- 2050-PS │The Constitution of the German Reich, 11│ │
- │ August 1919. 1919 Reichsgesetzblatt, │ │
- │ Part I, p. 1383. │ IV │ 662
- │ │ │
- 2058-PS │Decree for the securing of the State │ │
- │ Leadership, 7 July 1933. 1933 │ │
- │ Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 462. │ IV │ 699
- │ │ │
- 2059-PS │Decree of the Reich President relating │ │
- │ to the granting of Amnesty, 21 March │ │
- │ 1933. 1933 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, │ │
- │ p. 134. │ IV │ 701
- │ │ │
- 2103-PS │Decree of Fuehrer on Cabinet │ │
- │ Legislation, 10 May 1943. 1943 │ │
- │ Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 295. │ IV │ 729
- │ │ │
-*2168-PS │Book by SA Sturmfuehrer Dr. Ernst Bayer,│ │
- │ entitled “The SA”, depicting the │ │
- │ history, work, aim and organization of│ │
- │ the SA. (USA 411) │ IV │ 772
- │ │ │
-*2324-PS │Extracts from Reconstruction of a │ │
- │ Nation, by Hermann Goering, 1934. (USA│ │
- │ 233) │ IV │ 1033
- │ │ │
- 2403-PS │The End of the Party State, from │ │
- │ Documents of German Politics, Vol. I, │ │
- │ pp. 55-56. │ V │ 71
- │ │ │
- 2404-PS │Report of Hitler’s speech in his own │ │
- │ defense, published in The Hitler Trial│ │
- │ (1934). │ V │ 73
- │ │ │
- 2405-PS │Extracts from German Publications. │ V │ 79
- │ │ │
- 2412-PS │Extracts from Nature and Form of │ │
- │ National Socialism pamphlet by Dr. │ │
- │ Joseph Goebbels, Berlin, 1935. │ V │ 88
- │ │ │
- 2500-PS │“What do we want in the Reichstag?” one │ │
- │ of Goebbels newspaper articles. │ V │ 237
- │ │ │
- 2511-PS │Statement by Hitler from Voelkischer │ │
- │ Beobachter, 24 August 1932. │ V │ 246
- │ │ │
- 2512-PS │Hitler’s Testimony Before the Court for │ │
- │ High Treason, published in Frankfurter│ │
- │ Zeitung, 26 September 1931. │ V │ 246
- │ │ │
-*2513-PS │Extract from The National Socialist │ │
- │ Workers’ Party as an Association │ │
- │ Hostile to State and to Republican │ │
- │ Form of Government and Guilty of │ │
- │ Treasonable Activity. (USA 235) │ V │ 252
- │ │ │
- 2514-PS │Extract from Statistical Yearbook of the│ │
- │ German Reich 1933, concerning │ │
- │ elections in the Reichstag. │ V │ 253
- │ │ │
- 2532-PS │Extract from The Third Reich, by Gerd │ │
- │ Ruehle. │ V │ 268
- │ │ │
- 2573-PS │Announcement of Official Prussian Press │ │
- │ Office, in Frankfurter Zeitung, 1 │ │
- │ March 1933. │ V │ 303
- │ │ │
- 2579-PS │Extracts from the Frankfurter Zeitung, │ │
- │ 24 March 1933, concerning happenings │ │
- │ 23 March. │ V │ 303
- │ │ │
- 2632-PS │Extracts from The National Socialist │ │
- │ Revolution 1933, published in Berlin │ │
- │ 1935. │ V │ 343
- │ │ │
- 2633-PS │Extracts from Constitutional Law of the │ │
- │ Greater German Reich, 1939. │ V │ 344
- │ │ │
- 2634-PS │Goering to the Condemned, published in │ │
- │ Voelkischer Beobachter, 26 August │ │
- │ 1932. │ V │ 344
- │ │ │
- 2651-PS │Statement by Frick from Voelkischer │ │
- │ Beobachter, 14 March 1933. │ V │ 359
- │ │ │
- 2652-PS │Speech of Hitler to Reichstag, 23 March │ │
- │ 1933, from Voelkischer Beobachter, 24 │ │
- │ March 1933. │ V │ 359
- │ │ │
- 2741-PS │Speech by Hitler on 9 November 1934, │ │
- │ published in Voelkischer Beobachter, │ │
- │ 10 November 1934. │ V │ 382
- │ │ │
- 2742-PS │Passage written by Frick in National │ │
- │ Socialist Yearbook, 1927, p. 124. │ V │ 383
- │ │ │
- 2743-PS │Passage written by Frick in National │ │
- │ Socialist Yearbook, 1930, p. 178. │ V │ 383
- │ │ │
- 2759-PS │Law for the protection of Nationalist │ │
- │ Symbols, 19 May 1933. 1933 │ │
- │ Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 285. │ V │ 394
- │ │ │
-*2955-PS │Affidavit of Magnus Heimannsberg, 14 │ │
- │ November 1945, referring to SA and │ │
- │ other Nazi groups posted at polling │ │
- │ places. (USA 755) │ V │ 659
- │ │ │
-*2962-PS │Minutes of meeting of Reich Cabinet, 15 │ │
- │ March 1933. (USA 578) │ V │ 669
- │ │ │
-*2963-PS │Minutes of meeting of Reich Cabinet, 20 │ │
- │ March 1933. (USA 656) │ V │ 670
- │ │ │
-*3054-PS │“The Nazi Plan”, script of a motion │ │
- │ picture composed of captured German │ │
- │ film. (USA 167) │ V │ 801
- │ │ │
-*3740-PS │Affidavit of Franz Halder, 6 March 1946.│ │
- │ (USA 779) │ VI │ 635
- │ │ │
-*L-83 │Affidavit of Gerhart H. Seger, 21 July │ │
- │ 1945. (USA 234). │ VII │ 859
-
-
- 3. CONSOLIDATION OF TOTALITARIAN POLITICAL CONTROL
-
-_Between the Accession to Power (early 1933) and the Outbreak of the War
-(late 1939) the Nazi Conspirators Consolidated Their Control of Germany
-by Utilizing and Molding Its Political Machinery to Their Own Ends._
-
-A. _The Nazi conspirators reduced the Reichstag to an impotent body of
-their own appointees._ Under the Weimar Constitution of the German
-Reich, adopted by the German people on 11 August 1919, the Reichstag was
-a representative parliamentary body with broad legislative powers.
-Article 20 provided that the Reichstag should be “composed of the
-delegates of the German people.” Article 68 of the Chapter on
-Legislation provided that:
-
- “Bills are introduced by the government of the Reich or by
- members of the Reichstag. Reich laws shall be enacted by the
- Reichstag.” (_2050-PS_)
-
-In _Mein Kampf_ Hitler stated the conspirators’ purpose to undermine the
-Reichstag:
-
- “Our young movement in essence and structure is
- anti-parliamentarian, i.e., it rejects majority voting as a
- matter of principle as well as in its own organization * * * Its
- participation in the activities of a parliament has only the
- purpose to contribute to its destruction, to the elimination of
- an institution which we consider as one of the gravest symptoms
- of decay of mankind * * *” (_2883-PS_).
-
-With the passage of the Law for the Protection of the People and the
-Reich (also known as the Enabling Act) the Nazi succeeded, in effect, in
-depriving the Reichstag of its legislative functions. The legislative as
-well as the executive powers of the government were concentrated in
-Hitler and the Cabinet (_2001-PS_; the legislative activities of the
-Cabinet (_Reichsregierung_) and its power to contravene constitutional
-limitations are treated in Section 3 of Chapter XV).
-
-During the period from March 1933 until the beginning of 1937, the
-Reichstag enacted only four laws: The Reconstruction Law of 30 January
-1934 and the three Nurnberg laws of 15 September 1935. The Reichstag was
-retained chiefly as a sounding board for Hitler’s speeches. All other
-legislation was enacted by the Cabinet, by the Cabinet ministers, or by
-decree of the Fuehrer (_2481-PS_). Hess has admitted the lack of
-importance of the Reichstag in the legislative process after 1933.
-(_2426-PS_)
-
-Hitler indicated in a 1939 decree that the Reichstag would be permitted
-to enact only such laws as he, in his own judgment, might deem
-appropriate for Reichstag legislation. (_2018-PS_)
-
-Immediately after the Nazis acquired the control of the central
-government they proceeded systematically to eliminate their opponents.
-First they forced all other political parties to dissolve, and on 14
-July 1933 issued a decree making illegal the existence of any political
-party except the Nazi Party. (_1388-PS_)
-
-In early 1935 there were 661 delegates in the Reichstag. Of this number
-641 were officially registered as Nazi party members and the remaining
-20 were classified as “guests” (_Gaeste_). (_2384-PS_; _2380-PS_)
-
-B. _The Nazi conspirators curtailed the freedom of popular elections
-throughout Germany._ Under the Weimar Republic there existed
-constitutional and legislative guarantees of free popular elections. The
-Weimar Constitution guaranteed the universal, equal and secret ballot
-and proportional representation. (_2050-PS_) These general principles
-were implemented by the provisions of the Reich Election Law of 1924,
-particularly with respect to the multiple party system and the
-functioning of proportional representation. (_2382-PS_)
-
-In _Mein Kampf_ Hitler stated the conspirators’ purpose to subvert the
-system of popular election:
-
- “Majority can never replace men. * * * The political
- understanding of the masses is not sufficiently developed to
- produce independently specific political convictions and to
- select persons to represent them.” (_2883-PS_)
-
-The occasional national elections after 1933 were formalities devoid of
-freedom of choice. Bona fide elections could not take place under the
-Nazi system. The basic ideological doctrine of the _Fuehrerprinzip_
-(Leadership Principle) dictated that all subordinates must be appointed
-by their superiors in the governmental hierarchy. In order to insure the
-practical application of this principle the Nazis immediately liquidated
-all other political parties and provided criminal sanctions against the
-formation of new parties. (For further discussion see Section 2 on the
-Acquisition of Totalitarian Political Control.)
-
-Although the Reichstag, unlike all other elective assemblies in Germany,
-was allowed to continue in existence, elections no longer involved a
-free choice between lists or candidates. At these elections there were
-usually large bands of uniformed Nazis surrounding the polls and
-intimidating the voters. (_2955-PS_)
-
-The surreptitious marking of ballots (e.g. with skimmed milk) was also
-customary, to ascertain the identity of the persons who cast “No” or
-invalid votes. (_R-142_)
-
-Although it had already become practically impossible to have more than
-one list of candidates, it was specifically provided by law in 1938 that
-only one list was to be submitted to the electorate. (_2355-PS_)
-
-By the end of this period, little of substance remained in the election
-law. In an official volume published during the war there are reprinted
-the still effective provisions of the law of 1924. The majority of the
-substantive provisions have been marked “obsolete” (_gegenstandslos_)
-(_2381-PS_).
-
-The comprehensive Nazi program for the centralization of German
-government included in its scope the whole system of regional and local
-elections, which soon ceased to exist. Article 17 of the Weimar
-Constitution had required a representative form of government and
-universal, secret elections in all Laender and municipalities
-(_2050-PS_). Yet in early 1934, the sovereign powers (_Hoheitsrechte_)
-of the Laender were transferred by law to the Reich and the Land
-governments were placed under the Reich control:
-
- “The popular assemblies (_Volksvertretungen_) of the Laender
- shall be abolished.” (_2006-PS_)
-
-Pursuant to the German Communal Ordinance of 30 January 1935, the mayors
-and executive officers of all municipalities received their appointments
-“through the confidence of Party and State” (Article 6 (2)).
-Appointments were made by Reich authorities from lists prepared by the
-Party delegates (Article 41). City councillors were selected by the
-Party delegates in agreement with the mayors (Article 51 (1)).
-(_2008-PS_)
-
-C. _The Nazi conspirators transformed the states, provinces, and
-municipalities into what were, in effect, mere administrative organs of
-the central government._ Under the Weimar Constitution of the pre-Nazi
-regime, the states, provinces, and municipalities enjoyed considerable
-autonomy in the exercise of governmental functions—legislative,
-executive and judicial. (_2050-PS_)
-
-Hitler, in _Mein Kampf_, stated the conspirators’ purpose to establish
-totalitarian control of local government:
-
- “National Socialism, as a matter of principle, must claim the
- right to enforce its doctrines, without regard to present
- federal boundaries, upon the entire German nation and to educate
- it in its ideas and its thinking. * * * The National Socialist
- doctrine is not the servant of political interests of individual
- federal states but shall become the ruler of the German nation.”
- (_2883-PS_)
-
-These views were echoed by Rosenberg:
-
- “In the midst of the great power constellations of the globe
- there must be, for foreign as well as for internal political
- reasons, only one strong central national authority, if one
- wants Germany to regain a position which makes it fit for
- alliance with other countries.” (_2882-PS_)
-
-By a series of laws and decrees, the Nazi conspirators reduced the
-powers of the regional and local governments and substantially
-transformed them into territorial subdivisions of the Reich government.
-The program of centralization began almost immediately after the Nazis
-acquired the chief executive posts of the government. On 31 March 1933,
-they promulgated the Provisional Law integrating the Laender with the
-Reich (_2004-PS_). This law called for the dissolution of all state and
-local self governing bodies and for their reconstitution according to
-the number of votes cast for each party in the Reichstag election of 5
-March 1933. The Communists and their affiliates were expressly denied
-representation.
-
-A week later there followed the Second Law Integrating the Laender with
-the Reich (_2005-PS_). This Act established the position of Reich
-Governor. He was to be appointed by the President upon the proposal of
-the Chancellor, and was given power to appoint the members of the Land
-governments and the higher Land officials and judges, the authority to
-reconstruct the Land legislature according to the law of 31 March 1933
-(_2004-PS_, _supra_), and the power of pardon.
-
-On 31 January 1934, most of the remaining vestiges of Land independence
-were destroyed by the Law for the Reconstruction of the Reich:
-
- “The popular referendum and the Reichstag election of November
- 12, 1933, have proved that the German people have attained an
- indestructible internal unity (_unloesliche innere Einheit_)
- superior to all internal subdivisions of political character.
- Consequently, the Reichstag has enacted the following law which
- is hereby promulgated with the unanimous vote of the Reichstag
- after ascertaining that the requirements of the Reich
- Constitution have been met:
-
- Article I. Popular assemblies of the Laender shall be abolished.
-
- Article II. (1) The sovereign powers (_Hoheitsrechte_) of the
- Laender are transferred to the Reich.
-
- (2) The Laender governments are placed under the Reich
- government.
-
- Article III. The Reich governors are placed under the
- administrative supervision of the Reich Minister of Interior.
-
- Article IV. The Reich Government may issue new constitutional
- laws.”
-
-This law was implemented by a regulation, issued by Frick, providing
-that all Land laws must have the assent of the competent Minister of the
-Reich, that the highest echelons of the Land Government were to obey the
-orders of the competent Reich Minister, and that the employees of the
-Laender might be transferred into the Reich Civil Service. (_1653-PS_)
-
-The _Reichsrat_ (Reich Council) was abolished by law on 14 February
-1934, and all official representation on the part of the Laender in the
-administration of the central government was at an end (_2647-PS_). The
-legislative pattern was complete with the enactment of the Reich
-Governor Law on 30 January 1935, which solidified the system of
-centralized control. The Reich Governor was declared to be the official
-representative of the Reich government, who was to receive orders
-directly from Hitler (_Reichstatthaltergesetz_ (Reich Governor Law), 30
-January 1935, 1935 _Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I, p. 65). The same
-development was apparent in the provinces, the territorial subdivisions
-of Prussia. All local powers were concentrated in the Provincial
-Presidents, who acted solely as representatives of the national
-administration (_2049-PS_). Similarly, in the case of the municipalities
-local self-government was quickly reduced to a minimum and communal
-affairs were placed under central Reich control. The Nazi Party Delegate
-was given special functions:
-
- “* * * in order to insure harmony between the communal
- administration and the Party.” (Art. 6 (2)).
-
-The Reich was given supervision over the municipalities:
-
- “* * * in order to insure that their activities conform with the
- laws and the aims of national leadership.” (_2008-PS_)
-
-The Nazi conspirators frequently boasted of their comprehensive program
-of government centralization. Frick, Minister of the Interior throughout
-this period, wrote:
-
- “The reconstruction law abolished the sovereign rights and the
- executive powers of the Laender and made the Reich the sole
- bearer of the rights of sovereignty. The supreme powers of the
- Laender do not exist any longer. The natural result of this was
- the subordination of the Land governments to the Reich
- government and the Land Ministers to the corresponding Reich
- Ministers. On 30 January 1934, the German Reich became one
- state. (_2481-PS_)
-
-In another article Frick indicated even more clearly the purposes which
-underlay this program of centralization:
-
- “In the National Socialist revolution of 1933, it was stipulated
- for the first time in the history of the German nation that the
- erection of a unified state (_Einheitsstaat_) would be
- accomplished. From the early days of his political activity,
- Adolf Hitler never left a doubt in the mind of anyone that he
- considered it the first duty of National Socialism to create a
- German Reich in which the will of the people would be led in a
- single direction and that the whole strength of the nation, _at
- home and abroad_, would be placed on the balance scale.”
- (_2380-PS_; _2378-PS_.)
-
-D. _The Nazi conspirators united the offices of President and Chancellor
-in the person of Hitler._ The merger of the two offices was accomplished
-by the law of 1 August 1934, signed by the entire cabinet (_2003-PS_).
-The official Nazi statement concerning the effect of this statute
-contains this observation:
-
- “Through this law, the conduct of Party and State has been
- combined in one hand. * * * He is responsible only to his own
- conscience and to the German nation.” (_1893-PS_)
-
-One of the significant consequences of this law was to give to Hitler
-the supreme command of the German armed forces, always a prerequisite of
-the Presidency (_2050-PS_). Accordingly, every soldier was immediately
-required to take an oath of loyalty and obedience to Hitler. (_2061-PS_)
-
-E. _The Nazi conspirators removed great numbers of civil servants on
-racial and political grounds and replaced them with party members and
-supporters._
-
-Hitler publicly announced the conspirators’ purpose:
-
- “We know that two things alone will save us: the end of internal
- corruption and the cleaning out of all those who owe their
- existence simply to the protection of members of the same
- political parties. Through the most brutal ruthlessness towards
- all officials installed by those political parties we must
- restore our finances. * * * The body of German officials must
- once more become what it was.” (_2881-PS_)
-
-The Nazi legislative machine turned to the task of purging the civil
-service soon after the accession to power. On 7 April 1933, the Law for
-the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service was promulgated
-(_1397-PS_). Article 3 of this law applies the Nazi blood theories:
-
- “(1) Officials who are not of Aryan descent are to be retired
- (See Section 8); where honorary officials are concerned, they
- are to be discharged from office.
-
- (2) (1) Does not apply to officials who have been in service
- since August 1, 1914, or who fought in the World War at the
- front for the German Reich or for its allies or whose fathers or
- sons were killed in the World War. The Reich Minister of the
- Interior after consultation with the competent Minister or with
- the highest state authorities may permit further exceptions in
- the case of officials who are in foreign countries.”
-
-Article 8 provides that retirement does not carry a pension unless the
-official has served at least ten years. The political purge provision of
-this law is contained in Article 4:
-
- “Officials who because of their previous political activity do
- not offer security that they will exert themselves for the
- national state without reservations, may be discharged. For
- three months after dismissal, they will be paid their former
- salary. From this time on they receive three-quarters of their
- pensions (see 8) and corresponding annuities for their heirs.”
-
-The provisions of the Act apply to all Reich, Land, and Communal
-officials (Art. 1 (2)). Civil Servants may be placed on the retired list
-without any reason, “for the purpose of simplifying the administration”
-(Art. 6). Discharges and transfers, once decided on by the appropriate
-administrative chief, are final and are not subject to appeal (Art. 7
-(1)).
-
-This basic enactment was followed by a series of decrees, regulations,
-and amendments. For example, on 11 April 1933, the term “non-Aryan” was
-defined to include persons with only one non-Aryan grandparent
-(_2012-PS_). An amendatory law of 30 June ruled out all civil servants
-married to non-Aryans. (_1400-PS_)
-
-The political standards of the “Purge Law” were made more explicit by
-the supplementary law of 20 July 1933. Officials who belonged to any
-party or organization which, in the opinion of the Nazis, furthered the
-aims of Communism, Marxism, or Social Democracy were summarily to be
-discharged (_1398-PS_). In the later years, these earlier provisions
-were enlarged and codified, no longer solely for the purposes of
-affecting the existing civil service, but rather to set out the
-qualifications for the appointment of new applicants and for their
-promotion. Proof of devotion to National Socialism and documentary proof
-of acceptable “blood” were prescribed as conditions to promotion.
-(_2326-PS_)
-
-The comprehensive German Civil Service Law of 26 January 1937 included
-the discriminatory provisions of the earlier legislation, and prevented
-the appointment of any applicants opposed or suspected of being opposed
-to the Nazi program and policy (_2340-PS_). The legislation dealing with
-the training and education of civil servants provided that no person can
-be accepted for an official position unless he is a member of the Nazi
-Party or one of its formations (_Gliederungen_). (_2341-PS_)
-
-The total subjugation of the German civil servant was ultimately
-accomplished by the following resolution passed by the Reichstag at the
-request of the Fuehrer.
-
- “* * * without being bound by existing legal provisions, the
- Fuehrer must therefore in his capacity as Fuehrer of the nation,
- as commander-in-chief of the Armed Forces, as Head of the
- Government and as the highest bearer of all power, as highest
- Law Lord and as Fuehrer of the Party, always be in a position to
- require every German—whether a simple soldier or officer,
- subordinate or higher official, or judge, supervisory or
- operating functionary of the Party, laborer or employer—to
- carry out his duties with all the means available to him and to
- discharge these duties according to a conscientious examination
- without reference to so-called vested rights, especially without
- the preambles of pre-existing procedure, by removal of any man
- from his office, rank or position.” (_2755-PS_)
-
-F. _The Nazi conspirators restricted the independence of the judiciary
-and rendered it subservient to their ends._
-
-The independence of judges, before the Nazi regime, was guaranteed by
-the Weimar Constitution. The fundamental principle was stated briefly in
-Article 102:
-
- “Judges are independent and subject only to the law.”
- (_2050-PS_)
-
-Article 104 contained a safeguard against the arbitrary removal or
-suspension of judges, while Article 105 prohibited “exceptional courts”.
-The fundamental rights of the individual are set out in Article 109 and
-include equality before the law. (_2050-PS_)
-
-Like all other public officials, German judges who failed to meet Nazi
-racial and political requirements became the subject of a wide-spread
-purge. Non-Aryans, political opponents of the Nazis, and all persons
-suspected of antagonism to the aims of the Party were summarily removed
-(_2967-PS_). The provisions of the Law for the Restoration of
-Professional Civil Service of 7 April 1933 applied to all judges. This
-was declared expressly in the third regulation for the administration of
-the law. (_2867-PS_)
-
-To make certain that cases with political ramifications would be dealt
-with acceptably and in conformity with Party principles, the Nazis
-granted designated areas of criminal jurisdiction to the so-called
-Special Courts (_Sondergerichte_). These constituted a new system of
-special criminal courts, independent of the regular judiciary and
-directly subservient to the Party (_2076-PS_). A later decree
-considerably broadened the jurisdiction of these courts. (_2056-PS_)
-
-In 1934, the People’s Court was set up as a trial court “in cases of
-high treason and treason” (_2014-PS_). This action was a direct, result
-of the dissatisfaction of the Nazi rulers with the decision of the
-Supreme Court (_Reichsgericht_) in the Reichstag fire trial. Three of
-the four defendants were acquitted although the Nazi conspirators had
-expected convictions in all cases (_2967-PS_). The law which created
-this new tribunal contained a wide definition of treason which would
-include most of what were regarded by the Nazis as “political” crimes
-(Art. 3 (1)). The express denial of any appeal from the decisions of the
-People’s Court (Art. 5 (2)) was a further indication of the intention of
-the Nazis to set up a criminal law system totally outside of accepted
-judicial pattern. The substantive organization of the People’s Court was
-later established by law in 1936. (_2342-PS_)
-
-These new tribunals were staffed almost exclusively with Nazis and were
-used to tighten the Party’s grip on Germany. This control became
-progressively stronger, due first, to the power of the prosecutor to
-pick the appropriate court; second, to the restriction of defense
-counsel in these courts to specially admitted attorneys; and finally, to
-the absence of appeal from the decisions of these judges. Moreover,
-there developed along side of the entire judicial system the
-increasingly powerful police administration, under which persons opposed
-to the regime were regularly imprisoned in concentration camps without
-any type of hearing, even after acquittal by the courts. (_2967-PS_)
-
-Still another group of courts was established within the Party itself.
-These Party Courts heard cases involving internal party discipline and
-infractions of the rules of conduct prescribed for members of formations
-and affiliated organizations. The published rules for the Party judges
-emphasized the complete dependence of these judges upon the directions
-and supervision of their Party superiors. (_2402-PS_)
-
-The Nazi legal theorists freely admitted that there was no place in
-their scheme of things for the truly independent judge. They controlled
-all judges through special directives and orders from the central
-government. Frank underscored the role of the judge as a political
-functionary and as an administrator in the National Socialist state
-(_2378-PS_). Two case histories of this period serve to illustrate the
-manner in which criminal proceedings were directly suppressed or
-otherwise affected by order of the Reich government.
-
-In 1935, the Reich Governor of Saxony, Mutschmann, attempted to quash
-criminal proceedings which, in this exceptional instance, had been
-brought against officials of the Hohnstein concentration camp for a
-series of extremely brutal attacks upon inmates. The trial was held and
-the defendants convicted, but during the trial the governor inquired of
-the presiding judge whether he did not think the penalty proposed by the
-prosecutor too severe and whether an acquittal was not indicated. After
-the conviction, two jurymen were ousted from the NSDAP and the
-prosecutor was advised by his superior to withdraw from the SA. Although
-Guertner, the then Minister of Justice, strongly recommended against
-taking any action to alter the decision, Hitler pardoned all the
-accused. (_783-PS_; _784-PS_; _785-PS_; _786-PS_)
-
-In another similar case, Guertner wrote directly to Hitler narrating the
-horrible details of maltreatment and advising that the case be regularly
-prosecuted. Nevertheless, Hitler ordered complete suppression of the
-proceedings. (_787-PS_; _788-PS_)
-
-Under the Nazi regime, it was part of the official duty of many Party
-functionaries to supervise the administration of justice. The official
-papers of Hess contain detailed statements concerning his own functions
-and those of the Gauleiter in deciding criminal cases. (_2639-PS_)
-
-Another type of governmental interference in judicial matters is
-evidenced by the confidential letter which the Ministry of Justice sent
-in early 1938 to the Chief Justices of the Regional Supreme Courts
-(_Oberlandesgerichtspraesidenten_). The judges were instructed to submit
-lists of lawyers who would be sufficiently able and trustworthy to
-represent in court persons who had been taken into “protective custody”.
-The main requirement was absolute political reliability. Simple Party
-membership was not enough; to be selected, the lawyer had to enjoy the
-confidence of the “Gestapo”. (_651-PS_)
-
-After the war began, Thierack, Minister of Justice, revealed the low
-state to which the judiciary had fallen under Nazi rule. He argued that
-the judge was not the “supervisor” but the “assistant” of the
-government. He said that the word “independent”, as applied to the
-judge, was to be eliminated from the vocabulary and that although the
-judge should retain a certain freedom of decision in particular cases,
-the government “can and must” give him the “general line” to follow. For
-this purpose, Thierack decided in 1942 to send confidential Judge’s
-Letters (_Richterbriefe_) to all German judges and prosecutors, setting
-forth the political principles and directives with which all judicial
-personnel were obligated to comply (_2482-PS_). The first of these
-Judge’s Letters clearly expresses the complete subordination of the
-judges to the Fuehrer and his government. (_D-229_)
-
-G. _The Nazi conspirators greatly enlarged existing State and Party
-organizations and established an elaborate network of new formations and
-agencies._
-
-The totalitarian character of the Nazi regime led to the establishment
-of a great number of new official and semi-official agencies and
-organizations in the various fields of life which were permeated by Nazi
-doctrine and practice, including culture, trade, industry, and
-agriculture.
-
-New agencies had to be created to handle the large number of additional
-administrative tasks taken over from the Laender and the municipalities.
-Moreover, the mobilization of the political, economic, and military
-resources of Germany required the formation of such coordinating
-“super-agencies” as the Four Year Plan, the Plenipotentiary for
-Economics, the Plenipotentiary for Administration, and the Ministerial
-Council for the Defense of the Reich. At the time of the launching of
-war, the central Reich government was an extremely complicated structure
-held together under strict Nazi dictatorship. (See _Chart Number 18_;
-also _2261-PS_; _2194-PS_; _2018-PS_.)
-
-Simultaneously, in the Party, the growth of agencies and organizations
-proceeded rapidly. The Party spread, octopus-like, throughout all
-Germany and into many foreign lands. (See _Chart Number 1_; also
-_1725-PS_.)
-
-This process of growth was summed up late in 1937 in an official
-statement of the Party Chancellery:
-
-“In order to control the whole German nation in all spheres of life, the
-NSDAP, after assuming power, set up under its leadership the new Party
-formations and affiliated organizations.” (_2383-PS_)
-
-H. _The Nazi conspirators created a dual system of government controls,
-set up Party agencies to correspond with State agencies, and coordinated
-their activities, often by uniting corresponding State and Party offices
-in a single person._
-
-In _Mein Kampf_, Hitler announced the conspirators’ purpose:
-
- “Such a revolution can and will only be achieved by a movement
- which itself is already organized in the spirit of such ideas
- and thus in itself already bears the coming state. Therefore,
- the National Socialist movement may today become imbued with
- these ideas and put them into practice in its own organization
- so that it not only may direct the state according to the same
- principles, but also may be in a position to put at the state’s
- disposal the finished organizational structure of its own
- state.” (_2883-PS_)
-
-The Nazis attempted to achieve a certain degree of identity between the
-Party and the State and, at the same time, to maintain two separate
-organizational structures. After the rise to power, the fundamental
-principle of unity was translated into “law”:
-
- “Article 1. After the victory of the National Socialistic
- Revolution, the National Socialistic German Labor Party is the
- bearer of the concept of the German State and is inseparably the
- state.” (_1395-PS_)
-
-The manner in which the Nazis retained a duality of organization despite
-the theory of unity is graphically portrayed in the charts of the Party
-and the State (_Charts Number 1 and 18_). These visual exhibits
-demonstrate the comprehensive character of the Party organization, which
-was established on parallel lines with the corresponding government
-structure. The Party structure remained at all times technically
-separate and could be used for non-governmental purposes whenever such
-use best served the needs of the conspirators. In innumerable instances,
-the corresponding Party and State offices were, in fact, held by the
-same person. For example, the Gauleiter of the Party in most instances
-also held the post of Reich Governor (or, in Prussia, that of Provincial
-President). (_2880-PS_)
-
-The coordination of the Party and State functions started at the top.
-The Chief of the Party Chancellery was designated a Reich Minister and
-endowed with plenary powers in the preparation and approval of
-legislation. He acted as liaison officer at the highest level between
-Party officials and cabinet ministers. He was given also the duty of
-passing on the appointment of all the more important civil servants.
-(_2787-PS_)
-
-Many of the same powers were bestowed upon the other _Reichsleiter_
-(Leaders composing the Party Directorate). The official Nazi exposition
-of their position is as follows:
-
- “It is in the Reich Directorate where the strings of the
- organization of the German people and the State meet. By
- endowment of the Chief of the Party Chancellery with the powers
- of a Reich Minister, and by special administrative directives,
- the penetration of the State apparatus with the political will
- of the Party is guaranteed. It is the task of the separate
- organs of the Reich Directorate to maintain as close a contact
- as possible with the life of the nation through their
- sub-offices in the Gaus. Observations at the front are to be
- collected and exploited by the offices of the Reich
- Directorate.” (_1893-PS_)
-
-On the regional and local levels, the _Gauleiter_, _Kreisleiter_, etc.,
-were also empowered to control the purely governmental authorities on
-political matters. Hess issued the following order shortly after the war
-began:
-
- “I, therefore order that the bearer of sovereignty
- (_Hoheitstraeger_) of the NSDAP (_Gauleiter_, _Kreisleiter_,
- _Ortsgruppenleiter_) in the scope of his authority is
- responsible for the political leadership and the frame of mind
- (_Stimmung_) of the population. It is his right and his duty to
- take or to cause to be taken any measures necessary for the
- expeditious fulfillment of his political duties and for the
- elimination of wrong within the Party. He is exclusively
- responsible to his superior bearers of sovereignty
- (_Hoheitstraeger_).” (_2383-PS_)
-
-In the later years, the functional coordination of Party and State
-offices became much more common. The appointment of Himmler as
-Reichsfuehrer SS and Chief of the German Police is a typical example of
-the way in which State and Party functions became inextricably merged so
-as to render any clean lines of demarcation impossible. (_2073-PS_)
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO CONSOLIDATION OF
- TOTALITARIAN POLITICAL CONTROL
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6, especially 6 (a).│ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Section IV (D) 3 │ │
- │ (a). │ I │ 18
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document was referred to during the │ │
- │trial but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
- *651-PS │Confidential circular signed by │ │
- │Schlegeberger, 31 January 1938, │ │
- │concerning representation by Counsel of │ │
- │Inmates of concentration camps. (USA │ │
- │730). │ III │ 466
- │ │ │
- *783-PS │Letter from Guertner to Mutschmann, 18 │ │
- │January 1935, concerning charges against│ │
- │members of camp personnel of protective │ │
- │custody Camp Hohnstein. (USA 731). │ III │ 558
- │ │ │
- *784-PS │Letters from Minister of Justice to Hess│ │
- │and SA Chief of Staff, 5 June 1935, │ │
- │concerning penal proceedings against │ │
- │merchant and SA leader and 22 companions│ │
- │because of inflicting bodily injury on │ (USA │
- │duty. │ 732) │ III
- │ │ │
- *785-PS │Memorandum of Guertner concerning legal │ │
- │proceedings against the camp personnel │ │
- │of concentration camp Hohnstein. (USA │ │
- │733) │ III │ 564
- │ │ │
- *786-PS │Minister of Justice memorandum, 29 │ │
- │November 1935, concerning pardon of │ │
- │those sentenced in connection with │ │
- │mistreatment in Hohnstein concentration │ │
- │camp. (USA 734) │ III │ 568
- │ │ │
- *787-PS │Memorandum to Hitler from Public │ │
- │Prosecutor of Dresden, 18 June 1935, │ │
- │concerning criminal procedure against │ │
- │Vogel on account of bodily injury while │ │
- │in office. (USA 421) │ III │ 568
- │ │ │
- *788-PS │Letters from Secretary of State to the │ │
- │Minister of Justice, 25 June 1935 and 9 │ │
- │September 1935, concerning criminal │ │
- │procedure against Vogel. (USA 735) │ III │ 571
- │ │ │
- 1388-PS │Law concerning confiscation of Property │ │
- │subversive to People and State, 14 July │ │
- │1933. 1933 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p.│ │
- │479. │ III │ 962
- │ │ │
-*1395-PS │Law to insure the unity of Party and │ │
- │State, 1 December 1933. 1933 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 1016. (GB │ │
- │252) │ III │ 978
- │ │ │
- 1397-PS │Law for the reestablishment of the │ │
- │Professional Civil Service, 7 April │ │
- │1933. 1933 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p.│ │
- │175. │ III │ 981
- │ │ │
- 1398-PS │Law to supplement the Law for the │ │
- │restoration of the Professional Civil │ │
- │Service, 20 July 1933. 1933 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 518. │ III │ 986
- │ │ │
- 1400-PS │Law changing the regulations in regard │ │
- │to public officer, 30 June 1933. 1933 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 433. │ III │ 987
- │ │ │
- 1653-PS │First regulation concerning the │ │
- │reconstruction of the Reich, 2 February │ │
- │1934. 1934 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p.│ │
- │81. │ IV │ 162
- │ │ │
- 1725-PS │Decree enforcing law for securing the │ │
- │unity of Party and State, 29 March 1935.│ │
- │1935 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 502. │ IV │ 224
- │ │ │
-*1893-PS │Extracts from Organization Book of the │ │
- │NSDAP, 1943 edition. (USA 323) │ IV │ 529
- │ │ │
- 2001-PS │Law to Remove the Distress of People and│ │
- │State, 24 March 1933. 1933 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 141. │ IV │ 638
- │ │ │
- 2003-PS │Law concerning the Sovereign Head of the│ │
- │German Reich, 1 August 1934. 1934 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 747. │ IV │ 639
- │ │ │
- 2004-PS │Preliminary law for the coordination of │ │
- │Federal States under the Reich, 31 March│ │
- │1933. 1933 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p.│ │
- │153. │ IV │ 640
- │ │ │
- 2005-PS │Second law integrating the “Laender” │ │
- │with the Reich, 7 April 1933. 1933 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 173. │ IV │ 641
- │ │ │
- 2006-PS │Law for the reconstruction of the Reich,│ │
- │30 January 1934. 1934 Reichsgesetzblatt,│ │
- │Part I, p. 75. │ IV │ 642
- │ │ │
- 2008-PS │German Communal Ordinance, 30 January │ │
- │1935. 1935 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p.│ │
- │49. │ IV │ 643
- │ │ │
- 2012-PS │First regulation for administration of │ │
- │the law for the restoration of │ │
- │professional Civil Service, 11 April │ │
- │1933. 1933 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p.│ │
- │195. │ IV │ 647
- │ │ │
- 2014-PS │Law amending regulations of criminal law│ │
- │and criminal procedure, 24 April 1934. │ │
- │1934 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 341. │ IV │ 648
- │ │ │
-*2018-PS │Fuehrer’s decree establishing a │ │
- │Ministerial Council for Reich Defense, │ │
- │30 August 1939. 1939 Reichsgesetzblatt, │ (GB │
- │Part I, p. 1539. │ 250) │ IV
- │ │ │
- 2049-PS │Second Decree concerning the │ │
- │reconstruction of the Reich, 27 November│ │
- │1934. 1934 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p.│ │
- │1189. │ IV │ 661
- │ │ │
- 2050-PS │The Constitution of the German Reich, 11│ │
- │August 1919. 1919 Reichsgesetzblatt, │ │
- │Part I, p. 1383. │ IV │ 662
- │ │ │
- 2056-PS │Decree concerning the extension of the │ │
- │Jurisdiction of Special Courts, 20 │ │
- │November 1938. 1938 Reichsgesetzblatt, │ │
- │Part I, p. 1632. │ IV │ 698
- │ │ │
- 2061-PS │Oath of Reich Officials and of German │ │
- │Soldiers, 20 August 1934. 1934 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 785. │ IV │ 702
- │ │ │
- 2073-PS │Decree concerning the appointment of a │ │
- │Chief of German Police in the Ministry │ │
- │of the Interior, 17 June 1936. 1936 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 487. │ IV │ 703
- │ │ │
- 2076-PS │Decree of the Government concerning │ │
- │formation of Special Courts, 21 March │ │
- │1933. 1933 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, │ │
- │pp. 136-137. │ IV │ 705
- │ │ │
-*2194-PS │Top secret letter from Ministry for │ │
- │Economy and Labor, Saxony, to Reich │ │
- │Protector in Bohemia and Moravia, │ │
- │enclosing copy of 1938 Secret Defense │ │
- │Law of 4 September 1938. (USA 36) │ IV │ 843
- │ │ │
-*2261-PS │Directive from Blomberg to Supreme │ │
- │Commanders of Army, Navy and Air Forces,│ │
- │24 June 1935; accompanied by copy of │ │
- │Reich Defense Law of 21 May 1935 and │ │
- │copy of Decision of Reich Cabinet of 12 │ │
- │May 1935 on the Council for defense of │ │
- │the Reich. (USA 24) │ IV │ 934
- │ │ │
- 2326-PS │Reich Principles Regarding recruiting │ │
- │appointment and promotion of Reich and │ │
- │Provincial Officials, 14 October 1936. │ │
- │1936 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 893. │ IV │ 1034
- │ │ │
- 2340-PS │German public officials law of 27 │ │
- │January 1937. 1937 Reichsgesetzblatt, │ │
- │Part I, p. 41. │ IV │ 1058
- │ │ │
- 2341-PS │Decree on Education and Training of │ │
- │German officials, 28 February 1939. 1939│ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 371. │ IV │ 1062
- │ │ │
- 2342-PS │Law on People’s Court and on 25th │ │
- │Amendment, to Salary Law of 18 April │ │
- │1936. 1936 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p.│ │
- │369. │ IV │ 1062
- │ │ │
- 2355-PS │Second Law relating to right to vote for│ │
- │Reichstag, 18 March 1938. 1938 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 258. │ IV │ 1098
- │ │ │
- 2378-PS │Extracts from Documents of German │ │
- │Politics, Vol. 4, pp. 207, 337. │ V │ 4
- │ │ │
-*2380-PS │Articles from National Socialist │ │
- │Yearbook, 1935. (USA 396) │ V │ 6
- │ │ │
-*2381-PS │Extracts from The Greater German Diet, │ │
- │1943. (USA 476) │ V │ 7
- │ │ │
- 2382-PS │Law relating to the Reich Election, 8 │ │
- │March 1924. 1924 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part│ │
- │I, pp. 159-162. │ V │ 8
- │ │ │
-*2383-PS │Ordinance for execution of decree of │ │
- │Fuehrer concerning position of the Head │ │
- │of Party Chancellery of 16 January 1942,│ │
- │published in Decrees, Regulations, │ │
- │Announcements. (USA 410) │ V │ 9
- │ │ │
- 2384-PS │The Delegates of the German People, │ │
- │published in Movement, State and People │ │
- │in their Organizations, 1935, p. 161. │ V │ 23
- │ │ │
- 2402-PS │Guide for Party Courts, 17 February │ │
- │1934. │ V │ 70
- │ │ │
-*2426-PS │Extracts from Speeches, by Hess. (GB │ │
- │253) │ V │ 90
- │ │ │
- 2481-PS │Extracts from Four Years of the Third │ │
- │Reich, by Frick, published in Magazine │ │
- │of the Academy for German Law, 1937. │ V │ 231
- │ │ │
- 2482-PS │Extract from German Justice, a legal │ │
- │periodical, 10th Year, Edition A, No. │ │
- │42, 16 October 1942. │ V │ 233
- │ │ │
- 2639-PS │Ordinances of the Deputy of the Fuehrer,│ │
- │published in Munich 1937. │ V │ 345
- │ │ │
- 2647-PS │Law relating to the abolition of the │ │
- │Reichsrat, 14 February 1934. 1934 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 89. │ V │ 358
- │ │ │
- 2755-PS │Resolution of the Greater German │ │
- │Reichstag, 26 April 1942. 1942 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 247. │ V │ 393
- │ │ │
- 2787-PS │Excerpt from Order of the Deputy of the │ │
- │Fuehrer. │ V │ 420
- │ │ │
- 2867-PS │Third Decree relating to Implementation │ │
- │of Law for restoration of Professional │ │
- │Civil Service, 6 May 1933. 1933 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 245. │ V │ 527
- │ │ │
- 2880-PS │Extracts from Handbook for │ │
- │Administrative Officials, 1942. │ V │ 547
- │ │ │
- 2881-PS │Hitler’s speech of 12 April 1922, quoted│ │
- │in Adolf Hitler’s Speeches, published by│ │
- │Dr. Ernst Boepple, Munich, 1934, pp. │ │
- │20-21, 72. │ V │ 548
- │ │ │
- 2882-PS │The Party Program of 1922, by Rosenberg,│ │
- │25th edition, 1942, p. 60. │ V │ 548
- │ │ │
- 2883-PS │Extracts from Mein Kampf by Adolf │ │
- │Hitler, 41st edition, 1933. │ V │ 549
- │ │ │
-*2955-PS │Affidavit of Magnus Heimannsberg, 14 │ │
- │November 1945, referring to SA and other│ │
- │Nazi groups posted at polling places. │ │
- │(USA 755) │ V │ 659
- │ │ │
- 2957-PS │Extract from German Civil Servants │ │
- │Calendar, 1940, p. 111. │ V │ 663
- │ │ │
-*2967-PS │Affidavit of Dr. Hans Anschuetz, 17 │ │
- │November 1945. (USA 756) │ V │ 673
- │ │ │
-*3054-PS │“The Nazi Plan”, script of a motion │ │
- │picture composed of captured German │ │
- │film. (USA 167) │ V │ 801
- │ │ │
- D-229 │Extract from pamphlet “Judges Letters” │ │
- │concerning judgment of Lower Court, 24 │ │
- │April 1942, on concealment of Jewish │ │
- │identification. │ VI │ 1091
- │ │ │
-*R-142 │Memoranda to Koblenz District │ │
- │Headquarters, 22 April 1938 and 7 May │ │
- │1938, relating to the plebiscite of 10 │ │
- │April 1938. (USA 481) │ VIII │ 243
- │ │ │
-Statement X │The Relationship of Party and State, As │ │
- │It Existed in Reality, by Wilhelm │ │
- │Stuckhart, Nurnberg, 1 December 1945. │ VIII │ 736
- │ │ │
-*Chart No. 1 │National Socialist German Workers’ │ │
- │Party. (2903-PS; USA 2) │ VIII │ 770
- │ │ │
-*Chart No. 18 │Organization of the Reich Government. │ End of Volume
- │(2905-PS; USA 3) │ VIII
-
-
- 4. PURGE OF POLITICAL OPPONENTS AND TERRORIZATION
-
-A. _The Nazi conspirators ruthlessly purged their political opponents._
-Soon after the Nazi conspirators had acquired political control, the
-defendant Goering, 3 March 1933, stated:
-
- “Fellow Germans, my measures will not be crippled by any
- judicial thinking. My measures will not be crippled by any
- bureaucracy. Here, I don’t have to give justice, my mission is
- only to destroy and exterminate, nothing more! This struggle,
- fellow Germans, will be a struggle against chaos and such a
- struggle, I shall not conduct with the power of any police. A
- bourgeoise state might have done that. Certainly, I shall use
- the power of the State and the police to the utmost, my dear
- Communists! So you won’t draw any false conclusions; but the
- struggle to the death, in which my fist will grasp your necks, I
- shall lead with those down there—those are the Brown Shirts.”
- (_1856-PS_)
-
-In 1934 Heinrich Himmler, the Deputy Leader of the Prussian Secret State
-Police, stated:
-
- “We are confronted with a very pressing duty—both the open and
- secret enemies of the Fuehrer and of the National Socialist
- movement and of our National Revolution must be discovered,
- combatted and exterminated. In this duty we are agreed to spare
- neither our own blood nor the blood of anyone else when it is
- required by our country.” (_2543-PS_)
-
-Raymond H. Geist, former American Counsel and First Secretary of the
-Embassy in Berlin, Germany 1929-1939, has stated:
-
- “Immediately in 1933, the concentration camps were established
- and put under charge of the Gestapo. Only ‘political’ prisoners
- were held in concentration camps * * *.
-
- “The first wave of terroristic acts began in March 6-13, 1933,
- accompanied by unusual mob violence. When the Nazi Party won the
- elections in March 1933—on the morning of the 6th—the
- accumulated passion blew off in wholesale attacks on the
- Communists, Jews, and others suspected of being either. Mobs of
- SA men roamed the streets, beating up, looting, and even killing
- persons * * *.
-
- “For Germans taken into custody by the Gestapo * * * there was a
- regular pattern of brutality and terror. Victims numbered in the
- hundreds of thousands all over Germany.” (_1759-PS_)
-
-The Sturmabteilung (SA) had plans for the murder of former Prime
-Minister Bruening, but his life was spared through the negotiations and
-activities of the defendant Hess and Dr. Haushofer, President of the
-Geopolitic Institute of Munich, because they feared his death might
-result in serious repercussions abroad. (_1669-PS_)
-
-From March until October 1933 the Nazi conspirators arrested, mistreated
-and killed numerous politicians, Reichstag members, authors, physicians,
-and lawyers. Among the persons killed were the Social Democrat Stolling;
-Ernst Heilman, Social Democrat and member of the Prussian Parliament;
-Otto Eggerstadt, the former Police President of Altona; and various
-other persons. The people killed by the Nazis belonged to various
-political parties and religious faiths, such as Democrats, Catholics,
-Communists, Jews, and pacifists. The killings were usually camouflaged
-by such utterances as “killed in attempting to escape” or “resisting
-arrest.” It is estimated that during this first wave of terror conducted
-by the Nazi conspirators, between 500 and 700 persons died. (_2544-PS_;
-see also _2460-PS_ and _2472-PS_.)
-
-On 30 June, and 1, 2 July 1934, the Nazi conspirators proceeded to
-destroy opposition within their own ranks by wholesale murder
-(_2545-PS_). In making a formal report of these murders to the Reichstag
-on 13 July 1934, Hitler stated:
-
- “The punishment for these crimes was hard and severe. There were
- shot 19 higher SA leaders, 31 SA leaders and SA members and also
- 3 SS leaders as participants in the plot. Also 13 SA leaders and
- civilians who tried to resist arrest and were killed in the
- attempt. 3 others committed suicide. 5 members of the Party who
- were not members of the SA were shot because of their
- participation. Finally, 3 SS members were at the same time
- exterminated because they had maltreated concentration camp
- inmates.” (_2572-PS_)
-
-In this same speech, Hitler proudly boasted that he gave the order to
-shoot the principal traitors and that he had prosecuted thousands of his
-former enemies on account of their corruption. He justified this action
-by saying,
-
- “In this hour I was responsible for the fate of the German
- people.” (_Voelkischer Beobachter (People’s Observer), Berlin
- ed., issue 195, 14 July 1934, Beiblatt, p. 2._)
-
-The conspirators took advantage of this occasion to eliminate many
-opponents indiscriminately.
-
-In discussing the Roehm purge, the defendant Frick stated:
-
- “On account of this order, many, many people were arrested * * *
- something like a hundred, even more, were even killed who were
- accused of high treason. All of this was done without resort to
- legal proceedings. They were just killed on the spot. Many
- people were killed—I don’t know how many—who actually did not
- have anything to do with the putsch. People who just weren’t
- liked very well, as, for instance, SCHLEICHER, the former Reich
- Chancellor, were killed. SCHLEICHER’s wife was also killed as
- was GREGOR STRASSER, who had been the Reich organization leader
- and second man in the Party after Hitler. STRASSER, at the time
- he was murdered, was not active in political affairs anymore.
- However, he had separated himself from the Fuehrer in November
- or December of 1932.” (_2950-PS_)
-
-Such a large scale of extermination could not be carried out without
-errors. Shortly after the event, the Nazi conspirators arranged for a
-Government pension to be paid to one of its citizens, because “by
-mistake” the political police had murdered her husband, Willi Schmidt,
-who had never engaged in any kind of political activity. It was believed
-at the time that the man intended was Willi Schmidt, an SA leader in
-Munich, who was later shot on the same day. (_L-135_)
-
-The Nazi conspirators formally endorsed their murderous purge within
-their own ranks by causing the Reichstag to pass a law declaring that
-all measures taken in carrying out the purge on 30 June and 1-2 July
-1934 were legal as a measure of State necessity (_2057-PS_). Referring
-to this act of approval on the part of the Nazi-controlled Reichstag,
-Goering stated:
-
- “The action of the Government in the days of the Roehm revolt
- was the highest realization of the legal consciousness of the
- people. Later the action which itself was justified, now has
- been made legal by the passage of a law.” (_2496-PS_)
-
-Furthermore, the leader of the Nazi conspiracy on 25 July 1934 issued a
-decree which stated that because of the meritorious service of the SS,
-especially in connection with the events of 30 June 1934, the
-organization was elevated to the standing of an independent organization
-within the NSDAP. (_1857-PS_)
-
-B. _The Nazi conspirators used the legislative and judicial powers of
-the German Reich to terrorize all political opponents._
-
-(1) _They created a great number of new political crimes._ The decree of
-28 February 1933 punished the inciting of disobedience to orders given
-out by State or Reich Government authorities or the provocation of acts
-“contrary to public welfare.” (_1390-PS_) A month later, in order to
-give themselves legal justification for murdering by judicial process
-their political enemies, the Nazi conspirators passed a law making the
-provisions of the above decree applicable retroactively to acts
-committed during the period from 31 January to 28 February 1933.
-(_2554-PS_)
-
-Referring to these laws, the defendant Goering stated:
-
- “Whoever in the future raises a hand against a representative of
- the National Socialist movement or of the State, must know that
- he will lose his life in a very short while. Furthermore, it
- will be entirely sufficient, if he is proven to have intended
- the act, or, if the act results not in a death, but only in an
- injury.” (_2494-PS_)
-
-On 21 March 1933 a decree was issued which provided for penitentiary
-imprisonment up to two years for possessing a uniform of an organization
-supporting the government of the Nationalist movement without being
-entitled thereto, or circulating a statement which was untrue or greatly
-exaggerated, or which was apt to seriously harm the welfare of the Reich
-or the reputation of the Government, or of the Party or organizations
-supporting the Government. (_1652-PS_)
-
-The Nazi conspirators caused a law to be enacted punishing whoever
-undertook to maintain or form a political party other than the NSDAP.
-(_1388-PS_)
-
-The Nazi conspirators enacted a law which made it a crime deliberately
-to make false or grave statements calculated to injure the welfare or
-the prestige of the Reich, or to circulate a statement manifesting a
-malicious or low-minded attitude toward leading personalities of the
-State or the Party. The law also applied to statements of this kind
-which were not made in public, provided the offender counted on his
-statements being eventually circulated in public. (_1393-PS_)
-
-In commenting on the above law, one of the leading Nazi conspirators,
-Martin Bormann, stated:
-
- “Although it must absolutely be prevented that martyrs are
- created, one must take merciless action against such people, in
- whose attacks a bad character or attitude, decisively inimical
- to the State, can be recognized. For this purpose, I request the
- Gauleiters to report here briefly all crimes, which must
- absolutely be punished, and which have become known to the
- districts, regardless of the report to be made to the district
- attorney’s office * * *.
-
- “The district and local leaderships are to be notified
- accordingly. However, if it should be decided from wherein this
- or that punishable case, that the miscreant is to be given a
- simple or strong reprimand by the court, I shall give the
- directive for the future, that the Districts are informed of the
- names of the persons.
-
- “I therefore request, to see to it, that these compatriots be
- especially watched by the Ortsgruppen, and that it be attempted,
- to influence them in the National Socialist sense. Otherwise, it
- will be necessary to place the activities of such persons, who
- do not want to be taught, under exact control. In these cases,
- it will eventually be necessary, to notify the Secret State
- Police.” (_2639-PS_)
-
-On 24 April 1934 the Nazi conspirators passed a law imposing the death
-penalty for “any treasonable act.” Included in the law was a declaration
-to the effect that the creating or organizing of a political party, or
-continuing of an existing one was a treasonable act. (_2548-PS_)
-
-(2) _By their interpretation and changes of the penal law, the Nazi
-conspirators enlarged their terroristic methods._ After the enactment of
-these new political crimes, the Nazi conspirators introduced into the
-penal law the theory of punishment by analogy. This enabled them legally
-to punish any act injurious to their political interests even if no
-existing statute forbade it. The culpability of the act and the
-punishment was determined by the law most closely relating to or
-covering the act which was in force at the time. (_1962-PS_)
-
-In interpreting this law, Dr. Guertner, Reich Minister of Justice,
-stated:
-
- “National Socialism substitutes for the idea of formal wrong,
- the idea of factual wrong. * * * Even without the threat of
- punishment, every violation of the goals toward which the
- community is striving is a wrong per se. As a result, the law
- ceases to be an exclusive source for the determination of right
- or wrong.” (_2549-PS_)
-
-Referring to the penal code of Nazi Germany, the defendant Frank stated
-in 1935:
-
- “The National Socialist State is a totalitarian State, it makes
- no concessions to criminals, it does not negotiate with them; it
- stamps them out.” (_2552-PS_)
-
-The Nazi conspirators also revised the criminal law so that the State
-could, within one year after a decree in a criminal case had become
-final, apply for a new trial, and the application would be decided by
-members of a Special Penal Chamber appointed by Hitler personally. Thus,
-if a defendant should be acquitted in a lower court, the Nazi
-conspirators could rectify the situation by another trial. (_2550-PS_)
-
-In direct contrast to the severity of the criminal law as it affected
-the general population of Germany, the Nazi conspirators adopted and
-endorsed a large body of unwritten laws exempting the police from
-criminal liability for illegal acts done under higher authority. This
-principle was described by Dr. Werner Best, outstanding Nazi lawyer, in
-the following terms:
-
- “The police never act in a lawless or illegal manner as long as
- they act according to the rules laid down by their superiors up
- to the highest governing body. According to its nature, the
- police must only deal with what the Government wants to know is
- being dealt with. What the Government wants to know is being
- dealt with by the police is the essence of the police law and is
- that which guides and restricts the actions of the police. As
- long as the police carry out the will of the Government, it is
- acting legally.” (_1852-PS_)
-
-C. _The Nazi conspirators created a vast system of espionage into the
-daily lives of all parts of the population._
-
-(1) _They destroyed the privacy of postal, telegraphic, and telephonic
-communications._ They enacted a law in February of 1933 providing that
-violations of privacy of postal, telegraphic, and telephonic
-communications were permissible beyond legal limitations. (_1390-PS_)
-
-Dr. Hans Anschuetz, the present District Court Director
-(_Landgerichtsdirektor_) at Heidelberg, Germany, recently stated:
-
- “Subsequently, the system of spying upon and supervising the
- political opinions of each citizen which permeated the entire
- people and private life of Germany, was, of course, also
- extended to judges.” (_2967-PS_)
-
-(2) _They used the Secret State Police (Gestapo) and the Security
-Service (SD) for the purpose of maintaining close surveillance over the
-daily activities of all people in Germany._ The Gestapo had as its
-primary preventive activity the thorough observation of all enemies of
-the State, in the territory of the Reich. (_1956-PS_)
-
-The SD was an intelligence organization which operated out of various
-regional offices. It consisted of many hundreds of professional SD
-members who were assisted by thousands of honorary members and
-informers. These people were placed in all fields of business,
-education, State and Party administration, and frequently performed
-their duties secretly in their own organization. This information
-service reported on the activities of the people. (_2614-PS_)
-
-D. _Without judicial process, the Nazi conspirators imprisoned, held in
-protective custody and sent to concentration camps opponents and
-suspected opponents._
-
-_They authorized the Gestapo to arrest and detain without recourse to
-any legal proceeding._ Officially, this power was described as follows:
-
- “The Secret State Police takes the necessary police preventive
- measures against the enemies of the State on the basis of the
- results of the observation. The most effective preventive
- measure is without doubt the withdrawal of freedom which is
- covered in the form of protective custody. * * * While
- protective arrests of short duration are carried out in police
- and court prisons, the concentration camps under the Secret
- State Police admit those taken into protective custody who have
- to be withdrawn from public life for a longer time.” (_1956-PS_)
-
-The Nazi conspirators issued their own orders for the taking of people
-into protective custody and these orders set forth no further details
-concerning the reasons therefor, except a statement such as “Suspicion
-of activities inimical toward the State.” (_2499-PS_)
-
-The defendant Frank stated:
-
- “To the world we are blamed again and again because of the
- concentration camps. We are asked, ‘Why do you arrest without a
- warrant of arrest?’ I say, put yourselves into the position of
- our nation. Don’t forget that the very great and still untouched
- world of Bolshevism cannot forget that we have made final
- victory for them impossible in Europe, right here on German
- soil.” (_2533-PS_)
-
-The defendant Goering said in 1934:
-
- “Against the enemies of the State, we must proceed ruthlessly.
- It cannot be forgotten that at the moment of our rise to power,
- according to the official election figures of March 1933, six
- million people still confess their sympathy for Communism and
- eight million for Marxism. * * * _Therefore, the concentration
- camps have been created, where we have first confined thousands
- of Communists and Social Democrat functionaries._ * * *”
- (_2344-PS_)
-
-U. S. Ambassador George S. Messersmith, former Counsel General in
-Berlin, Germany, 1930-34, and Raymond H. Geist, former American Counsel
-and First Secretary of the Embassy in Berlin, Germany, 1929-1939, have
-recently stated:
-
- “Independent of individual criminal acts committed by high
- functionaries of the German government or the Nazi Party, such
- as the murders ordered by Hitler, Himmler and Goering, all high
- functionaries of the German government and of the Nazi Party * *
- * are guilty in the highest degree of complicity in and
- furtherance of the cardinal crimes of oppression against the
- German people, persecution and destruction of the Jews and all
- of their political opponents.” (_2386-PS_)
-
-Commenting further on the Nazi conspirators’ use of concentration camps
-to destroy political opposition, Raymond H. Geist stated:
-
- “The German people were well acquainted with the goings on in
- concentration camps and it was well known that the fate of
- anyone too actively opposed to any part of the Nazi program was
- liable to be one of great suffering. Indeed, before the Hitler
- regime was many months old, almost every family in Germany had
- had first-hand accounts of the brutalities inflicted in the
- concentration camps from someone either in the relationship or
- in the circle of friends who had served a sentence there;
- consequently the fear of such camps was a very effective brake
- on any possible opposition.” (_1759-PS_)
-
-The Nazi conspirators confined, under the guise of “protective custody”
-Reichstag members, Social Democrats, Communists, and other opponents or
-suspected opponents. (_2544-PS_; _L-73_; _L-83_; _1430-PS_.)
-
-E. _The Nazi conspirators created and utilized special agencies for
-carrying out their system of terror._
-
-(See Chapter XV, Sections 5 and 6, on the Gestapo, SS, and SD)
-
-F. _The Nazi conspirators permitted organizations and individuals to
-carry out this system of terror without restraint of law._
-
-(1) _Acts of the Gestapo were not subject to review by the courts._ In
-1935 the Prussian Supreme Court of Administration held that the orders
-of the Gestapo were not subject to judicial review; and that the accused
-person could appeal only to the next higher authority within the State
-Police itself. (_2347-PS_)
-
-In 1936 a law was passed concerning The Gestapo in Prussia which
-provided that orders in matters of the Gestapo were not subject to
-review of the Administrative Courts. (_2107-PS_)
-
-On the same subject, the following article appeared in the official
-German Lawyer’s Journal, 1935.
-
- “Once again the court had to decide on the question of whether
- political measures could be subjected to the review of the
- ordinary courts. * * * The case in question concerned the
- official performance of his duty by an official of the NSDAP. *
- * * The principle of the importance and the mission of the Party
- and its ‘Sovereign Functionaires’ cannot be overlooked.
- Therefore, the plaintiff should have been denied the right to be
- in court.” (_2491-PS_)
-
-(2) _Where no definite law protected terroristic acts of Nazi
-conspirators and their accomplices, proceedings against them were in the
-first instance suppressed or thereafter their acts were pardoned._ In
-1935, proceedings against an employee of the Gestapo accused of
-torturing, beating, and killing of inmates of a concentration camp were
-suppressed (_787-PS_; _788-PS_). In June 1935 twenty-three SA members
-and policemen convicted of the beating and murder of inmates of the
-Hohnstein concentration camp were pardoned (_786-PS_). The prosecutor
-was forced to resign from the SA. (_784-PS_)
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO PURGE OF POLITICAL
- OPPONENTS AND TERRORIZATION
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6, especially 6 (a).│ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Section IV (D) 3 │ │
- │ (b). │ I │ 19
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document as referred to during the trial│ │
- │but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
- *784-PS │Letters from Minister of Justice to Hess│ │
- │and SA Chief of Staff, 5 June 1935, │ │
- │concerning penal proceedings against │ │
- │merchant and SA leader and 22 companions│ │
- │because of inflicting bodily injury on │ │
- │duty. (USA 732) │ III │ 559
- │ │ │
- *786-PS │Minister of Justice memorandum, 29 │ │
- │November 1935, concerning pardon of │ │
- │those sentenced in connection with │ │
- │mistreatment in Hohnstein concentration │ │
- │camp. (USA 734) │ III │ 568
- │ │ │
- *787-PS │Memorandum to Hitler from Public │ │
- │Prosecutor of Dresden, 18 June 1935, │ │
- │concerning criminal procedure against │ │
- │Vogel on account of bodily injury while │ │
- │in office. (USA 421) │ III │ 568
- │ │ │
- *788-PS │Letters from Secretary of State to the │ │
- │Minister of Justice, 25 June 1935 and 9 │ │
- │September 1935, concerning criminal │ │
- │procedure against Vogel. (USA 735) │ III │ 571
- │ │ │
- 1388-PS │Law concerning confiscation of Property │ │
- │subversive to People and State, 14 July │ │
- │1933. 1933 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p.│ │
- │479. │ III │ 962
- │ │ │
- 1390-PS │Decree of the Reich President for the │ │
- │Protection of the People and State, 28 │ │
- │February 1933. 1933 Reichsgesetzblatt, │ │
- │Part I, p. 83. │ III │ 968
- │ │ │
- 1393-PS │Law on treacherous attacks against State│ │
- │and Party, and for the Protection of │ │
- │Party Uniforms, 20 December 1934. 1934 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 1269. │ III │ 973
- │ │ │
- 1430-PS │Compilation of Leading Men of the System│ │
- │Era, June 1939. │ IV │ 15
- │ │ │
- 1652-PS │Decree of the Reich President for │ │
- │protection against treacherous attacks │ │
- │on the government of the Nationalist │ │
- │movement, 21 March 1933. 1933 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 135. │ IV │ 160
- │ │ │
-*1669-PS │Correspondence between Dr. Haushofer and│ │
- │Hess, 24 and 28 August 1933. (USA 741) │ IV │ 184
- │ │ │
-*1759-PS │Affidavit of Raymond H. Geist. (USA 420)│ IV │ 288
- │ │ │
-*1852-PS │“Law” from The German Police, 1941, by │ │
- │Dr. Werner Best. (USA 449). (See Chart │ │
- │No. 16) │ IV │ 490
- │ │ │
-*1856-PS │Extract from book entitled “Hermann │ │
- │Goering—Speeches and Essays”, 3rd │ │
- │edition 1939, p. 27. (USA 437) │ IV │ 496
- │ │ │
-*1857-PS │Announcement of creation of SS as │ │
- │independent formation of NSDAP. │ │
- │Voelkischer Beobachter, 26 July 1934, p.│ │
- │1. (USA 412) │ IV │ 496
- │ │ │
- 1956-PS │Meaning and Tasks of the Secret State │ │
- │Police, published in The Archives, │ │
- │January 1936, Vol. 22-24, p. 1342. │ IV │ 598
- │ │ │
- 1962-PS │Law to change the Penal Code of 28 June │ │
- │1935. 1935 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p.│ │
- │839. │ IV │ 600
- │ │ │
- 2057-PS │Law relating to National Emergency │ │
- │Defense Measures of 3 July 1934. 1934 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 529. │ IV │ 699
- │ │ │
- 2107-PS │Law on Secret State Police of 10 │ │
- │February 1936. 1936 Preussiche │ │
- │Gesetzsammlung, pp. 21-22. │ IV │ 732
- │ │ │
- 2344-PS │Reconstruction of a Nation by Goering, │ │
- │1934, p. 89. │ IV │ 1065
- │ │ │
- 2347-PS │Court decisions from 1935 │ │
- │Reichsverwaltungsblatt, Vol. 56, pp. │ │
- │577-578, 20 July 1935. │ IV │ 1066
- │ │ │
-*2386-PS │Joint affidavit of George S. Messersmith│ │
- │and Raymond H. Geist, 29 August 1945. │ │
- │(USA 750) │ V │ 39
- │ │ │
-*2460-PS │Affidavit of Rudolf Diels. (USA 751) │ V │ 205
- │ │ │
-*2472-PS │Affidavit of Rudolf Diels, 31 October │ │
- │1945. (USA 752) │ V │ 224
- │ │ │
- 2491-PS │Extract from Legal Review, published │ │
- │Lawyers’ Journal, 1935. │ V │ 235
- │ │ │
- 2494-PS │Prime Minister Goering’s Press │ │
- │Conference, published in Voelkischer │ │
- │Beobachter, Berlin edition, 23-24 July │ │
- │1933, p. 1. │ V │ 236
- │ │ │
- 2496-PS │Extract from Goering’s address to Public│ │
- │Prosecutors of Prussia on 12 July 1934 │ │
- │from the Archive, 1934, Vols. IV-VI, p. │ │
- │495. │ V │ 236
- │ │ │
-*2499-PS │Original Protective Custody Order served│ │
- │on Dr. R. Kempner, 15 March 1935. (USA │ │
- │232) │ V │ 236
- │ │ │
- 2533-PS │Extract from article “Legislation and │ │
- │Judiciary in the Third Reich”, from │ │
- │Journal of the Academy for German Law, │ │
- │1936, pp. 141-142. │ V │ 277
- │ │ │
- 2543-PS │Extract from The Mission of the SS, │ │
- │published in The National Socialist │ │
- │Magazine, Issue 46, January 1934. │ V │ 288
- │ │ │
-*2544-PS │Affidavit of Rudolf Diels, former │ │
- │Superior Government Counsellor of the │ │
- │Police Division of the Prussian Ministry│ │
- │of the Interior. (USA 753) │ V │ 288
- │ │ │
- 2545-PS │Extract from Hitler’s cleaning up act in│ │
- │Reich, published in Voelkischer │ │
- │Beobachter, Berlin edition, No. 182-183,│ │
- │1-2 July 1934, p. 1. │ V │ 290
- │ │ │
- 2548-PS │Law about changing rules of Criminal Law│ │
- │and Criminal Procedure of 24 April 1934.│ │
- │1934 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 34. │ V │ 291
- │ │ │
- 2549-PS │Extract from “Germany’s Road to Freedom”│ │
- │as published in Documents of German │ │
- │Politics, Vol. 3. │ V │ 292
- │ │ │
- 2550-PS │Law on modification of rules of general │ │
- │criminal procedure, 16 September 1939. │ │
- │1939 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 1841.│ V │ 293
- │ │ │
- 2552-PS │Excerpt concerning criminals, published │ │
- │in Journal of the Academy for German │ │
- │Law. No. 3. March 1935. │ V │ 293
- │ │ │
- 2554-PS │Law concerning adjudication and │ │
- │execution of the death penalties of 29 │ │
- │March 1933. 1933 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part│ │
- │I, p. 151. │ V │ 294
- │ │ │
- 2572-PS │Hitler’s speech to the Reichstag on 13 │ │
- │July 1934, printed in The Third Reich, │ │
- │Vol. II, p. 247. │ V │ 302
- │ │ │
-*2614-PS │Affidavit of Dr. Wilhelm Hoettl, 5 │ │
- │November 1945. (USA 918) │ V │ 337
- │ │ │
- 2639-PS │Ordinances of the Deputy of the Fuehrer,│ │
- │published in Munich 1937. │ V │ 345
- │ │ │
-*2950-PS │Affidavit of Frick, 19 November 1945. │ │
- │(USA 448) │ V │ 654
- │ │ │
-*2967-PS │Affidavit of Dr. Hans Anschuetz, 17 │ │
- │November 1945. (USA 756) │ V │ 673
- │ │ │
-*L-73 │Affidavit of Bruno Bettelheim, 10 July │ │
- │1945. (USA 746) │ VII │ 818
- │ │ │
-*L-83 │Affidavit of Gerhart H. Seger, 21 July │ │
- │1945. (USA 234) │ VII │ 859
- │ │ │
-*L-135 │Affidavit of Kate Eva Hoerlin, 9 July │ │
- │1945. (USA 747) │ VII │ 883
-
-
- 5. DESTRUCTION OF THE FREE TRADE UNIONS AND
- ACQUISITION OF CONTROL OVER THE
- PRODUCTIVE LABOR CAPACITY
-
-A. _They destroyed the independent organization of German labor._
-
-(1) _Before the Nazis took control, organized labor held a well
-established and influential position in Germany._ Most of the trade
-unions of Germany were joined together in two large congresses or
-federations, the Free Trade Unions (_Freie Gewerkschaften_) and
-Christian Trade Unions (_Christlichen Gewerkschaften_). Unions outside
-these two large groupings contained only 15 per cent of the total union
-membership. The Free Trade Unions were a congress of two federations of
-affiliated unions: (1) the General German Trade Union Federation
-(_Allgemeinen Deutschen Gewerkschaftsbund_, or the “ADGB”) with 28
-affiliated unions of industrial workers; (2) the General Independent
-Employees Federation (_Allgemeinen Freien Angestelltenbund_, or the
-“AFA”) with 13 affiliated unions of white collar workers. (_392-PS_)
-
-The membership of the Free Trade Unions, the affiliated organizations of
-the Christian Trade Unions, and all other unions at the end of 1931 (the
-last year for which the official government yearbook gives statistics)
-was as follows (_2411-PS_):
-
- Union Group │ Number of │ Percentage of
- │ members │ total
- │ │
- Free Trade Unions │ 4,569,876│ 65.9
- Christian Trade Unions │ 1,283,272│ 18.5
- Others Unions │ 1,081,371│ 15.6
- │ ————│ ——
-       Total │ 6,934,519│ 100.0
-
-Under the Weimar Constitution, workers were “called upon to take part on
-equal terms” with employers in regulating conditions of employment. “It
-was provided that organizations on both sides and agreements between
-them shall be recognized.” Factory Representative Councils (otherwise
-known as Workmens or Factory Works Councils) had the right, in
-conjunction with employers’ representatives, to take an official part in
-the initiation and administration of social and economic legislation.
-(_2050-PS_)
-
-(2) _The Nazi conspirators conceived that the free trade unions were
-incompatible with their objectives._
-
-Hitler stated in _Mein Kampf_:
-
- “It (the trade union) created the economic weapon which the
- international world Jew uses for the ruination of the economic
- basis of free, independent states, for the annihilation of their
- national industry and of their national commerce, and thereby
- for the enslavement of free people in the service of the
- above-the-state-standing, world finance Jewry (_ueberstaatlichen
- Weltfinanz-Judentums_).” (_404-PS_)
-
-In announcing to Germany the seizure of the Free Trade Unions, Dr.
-Robert Ley, speaking as chairman of the Nazi Committee for the
-Protection of German Labor, stated:
-
- “You may say, what else do you want, you have the absolute
- power, but we do not have the whole people, we do not have you
- workers 100 percent, and it is you whom we want; we will not let
- you be until you stand with us in complete, genuine
- acknowledgement.” (_614-PS_; see also _2224-PS_ and _2283-PS_.)
-
-(3) _Soon after coming to power the Nazi conspirators took drastic
-action to convert the Factory Representative Councils into
-Nazi-controlled organizations._ The Nazi conspirators eliminated the
-independence of the Factory Representative Councils by giving the
-Governors of the Laender authority to cancel the membership of labor
-representatives in the councils; by abrogating the right of the councils
-to oppose the dismissal of a worker when he was “suspected of an
-unfriendly attitude toward the state” (_1770-PS_); and finally by
-limiting membership in all Factory Representative Councils to Nazis
-(_2336-PS_). (After 7 April 1933, the Governors of the Laender were
-appointed by the Reich President “upon the proposal of the Reich
-Chancellor,” Hitler, _2005-PS_).
-
-(4) _Soon after coming to power the Nazi conspirators proceeded to
-destroy the independent unions._ In mid-April 1933, Hitler directed Dr.
-Robert Ley, then staff director of the PO (Political Organization) of
-the NSDAP, to take over the trade unions. (_2283-PS_)
-
-Ley issued an NSDAP circular directive on 21 April 1933 detailing a
-“coordination action” (_Gleichschaltunsaktion_) to be taken on 2 May
-1933 against the General German Trade Union Federation (ADGB) and the
-General Independent Employees Federation (AFA), the so-called “Free
-Trade Unions” (_392-PS_). This directive created a special “Action
-Committee” to direct the entire action and declared that the supporters
-of the action were to be drawn from the National Socialist Factory Cells
-Organization or NSBO (_Nationalsozialistiche
-Betriebszellen-Organisation_), the NSDAP political leaders (_Politische
-Leiter_) in the factories; it named NSDAP commissars for the
-administration of the larger ADGB unions to be seized in the action; it
-made the Gauleaders (_Gauleiter_) of the NSDAP responsible for the
-disciplined execution of the action in their respective areas and
-authorized them to nominate additional commissars to administer the
-unions subjected to the action. The directive ordered that SA and SS
-were to be used in occupying union offices and the Bank of Workers,
-Employees and Officials, Inc., and for taking into protective custody
-the higher union leaders.
-
-The order of seizure was carried out as planned and ordered. On 2 May
-the official NSDAP press service reported that the NSBO had “eliminated
-the old leadership” of Free Trade Unions and taken over their
-leadership. (_2224-PS_)
-
-On 3 May 1933 the NSDAP press service announced that the Central League
-of Christian Trade Unions (_Gesamtverband der Christlichen
-Gewerkschaften_) and several smaller unions “have unconditionally
-subordinated themselves to the leadership of Adolf Hitler” (_2225-PS_).
-The next day the NSDAP press stated that the German Nationalist Clerks
-League (DHV) had also “recognized the leadership of the NSDAP in German
-trade union affairs * * * after a detailed conversation” between Dr. Ley
-and the leader of the DHV (_2226-PS_). In late June 1933, as a final
-measure against the Christian Trade Unions, Ley directed that all their
-offices were to be occupied by National Socialists. (_392-PS_)
-
-The duress practiced by the Nazi conspirators in their assumption of
-absolute control over the unions is shown by a proclamation of Muchow,
-leader of the organizational office of the German Labor Front, in late
-June 1933. By this Party proclamation, all associations of workers not
-yet “concentrated” in the German Labor Front had to report within eight
-days. Thereafter they were to be notified of the branch of the German
-Labor Front which “they will have to join”. (_2228-PS_)
-
-(5) _The Nazi Conspirators eliminated the right of collective bargaining
-generally._ During the same months in which the unions were abolished, a
-decree eliminated collective bargaining on conditions of employment and
-substituted regulation by “trustees of labor” (_Treuhaender der Arbeit_)
-appointed by Hitler. (_405-PS_)
-
-(6) _The Nazi conspirators confiscated all union funds and property._
-The NSDAP circular ordering the seizure of the Free Trade Unions on 2
-May 1933 directed that the SA and SS were to be used to occupy the
-branches and paying offices of the Bank for Workers, Employees and
-Officials and appointed a Nazi commissar, Mueller, for the bank’s
-subsequent direction. The stock of this bank was held entirely by the
-General German Trade Union Association and its affiliated member unions.
-The NSDAP circular also directed that all union funds were to be blocked
-until re-opened under the authority and control of NSDAP-appointed
-commissars (_392-PS_; _2895-PS_). The Fuehrer’s basic order on the
-German Labor Front of the NSDAP in October 1934 declared that all the
-property of the trade unions and their dependent organizations
-constituted (_bildet_) property of the German Labor Front (_2271-PS_).
-Referring to the seizure of the property of the unions in a speech at
-the 1937 Party Congress, Ley mockingly declared that he would have to be
-convicted if the former trade union leaders were ever to demand the
-return of their property. (_1678-PS_)
-
-(7) _The Nazi conspirators persecuted union leaders._ The NSDAP order on
-the seizure of the “Free Trade Unions” directed that the chairmen of the
-unions were to be taken into “protective custody”. Lesser leaders could
-be arrested with the permission of the appropriate Gau leader of the
-NSDAP (_392-PS_). In late June 1933 the German Labor Front published a
-“List of Outlaws” who were to be denied employment in the factories. The
-List named union leaders who had been active in combatting National
-Socialism and who allegedly continued to carry on their resistance
-secretly. (_2336-PS_)
-
-The Nazi conspirators subjected union leaders to maltreatment ranging
-from assaults to murder. Among the offenses committed against union
-leaders are the following: assault and battery; degrading work and work
-beyond their physical capacity; incarceration in concentration camps;
-solitary confinement; denial of adequate food; surveillance; arrest and
-maltreatment of members of their families; murder. (_2330-PS_;
-_2331-PS_; _2335-PS_; _2334-PS_; _2928-PS_; _2277-PS_; _2332-PS_; and
-_2333-PS_)
-
-B. _The Nazi conspirators introduced the Leadership Principle into
-industrial relations._ In January 1934, a decree introduced the
-Leadership Principle (_Fuehrerprinzip_) into industrial relations, the
-entrepreneur becoming the leader and the workers becoming his followers.
-(_1861-PS_)
-
-C. _The Nazi conspirators supplanted independent unions by an affiliated
-Party organization, the German Labor Front (DAF)._
-
-(1) _They created the German Labor Front._ On the day the Nazis seized
-the Free Trade Unions, 2 May 1933, they publicly announced that a
-“united front of German workers” with Hitler as honorary patron would be
-formed at a Workers’ Congress on 10 May 1933. (_2224-PS_)
-
-Ley was appointed “leader of the German Labor Front” (_Deutsche
-Arbeitsfront_, or “DAF”) on 10 May 1933 (_1940-PS_). The German Labor
-Front succeeded to the confiscated property of the suppressed trade
-union. It was an affiliated organization of the NSDAP, subject to the
-Leadership Principle; Ley was concurrently Reich Organization Leader
-(_Reichsorganisationsleiter_) and leader of the German Labor Front
-(_1814-PS_). The National Socialist Factory Cells Organization or NSBO
-contained the political leaders (_Politische Leiter_) of the NSDAP in
-the German Labor Front and those political leaders were given first
-preference in the filling of jobs in the DAF (_2271-PS_). The German
-Labor Front became the largest of the Party’s organizations. At the
-outbreak of the war it had 23 million individual members and about 10
-million corporative members who were members of organizations affiliated
-with it. (_2275-PS_)
-
-(2) _They utilized the German Labor Front as an instrument to impose
-their ideology on the masses, to frustrate potential resistance, and to
-insure effective control of the productive labor capacity of Germany._
-The DAF was charged with the ideological orientation of the broad masses
-of Germans working in the factories. Its leaders were charged with
-weeding out potential opponents to National Socialism from the ranks of
-the DAF and from employment in industry. In its surveillance functions,
-the German Labor Front relied on Gestapo reports and on its own
-intelligence service (_2336-PS_). The German Labor Front took over the
-leadership of the German Cooperatives with the view to their subsequent
-liquidation (_2270-PS_). The Nazi conspirators established Factory
-Troops (_Werkscharen_) within the Strength Through Joy branch of the
-German Labor Front as an “ideological shock squad (_Weltanschaulicher
-Stosstrupp_) within the factory” (_1817-PS_). These shock squads were
-formed only of voluntary members ready “to fight” for Nazi conceptions.
-Among their objects were the speeding up of labor effort and the forging
-of a “single-willed community” (_1818-PS_). The SA was charged with the
-promotion and building up of Factory Troops by all means. When a factory
-worker joined the Factory Troops, he automatically became an SA
-candidate. Factory Troops were given a special uniform and their
-physical training took place within SA cadre units. (_2230-PS_)
-
-During the war, the German Labor Front was made responsible for the care
-of foreign labor employed within the Reich (_1913-PS_). Barely two years
-after the suppression of the independent unions and the creation of the
-German Labor Front, the Nazi conspirators decreed compulsory labor
-service (_Reichsarbeitsdienst_) under which young men and women between
-18 and 25 years of age were conscripted for labor service under the
-administration of the Reich Minister of Interior, Frick. (_1389-PS_)
-
-After war had been declared, the Nazi conspirators openly admitted the
-objectives of the Nazis’ control over labor. A publication of the
-Scientific Institute of the German Labor Front declared that it had been
-difficult to make the German people understand continuous renunciations
-in social conditions because all the nation’s strength had been
-channeled into armaments (_Wehrhaftigkeit_) for “the anticipated clash
-with an envious surrounding world” (_2276-PS_). Addressing workers five
-days after the launching of war on Poland, Ley admitted that the Nazis
-had mobilized all the resources and energies of Germany for seven years
-“so as to be equipped for the supreme effort of battle” and that the
-First World War had not been lost because of cowardice of German
-soldiers, “but because dissension and discord tore the people asunder”
-(_1939-PS_). Ley’s confidence in the Nazis’ effective control over the
-productive labor capacity of Germany in peace or war was declared as
-early as 1936 to the Nurnberg Party Congress:
-
- “The idea of the Factory Troops is making good progress in the
- plants, and I am able to report to you, my Fuehrer, that
- security and peace in the factories has been guaranteed, not
- only in normal times, but also in times of the most serious
- crisis. Disturbances such as the munitions strikes of the
- traitors Ebert and confederates, are out of the question.
- _National Socialism has conquered the factories. Factory Troops
- are the National Socialist shock troops within the factory, and
- their motto is: THE FUEHRER IS ALWAYS RIGHT._” (_2283-PS_)
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO DESTRUCTION OF THE
- FREE TRADE UNIONS AND ACQUISITION OF CONTROL OVER THE PRODUCTIVE LABOR
- CAPACITY
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6, especially 6 (a).│ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Section IV (D) 3 │ │
- │ (c) (1). │ I │ 19
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document was referred to during the │ │
- │trial but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
- *392-PS │Official NSDAP circular entitled “The │ │
- │Social Life of New Germany with Special │ │
- │Consideration of the German Labor │ │
- │Front”, by Prof. Willy Mueller (Berlin, │ │
- │1938). (USA 326) │ III │ 380
- │ │ │
- *404-PS │Excerpts from Hitler, Mein Kampf, pp. │ │
- │456, 475. (USA 256) │ III │ 385
- │ │ │
-  405-PS │Law Concerning Trustees of Labor, 19 May│ │
- │1933. 1933 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p.│ │
- │285. │ III │ 387
- │ │ │
-  614-PS │Proclamation of the Action Committee for│ │
- │the Protection of German Labor, 2 May │ │
- │1933. Documents of German Politics, Vol.│ │
- │I, p. 151-3. │ III │ 447
- │ │ │
- 1389-PS │Law creating Reich Labor Service, 26 │ │
- │June 1935. 1935 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part │ │
- │I, p. 769. │ III │ 963
- │ │ │
-*1678-PS │Speech of Dr. Robert Ley. Documents of │ │
- │German Politics, Vol. V, pp. 373, 376. │ │
- │(USA 365) │ IV │ 190
- │ │ │
- 1770-PS │Law concerning factory representative │ │
- │councils and economic organizations, 4 │ │
- │April 1933. 1933 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part│ │
- │I, p. 161. │ IV │ 343
- │ │ │
-*1814-PS │The Organization of the NSDAP and its │ │
- │affiliated associations, from │ │
- │Organization book of the NSDAP, editions│ │
- │of 1936, 1938, 1940 and 1943, pp. 86-88.│ │
- │(USA 328) │ IV │ 411
- │ │ │
- 1817-PS │Bureau for factory troops, from │ │
- │Organization Book of the NSDAP, 1936 │ │
- │edition, p. 211. │ IV │ 457
- │ │ │
- 1818-PS │Bureau for Factory troops and training, │ │
- │from Organization Book of the NSDAP, │ │
- │1940 edition, pp. 195-196b. │ IV │ 457
- │ │ │
- 1861-PS │Law on the regulation of National labor,│ │
- │20 January 1934. 1934 Reichsgesetzblatt,│ │
- │Part I, p. 45. │ IV │ 497
- │ │ │
-*1913-PS │Agreement between Plenipotentiary │ │
- │General for Arbeitseinsatz and German │ │
- │Labor Front concerning care of │ │
- │non-German workers. 1943 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 588. (USA │ │
- │227) │ IV │ 547
- │ │ │
- 1939-PS │Speech by Ley published in Forge of the │ │
- │Sword, with an introduction by Marshal │ │
- │Goering, pp. 14-17. │ IV │ 581
- │ │ │
- 1940-PS │Fuehrer edict appointing Ley leader of │ │
- │German Labor Front. Voelkischer │ │
- │Beobachter, Munich (Southern German) │ │
- │edition, p. 1. │ IV │ 584
- │ │ │
- 1947-PS │Letter from von Fritsch, 11 December │ │
- │1938, concerning need of Germany to be │ │
- │victorious over working class, Catholic │ │
- │Church and Jews. │ IV │ 585
- │ │ │
- 2005-PS │Second law integrating the “Laender” │ │
- │with the Reich, 7 April 1933. 1933 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 173. │ IV │ 641
- │ │ │
- 2050-PS │The Constitution of the German Reich, 11│ │
- │August 1919. 1919 Reichsgesetzblatt, │ │
- │Part I, p. 1383. │ IV │ 662
- │ │ │
-*2224-PS │The End of the Marxist Class Struggle, │ │
- │published in National Socialist Party │ │
- │Press Agency, 2 May 1933, pp. 1-2. (USA │ │
- │364) │ IV │ 864
- │ │ │
- 2225-PS │The Front of German Workers has been │ │
- │Erected, published in National Socialist│ │
- │Party Press Agency, 3 May 1933, p. 1. │ IV │ 868
- │ │ │
- 2226-PS │The Labor Front Stands, published in │ │
- │National Socialist Party Press Agency, 4│ │
- │May 1933, p. 2. │ IV │ 869
- │ │ │
- 2228-PS │Order issued by German Labor Front, │ │
- │published in National Socialist Party │ │
- │Press Agency, 26 June 1933, p. 5. │ IV │ 869
- │ │ │
- 2230-PS │Agreement between Ley and Lutze, chief │ │
- │of staff of SA, published in │ │
- │Organization Book of NSDAP, 1938, pp. │ │
- │484-485b, 486c. │ IV │ 871
- │ │ │
- 2270-PS │Coordination of Cooperatives, published │ │
- │in National Socialist Party Press Agency│ │
- │release of 16 May 1933. │ IV │ 938
- │ │ │
- 2271-PS │The National Socialist Factory Cells │ │
- │Organization, published in Organization │ │
- │Book of NSDAP, pp. 185-187. │ IV │ 940
- │ │ │
- 2275-PS │The German Labor Front, published in │ │
- │Nature-Aim-Means. Footnote on p. 11. │ IV │ 949
- │ │ │
- 2276-PS │The German Labor Front, published in │ │
- │Nature-Aim-Means. p. 55. │ IV │ 950
- │ │ │
-*2277-PS │Affidavit, 17 October 1945, of Gustav │ │
- │Schiefer, Chairman of General German │ │
- │Trade Union Association, Local │ │
- │Committee, Munich, in 1933. (USA 748) │ IV │ 951
- │ │ │
-*2283-PS │The Fifth Day of the Party Congress, │ │
- │from Voelkischer Beobachter, Munich │ │
- │(Southern German) Edition, Issue 258, 14│ │
- │September 1936. (USA 337) │ IV │ 971
- │ │ │
-*2330-PS │Order of Protective Custody, Police │ │
- │Directorate of Nurnberg-Fuerth of Josef │ │
- │Simon, Chairman of German Shoemaker’s │ │
- │Union, 29 August 1935. (USA 237) │ IV │ 1038
- │ │ │
-*2331-PS │Declaration required of union leader │ │
- │Josef Simon upon his release from │ │
- │Protective Custody by Bavarian Political│ │
- │Police, 20 December 1935. (USA 743) │ IV │ 1039
- │ │ │
- 2332-PS │Death certificate, Flossenburg │ │
- │Concentration Camp, concerning union │ │
- │leader Staimer and official letter to │ │
- │his wife, 22 December 1941. │ IV │ 1040
- │ │ │
-*2333-PS │Death certificate, Flossenburg │ │
- │Concentration Camp, concerning union │ │
- │leader Herrmann, and official letter to │ │
- │his wife, 29 December 1941. (USA 744) │ IV │ 1040
- │ │ │
-*2334-PS │Affidavits of Lorenz Hagen, Chairman of │ │
- │Local Committee, German Trade Unions, │ │
- │Nurnberg. (USA 238) │ IV │ 1041
- │ │ │
-*2335-PS │Affidavits of Josef Simon, Chairman of │ │
- │German Shoemakers’ Union in 1933. (USA │ │
- │749) │ IV │ 1046
- │ │ │
- 2336-PS │Special Circular on Securing of │ │
- │association of German Labor Front │ │
- │against hidden Marxist sabotage, 27 June│ │
- │1933. │ IV │ 1052
- │ │ │
- 2411-PS │Chart of unions of workers and │ │
- │employees, from Statistical Yearbook for│ │
- │German Reich, 1932, p. 555. │ V │ 87
- │ │ │
-*2895-PS │Joint affidavit of union leaders Simon, │ │
- │Hagen, and Lex, 13 November 1945. (USA │ │
- │754) │ V │ 563
- │ │ │
-*2928-PS │Affidavit of Mathias Lex, deputy │ │
- │president of the German Shoemakers │ │
- │Union. (USA 239) │ V │ 594
- │ │ │
-Statement XII │Political Testament of Robert Ley, │ │
- │written in Nurnberg prison, October │ │
- │1945. │ VIII │ 742
- │ │ │
-Statement XIII │Outline of Defense of Dr. Robert Ley, │ │
- │written in Nurnberg prison, 24 October │ │
- │1945. │ VIII │ 749
-
-
- 6. SUPPRESSION OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCHES
-
-A. _The Nazi conspirators sought to subvert the influence of the
-churches over the people of Germany._
-
-(1) _They sought to eliminate the Christian Churches in Germany._
-
-(_a_) _Statements of this aim._ Martin Bormann stated in a secret decree
-of the Party Chancellery signed by him and distributed to all Gauleiters
-7 June 1941:
-
- “Our National Socialist ideology is far loftier than the
- concepts of Christianity, which in their essential points have
- been taken over from Jewry * * *. A differentiation between the
- various Christian confessions is not to be made here * * * the
- Evangelical Church is just as inimical to us as the Catholic
- Church. * * * All influences which might impair or damage the
- leadership of the people exercised by the Fuehrer with the help
- of the NSDAP must be eliminated. More and more the people must
- be separated from the churches and their organs the pastors. * *
- * Just as the deleterious influences of astrologers, seers and
- other fakers are eliminated and suppressed by the State, so must
- the possibility of church influence also be totally removed. * *
- * Not until this has happened, does the state leadership have
- influence on the individual citizens. Not until then are the
- people and Reich secure in their existence for all time.”
- (_D-75_)
-
-Hans Kerrl, Reich Minister for Church Affairs, in a letter dated 6
-September 1939 to a Herr Stapel, which indicated that it would be
-brought to the attention of the Confidential Council and of the
-defendant Hess, made the following statements:
-
- “The Fuehrer considers his efforts to bring the Evangelical
- Church to reason, unsuccessful and the Evangelical Church with
- respect to its condition rightfully a useless pile of sects. As
- you emphasize the Party has previously carried on not only a
- fight against the political element of the Christianity of the
- Church, but also a fight against membership of Party Members in
- a Christian confession. * * *
-
- “The Catholic Church will and must, according to the law under
- which it is set up, remain a thorn in the flesh of a Racial
- State * * *.” (_129-PS_)
-
-Gauleiter Florian, in a letter dated 23 September 1940 to the defendant
-Hess, stated:
-
- “The churches with their Christianity are the danger against
- which to fight is absolutely necessary.” (_064-PS_)
-
-Regierungsrat Roth, in a lecture 22 September 1941, to a group of
-Security Police, in the Reich Main Security Office (RSHA) concluded his
-address on Security Police (_Sipo_) measures for combatting church
-politics and sects with the following remarks:
-
- “The immediate aim: the church must not regain one inch of the
- ground it has lost. The ultimate aim: Destruction of the
- Confessional Churches to be brought about by the collection of
- all material obtained through the intelligence service
- (_Nachrichtendienst_) activities which will at a given time be
- produced as evidence for the charge of treasonable activities
- during the German fight for existence.” (_1815-PS_)
-
-The Party Organization Book states:
-
- “Bravery is valued by the SS man as the highest virtue of men in
- a struggle for his ideology.
-
- “He openly and unrelentingly fights the most dangerous enemies
- of the State; Jews, Free Masons, Jesuits, and political
- clergymen.
-
- “However, he recruits and convinces the weak and inconstant by
- his example, who have not been able to bring themselves to the
- National Socialistic ideology.” (_1855-PS_)
-
-(_b_) _The Nazi conspirators promoted beliefs and practices incompatible
-with Christian teachings._ The 24th point of the Program of the NSDAP,
-unchanged since its adoption in 1920, is as follows:
-
- “We demand freedom of religion for all religious denominations
- within the state so long as they do not endanger its existence
- or oppose the moral senses of the germanic race. The Party as
- such advocates the standpoint of a positive Christianity without
- binding itself confessionally to any one denomination. It
- combats the Jewish materialistic spirit within and around us,
- and is convinced that a lasting recovery of our nation can only
- succeed from within on the framework: common utility precedes
- individual utility.” (_1708-PS_)
-
-In official correspondence with the defendant Rosenberg in 1940, Bormann
-stated:
-
- “Christian religion and National Socialist doctrines are not
- compatible. * * * The churches cannot be subjugated through
- compromise, only through a new philosophy as prophesied in
- Rosenberg’s works.”
-
-He then proposed creation of a National Socialist Catechism to provide a
-“moral foundation” for a National Socialist religion which is gradually
-to supplant the Christian churches. He stated the matter was so
-important it should be discussed with members of the Reich Cabinet as
-soon as possible and requested Rosenberg’s opinion before the meeting.
-(_098-PS_)
-
-In a secret decree of the Party Chancellery, signed by Bormann and
-distributed to all _Gauleiters_ on 7 June 1941, the following statements
-appeared:
-
- “When we National Socialists speak of a belief in God, we do not
- understand by God, like naive Christians and their spiritual
- opportunists, a human-type being, who sits around somewhere in
- the sphere * * *. The force of natural law, with which all these
- innumerable planets move in the universe, we call the Almighty,
- or God. The claim that this world force * * * can be influenced
- by so-called prayers or other astonishing things is based upon a
- proper dose of naiveté or on a business shamelessness.
-
- “As opposed to that we National Socialists impose on ourselves
- the demand to live naturally as much as possible, i.e.,
- biologically. The more accurately we recognize and observe the
- laws of nature and of life, the more we adhere to them, so much
- the more do we conform to the will of the Almighty. The more
- insight we have into the will of the Almighty, the greater will
- be our successes.” (_D-75_)
-
-Rosenberg in his book “The Myth of the 20th Century” advocated a new
-National Socialist faith or religion to replace the Christian
-confessions in Germany. He stated that the Catholic and Protestant
-churches represent “negative Christianity” and do not correspond to the
-soul of the “Nordic racially determined peoples”; that a German
-religious movement would have to declare that the idea of neighborly
-love is unconditionally subordinated to national honor; that national
-honor is the highest human value and does not admit of any equal valued
-force such as Christian love. He predicted:
-
- “A German religion will, bit by bit, present in the churches
- transferred to it, in place of the crucifixion the spirit of
- fire—the heroic—in the highest sense.” (_2349-PS_)
-
-The Reich Labor Service (_Reichsarbeitsdienst_), a National Socialist
-youth organization, was prohibited from participating in religious
-celebrations of any kind, and its members were instructed to attend only
-the parts of such ceremonies as weddings and funerals which took place
-before or after the church celebration. (_107-PS_)
-
-The Nazi conspirators considered religious literature undesirable for
-the Wehrmacht. National Socialist publications were prepared for the
-Wehrmacht for the expressed purpose of replacing and counteracting the
-influence of religious literature dissimulated to the troops. (_101-PS_;
-_100-PS_; _064-PS_)
-
-The Nazi conspirators through Rosenberg’s Office for Supervision of the
-Ideological Training and Education of the NSDAP and the Office of the
-Deputy of the Fuehrer “induced” the substitution of National Socialist
-mottoes and services for religious prayers and services in the schools
-of Germany. (_070-PS_)
-
-On 14 July 1939, Bormann, as Deputy of the Fuehrer, issued a Party
-regulation excluding clergymen, persons closely connected with the
-church, and Theology students from membership in the Party. It was
-further decreed that in the future Party Members who entered the clergy
-or turned to the study of Theology must leave the Party. (_840-PS_)
-
-(_c_) _The Nazi conspirators persecuted priests, clergy and members of
-monastic orders._ The priests and clergy of Germany were subjected by
-the police to systematic espionage into their daily lives. The Nazi
-conspirators through the Chief of the Reich Main Security Office (RSHA)
-maintained a special branch of the Security Police and Security Service
-(Sipo/SD) whose duties were to investigate the churches and maintain
-constant surveillance upon the public and private lives of the clergy.
-(_1815-PS_)
-
-At a conference of these police “church specialists” called by Heydrich,
-who was then SS Gruppenfuehrer and Chief of the Reich Main Security
-Office (RSHA), in Berlin, 23 September 1941, SS Sturmbannfuehrer Hartl,
-acting for Heydrich, stated that the greatest importance was to be
-attached to church political activity. The intelligence network in this
-field, he continued, was to be fostered with the greatest of care and
-enlarged with the recruitment of informants, particular value being
-attached to contacts with church circles. He closed his lecture with the
-following words:
-
- “Each of you must go to work with your whole heart and a true
- fanaticism. Should a mistake or two be made in the execution of
- this work, this should in no way discourage you, since mistakes
- are made everywhere. The main thing is that the enemy should be
- constantly tackled with determination, will, and effective
- initiative.” (_1815-PS_)
-
-In a letter of 22 October 1941, Heydrich, as Chief of the Reich Main
-Security Office (RSHA) issued detailed instructions to all State Police
-Offices outlining the organization of the Catholic Church and directing
-close surveillance of the activities, writings, and reports of the
-Catholic clergy in Germany. In this connection he directed:
-
- “Reports are also to be submitted on those Theological students
- destined for Papal Institutes, and Priests returning from such
- institutes to Germany. Should the opportunity arise of placing
- someone for intelligence (_Nachrichtendienst_) purposes in one
- of these Institutes, in the guise of a Theological student, we
- should receive immediate notification.” (_1815-PS_)
-
-Priests and other members of the clergy were arrested, fined,
-imprisoned, and otherwise punished by executive measures of the police
-without judicial process. In his lecture before a conference at the
-Reich Main Security Office (RSHA) in Berlin, for “church specialists,”
-of the Security Police, 22 November 1941, _Regierungsrat_ Roth stated
-(_1815-PS_):
-
- “It has been demonstrated that it is impracticable to deal with
- political offenses (malicious) under normal legal procedure.
- Owing to the lack of political perception which still prevails
- among the legal authorities, suspension of this procedure must
- be reckoned with. The so-called “Agitator-Priests” must
- therefore be dealt with in future by Stapo measures, and, if the
- occasion arises, be removed to a Concentration Camp, if agreed
- upon by the RSHA.
-
- “The necessary executive measures are to be decided upon
- according to local conditions, the status of the person accused,
- and the seriousness of the case—as follows:
-
- 1. Warning
-
- 2. Fine
-
- 3. Forbidden to preach
-
- 4. Forbidden to remain in parish
-
- 5. Forbidden all activity as a priest
-
- 6. Short-term arrest
-
- 7. Protective custody.”
-
-Members of monastic orders were forced by the seizure and confiscation
-of their properties to give up their established place of abode and seek
-homes elsewhere (_R-101-A_; _R-101-D_). A secret order of the SS
-Economic Administration Office to all Concentration Camp Commanders,
-dated 21 April 1942, concerning labor mobilization of clergy, reveals
-that clergymen were at that time, and had previously been, incarcerated
-in Concentration Camps. (_1164-PS_)
-
-On the death of von Hindenburg, the Reich Government ordered the ringing
-of all church bells on the 2nd, 3rd and 4th August 1934. In Bavaria,
-there were many instances of failure to comply with this order. The
-Bavarian police submitted a report outlining the above situation and
-stating that in three cases the taking into protective custody of
-recalcitrant clergy could not be avoided.
-
- “The Parish priest, Father Johann Quinger of Altenkunstadt BA
- Lichtenfels. He was taken into protective custody on 3 August on
- the express order of the State Ministry of the Interior, because
- he assaulted SA leaders and SA men who were ringing the bells
- against his wishes. He was released from custody on 10 August
- 1934.
-
- “The Parish priest, Father Ludwig Obholzer of Kiefersfelden, BA
- Rosenheim. For his personal safety he was in police custody from
- 2400 hours on the 2 August 1934, till 1000 hours on 3 August
- 1934. On 5 August 1934, he said sarcastically in his sermon,
- referring to the SA men who had carried out the ringing of the
- funeral knell on their own account, ‘Lord forgive them, for they
- know not what they do’! “The Parish priest, Father Johann
- Nepomuk Kleber of Wiefelsdorf, BA Burglengenfeld, refused to
- ring the church bells on the 2nd and 3rd. He is badly tainted
- politically and had to be taken into protective custody from the
- 5th to the 8th of August 34 in the interests of his own safety.”
- (_1521-PS_)
-
-After Hitler’s rise to power, Bishop Sproll of Rottenburg delivered a
-series of sermons regarded by the Nazis as damaging, and on 10 April
-1938 he refrained from voting in the plebiscite. For this, the Reich
-Governor of Wuertemberg declared he would no longer regard Bishop Sproll
-as head of the Diocese of Rottenburg; made an official request that he
-leave the Gau; and declared he would see to it that all personal and
-official intercourse between the Bishop and the State and Party offices
-as well as the Armed Forces would be denied (_849-PS_). For his alleged
-failure to vote in the plebiscite, of 10 April 1938, the Party caused
-three demonstrations to be staged against the Bishop and his household
-in Rottenburg. The third demonstration was described as follows in a
-teletype message from Gestapo Office Stuttgart to Gestapo Office Berlin:
-
- “The Party on 23 July 1938 from 2100 on carried out the third
- demonstration against Bishop Sproll. Participants about
- 2,500-3,000 were brought in from outside by bus, etc. The
- Rottenburg populace again did not participate in the
- demonstration. The town took rather a hostile attitude to the
- demonstrations. The action got completely out of hand of the
- Party Member responsible for it. The demonstrators stormed the
- palace, beat in the gates and doors. About 150 to 200 people
- forced their way into the palace, searched the rooms, threw
- files out of the windows and rummaged through the beds in the
- rooms of the palace. One bed was ignited. Before the fire got to
- the other objects of equipment in the rooms and the palace, the
- flaming bed could be thrown from the window and the fire
- extinguished. The Bishop was with Archbishop Groeber of Freiburg
- and the ladies and gentlemen of his menage in the chapel at
- prayer. About 25 to 30 people pressed into this chapel and
- molested those present. Bishop Groeber was taken for Bishop
- Sproll. He was grabbed by the robe and dragged back and forth.
- Finally the intruders realized that Bishop Groeber is not the
- one they are seeking. They could then be persuaded to leave the
- building. After the evacuation of the palace by the
- demonstrators I had an interview with Archbishop Groeber, who
- left Rottenburg in the night. Groeber wants to turn to the
- Fuehrer and Reich Minister of the Interior Dr. Frick anew. On
- the course of the action, the damage done as well as the homage
- of the Rottenburg populace beginning today for the Bishop I
- shall immediately hand in a full report, after I am in the act
- of suppressing counter mass meetings.” (_848-PS_)
-
-Reich Minister for Church Affairs Kerrl and other Party officials
-alleged that these demonstrations were spontaneously staged by indignant
-citizens of Rottenburg and caused representations to be made to the Holy
-See in an effort to effect the Bishop’s removal from office. (_849-PS_)
-
-On or about 3 December 1941, a copy of a secret decree of the Party
-Chancellery on the subject of Relationship of National Socialism to
-Christianity was found by the Security Police in the possession of
-Protestant Priest Eichholz at Aix-la-Chapelle. For this he was arrested
-and held for questioning for an unknown period of time. (_D-75_)
-
-(_d_) _The Nazi conspirators confiscated church property._ On 20 January
-1938, the Gestapo District Office at Munich issued a decree dissolving
-the Guild of the Virgin Mary of the Bavarian Diocese, together with its
-branches and associations. The decree also stated:
-
- “The property belonging to the dissolved Guild is to be
- confiscated by the police. Not only is property in cash to be
- confiscated, but also any stock on hand and other objects of
- value. All further activity is forbidden the dissolved Guilds,
- particularly the foundation of any organization intended as a
- successor or as a cover. Incorporation as a body into other
- women’s societies is also to be looked on as a forbidden
- continuation of activity. Infringements against the above
- prohibition will be punished according to par. 4 of the order of
- 28.2.1933.”
-
-The reasons for the dissolution and confiscation were that the Guild of
-the Virgin Mary had occupied itself for years “to a most far-reaching
-degree” with arrangements of a “worldly and popular sporting character”
-such as community games and “social evenings”; and further that the
-president of the society supplied the members with “seditious materials”
-which served for “seditious discussions”; and that the members of the
-Guild were trained and mobilized for “political and seditious tasks.”
-(_1481-PS_)
-
-In a lecture delivered to a conference of police investigators of Church
-Affairs assembled in the lecture hall of the Reich Main Security Office
-(RSHA) in Berlin, 22 September 1941, _Regierungsrat_ Roth stated that
-about 100 monasteries in the Reich had been dissolved and pointed out
-that the proper procedure called for seizure of the churches at the same
-time the monasteries were dissolved. (_1815-PS_)
-
-In February 1940, SS Gruppenfuehrer Heydrich suggested to Himmler the
-seizure of monasteries for the accommodation of Racial Germans. He
-proposed that the authorities of the monastic orders be instructed to
-make the monasteries concerned available and move their own members to
-less populous monasteries. He pointed out that the final expropriation
-of properties thus placed at their disposal could be carried out step by
-step in the course of time. Himmler agreed to this proposal and ordered
-the measure to be carried out by the Security Police and Security
-Service (_Sipo_ and SD) in collaboration with the Reich Commissioner for
-Consolidation of German Folkdom. (_R-101-A_)
-
-These orders for confiscation were carried out, as revealed in a letter
-dated 30 March 1942 from the Reich Main Security Office (RSHA) Chief of
-Staff to Himmler mentioning claims for compensation pending in a number
-of confiscation cases. In this letter he stated that all rental payments
-to those monasteries and ecclesiastical institutions whose premises had
-been put to use as camps for resettlers had been stopped on receipt of
-Himmler’s order. Concerning current developments, he stated:
-
- “After further preparations in which the Party Chancellery
- participated prominently, the Reich Minister of the Interior
- found a way which makes it possible to seize ecclesiastical
- premises practically without compensation and yet avoids the
- impression of being a measure directed against the Church. * *
- *” (_R-101-D_)
-
-In a letter of 19 April 1941, Bormann advised Rosenberg that libraries
-and art objects of the monasteries confiscated in the Reich were to
-remain for the time being in these monasteries and that the Fuehrer had
-repeatedly rejected the suggestion that centralization of all such
-libraries be undertaken. (_072-PS_)
-
-(_e_) _The Nazi conspirators suppressed religious publications._ On 6
-November 1934, Frick, as Reich and Prussian Minister of the Interior,
-issued an order forbidding until further notice publication of all
-announcements in the daily press, in pamphlets and other publications,
-which dealt with the Evangelical Church; with the exception of official
-announcements of the Church Government of the Reich. (_1498-PS_)
-
-By order of the State Police for the District of Duesseldorf, the Police
-Regulation which is quoted in part below was promulgated 28 May 1934:
-
- “The distribution and sale of published items of any sort in
- connection with worship or religious instructions in public
- streets or squares near churches is forbidden. In the same sense
- the distribution and sale of published items on the occasions of
- processions, pilgrimages and similar church institutions in the
- streets or squares they pass through or in their vicinity is
- prohibited.” (_R-145_)
-
-In January 1940, Bormann informed Rosenberg that he had sought to
-restrict production of religious publications by means of having their
-rations of printing paper cut down through the control exercised by
-Reichsleiter Amann, but that the result of these efforts remained
-unsatisfactory. (_101-PS_)
-
-In March 1940, Bormann instructed Reichsleiter Amann, Director of the
-NSDAP Publications Office, that in any future redistribution of paper,
-confessional writings should receive still sharper restrictions in favor
-of literature politically and ideologically more valuable. He went on to
-point out:
-
- “* * * according to a report I have received, only 10% of the
- over 3000 Protestant periodicals appearing in Germany, such as
- Sunday papers, etc. have ceased publication for reasons of paper
- saving.” (_089-PS_)
-
-In April 1940, Bormann informed the High Command of the Navy that use of
-the term “Divine Service” to refer exclusively to the services arranged
-by Christian Confessions was no longer to be used, even in National
-Socialist daily papers. In the alternative he suggested:
-
- “In the opinion of the Party the term ‘Church Service’ cannot be
- objected to. I consider it fitting since it properly implies
- meetings arranged and organized by the _Churches_.” (_068-PS_)
-
-(_f_) _The Nazi conspirators suppressed religious organizations._ On 28
-May 1934, the State Police Office for the District of Duesseldorf issued
-an order concerning denominational youth and professional organizations
-which stated in part as follows:
-
- “Denominational youth and professional organizations as well as
- those created for special occasions only are prohibited from
- every public activity outside the church and religious sphere.
-
- “Especially forbidden is: Any public appearance in groups, all
- sorts of political activity. Any public sport function including
- public hikes and establishment of holiday or outdoor camps. The
- public display or showing of flags, banners, pennants or the
- open wearing of uniforms or insignia.” (_R-145_)
-
-On 20 July 1935, Frick, as Reich and Prussian Minister of the Interior,
-issued secret instructions to the provincial governments and to the
-Prussian Gestapo that Confessional youth organizations were to be
-forbidden to wear uniforms, or uniform-like clothing, to assemble
-publicly with pennants and flags, to wear insignia as a substitute for
-uniforms, or to engage in any outdoor sport activity. (_1482-PS_)
-
-On 20 January 1938 the Gestapo District Office at Munich, issued a
-decree which stated in part as follows:
-
- “The Guild of the Virgin Mary (_die Marianisch
- Jungfrauenkongregation_) of the Bavarian dioceses, including the
- diocese of Speyere, together with its branches and associations
- and the Societies of Our Lady (_Jungfrauenvereinen_) attached to
- it, is by police order to be dissolved and forbidden with
- immediate effect.”
-
-Among the reasons cited for this action were the following:
-
- “The whole behavior of the Guild of the Virgin Mary had
- therefore to be objected to from various points of view. It
- could be repeatedly observed that the Guild engaged in purely
- worldly affairs, such as community games, and then in the
- holding of ‘Social Evenings’.
-
- “This proves incontestably that the Guild of the Virgin Mary was
- active to a very great degree in a manner unecclesiastical and
- therefore worldly. By so doing it has left the sphere of its
- proper religious task and entered a sphere of activity to which
- it has no statutory right. The organization has therefore to be
- dissolved and forbidden.” (_1481-PS_)
-
-According to the report of a Security Police “church specialist”
-attached to the State Police Office at Aachen, the following points were
-made by a lecturer at a conference of Security Police and Security
-Service church intelligence investigators in Berlin, on 22 September
-1941:
-
- “Retreats, recreational organizations, etc., may now be
- forbidden on ground of industrial war-needs, whereas formerly
- only a worldly activity could be given as a basis.
-
- “Youth camps, recreational camps are to be forbidden on
- principle, church organizations in the evening may be prevented
- on grounds of the blackout regulations.
-
- “Processions, pilgrimages abroad are to be forbidden by reason
- of the over-burdened transport conditions. For local events too
- technical traffic troubles and the danger of air-attack may
- serve as grounds for their prohibition. (One Referent forbade a
- procession, on the grounds of it wearing out shoe leather).”
- (_1815-PS_)
-
-(_g_) _The Nazi conspirators suppressed religious education._ In a
-speech on 7 March 1937, Rosenberg stated:
-
- “The education of youth can only be carried out by those who
- have rescued Germany from disaster. It is therefore impossible
- to demand one Fuehrer, one Reich and one firmly united people as
- long as education is carried out by forces which are mutually
- exclusive to each other.” (_2351-PS_)
-
-In a speech at Fulda, 27 November 1937 Reich Minister for Church Affairs
-Hans Kerrl stated:
-
- “We cannot recognize that the Church has a right to insure that
- the individual should be educated in all respects in the way in
- which it holds to be right; but we must leave it to the National
- Socialist State to educate the child in the way it regards as
- right.” (_2352-PS_)
-
-In January 1939, Bormann, acting as Deputy of the Fuehrer, informed the
-Minister of Education, that the Party was taking the position that
-theological inquiry was not as valuable as the general fields of
-knowledge in the universities and that suppression of Theological
-Faculties in the universities was to be undertaken at once. He pointed
-out that the Concordat with the Vatican placed certain limitations on
-such a program, but that in the light of the general change of
-circumstances, particularly the compulsory military service and the
-execution of the four-year plan, the question of manpower made certain
-reorganizations, economies and simplification necessary. Therefore,
-Theological Faculties were to be restricted insofar as they could not be
-wholly suppressed. He instructed that the churches were not to be
-informed of this development and no public announcement was to be made.
-Any complaints, if they were to be replied to at all, should be answered
-with a statement that these measures are being executed in a general
-plan of reorganization and that similar things are happening to other
-faculties. He concludes with the statement that the professorial chairs
-vacated by the above program are to be turned over to the newly-created
-fields of inquiry, such as Racial Research. (_116-PS_)
-
-A plan for the reduction of Theological Faculties was submitted by the
-Reich Minister for Science, Education and Training in April 1939 to
-Bormann, who forwarded it to Rosenberg for consideration and action. The
-plan called for shifting, combining and eliminating Theological
-Faculties in various schools and universities throughout the Reich, with
-the following results:
-
- “To recapitulate this plan would include the complete closing of
- Theological Faculties at Innsbruck, Salzburg and Munich, the
- transfer of the faculty of Graz to Vienna and the vanishing of
- four Catholic faculties.
-
- “_a._ Closing of three Catholic Theological Faculties or Higher
- Schools and of four Evangelic Faculties in the winter semester
- 1939/40.
-
- “_b._ Closing of one further Catholic and of three further
- Evangelic Faculties in the near future.” (_122-PS_)
-
-In a secret decree of the Party Chancellery, signed by Bormann, and
-distributed to all Gauleiters on 7 June 1941, the following statement
-concerning religious education was made:
-
- “No human being would know anything of Christianity if it had
- not been drilled into him in his childhood by pastors. The
- so-called dear God in no wise gives knowledge of his existence
- to young people in advance, but in an astonishing manner in
- spite of his omnipotence leaves this to the efforts of the
- pastors. If therefore in the future our youth learns nothing
- more of this Christianity, whose doctrines are far below ours,
- Christianity will disappear by itself.” (_D-75_)
-
-(2) _Supplementary evidence of acts of suppression within Germany._ In
-laying the groundwork for their attempted subversion of the Church, the
-Nazi conspirators resorted to assurances of peaceful intentions. Thus
-Hitler, in his address to the Reichstag on 23 March 1933 declared:
-
- “While the government is determined to carry through the
- political and moral purging of our public life, it is creating
- and insuring prerequisites for a truly religious life. The
- government sees in both Christian confessions the factors most
- important for the maintenance of our Folkdom. It will respect
- agreements concluded between them and the states. However, it
- expects that its work will meet with a similar appreciation. The
- government will treat all other denominations with equal
- objective justice. However, it can never condone that belonging
- to a certain denomination or to a certain race might be regarded
- as a license to commit or tolerate crimes. The Government will
- devote its care to the sincere living together of Church and
- State.” (_3387-PS_)
-
-(_a_) _Against the Evangelical Churches._ The Nazi conspirators, upon
-their accession to power, passed a number of laws, under
-innocent-sounding titles, designed to reduce the Evangelical Churches to
-the status of an obedient instrument of Nazi policy. The following are
-illustrative:
-
- Document │ Date │Reichsge│ Title and Gist of Law │Signed by
- Number │ │setzblat│ │
- │ │ t—Page │ │
- │ │ │ │
- _3433-PS_ │ 14.7.33│I.471 │_Gesetz ueber die Verfassung │Hitler
- │ │ │ der Deutschen Evangelischen │Frick
- │ │ │ Kirche_ (Law concerning the │
- │ │ │ Constitution of the German │
- │ │ │ Evangelical Church), │
- │ │ │ establishing among other │
- │ │ │ things the new post of Reich│
- │ │ │ Bishop. │
- │ │ │ │
- _3434-PS_ │ 26.6.35│I.774 │_Gesetz ueber das │Hitler
- │ │ │ Beschlussverfahren in │Frick
- │ │ │ Rechtsangelegenheiten der │
- │ │ │ Evangelisschen Kirche_ (Law │
- │ │ │ concerning procedure for │
- │ │ │ decisions in legal affairs │
- │ │ │ of the Evangelical Church), │
- │ │ │ giving the Reich Ministry of│
- │ │ │ the Interior sole authority │
- │ │ │ to determine the validity of│
- │ │ │ measures taken in the │
- │ │ │ Churches since 1 May 1933, │
- │ │ │ when raised in a civil │
- │ │ │ lawsuit. │
- │ │ │ │
- _3435-PS_ │ 3.7.35│I.851 │_Erste Verordnung zur │Frick
- │ │ │ Durchfuehrung des Gesetzes │
- │ │ │ ueber das Beschlussverfahren│
- │ │ │ in Rechtsangelegenheiten der│
- │ │ │ Evangelischen Kirche_ (First│
- │ │ │ Ordinance for Execution of │
- │ │ │ the Law concerning procedure│
- │ │ │ for decisions in legal │
- │ │ │ affairs of the Evangelical │
- │ │ │ Church), setting up detailed│
- │ │ │ organization and procedures │
- │ │ │ under the law of 26 June │
- │ │ │ 1935. │
- │ │ │ │
- _3466-PS_ │ 16.7.35│I.1029 │_Erlass ueber die │Hitler
- │ │ │ Zusammenfassung der │Rust
- │ │ │ Zustaendigkeiten des Reichs │Koerner
- │ │ │ und Preussens in │
- │ │ │ Kirchenangelegenheiten_ │
- │ │ │ (Decree to unite the │
- │ │ │ competences of Reich and │
- │ │ │ Prussia in Church affairs) │
- │ │ │ transferring to Kerrl, │
- │ │ │ Minister without Portfolio, │
- │ │ │ the church affairs │
- │ │ │ previously handled by Reich │
- │ │ │ and Prussian Ministers of │
- │ │ │ the Interior and of Science,│
- │ │ │ Education, and Training. │
- │ │ │ │
- _3436-PS_ │ 24.9.35│I.1178 │_Gesetz zur Sicherung der │Hitler
- │ │ │ Deutschen Evangelischen │Kerrl
- │ │ │ Kirche_ (Law for the │
- │ │ │ Safe-guarding of the German │
- │ │ │ Evangelical Church) │
- │ │ │ empowering the Reich │
- │ │ │ Minister of Church Affairs │
- │ │ │ (Kerrl) to issue Ordinances │
- │ │ │ with binding legal force. │
- │ │ │ │
- _3437-PS_ │ 2.12.85│I.1370 │_Fuenfte Verordnung Zur │Kerrl
- │ │ │ Durchfuehrung des Gesetzes │
- │ │ │ zur Sicherung der Deutschen │
- │ │ │ Evangelischen Kirche_ (Fifth│
- │ │ │ decree for execution of the │
- │ │ │ law for the Safe-guarding of│
- │ │ │ the German Evangelical │
- │ │ │ Church) prohibiting the │
- │ │ │ churches from filling their │
- │ │ │ pastorates, ordaining │
- │ │ │ ministers, visitation, │
- │ │ │ publishing of banns, and │
- │ │ │ collecting dues and │
- │ │ │ assessments. │
- │ │ │ │
- _3439-PS_ │ 25.6.37│I.697 │_Fuenfzehnte Verordnung zur │Kerrl
- │ │ │ Durchfuehrung des Gesetzes │
- │ │ │ zur Sicherung der Deutschen │
- │ │ │ Evangelischen Kirche_ │
- │ │ │ (Fifteenth decree for the │
- │ │ │ Execution of the Law for │
- │ │ │ Security of the German │
- │ │ │ Evangelical Church) │
- │ │ │ establishing in the Reich │
- │ │ │ Ministry for Church Affairs │
- │ │ │ a Finance Department, to │
- │ │ │ supervise administration of │
- │ │ │ the church property budget, │
- │ │ │ tax assessment, and use of │
- │ │ │ budget funds. │
-
-With the help of their Reich Bishop, Bishop Mueller, they manoeuvered
-the Evangelical Youth Association into the Hitler Jugend under Von
-Schirach in December 1933. (_1458-PS_)
-
-They arrested prominent Protestant leaders such as Pastor Niemoeller. By
-1937, the result of all these measures was complete administrative
-control by the Nazi conspirators over the Evangelical churches.
-
-(_b_) _Against the Catholic Church._ Just as in their program against
-the Evangelical Churches, so in their attack on the Catholic Church, the
-Nazi conspirators concealed their real intentions under a cloak of
-apparent respect for its rights and protection of its activities. On 20
-July 1933, a Concordat was concluded between the Holy See and the German
-Reich, signed for the Reich by Von Papen (_3280-A-PS_). It was the Nazi
-Government, not the Church, which initiated the negotiations.
-
- “The German Government asked the Holy See to conclude a
- Concordat with the Reich.” (_3268-PS_)
-
-By Article I of the Concordat,
-
- “The German Reich guarantees freedom of profession and public
- practice of the Catholic religion.
-
- “It acknowledges the right of the Catholic Church, within the
- limit of those laws which are applicable to all, to manage and
- regulate her own affairs independently, and, within the
- framework of her own competence, to publish laws and ordinances
- binding on her members.” (_3280-A-PS_)
-
-Other articles formulated agreements on basic principles such as free
-communication between Rome and the local ecclesiastical authorities,
-freedom of the Catholic press, of Catholic education and of Catholic
-action in charitable, professional, and youth organizations. In return,
-the Vatican pledged loyalty by the clergy to the Reich Government and
-emphasis in religious instruction on the patriotic duties of the
-Christian citizen. (_3280-A-PS_)
-
-In reliance upon assurances by the Nazi conspirators, the Catholic
-hierarchy had already revoked their previous prohibition against
-Catholics becoming members of the Nazi Party (_3389-PS_). The Catholic
-Center Party, under a combination of Nazi pressure and assurances,
-published on 29 December 1933, an announcement of its dissolution
-(_2403-PS_). Thus the Catholics went a long way to disarm themselves and
-cooperate with the Nazis. Nevertheless, the Nazi conspirators continued
-to develop their policy of slow strangulation of religion, first in
-covert, and then in open, violation of their assurances and agreements.
-
-In the Encyclical “_Mit Brennender Sorge_”, on 14 March 1937, Pope Pius
-XI described the program:
-
- “It discloses intrigues which from the beginning had no other
- aim than a war of extermination. In the furrows in which we had
- labored to sow the seeds of true peace, others—like the enemy
- in Holy Scripture (Matt. xiii, 25)—sowed the tares of
- suspicion, discord, hatred, calumny of secret and open
- fundamental hostility to Christ and His Church, fed from a
- thousand different sources and making use of every available
- means. On them and on them alone and on their silent and vocal
- protectors rests the responsibility that now on the horizon of
- Germany there is to be seen not the rainbow of peace but the
- threatening storm clouds of destructive religious wars. * * *
- Anyone who has any sense of truth left in his mind and even a
- shadow of the feeling of justice left in his heart will have to
- admit that, in the difficult and eventful years which followed
- the Concordat, every word and every action of Ours was ruled by
- loyalty to the terms of the agreement; but also he will have to
- recognize with surprise and deep disgust that the unwritten law
- of the other party has been arbitrary misinterpretation of
- agreements, evasion of agreements, evacuation of the meaning of
- agreements, and finally more or less open violation of
- agreements.” (_3280-PS_)
-
-The Nazis suppressed the Catholic Youth League, beginning ten days after
-the concordat was signed. (See Section 8, infra.)
-
-On 18 January 1942, in declining to accede to a demand made by the
-German Government that no further appointment of Archbishops, Bishops,
-and other high administrative dignitaries be made in the new territories
-of the Reich, or of certain of them within the old Reich, without
-previous consultation with the German Government (_3261-PS_), the
-Secretary of State of Pope Pius XII pointed to measures taken by the
-German Government,
-
- “Contrary not only to the existing Concordats and to the
- principles of international law ratified by the Second Hague
- conference, but often—and this is much more grave—to the very
- fundamental principles of divine law, both natural and
- positive.”
-
-The Papal Secretary of State continued:
-
- “Let it suffice to recall in this connection, among other
- things, the changing of the Catholic State elementary schools
- into undenominational schools; the permanent or temporary
- closing of many minor seminaries, of not a few major seminaries
- and of some theological faculties; the suppression of almost all
- the private schools and of numerous Catholic boarding schools
- and colleges; the repudiation, decided unilaterally, of
- financial obligations which the State, Municipalities, etc. had
- towards the Church; the increasing difficulties put in the way
- of the activity of the religious Orders and Congregations in the
- spiritual, cultural and social field and above all the
- suppression of Abbeys, monasteries, convents and religious
- houses in such great numbers that one is led to infer a
- deliberate intention of rendering impossible the very existence
- of the Orders and Congregations in Germany.
-
- “Similar and even graver acts must be deplored in the annexed
- and occupied territories, especially in the Polish territories
- and particularly in the _Reichsgau Wartheland_, for which the
- Reich Superintendent has issued, under date of September 13th
- last, a ‘Decree concerning Religious Associations and Religious
- Societies’ (_Verordnung ueber Religioese Vereinigungen und
- Religion-gesellschaften_) in clear opposition to the fundamental
- principles of the divine constitution of the Church.”
- (_3261-PS_)
-
-Illustrative of the numerous other cases and specific incidents which
-might be adduced as the program of suppression was carried into action
-within Germany proper, are the measures adopted beginning in 1936 to
-eliminate the priest Rupert Mayer of Munich. Because of his sermons, he
-was confined in various prisons, arrested and rearrested, interned in
-Oranienburg-Sachsenhausen concentration camp, and the Ettal Monastery,
-from which he was released by Allied troops in May 1945, and later died.
-(_3272-PS_)
-
-(_c_) _Against other religious groups._
-
-Members of the sect known as “_Bibelforscher_”—meaning “Members of a
-Biblical Society” or “Bible-Researchers”—were as early as 1937 sent as
-a routine matter to concentration camps by the Gestapo, even after
-serving of a sentence imposed by a court or after the cancellation of an
-arrest order (_D-84_). At one camp alone—Dachau—there were over 150
-“_Bibelforscher_” in protective custody in 1937. (_2928-PS_)
-
-B. _Acts of suppression of the Christian Churches in Annexed and
-Occupied Territories._
-
-(1) _In Austria._ The methods of suppression of churches followed in
-Austria by the occupying power began with measures to exclude the Church
-from public activities, such as processions, printing of newspapers and
-Reviews which could spread Christian doctrines; from forming Youth
-organizations, such as Boy Scouts; from directing educational or
-charitable activities; and even from extending help in the form of food
-to foreigners. Unable in conscience to obey the public prescription,
-ministers of religions were arrested and sent to concentration camps,
-and some were executed. Churches were closed, convents and monastries
-suppressed, and educational property confiscated. The total number of
-confiscations, suppressions, or alienations of religious institutions
-exceeded 100 cases in one diocese alone. (_3278-PS_)
-
-The Lutheran Church in Austria, though comprising a small minority of
-the population, was subjected to organized oppression. Its educational
-efforts were obstructed or banned. Believers were encouraged, and
-sometimes intimidated, to repudiate their faith. Lutheran pastors were
-given to understand that a government position would be awarded to each
-one who would renounce his ministry and if possible withdraw from the
-Lutheran Church. (_3273-PS_)
-
-In summation of the period of Nazi domination and in review of the
-attempted suppression of the Christian Church, the Archbishops and
-Bishops of Austria in their first joint Pastoral after liberation
-declared:
-
- “At an end also is an intellectual battle, the goal of which was
- the destruction of Christianity and the Church among our people;
- a campaign of lies and treachery against truth and love, against
- divine and human rights and against international law.”
- (_3274-PS_)
-
-(2) _In Czechoslovakia._ The Czechoslovak Official Report for the
-prosecution and trial of the German Major War Criminals by the
-International Military Tribunal established according to the Agreement
-of the Four Great Powers of 8 August, 1945 describes in summary form the
-measures taken by the Nazi conspirators to suppress religious liberties
-and persecute the churches. The following excerpts are quoted from this
-report (_998-PS_):
-
- “(_a_) _Catholic Church._
-
- “* * * At the outbreak of war, 487 Catholic priests were among
- the thousands of Czech patriots arrested and sent to
- concentration camps as hostages. Venerable high ecclesiastical
- dignitaries were dragged to concentration camps in Germany. * *
- * Religious orders were dissolved and liquidated, their
- charitable institutions closed down and their members expelled
- or else forced to compulsory labor in Germany. All religious
- instruction in Czech schools was suppressed. Most of the
- weeklies and monthlies which the Catholics had published in
- Czechoslovakia, had been suppressed from the very beginning of
- the occupation. The Catholic gymnastic organization “Orel” with
- 800,000 members was dissolved and its property was confiscated.
- To a great extent Catholic church property was seized for the
- benefit of the Reich.
-
- “(_b_) _Czechoslovak National Church._
-
- “* * * The Czechoslovak Church in Slovakia was entirely
- prohibited and its property confiscated under German compulsion
- in 1940. It has been allowed to exist in Bohemia and Moravia but
- in a crippled form under the name of the Czecho-Moravian Church.
-
- “(_c_) _Protestant Churches._
-
- “The Protestant Churches were deprived of the freedom to preach
- the gospel. German secret state police watched closely whether
- the clergy observed the restrictions imposed on it. * * * Some
- passages from the Bible were not allowed to be read in public at
- all. * * *
-
- “* * * Church leaders were especially persecuted, scores of
- ministers were imprisoned in concentration camps, among them the
- General Secretary of the Students’ Christian Movement in
- Czechoslovakia. One of the Vice-Presidents was executed.
-
- “Protestant Institutions such as the YMCA and YWCA were
- suppressed throughout the country.
-
- “The leading Theological School for all Evangelical
- denominations, HUS Faculty in Prague and all other Protestant
- training schools for the ministry were closed down in November
- 1939, with the other Czech universities and colleges.
-
- “(_d_) _Czech Orthodox Church._
-
- “The hardest blow was directed against the Czech Orthodox
- Church. The Orthodox churches in Czechoslovakia were ordered by
- the Berlin Ministry of Church Affairs to leave the Pontificat of
- Belgrade and Constantinople respectively and to become
- subordinate to the Berlin Bishop. The Czech Bishop Gorazd was
- executed together with two other priests of the Orthodox Church.
- By a special order of the Protector Daluege, issued in September
- 1942, the Orthodox Church of Serbian Constantinople jurisdiction
- was completely dissolved in the Czech lands, its religious
- activity forbidden and its property confiscated.
-
- “All Evangelical education was handed over to the civil
- authorities and many Evangelical teachers lost their employment;
- moreover the State grant to salaries of many Evangelical priests
- was taken away.” (_998-PS_)
-
-(3) _In Poland._ The repressive measures levelled against the Christian
-Church in Poland where Hans Frank was Governor-General from 1939 to
-1945, were even more drastic and sweeping. In protest against the
-systematic strangulation of religion, the Vatican, on 8 October 1942,
-addressed a memorandum to the German Embassy accredited to the Holy See
-in which the Secretariat of State emphasized the fact that despite
-previous protests to the Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Reich, von
-Ribbentrop, the religious condition of the Catholics in the _Warthegau_
-“has become even sadder and more tragic.” This memorandum states:
-
- “For quite a long time the religious situation in the
- _Warthegau_ gives cause for very grave and ever-increasing
- anxiety. There, in fact, the Episcopate has been little by
- little almost completely eliminated; the secular and regular
- clergy have been reduced to proportions that are absolutely
- inadequate, because they have been in large part deported and
- exiled; the education of clerics has been forbidden; the
- Catholic education of youth is meeting with the greatest
- opposition; the nuns have been dispersed; insurmountable
- obstacles have been put in the way of affording people the helps
- of religions; very many churches have been closed; Catholic
- intellectual and charitable institutions have been destroyed;
- ecclesiastical property has been seized.” (_3263-PS_)
-
-On 18 November 1942 the Papal Secretary of State requested the
-Archbishop of Breslau, Cardinal Bertram, to use every effort to assist
-Polish Catholic workers transferred to Germany, who were being deprived
-of the consolations of religion. In addition, he again appealed for help
-for the Polish priests detained in various concentration camps, whose
-death rate was “still on the increase.” (_3265-PS_). On 7 December 1942
-the Cardinal Archbishop of Breslau replied that all possible efforts
-were being put forward by the German Bishops without success on behalf
-of the victims of concentration camps and labor battalions, and deplored
-“the intolerable decrees” against religious ministration to Poles.
-(_3266-PS_)
-
-On 2 March 1943, the Cardinal Secretary of State addressed a note to von
-Ribbentrop, Reichsminister for Foreign Affairs, in which the violations
-of religious rights and conscience among the civilian population of
-Poland were set out in detail, and the time, locality, and character of
-the persecutions were specified. Priests and Ecclesiastics were still
-being arrested, thrust into concentration camps, and treated with scorn
-and derision, while many had been summarily executed. Religious
-instruction was hampered; Catholic schools were closed; the use of the
-Polish language in sacred functions and even in the Sacrament of Penance
-was forbidden. Even the natural right of marriage was denied to men of
-Polish nationality under 28 years of age to women under 25. In the
-territory called “General Government” similar conditions existed and
-against these the Holy See vigorously protested. To save the harassed
-and persecuted leaders of the Catholic Church, the Vatican had
-petitioned that they be allowed to emigrate to neutral countries of
-Europe or America. The only concession made was that they would all be
-collected in one concentration camp—Dachau. (_3264-PS_)
-
-The Nazi conspirators adopted a dilatory and obstructionist policy
-toward complaints as to religious affairs in the overrun territories,
-and a decision was “taken by those competent to do so. * * * that no
-further consideration will be taken of proposals or requests concerning
-the territories which do not belong to the Old Reich.” (_3262-PS_)
-
-“Those competent” to make decisions on complaints as to religious
-affairs in the overrun territories—especially the Party Chancery,
-headed by Bormann—the methods they used, and the reasons for their
-attitude are outlined by the Cardinal Archbishop of Breslau, a German
-living in Germany, in a letter to the Papal Secretary of State on 7
-December 1942 as follows:
-
- “Your Eminence knows very well the greatest difficulty in the
- way of opening negotiations comes from the overruling authority
- which the “National Socialist Party Chancery” (_Kanzlei der
- National-Sozialistischen Partei_, known as the _Partei-Kanzlei_)
- exercises in relation to the Chancery of the Reich
- (_Reichskanzlei_) and to the single Reich Ministries. This
- ‘_Parteikanzlei_’ directs the course to be followed by the
- State, whereas the Ministries and the Chancery of the Reich are
- obliged and compelled to adjust their decrees to these
- directions. Besides, there is the fact that the “Supreme Office
- for the Security of the Reich” called the
- ‘_Reichssicherheitshauptamt_’ enjoys an authority which
- precludes all legal action and all appeals. Under it are the
- ‘Secret Offices for Public Security’ called ‘_Geheime
- Staatspolizei_’ (a title shortened usually to _Gestapo_) of
- which there is one for each Province. Against the decrees of
- this Central Office (_Reichssicherheitshauptamt_) and of the
- Secret Offices (_Geheime Staatspolizei_) there is no appeal
- through the Courts, and no complaint made to the Ministries has
- any effect. Not infrequently the Councillors of the Ministries
- suggest that they have not been able to do as they would wish
- to, because of the opposition of these Party offices. As far as
- the executive power is concerned, the organization called the
- SS, that is _Schutzstaffeln der Partei_, is in practice supreme.
-
- “This hastily sketched interrelation of authorities is the
- reason why many of the petitions and protests made by the
- Bishops to the Ministries have been foiled. Even if we present
- our complaints to the so-called Supreme Security Office, there
- is rarely any reply; and when there is, it is negative.
-
- “On a number of very grave and fundamental issues we have also
- presented our complaints to the Supreme Leader of the Reich
- (_Fuehrer_). Either no answer is given, or it is apparently
- edited by the above-mentioned Party Chancery, which does not
- consider itself bound by the Concordat made with the Holy See.”
- (_3266-PS_)
-
-The interchange of correspondence following the transmission of the
-above-described note of 2 March 1943 on the religious situation in the
-overrun Polish Provinces illustrates the same evasive tactics.
-(_3269-PS_)
-
-In his Allocution to the Sacred College, on 2 June 1945, His Holiness
-Pope Pius XII recalled, by way of example, “some details from the
-abundant accounts which have reached us from priests and laymen who were
-interned in the concentration camp at Dachau”:
-
- “In the forefront, for the number and harshness of the treatment
- meted out to them, are the Polish priests. From 1940 to 1945,
- 2,800 Polish ecclesiastics and religious were imprisoned in that
- camp; among them was the Auxiliary bishop of Wloclawek, who died
- there of typhus. In April last there were left only 816, all the
- others being dead except for two or three transferred to another
- camp. In the summer of 1942, 480 German-speaking ministers of
- religion were known to be gathered there; of these, 45 were
- Protestants, all the others Catholic priests. In spite of the
- continuous inflow of new internees, especially from some
- dioceses of Bavaria, Rhenania and Westphalia, their number, as a
- result of the high rate of mortality, at the beginning of this
- year, did not surpass 350. Nor should we pass over in silence
- those belonging to occupied territories, Holland, Belgium,
- France (among whom the Bishop of Clermont), Luxembourg,
- Slovenia, Italy. Many Of those priests and laymen endured
- indescribable sufferings for their faith and for their vocation.
- In one case the hatred of the impious against Christ reached the
- point of parodying on the person of an interned priest, with
- barbed wire, the scourging and the crowning with thorns of our
- Redeemer.” (_3268-PS_)
-
-Further revealing figures on the persecution of Polish priests are
-contained in the following extract from Charge No. 17 against Hans
-Frank, Governor-General of Poland, submitted by the Polish Government,
-entitled “Maltreatment and Persecution of the Catholic Clergy in the
-Western Provinces”:
-
- “IV. _GENERAL CONDITIONS AND RESULTS OF THE PERSECUTION_
-
- 11. The general situation of the clergy in the
- Archdiocese of Poznan in the beginning of April 1940 is
- summarized in the following words of Cardinal Hlond’s
- second report:
-
- ‘5 priests shot
-
- 27 priests confined in harsh concentration camps
- at Stutthof and in other camps
-
- 190 priests in prison or in concentration camps
- at Bruczkow, Chludowo, Goruszki, Kazimierz,
- Biskupi, Lad, Lubin and Puszczykowo,
-
- 35 priests expelled into the Government General,
-
- 11 priests seriously ill in consequence of
- ill-treatment,
-
- 122 parishes entirely left without priests.’
-
- 12. In the diocese of Chelmno, where about 650 priests
- were installed before the war only 3% were allowed to
- stay, the 97% of them were imprisoned, executed or put
- into concentration camps.
-
- 13. By January 1941 about 7000 priests were killed, 3000
- were in prison or concentration camps.” (_3279-PS_)
-
-The Allocution of Pope Pius XII on 2 June 1945 described National
-Socialism as “the arrogant apostasy from Jesus Christ, the denial of His
-doctrine and of His work of redemption, the cult of violence, the
-idolatry of race and blood, the overthrow of human liberty and dignity.”
-It summarized the attacks of “National Socialism” on the Catholic Church
-in these terms:
-
- “The struggle against the Church did, in fact, become even more
- bitter: there was the dissolution of Catholic organizations; the
- gradual suppression of the flourishing Catholic schools, both
- public and private; the enforced weaning of youth from family
- and Church; the pressure brought to bear on the conscience of
- citizens, and especially of civil servants; the systematic
- defamation, by means of a clever, closely-organized propaganda,
- of the Church, the clergy, the faithful, the Church’s
- institutions, teaching and history; the closing, dissolution,
- confiscation of religious houses and other ecclesiastical
- institutions; the complete suppression of the Catholic press and
- publishing houses.” (_3268-PS_)
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO SUPPRESSION OF THE
- CHRISTIAN CHURCHES
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6, especially 6 (a, │ │
- │ c). │ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Sections IV (D) 3│ │
- │ (_c_) (2, 3); X (B). │ I │ 20, 55
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document was referred to during the │ │
- │trial but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
- *064-PS │Bormann’s letter to Rosenberg, 27 │ │
- │September 1940, enclosing letter from │ │
- │Gauleiter Florian criticizing Churches │ │
- │and publications for soldiers. (USA 359)│ III │ 109
- │ │ │
- *068-PS │Letter from Bormann to Rosenberg, 5 │ │
- │April 1940, enclosing copy of Bormann’s │ │
- │letter to the High Command of Navy, and │ │
- │copy of Navy High Command letter to │ │
- │Bormann of 9 February 1940. (USA 726) │ III │ 114
- │ │ │
- *070-PS │Letter of Deputy Fuehrer to Rosenberg, │ │
- │25 April 1941, on substitution of │ │
- │National Socialist mottos for morning │ │
- │prayers in schools. (USA 349) │ III │ 118
- │ │ │
- *072-PS │Bormann letter to Rosenberg, 19 April │ │
- │1941, concerning confiscation of │ │
- │property, especially of art treasures in│ │
- │the East. (USA 357) │ III │ 122
- │ │ │
- *089-PS │Letter from Bormann to Rosenberg, 8 │ │
- │March 1940, instructing Amann not to │ │
- │issue further newsprint to confessional │ │
- │newspapers. (USA 360) │ III │ 147
- │ │ │
- *098-PS │Bormann’s letter to Rosenberg, 22 │ │
- │February 1940, urging creation of │ │
- │National Socialist Catechism, etc. to │ │
- │provide moral foundation for NS │ │
- │religion. (USA 350) │ III │ 152
- │ │ │
- *100-PS │Bormann’s letter to Rosenberg, 18 │ │
- │January 1940, urging preparation of │ │
- │National Socialist reading material to │ │
- │replace Christian literature for │ │
- │soldiers. (USA 691) │ III │ 160
- │ │ │
- *101-PS │Letter from Hess’ office signed Bormann │ │
- │to Rosenberg, 17 January 1940, │ │
- │concerning undesirability of religious │ │
- │literature for members of the Wehrmacht.│ │
- │(USA 361) │ III │ 160
- *107-PS │Circular letter signed Bormann, 17 June │ │
- │1938, enclosing directions prohibiting │ │
- │participation of Reichsarbeitsdienst in │ │
- │religious celebrations. (USA 351) │ III │ 162
- │ │ │
- *116-PS │Bormann’s letter to Rosenberg, enclosing│ │
- │copy of letter, 24 January 1939, to │ │
- │Minister of Education requesting │ │
- │restriction or elimination of │ │
- │theological faculties. (USA 685) │ III │ 165
- │ │ │
- *122-PS │Bormann’s letter to Rosenberg, 17 April │ │
- │1939, enclosing copy of Minister of │ │
- │Education letter, 6 April 1939, on │ │
- │elimination of theological faculties in │ │
- │various universities. (USA 362) │ III │ 173
- │ │ │
- *129-PS │Letter from Kerrl to Herr Stapol, 6 │ │
- │September 1939, found in Rosenberg │ │
- │files. (USA 727) │ III │ 179
- │ │ │
- *840-PS │Party Directive, 14 July 1939, making │ │
- │clergy and theology students ineligible │ │
- │for Party membership. (USA 355) │ III │ 606
- │ │ │
- *848-PS │Gestapo telegram from Berlin to │ │
- │Nurnberg, 24 July 1938, dealing with │ │
- │demonstrations against Bishop Sproll in │ │
- │Rottenburg. (USA 353) │ III │ 613
- │ │ │
- *849-PS │Letter from Kerrl to Minister of State, │ │
- │23 July 1938, with enclosures dealing │ │
- │with persecution of Bishop Sproll. (USA │ │
- │354) │ III │ 614
- │ │ │
- *998-PS │“German Crimes Against Czechoslovakia”. │ │
- │Excerpts from Czechoslovak Official │ │
- │Report for the prosecution and trial of │ │
- │the German Major War Criminals by the │ │
- │International Military Tribunal │ │
- │established according to Agreement of │ │
- │four Great Powers of 8 August 1945. (USA│ │
- │91) │ III │ 656
- │ │ │
-*1164-PS │Secret letter, 21 April 1942, from SS to│ │
- │all concentration camp commanders │ │
- │concerning treatment of priests. (USA │ │
- │736) │ III │ 820
- │ │ │
-*1458-PS │The Hitler Youth by Baldur von Schirach,│ │
- │Leipzig, 1934. (USA 667) │ IV │ 22
- │ │ │
-*1481-PS │Gestapo order, 20 January 1938, │ │
- │dissolving and confiscating property of │ │
- │Catholic Youth Women’s Organization in │ │
- │Bavaria. (USA 737) │ IV │ 50
- │ │ │
-*1482-PS │Secret letter, 20 July 1933 to │ │
- │provincial governments and the Prussian │ │
- │Gestapo from Frick, concerning │ │
- │Confessional Youth Organizations. (USA │ │
- │738) │ IV │ 51
- │ │ │
-*1498-PS │Order of Frick, 6 November 1934, │ │
- │addressed inter alios to Prussian │ │
- │Gestapo prohibiting publication of │ │
- │Protestant Church announcements. (USA │ │
- │739) │ IV │ 52
- │ │ │
-*1521-PS │Report from the Bavarian Political │ │
- │Police to the Gestapo, Berlin, 24 August│ │
- │1934, concerning National mourning on │ │
- │occasion of death of von Hindenburg. │ │
- │(USA 740) │ IV │ 75
- │ │ │
-*1708-PS │The Program of the NSDAP. National │ │
- │Socialistic Yearbook, 1941, p. 153. (USA│ │
- │255; USA 324) │ IV │ 208
- │ │ │
-*1815-PS │Documents on RSHA meeting concerning the│ │
- │study and treatment of church politics. │ │
- │(USA 510) │ IV │ 415
- │ │ │
- 1855-PS │Extract from Organization Book of the │ │
- │NSDAP, 1937, p. 418. │ IV │ 495
- │ │ │
-*1997-PS │Decree of the Fuehrer, 17 July 1941, │ │
- │concerning administration of Newly │ │
- │Occupied Eastern Territories. (USA 319) │ IV │ 634
- │ │ │
-*2349-PS │Extracts from “The Myth of 20th Century”│ │
- │by Alfred Rosenberg, 1941. (USA 352) │ IV │ 1069
- │ │ │
- 2351-PS │Speech of Rosenberg, 7 March 1937, from │ │
- │The Archive, Vol. 34-36, p. 1716, │ │
- │published in Berlin, March 1937. │ IV │ 1070
- │ │ │
- 2352-PS │Speech of Kerrl, 27 November 1937, from │ │
- │The Archive, Vol. 43-45, p. 1029, │ │
- │published in Berlin, November 1937. │ IV │ 1071
- │ │ │
- 2403-PS │The End of the Party State, from │ │
- │Documents of German Politics, Vol. I, │ │
- │pp. 55-56. │ V │ 71
- │ │ │
- 2456-PS │Youth and the Church, from Complete │ │
- │Handbook of Youth Laws. │ V │ 198
- │ │ │
-*2851-PS │Statement by Rosenberg of positions │ │
- │held, 9 November 1945. (USA 6) │ V │ 512
- │ │ │
-*2910-PS │Certificate of defendant Seyss-Inquart, │ │
- │10 November 1945. (USA 17) │ V │ 579
- │ │ │
-*2928-PS │Affidavit of Mathias Lex, deputy │ │
- │president of the German Shoemakers │ │
- │Union. (USA 239) │ V │ 594
- │ │ │
-*2972-PS │List of appointments held by von │ │
- │Neurath, 17 November 1945. (USA 19) │ V │ 679
- │ │ │
-*2973-PS │Statement by von Schirach concerning │ │
- │positions held. (USA 14) │ V │ 679
- │ │ │
-*2978-PS │Frick’s statement of offices and │ │
- │positions, 14 November 1945. (USA 8) │ V │ 683
- │ │ │
-*2979-PS │Affidavit by Hans Frank, 15 November │ │
- │1945, concerning positions held. (USA 7)│ V │ 684
- │ │ │
-*3261-PS │Verbal note of the Secretariate of State│ │
- │of His Holiness, to the German Embassy, │ │
- │18 January 1942. (USA 568) │ V │ 1009
- │ │ │
- 3262-PS │Report of His Excellency, the Most │ │
- │Reverend Cesare Orsenigo, Papal Nuncio │ │
- │in Germany to His Eminence the Cardinal │ │
- │Secretary of State to His Holiness, 27 │ │
- │June 1942. │ V │ 1015
- │ │ │
-*3263-PS │Memorandum of Secretariate of State to │ │
- │German Embassy regarding the situation │ │
- │in the Warthegau, 8 October 1942. (USA │ │
- │571) │ V │ 1017
- │ │ │
-*3264-PS │Note of His Eminence the Cardinal │ │
- │Secretary of State to Foreign Minister │ │
- │of Reich about religious situation in │ │
- │Warthegau and in other Polish provinces │ │
- │subject to Germany, 2 March 1943. (USA │ │
- │572) │ V │ 1018
- │ │ │
- 3265-PS │Letter to His Eminence the Cardinal │ │
- │Secretary of State to the Cardinal │ │
- │Archbishop of Breslau, 18 November 1942.│ V │ 1029
- │ │ │
-*3266-PS │Letter of Cardinal Bertram, Archbishop │ │
- │of Breslau to the Papal Secretary of │ │
- │State, 7 December 1942. (USA 573) │ V │ 1031
- │ │ │
- 3267-PS │Verbal note of German Embassy to Holy │ │
- │See to the Secretariate of State of His │ │
- │Holiness, 29 August 1941. │ V │ 1037
- │ │ │
-*3268-PS │Allocution of His Holiness Pope Pius │ │
- │XII, to the Sacred College, 2 June 1945.│ │
- │(USA 356) │ V │ 1038
- │ │ │
- 3269-PS │Correspondence between the Holy See, the│ │
- │Apostolic Nuncio in Berlin, and the │ │
- │defendant von Ribbentrop, Reich Minister│ │
- │of Foreign Affairs. │ V │ 1041
- │ │ │
- 3272-PS │Statement of Rupert Mayer, 13 October │ │
- │1945. │ V │ 1061
- │ │ │
- 3273-PS │Statement of Lutheran Pastor, Friedrich │ │
- │Kaufmann, Salzburg, 23 October 1945. │ V │ 1064
- │ │ │
-*3274-PS │Pastoral letter of Austrian Bishops read│ │
- │in all churches, 14 October 1945. (USA │ │
- │570) │ V │ 1067
- │ │ │
-*3278-PS │Report on fighting of National Socialism│ │
- │in Apostolic Administration of │ │
- │Innsbruck-Feldkirch of Tyrol and │ │
- │Vorarlberg by Bishop Paulus Rusch, 27 │ │
- │June 1945 and attached list of church │ │
- │institutions there which were closed, │ │
- │confiscated or suppressed. (USA 569) │ V │ 1070
- │ │ │
-*3279-PS │Extract from Charge No. 17 against Hans │ │
- │Frank submitted by Polish Government to │ │
- │International Military Tribunal. (USA │ │
- │574) │ V │ 1078
- │ │ │
-*3280-PS │Extract from Papal Encyclical “Mit │ │
- │Brennender Sorge”, set forth in Appendix│ │
- │II, p. 524, of “The Persecution of the │ │
- │Catholic Church in the Third Reich”. │ │
- │(USA 567) │ V │ 1079
- │ │ │
- 3280-A-PS │Concordat between the Holy See and the │ │
- │German Reich. Reichsgesetzblatt, Part │ │
- │II, p. 679. │ V │ 1080
- │ │ │
-*3387-PS │Hitler Reichstag speech, 23 March 1933, │ │
- │asking for adoption of Enabling Act, │ │
- │from Voelkischer Beobachter, 24 March │ │
- │1933, p. 1. (USA 566) │ VI │ 104
- │ │ │
-*3389-PS │Fulda Declaration of 28 March 1933, from│ │
- │Voelkischer Beobachter, 29 March 1933, │ │
- │p. 2. (USA 566) │ VI │ 105
- │ │ │
- 3433-PS │Law concerning the Constitution of the │ │
- │German Protestant Church, 14 July 1933. │ │
- │1933 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 471. │ VI │ 136
- │ │ │
- 3434-PS │Law concerning procedure for decisions │ │
- │in legal affairs of the Protestant │ │
- │Church, 26 June 1935. 1935 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 774. │ VI │ 143
- │ │ │
- 3435-PS │First Ordinance for Execution of Law │ │
- │concerning procedure for decisions in │ │
- │legal affairs of the Protestant Church, │ │
- │3 July 1935. 1935 Reichsgesetzblatt, │ │
- │Part I, p. 851. │ VI │ 144
- │ │ │
- 3436-PS │Law for Safeguarding of German │ │
- │Protestant Church, 24 September 1935. │ │
- │1935 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 1178.│ VI │ 145
- │ │ │
- 3437-PS │Fifth Decree for execution of law for │ │
- │safeguarding of the German Protestant │ │
- │Church, 2 December 1935. 1935 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 1370. │ VI │ 146
- │ │ │
- 3439-PS │Fifteenth decree for the Execution of │ │
- │law for Security of German Protestant │ │
- │Church, 25 June 1937. 1937 │ │
- │Reiehsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 697. │ VI │ 147
- │ │ │
- 3466-PS │Decree to unite the competences of Reich│ │
- │and Prussia in Church Affairs, 16 July │ │
- │1935. 1935 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p.│ │
- │1029. │ VI │ 168
- │ │ │
- 3560-PS │Decree concerning organization and │ │
- │administration of Eastern Territories, 8│ │
- │October 1939. 1939 Reichsgesetzblatt, │ │
- │Part I, p. 2042. │ VI │ 244
- │ │ │
- 3561-PS │Decree concerning the Administration of │ │
- │Occupied Polish Territories, 12 October │ │
- │1939. 1939 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p.│ │
- │2077. │ VI │ 246
- │ │ │
- 3701-PS │Proposal for Reichsleiter Bormann │ │
- │concerning speech of Bishop of Muenster │ │
- │on 3 August 1941. │ VI │ 405
- │ │ │
-*3751-PS │Diary of the German Minister of Justice,│ │
- │1935 concerning prosecution of church │ │
- │officials and punishment in │ │
- │concentration camps. (USA 828; USA 858) │ VI │ 636
- │ │ │
-*D-75 │SD Inspector Bierkamp’s letter, 12 │ │
- │December 1941, to RSHA enclosing copy of│ │
- │secret decree signed by Bormann, │ │
- │entitled Relationship of National │ │
- │Socialism and Christianity. (USA 348) │ VI │ 1035
- │ │ │
-*D-84 │Gestapo instructions to State Police │ │
- │Departments, 5 August 1937, regarding │ │
- │protective custody for Bible students. │ │
- │(USA 236) │ VI │ 1040
- │ │ │
-*EC-68 │Confidential letter from Minister of │ │
- │Finance and Economy, Baden, containing │ │
- │directives on treatment of Polish │ │
- │Farmworkers, 6 March 1941. (USA 205) │ VII │ 260
- │ │ │
-*R-101-A │Letter from Chief of the Security Police│ │
- │and Security Service to the Reich │ │
- │Commissioner for the Consolidation of │ │
- │German Folkdom, 5 April 1940, with │ │
- │enclosures concerning confiscation of │ │
- │church property. (USA 358) │ VIII │ 87
- │ │ │
- R-101-B │Letter from Himmler to Dr. Winkler, 31 │ │
- │October 1940, concerning treatment of │ │
- │church property in incorporated Eastern │ │
- │countries. │ VIII │ 89
- │ │ │
-*R-101-C │Letter to Reich Leader SS, 30 July 1941,│ │
- │concerning treatment of church property │ │
- │in incorporated Eastern areas. (USA 358)│ VIII │ 91
- │ │ │
-*R-101-D │Letter from Chief of Staff of the Reich │ │
- │Main Security Office (RSHA) to Reich │ │
- │Leader SS, 30 March 1942, concerning │ │
- │confiscation of church property. (USA │ │
- │358) │ VIII │ 92
- │ │ │
-*R-103 │Letter from Polish Main Committee to │ │
- │General Government of Poland on │ │
- │situation of Polish workers in the │ │
- │Reich, 17 May 1944. (USA 204) │ VIII │ 104
- │ │ │
-*R-145 │State Police Order, 28 May 1934, at │ │
- │Duesseldorf, signed Schmid, concerning │ │
- │sanction of denominational youth and │ │
- │professional associations and │ │
- │distribution of publications in │ │
- │churches. (USA 745) │ VIII │ 248
-
-
- 7. ADOPTION AND PUBLICATION OF THE PROGRAM FOR
- PERSECUTION OF JEWS
-
-A. _The official program of the NSDAP, proclaimed 24 February 1920 by
-Adolf Hitler at a public gathering in Munich._
-
- Point 4: “None but members of the nation (_Volksgenosse_) may be
- citizens. None but those of German blood, whatever their creed,
- may be members of the nation. No Jew, therefore, may be a member
- of the nation.”
-
- Point 5: “Anyone who is not a citizen may live in Germany only
- as a guest and must be regarded as being subject to legislation
- for foreigners.”
-
- Point 6: “The right to determine matters concerning government
- and legislation is to be enjoyed by the citizen alone. We demand
- therefore that all appointments to public office, of whatever
- kind, whether in the Reich, Land, or municipality, be filled
- only by citizens. * * *”
-
- Point 7: “We demand that the state make it its first duty to
- promote the industry and livelihood of citizens. If it is not
- possible to nourish the entire population of the State, the
- members of foreign nations (non-citizens) are to be expelled
- from the Reich.”
-
- Point 8: “Any further immigration of non-Germans is to be
- prevented. We demand that all non-Germans who entered Germany
- subsequent to 2 August 1914, shall be forced immediately to
- leave the Reich.”
-
- Point 23: “We demand legal warfare against conscious political
- lies and their dissemination through the press. In order to make
- possible the creation of a German press we demand:
-
- (_a_) that all editors and collaborators of newspapers published
- in the German language be members of the nation.
-
- (_b_) non-German newspapers be requested to have express
- permission of the State to be published. They may not be printed
- in the German language.
-
- (_c_) non-Germans be prohibited by law from financial
- participation in or influence on German newspapers, and that as
- penalty for contravention of the law such newspapers be
- suppressed and all non-Germans participating in it expelled from
- the Reich. * * *” (_1708-PS_)
-
-B. _Development of ideological basis for anti-Semitic measures._
-
-Among the innumerable statements made by the leaders of the NSDAP are
-the following:
-
-Rosenberg advocated in 1920 the adoption of the following program
-concerning the Jews:
-
- “(1) The Jews are to be recognized as a (separate) nation living
- in Germany, irrespective of the religion they belong to.
-
- (2) A Jew is he whose parents on either side are nationally
- Jews. Anyone who has a Jewish husband or wife is henceforth a
- Jew.
-
- (3) Jews have no right to speak and write on or be active in
- German politics.
-
- (4) Jews have no right to hold public offices, or to serve in
- the Army either as soldiers or as officers. However, their
- contribution of work may be considered.
-
- (5) Jews have no right to be leaders of cultural institutions of
- the state and community (theaters, galleries, etc.) or to be
- professors and teachers in German schools and universities.
-
- (6) Jews have no right to be active in state or municipal
- commissions for examinations, control, censorship, etc. Jews
- have no right to represent the German Reich in economic
- treaties; they have no right to be represented in the
- directorate of state banks or communal credit establishments.
-
- (7) Foreign Jews have no right to settle in Germany permanently.
- Their admission into the German political community is to be
- forbidden under all circumstances.
-
- (8) Zionism should be energetically supported in order to
- promote the departure of German Jews—in numbers to be
- determined annually—to Palestine or generally across the
- border.” (_2842-PS_)
-
-Rosenberg’s “Zionism” was neither sincere nor consistent, for in 1921 he
-advocated breaking up Zionism, “which is involved in English-Jewish
-politics.” (_2432-PS_). He advocated in 1921 the adoption by “all
-Germans” of the following slogans: “Get the Jews out of all parties.
-Institute measures for the repudiation of all citizenship rights of all
-Jews and half-Jews: banish all the Eastern Jews; exercise strictest
-vigilance over the native ones. * * *” (_2432-PS_)
-
-Frick and other Nazis introduced a motion in the Reichstag on 27 May
-1924, “to place all members of the Jewish race under special laws.”
-(_2840-PS_). Frick also asked in the Reichstag, on 25 August 1924, for
-the realization of the Nazi program by “exclusion of all Jews from
-public office.” (_2893-PS_)
-
-C. _Anti-Semitism was seized upon by the Nazi conspirators as a
-convenient instrument to unite groups and classes of divergent views and
-interests under one banner._
-
-Adolf Hitler described racial anti-Semitism as “a new creed for the
-masses” and its spreading among the German people as “the most
-formidable task to be accomplished by our movement.” (_2881-PS_).
-Rosenberg called for the “_Zusammenraffen aller Deutschen zu einer
-stahlharten, voelkischen Einheitsfront_” (gathering of all Germans into
-a steel-hard racial united front) on the basis of anti-Semitic slogans
-(_2432-PS_). Gotfried Feder, official commentator of the Nazi Party
-program, stated: “Anti-Semitism is in a way the emotional foundation of
-our movement.” (_2844-PS_)
-
-There are innumerable admissions on the part of the Nazi leaders as to
-the part which their anti-Semitic propaganda played in their acquisition
-of control. The following statement concerning the purpose of racial
-propaganda was made by Dr. Walter Gross, director of the Office of
-Racial Policy of the Nazi Party:
-
- “In the years of fight, the aim was to employ all means of
- propaganda which promised success in order to gather people who
- were ready to overthrow, together with the Party, the harmful
- post-war regime and put the power into the hand of the Fuehrer
- and his collaborators. * * * In these years of fight the aim was
- purely political: I meant the overthrow of the regime and
- acquisition of power. * * * Within this great general task the
- education in racial thinking necessarily played a decisive part,
- because herein lies basically the deepest revolutionary nature
- of the new spirit.” (_2845-PS_)
-
-In another official Nazi publication, recommended for circulation in all
-Party units and establishments, it is stated:
-
- “The whole treatment of the Jewish problem in the years prior to
- our seizure of power is to be regarded essentially from the
- point of view of the political education of the German people.”
- (To disregard this angle of the use made of anti-Semitism means)
- “to disregard the success and aim of the work toward racial
- education.” (_2427-PS_)
-
-D. _After the acquisition of power the Nazi conspirators initiated a
-state policy of persecution of the Jews._
-
-(1) _The first organized act was the boycott of Jewish enterprises on 1
-April 1933._ The boycott action was approved by all the defendants who
-were members of the _Reichsregierung_ (Reich Cabinet), and Streicher was
-charged with its execution. Presented as an alleged act of “self
-defense”, the boycott action was intended to frighten Jewish public
-opinion abroad and force it, by the threat of collective responsibility
-to all Jews in Germany, to desist from warning against the Nazi danger.
-(_2409-PS_; _2410-PS_)
-
-The boycott was devised as a demonstration of the extent to which the
-Nazi Party controlled its members and the German masses; consequently,
-spontaneous action and physical violence were discouraged. Goebbels
-stated:
-
- “The national socialist leadership had declared: ‘The boycott is
- legal’, and the government demands that the people permit that
- the boycott be carried out legally. We expect iron discipline.
- This must be for the whole world a wonderful show of unity and
- manly training. To those abroad who believe that we could not
- manage it, we want to show that we have the people in our hand.”
- (_2431-PS_)
-
-(2) _Laws eliminating Jews from various offices and functions._ The Nazi
-conspirators legislative program was gradual and, in the beginning,
-relatively “moderate.” In the first period, which dates from 7 April
-1933 until September 1935, the laws eliminated Jews from public office
-and limited their participation in schools, certain professions, and
-cultural establishments. The following are the major laws issued in this
-period:
-
- Document │ Date │Reichsge│ Title and gist of law │Signed by
- No. │ │setzblat│ │
- │ │ t page │ │
- │ │ │ │
- _1397-PS_ │ 7.4.33│I.175 │_Gesetz zur Wiederherstellung │Hitler
- │ │ │ des Berufsbeamtentums_ (Law │Frick
- │ │ │ for the reestablishment of │Schwerin
- │ │ │ the professional civil │V. Krosigk
- │ │ │ service), removing Jews from│
- │ │ │ Civil Service. │
- │ │ │ │
- │ 7.4.33│I.188 │_Gesetz uber die Zulassung zur│Guertner
- │ │ │ Rechtsanwaltschaft_ (Law │
- │ │ │ relating to admission to the│
- │ │ │ Bar) removing Jews from the │
- │ │ │ Bar. │
- │ │ │ │
- _2868-PS_ │ 22.4.33│I.217 │_Gesetz betreffend die │Hitler
- │ │ │ Zulassung zur │Guertner
- │ │ │ Patentanwaltschaft_ (Law │
- │ │ │ relating to the admission to│
- │ │ │ the profession of patent │
- │ │ │ agent and lawyer) excluding │
- │ │ │ Jews from acting as patent │
- │ │ │ attorneys. │
- │ │ │ │
- _2869-PS_ │ 6.5.33│I.257 │_Gesetz uber die Zulassung von│Hitler
- │ │ │ Steuerberatern_ (Law │Schwerin
- │ │ │ relating to the admission of│V. Krosigk
- │ │ │ Tax Advisors) eliminating │
- │ │ │ “non-Aryans” from the │
- │ │ │ profession of tax │
- │ │ │ consultants. │
- │ │ │ │
- _2084-PS_ │ 22.4.33│I.215 │_Gesetz uber die uberfullung │Hitler
- │ │ │ deutscher Schullen_ (Law │Frick
- │ │ │ against the overcrowding of │
- │ │ │ German schools and higher │
- │ │ │ institutions) limiting │
- │ │ │ drastically the number of │
- │ │ │ Jewish students. │
- │ │ │ │
- _2870-PS_ │ 26.7.33│I.538 │_Verordnung zur Durchfuehrung │Pfundtner
- │ │ │ des Gesetzes uber den │(Asst. to
- │ │ │ Widerruf von │Frick)
- │ │ │ Einbuergerungen_ (Executing │
- │ │ │ decree for the law about the│
- │ │ │ Repeal of Naturalizations │
- │ │ │ and the adjudication of │
- │ │ │ German citizenship) defining│
- │ │ │ Jews from Eastern Europe as │
- │ │ │ “undesirable” and subject to│
- │ │ │ denationalization. │
- │ │ │ │
- _2083-PS_ │ 4.10.33│I.713 │_Schriftleitergesetz_ │Hitler
- │ │ │ (Editorial Law) barring │Goebbels
- │ │ │ “non-Aryans” and persons │
- │ │ │ married to“"non-Aryans” from│
- │ │ │ the newspaper profession. │
- │ │ │ │
- _2984-PS_ │ 21.5.35│I.608 │_Wehrgesetz_ (Law concerning │V.
- │ │ │ Armed Forces) barring │Blomberg
- │ │ │ “non-Aryans” from military │
- │ │ │ service. │
-
-On 10 September 1935, Minister of Education Rust issued a circular
-ordering the complete elimination of Jewish pupils from “Aryan” schools
-(_2894-PS_). This legislative activity, in addition to being the first
-step towards the elimination of the Jews, served an “educational”
-purpose and was a further test of the extent of control exerted by the
-Nazi Party and regime over the German masses.
-
-Dr. Achim Gercke, racial expert of the Ministry of the Interior, stated:
-
- “The laws are mainly educational and give direction. The aspect
- of the laws should not be underestimated. The entire nation is
- enlightened on the Jewish problem; it learns to understand that
- the national community is a blood community; it understands for
- the first time the racial idea, and is diverted from a too
- theoretical treatment of the Jewish problem and faced with the
- actual solution.” (_2904-PS_)
-
-It was clear, however, that the Nazi conspirators had a far more
-ambitious program in the Jewish problem and put off its realization for
-reasons of expediency. In the words of Dr. Gercke:
-
- “Nevertheless the laws published thus far cannot bring a final
- solution of the Jewish problem, because the time has not yet
- come for it, although the decrees give the general direction and
- leave open the possibility of further developments.
-
- “It would be in every respect premature now to work out and
- publicly discuss plans to achieve more than can be achieved for
- the time being. However, one must point out a few basic
- principles so that the ideas which one desires and must have
- ripened will contain no mistakes. * * *
-
- “All suggestions aiming at a permanent situation, at a
- stabilization of, the status of the Jews in Germany do not solve
- the Jewish problem, because they do not detach the Jews from
- Germany. * * *
-
- “_Plans and programs must contain an aim pointing to the future
- and not merely consisting of the regulation of a momentarily
- uncomfortable situation._” (_2904-PS_)
-
-(3) _Deprivation of Jews of their rights as citizens._ After a
-propaganda barrage, in which the speeches and writings of Streicher were
-most prominent, the Nazi conspirators initiated the second period of
-anti-Jewish legislation (15 September 1935 to September 1938). In this
-period the Jews were deprived of their full rights as citizens (First
-Nurnberg Law) and forbidden to marry “Aryans” (Second Nurnberg Law).
-Further steps were taken to eliminate Jews from certain professions, and
-the groundwork was laid for the subsequent expropriation of Jewish
-property. These laws were hailed as the fulfillment of the Nazi Party
-program.
-
-The major laws issued in this period are listed below:
-
- Document │ Date │Reichsge│ Title and gist of law │Signed by
- No. │ │setzblat│ │
- │ │ t page │ │
- │ │ │ │
- _1416-PS_ │ 15.9.35│I 1145 │_Reichsbuergergesetz_ (Reich │Hitler
- │ │ │ Citizenship Law), first │Frick
- │ │ │ Nurnberg Law, reserving │
- │ │ │ citizenship for subjects of │
- │ │ │ German blood. │
- │ │ │ │
- _2000-PS_ │ 15.9.35│I 1146 │_Gesetz zum Schutze des │Hitler
- │ │ │ deutschen Blutes_, (Law for │Frick
- │ │ │ _protection of German_ blood│Guertner
- │ │ │ and German honor), │Hess
- │ │ │ forbidding marriages and │
- │ │ │ extra-marital relations │
- │ │ │ between Jews and “Aryans”. │
- │ │ │ │
- _1417-PS_ │ 14.11.35│I 1333 │_Erste Verordnung zum │Hitler
- │ │ │ Reichsbuergergesetz_ (First │Frick Hess
- │ │ │ regulation to Reich │
- │ │ │ citizenship law), defining │
- │ │ │ the terms “Jew” and │
- │ │ │ “part-Jew”. Jewish officials│
- │ │ │ to be dismissed. │
- │ │ │ │
- _2871-PS_ │ 7.3.36│I 133 │_Gesetz ueber das │Hitler
- │ │ │ Reichstagwahlrecht_ (Law │Frick
- │ │ │ governing elections to the │
- │ │ │ Reichstag) barring Jews from│
- │ │ │ Reichstag vote. │
- │ │ │ │
- _1406-PS_ │ 26.4.38│I 414 │_Verordnung ueber die │Goering
- │ │ │ Ammeldung des Vermogens von │Frick
- │ │ │ Juden_ (Decree for reporting│
- │ │ │ Jewish-owned property), │
- │ │ │ basis for subsequent │
- │ │ │ expropriation. │
- │ │ │ │
- _2872-PS_ │ 25.7.38│I 969 │_Vierte Verordnung zum │Frick
- │ │ │ Reichsbuergergesetz._ Fourth│
- │ │ │ decree on the Citizenship │
- │ │ │ Law, revoking licenses of │
- │ │ │ Jewish physicians. │
- │ │ │ │
- _2873-PS_ │ 17.8.38│I 1044 │_Zweite Verordnung zur │Frick
- │ │ │ Durchfuhrung des Gesetzes │
- │ │ │ ueber die Aenderung von │
- │ │ │ Familiennamen und Vornamen_ │
- │ │ │ (Second decree on law │
- │ │ │ concerning change of first │
- │ │ │ and last names), forcing │
- │ │ │ Jews to adopt the names │
- │ │ │ “Israel” and “Sara”. │
- │ │ │ │
- _2874-PS_ │ 27.9.38│I 1403 │_Fuenfte Verordnung zum │
- │ │ │ Reichsbuergergesetz._ (Fifth│
- │ │ │ decree to law relating to │
- │ │ │ the Reich citizenship), │
- │ │ │ revoking admission of Jewish│
- │ │ │ lawyers. │
-
-(4) _Program of 9 November 1938 and elimination of Jews from economic
-life._
-
-In the autumn of 1938, within the framework of economic preparation for
-aggressive war and as an act of defiance to world opinion, the Nazi
-conspirators began to put into effect a program of complete elimination
-of the Jews. The measures taken were partly presented as retaliation
-against “world Jewry” in connection with the killing of a German embassy
-official in Paris. Unlike the boycott action in April, 1933, when care
-was taken to avoid violence, an allegedly “spontaneous” pogrom was
-staged and carried out all over Germany on orders of Heydrich.
-
-The organized character of the pogrom is also obvious from the admission
-of Heydrich and others at a meeting presided over by Goering at the Air
-Ministry in Berlin. (_1816-PS_)
-
-The legislative measures which followed were discussed and approved in
-their final form at a meeting on 12 November 1938 under the chairmanship
-of Goering, with the participation of Frick, Funk and others. The
-meeting was called following Hitler’s orders “requesting that the Jewish
-questions be now, once and for all, coordinated and solved one way or
-another.” The participants agreed on measures to be taken “for the
-elimination of the Jew from German economy.” Other possibilities, such
-as the establishment of ghettos, stigmatization through special
-insignia, and “the main problem, namely to kick the Jew out of Germany”,
-were also discussed. All these measures were later enacted as soon as
-conditions permitted. (_1816-PS_)
-
-The laws issued in this period were signed mostly by Goering, in his
-capacity as Deputy for the Four Year Plan, and were thus connected with
-the consolidation of control over German economy in preparation for
-aggressive war.
-
-The major laws issued in this period are listed below:
-
- Document │ Date │Reichsge│ Title and gist of law │Signed by
- No. │ │setzblat│ │
- │ │ t page │ │
- │ │ │ │
- _1412-PS_ │ 12.11.38│I 1579 │_Verordnung ueber eine │Goering
- │ │ │ Suhneleistung der Juden_ │
- │ │ │ (Order concerning expiation │
- │ │ │ contribution of Jews of │
- │ │ │ German nationality), │
- │ │ │ obligating all German Jews │
- │ │ │ to pay a collective fine of │
- │ │ │ 1.000.000.000 Reichsmark. │
- │ │ │ │
- _2875-PS_ │ 12.11.38│I 1580 │_Verordnung zur Ausschaltung │Goering
- │ │ │ der Juden aus dem deutschen │
- │ │ │ Wirtschaftsleben_ (Decree on│
- │ │ │ elimination of Jews from │
- │ │ │ German economic life), │
- │ │ │ barring Jews from trade and │
- │ │ │ crafts. │
- │ │ │ │
- _1415-PS_ │ 28.11.38│I 1676 │_Polizeiverordnung ueber das │Heydrich
- │ │ │ Auftreten der Juden in der │(assistant
- │ │ │ Queffentlichkeit_ (Police │to Frick)
- │ │ │ regulation of the appearance│
- │ │ │ of Jews in public), limiting│
- │ │ │ movement of Jews to certain │
- │ │ │ localities and hours. │
- │ │ │ │
- _1409-PS_ │ 3.12.38│I 1709 │_Verordnung ueber den Einsatz │Funk Frick
- │ │ │ des Juedischen Vermoegens_ │
- │ │ │ (Order concerning the │
- │ │ │ Utilization of Jewish │
- │ │ │ property), setting time │
- │ │ │ limit for the sale or │
- │ │ │ liquidation of Jewish │
- │ │ │ enterprises; forcing Jews to│
- │ │ │ deposit shares and │
- │ │ │ securities held by them; │
- │ │ │ forbidding sale or │
- │ │ │ acquisition of gold and │
- │ │ │ precious stones by Jews. │
- │ │ │ │
- _1419-PS_ │ 30.4.39│I 864 │_Gesetz ueber │Hitler
- │ │ │ Mietverhaeltnisse mit Juden_│Guertner
- │ │ │ (Law concerning Jewish │Krohn
- │ │ │ tenants) granting to │Frick Hess
- │ │ │ landlords the right to give │
- │ │ │ notice to Jewish tenants │
- │ │ │ before legal expiration of │
- │ │ │ lease. │
- │ │ │ │
- _2876-PS_ │ 4.7.39│I 1097 │_Zehnte Verordnung zum │Frick Rust
- │ │ │ Reichsbuergergesetz_ (Tenth │Kerrl Hess
- │ │ │ decree relating to the Reich│
- │ │ │ Citizenship Law), forcible │
- │ │ │ congregation of Jews in the │
- │ │ │ “Reichsvereinigung der Juden│
- │ │ │ in Deutschland”. │
- │ │ │ │
- _2877-PS_ │ 1.9.41│I 547 │_Polizeiverordnung ueber die │Heydrich
- │ │ │ Konnzeichnung der Juden_ │
- │ │ │ (Police order concerning │
- │ │ │ identification of Jews) │
- │ │ │ forcing all Jews over 6 │
- │ │ │ years of age to wear the │
- │ │ │ Star of David. │
-
-(5) _Extermination of German Jews._ Early in 1939 Hitler and the other
-Nazi conspirators decided to arrive at a “final solution of the Jewish
-problem.” In connection with preparations for aggressive war, further
-consolidation of controls and removal of elements not belonging to the
-_Volksgemeinschaft_ (racial community) were deemed necessary. The
-conspirators also anticipated the conquest of territories in Eastern
-Europe inhabitated by large numbers of Jews and the impossibility of
-forcing large-scale emigration in wartime. Hence, other and more drastic
-measures became necessary. The emphasis in this period shifted from
-legislative acts to police measures.
-
-On 24 January 1939 Heydrich was charged with the mission of “arriving at
-a solution of the Jewish problem.” (_710-PS_)
-
-On 15 January 1939 Rosenberg stated in a speech at Detmold:
-
- “For Germany the Jewish problem will be solved only when the
- last Jew has left Germany.”
-
-On 7 February 1939, Rosenberg appealed to foreign nations to forget
-“ideological differences” and unite against the “real enemy,” the Jew.
-He advocated the creation of a “reservation” where the Jews of all
-countries should be concentrated (_2843-PS_). In his Reichstag speech on
-30 January 1939, Hitler made the following prophecy:
-
- “The result [of war] will be * * * the annihilation of the
- Jewish race in Europe.” (_2663-PS_)
-
-Thus the direction was given for a policy which was carried out as soon
-as the conquest of foreign territories created the material conditions.
-(For the carrying out and results of the program of the Nazi
-conspirators against Jewry, see Chapter XII.)
-
-In the final period of the anti-Jewish crusade very few legislative
-measures were passed. The Jews were delivered to the SS and various
-extermination staffs. The last law dealing with the Jews in Germany,
-signed by Frick, Bormann, Schwerin V. Krosigk, and Thierach, put them
-entirely outside the law and ordered the confiscation by the State of
-the property of dead Jews (_1422-PS_). This law was a weak reflection of
-a factual situation already in existence. Dr. Wilhelm Stuckart,
-assistant to Frick, stated at that time:
-
- “The aim of the racial legislation may be regarded as already
- achieved and consequently the racial legislation as essentially
- closed. It led to the temporary solution of the Jewish problem
- and at the same time prepared the final solution. Many
- regulations will lose their practical importance as Germany
- approaches the achievement of the final goal in the Jewish
- problem.” (_Stuckart and Schiedermair: Rassen und Erbpflege in
- der Gesetzgebung des Reiches_ (The care for Race and Heredity in
- the Legislation of the Reich), Leipzig, 1943, p. 14.)
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO ADOPTION AND
- PUBLICATION OF THE PROGRAM FOR PERSECUTION OF JEWS
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6, especially 6 (a).│ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Section IV (D) 3 │ │
- │ (d). │ I │ 20
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document was referred to during the │ │
- │trial but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
-  *710-PS │Letter from Goering to Heydrich, 31 July│ │
- │1941, concerning solution of Jewish │ │
- │question. (USA 509) │ III │ 525
- │ │ │
-  1397-PS │Law for the reestablishment of the │ │
- │Professional Civil Service, 7 April │ │
- │1933. 1933 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p.│ │
- │175. │ III │ 981
- │ │ │
-  1401-PS │Law regarding admission to the Bar, 7 │ │
- │April 1933. 1933 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part│ │
- │I, p. 188. │ III │ 989
- │ │ │
-  1406-PS │Decree for reporting of Jewish-owned │ │
- │property, 26 April 1938. 1938 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 414. │ III │ 1001
- │ │ │
-  1409-PS │Order concerning utilization of Jewish │ │
- │property, 3 December 1938. 1938 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 1709. │ IV │ 1
- │ │ │
-  1412-PS │Decree relating to payment of fine by │ │
- │Jews of German nationality, 12 November │ │
- │1938. 1938 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p.│ │
- │1579. │ IV │ 6
- │ │ │
-  1415-PS │Police regulation concerning appearance │ │
- │of Jews in public, 28 November 1938. │ │
- │1938 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 1676.│ IV │ 6
- │ │ │
-  1416-PS │Reich Citizen Law of 15 September 1935. │ │
- │1935 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 1146.│ IV │ 7
- │ │ │
- *1417-PS │First regulation to the Reichs │ │
- │Citizenship Law, 14 November 1935. 1935 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 1333. (GB │ │
- │258) │ IV │ 8
- │ │ │
-  1419-PS │Law concerning Jewish tenants, 30 April │ │
- │1939. 1939 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p.│ │
- │864. │ IV │ 10
- │ │ │
-  1422-PS │Thirteenth regulation under Reich │ │
- │Citizenship Law, 1 July 1943. 1943 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 372. │ IV │ 14
- │ │ │
- *1708-PS │The Program of the NSDAP. National │ │
- │Socialistic Yearbook, 1941, p. 153. (USA│ │
- │255; USA 324) │ IV │ 208
- │ │ │
- *1816-PS │Stenographic report of the meeting on │ │
- │The Jewish Question, under the │ │
- │Chairmanship of Fieldmarshal Goering, 12│ │
- │November 1938. (USA 261) │ IV │ 425
- │ │ │
-  2000-PS │Law for protection of German blood and │ │
- │German honor, 15 September 1935. 1935 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, No. 100, p. │ │
- │1146. │ IV │ 636
- │ │ │
-  2022-PS │Law against overcrowding of German │ │
- │schools and Higher Institutions, 25 │ │
- │April 1933. 1933 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part│ │
- │I, p. 225. │ IV │ 651
- │ │ │
-  2083-PS │Editorial control law, 4 October 1933. │ │
- │1933 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 713. │ IV │ 709
- │ │ │
-  2084-PS │Law on formation of the Student │ │
- │Organization at Scientific Univesities, │ │
- │22 April 1933. 1933 Reichsgesetzblatt, │ │
- │Part I, p. 215. │ IV │ 718
- │ │ │
- *2409-PS │Extracts from The Imperial House to the │ │
- │Reich Chancellery by Dr. Joseph │ │
- │Goebbels. (USA 262) │ V │ 83
- │ │ │
-  2410-PS │Article by Julius Streicher on the │ │
- │“coming popular action” under banner │ │
- │headline “Beat the World Enemy”, from │ │
- │Voelkischer Beobachter, South German │ │
- │Edition, 31 March 1933. │ V │ 85
- │ │ │
-  2427-PS │The Racial Awakening of German Nation by│ │
- │Dr. Rudolf Frercks, in National │ │
- │Political Enlightenment Pamphlets. │ V │ 92
- │ │ │
-  2431-PS │The Revolution of the Germans; 14 years │ │
- │of National Socialism, by Dr. Joseph │ │
- │Goebbels. │ V │ 92
- │ │ │
-  2432-PS │Extracts from Rosenberg’s, Writings From│ │
- │The Years, 1921-1923. │ V │ 93
- │ │ │
- *2663-PS │Hitler’s speech to the Reichstag, 30 │ │
- │January 1939, quoted from Voelkischer │ │
- │Beobachter, Munich edition, 1 February │ │
- │1939. (USA 268) │ V │ 367
- │ │ │
-  2840-PS │Dr. Wilhelm Frick and his Ministry, │ │
- │1937, p. 180-181. │ V │ 503
- │ │ │
-  2841-PS │Extract from the Care for Race and │ │
- │Heredity in the Legislation of the │ │
- │Reich, Leipzig, 1943, p. 14. │ V │ 504
- │ │ │
-  2842-PS │Extract from Writings of the years, │ │
- │1917-21, by Alfred Rosenberg, published │ │
- │in Munich 1943, pp. 320-321. │ V │ 504
- │ │ │
-  2843-PS │Race Politics from Documents of German │ │
- │Politics, Vol. VII, pp. 728-729. │ V │ 505
- │ │ │
-  2844-PS │The Program of the Nazi Party, by │ │
- │Gottfried Feder, August 1927, Munich, p.│ │
- │17. │ V │ 506
- │ │ │
-  2845-PS │One Year of Racial Political Education │ │
- │by Dr. Gross in National Socialist │ │
- │Monthly No. 54, September 1934, pp. │ │
- │833-834. │ V │ 506
- │ │ │
-  2868-PS │Law relating to admission of profession │ │
- │of Patent-Agent and Lawyer, 22 April │ │
- │1933. 1933 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part II, │ │
- │No. 41, pp. 217-8. │ V │ 529
- │ │ │
-  2869-PS │Law relating to admission of Tax │ │
- │Advisors, 6 May 1933. 1933 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, No. 49, p. │ │
- │257. │ V │ 530
- │ │ │
-  2870-PS │Executory decree for law about repeal of│ │
- │Naturalization and Adjudication of │ │
- │German Citizenship, 26 July 1933. 1933 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 538. │ V │ 530
- │ │ │
-  2871-PS │Law governing elections to Reichstag, 7 │ │
- │March 1936. 1936 Reichsgesetzblatt, No. │ │
- │19, p. 133. │ V │ 532
- │ │ │
-  2872-PS │Fourth decree relative to Reich Citizen │ │
- │Law of 25 July 1938. 1938 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 969. │ V │ 533
- │ │ │
-  2873-PS │Second decree allotting to │ │
- │Implementation of Law on change of first│ │
- │and family names, 17 August 1938. 1938 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 1044. │ V │ 534
- │ │ │
-  2874-PS │Fifth decree to law relating to Reich │ │
- │Citizenship, 27 September 1938. 1938 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, No. 165, p. │ │
- │1403. │ V │ 535
- │ │ │
-  2875-PS │Decree on exclusion of Jews from German │ │
- │economic life, 12 November 1938. │ V │ 536
- │ │ │
-  2876-PS │Tenth decree relating to Reich │ │
- │Citizenship Law, 4 July 1939. 1939 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 1097. │ V │ 537
- │ │ │
-  2877-PS │Police decree concerning “marking” of │ │
- │Jews, 1 September 1941. 1941 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, No. 100, p. │ │
- │547. │ V │ 539
- │ │ │
-  2881-PS │Hitler’s speech of 12 April 1922, quoted│ │
- │in Adolf Hitler’s Speeches, published by│ │
- │Dr. Ernst Boepple, Munich, 1934, pp. │ │
- │20-21, 72. │ V │ 548
- │ │ │
-  2893-PS │Article: “Dr. Frick and the Unity of the│ │
- │Reich” by Walter Koerber, published in │ │
- │Our Reich Cabinet, Berlin, 1936, p. 87. │ V │ 562
- │ │ │
-  2894-PS │General Decree of September 10, 1935 on │ │
- │establishment of separate Jewish │ │
- │schools, published in Documents of │ │
- │German Politics, 1937, p. 152. │ V │ 562
- │ │ │
-  2904-PS │The Racial Problem and the New Reich, │ │
- │published in The National Socialist │ │
- │Monthly, No. 38, May 1933, pp.196-7. │ V │ 570
- │ │ │
-  2984-PS │Law concerning armed forces, 21 May │ │
- │1935. 1935 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I. │ V │ 686
- │ │ │
- *3054-PS │“The Nazi Plan”, script of a motion │ │
- │picture composed of captured German │ │
- │film. (USA 167) │ V │ 801
-
-
- 8. RESHAPING OF EDUCATION AND TRAINING OF YOUTH
-
-A. _The Nazi conspirators reshaped the educational system._
-
-(1) _The Nazi conspirators publicly announced the purposes of their
-educational and training program._ Hitler stated at Elbing, Germany:
-
- “When an opponent declares, ‘I will not come over to your side,
- and you will not get me on your side,’ I calmly say, ‘Your child
- belongs to me already. A people lives forever. What are you? You
- will pass on. Your descendants however now stand in the new
- camp. _In a short time they will know nothing else but this new
- community.’_” (_2455-PS_)
-
-Hitler said on 1 May 1937:
-
- “The youth of today is ever the people of tomorrow. For this
- reason we have set before ourselves the task of inoculating our
- youth with the spirit of this community of the people at a very
- early age, at an age when human beings are still unperverted and
- therefore unspoiled. * * * This Reich stands, and it is building
- itself up for the future, upon its youth. And this new Reich
- will give its youth to no one, _but will itself take youth and
- give to youth its own education and its own upbringing_.”
- (_2454-PS_)
-
-The first sentence in the official instructors manual for high schools
-reads:
-
- “The German school is a part of the National Socialist
- Educational order. It is its obligation to form the national
- socialistic personality in cooperation with the other
- educational powers of the nation, but by its distinctive
- educational means.” (_2453-PS_)
-
-Hitler stated in _Mein Kampf_:
-
- “On this basis the whole education by the National State must
- aim primarily not at the stuffing with mere knowledge, but at
- the building up of bodies which are physically healthy to the
- core. The development of intellectual faculties comes only after
- this.” (_2392-PS_)
-
-(2) _They transferred responsibility for education from the states to
-the Reich._ The Reich Ministry of Education was established, and control
-of all schools, public and private, including universities and adult
-educational activities, was transferred to this Reichsministry
-(_2078-PS_; _2088-PS_). The control of education by the local
-authorities was replaced by the absolute authority of the Reich in all
-educational matters. (_2393-PS_)
-
-(3) _They changed the curricula and textbooks._
-
-_Kindergarten_: Children from two to six years were trained in more than
-15,000 Kindergartens operated by the Party and State. The teachers in
-charge were trained in special schools that emphasized the ideological
-views of the Nazi Party. The children were given a systematic training
-in Nazi ideology. (_2443-PS_; _2441-PS_)
-
-_Elementary schools_: Primary emphasis was placed on physical training.
-History, German race culture and mathematics were the other subjects
-emphasized. These subjects were taught in such a way as to emphasize the
-cultural superiority of the German people, the importance of race, the
-Fuehrer principle, glorification of German war heroes, the subversive
-elements that caused the defeat of Germany in World War I, the shame of
-the Versailles Treaty, and the rebirth of Germany under the Nazis.
-(_2392-PS_; _2397-PS_; _2441-PS_; _2394-PS_)
-
-In addition to education in the schools all children from six to ten
-years were registered in the _Kindergruppen_ (Children’s Groups)
-conducted by the National Socialist _Frauenschaft_ (National Socialist
-Women’s Organization). All children were required to obtain an
-efficiency record card and uniform and were instructed in Nazi ideology
-by the members of the Women’s Organization. (_2441-PS_; _2452-PS_)
-
-_High Schools_ (Hoeheren Schule): The curricula and organization of the
-_Hoeheren_ School was modified by a series of decrees of the Minister of
-Education in order to make these schools effective instruments for the
-teaching of the Nazi doctrines. A new curricula emphasizing physical
-training, German war history, and race culture was introduced.
-(_2453-PS_)
-
-_Universities_: The schools of politics and physical education became
-the largest colleges at the universities. Beginning in 1933 the Nazis
-introduced courses in heredity and race culture, ancient and modern
-German history, biology and geopolitics. (_2443-PS_; _2441-PS_)
-
-Textbooks in the schools were changed to accord with the expressed
-objectives of the Nazi conspirators. (_2446-PS_; _2442-PS_; _2444-PS_;
-_2445-PS_)
-
-(4) _The Nazi conspirators acquired domination and control over all
-teachers._ The law for the reestablishing of the professional civil
-service made it possible for the Nazi conspirators thoroughly to
-reexamine all German teachers and to remove all “harmful and
-untrustworthy” elements (_1397-PS_; _2392-PS_). Many teachers and
-professors (mostly Jewish) were dismissed and were replaced with “State
-spirited” teachers (_2392-PS_). All teachers were required to take an
-oath of loyalty and obedience to Hitler. (_2061-PS_). All teachers were
-required to belong to the National Socialist _Lehrerbund_ (National
-Socialist Teachers League), which organization was charged with the
-training of all teachers in the theories and doctrines of the NSDAP.
-(_2452-PS_)
-
-In 1934 the National Socialist Teachers League was declared to be the
-official organ of German education. (_2393-PS_)
-
-The Civil Service Act of 1937 required the teachers to be “the executors
-of the will of the party-supported State.” It required them to be ready
-at “any time to defend without reservation the National Socialist
-State.” The law required the teachers to participate strenuously in
-elections, have thorough knowledge of Party principles and literature,
-render the Hitler Salute, send their children to the Hitler Youth, and
-educate them in the Nazi spirit (_2340-PS_). Before taking their second
-examination (required for permanent appointment), teachers in Prussia
-were required to show service in the SA and in the _Arbeitsdienst_
-(Labor Service) (_2392-PS_). Candidates for teaching and other public
-positions were required to have “proved themselves” in the Hitler Jugend
-(_2451-PS_; _2900-PS_). Teachers’ academies were judged by the Minister
-of Education on their ability to turn out men and women with new ideas
-“based on blood and soil”. (_2394-PS_)
-
-The leadership principle replaced the democratic school principle. A
-decree of the Reich Minister of Education made the head of any school
-fully responsible for the conduct of the institution in line with the
-official party ideology. Teachers committees and Student Committees were
-abolished (_2393-PS_; _2392-PS_). A “confidential instructor,” the
-school youth warden of the Hitler Jugend, appointed by the Hitler Youth
-authorities, was assigned to each school (_2396-PS_). The “Parents
-Advisory Committees” in the public schools were dissolved, and replaced
-by the “School Communities,” (_Schulgemeinde_). The headmaster was the
-leader. He appointed, after consultation with the local party leader,
-two to five teachers or parents, known as “_Jugendwalter_,” (Youth
-Advisors) and one Hitler Youth leader, who was appointed after
-consultation with the Hitler Youth officials in the district
-(_2399-PS_). The duties of the “School Community” were to bring to the
-attention of the public the educational objectives of the Nazi Party,
-including race questions, heredity indoctrination, physical training,
-and the Youth League activities. The function of advising the school
-authorities, formerly performed by the “Parents Advisory Committees,”
-was eliminated by the decree. (_2399-PS_)
-
-_Universities_: The Leadership Principle was introduced into the
-universities. The _Rektor_ (head of the university) was appointed by the
-Reich Minister of Education for an unspecified period of time and was
-responsible only to the Reichs Minister. The University was divided into
-the _Dozentenschaft_ (Lecturers Corps) and the _Studentenschaft_
-(Student Corps). The leaders of these two bodies were also appointed by
-the Reichsminister of Education (_2394-PS_). The teaching staff of the
-university was subject to the control of the National Socialist
-_Dozentenbund_ (NSDoB) (Nazi Association of University Lecturers). The
-purposes of the NSDoB were:
-
-(_a_) to take a decisive part in the selection of lecturers and to
-produce candidates for the teaching staff who were wholly Nazi in their
-outlook.
-
-(_b_) to train all university lecturers in Nazi ideology,
-
-(_c_) to see that the entire university life was run in accordance with
-the philosophy of the Party. (_2452-PS_; _318-PS_)
-
-All German students at the universities were required to belong to the
-_Studentenschaft_ (Student Corps) (_2084-PS_). The Student Corps was
-responsible for making the students conscious of their duties to the
-Nazis, and was obliged to promote enrollment in the SA and labor
-service. Physical training of students was the responsibility of the SA.
-Political education was the responsibility of the
-_National-Sozialistische Deutsche Studentenbund_ (NSDStB), (National
-Socialist German Student Bund) (_2458-PS_). The National Socialist
-Student Bund (NSDStB) was the Nazi “elite” of the student body and was
-responsible for the leadership of the university students, and all
-leaders of the Student Corps were appointed from its membership. The
-Nazi Student Bund was solely responsible for the entire ideological and
-political education of the students. (_2395-PS_; _2399-PS_; _2441-PS_;
-_2392-PS_; _2393-PS_)
-
-B. _The Nazi conspirators supplemented the school system by training the
-youth through the Hitler Jugend._
-
-(1) _The Nazi conspirators from their early days expressed their belief
-in the fundamental importance of controlling the education and training
-of youth._ Hitler stated in _Mein Kampf_:
-
- “It is precisely our German people, that today broken down, lies
- defenseless against the kicks of the rest of the world who need
- that suggestive force that lies in self-confidence. But this
- _self-confidence has to be instilled_ into the young
- fellow-citizen from childhood on. His entire education and
- development has to be directed at giving him _the conviction_
- _of being absolutely superior to others_. With this physical
- force and skill he has again to win the belief in the
- invincibility of his entire nationality. For what once led the
- German army to victory was the sum of the confidence which the
- individual and all in common had in their leaders. The
- confidence in _the possibility of regaining its freedom_ is what
- will restore the German people. But this conviction must be the
- final product of the same feeling of millions of individuals.”
- (_404-PS_; see also _2901-PS_)
-
-Again in _Mein Kampf_ Hitler said:
-
- “The racial State will have to see to it that there will be a
- generation which by a suitable education will be ready for the
- final and ultimate decision on this globe. The nation which
- enters first on this course will be the victorious one.”
- (_404-PS_)
-
-The law of the Hitler Youth provides in part as follows:
-
- “The future of the German nation depends on its youth, and the
- German youth shall have to be prepared for its future duties. *
- * *
-
- “The German youth besides being reared within the family and
- school, shall be educated physically, intellectually and morally
- in the spirit of National Socialism to serve the people and
- community, through the Hitler Youth.” (_1392-PS_)
-
-On May 1, 1938 Hitler said in a speech to the youth:
-
- “Since the victory of the Movement, under whose banner you
- stand, there has been completed within our people the
- unification of heart (innere Einigung) of the Germans. And as
- wages for this work of ours Providence has given us Greater
- Germany (Grossdeutschland). _This unification is no gift of
- chance, it is the result of a systematic education of our people
- by the National Socialist Movement._ . . . . And this education
- begins with the individual at an age when he is not already
- burdened with preconceived ideas. The youth is the stone which
- is to go to the building of our new Reich! You are Greater
- Germany! In you is being formed the community of the German
- people. Before the single leader there stands a Reich, before
- the single Reich stands a people, and before the single people
- stands German youth! When I see you my faith in the future of
- Germany has no bounds, nothing can shake it. For I know that you
- will fulfill all that we hope of you. So I greet you today on
- this 1st of May in our new great Germany: for you are our
- spring. In you will and shall be completed that for which
- generations and centuries have striven, Germany!” (_2454-PS_)
-
-(2) _The Nazi conspirators destroyed or took over all other youth
-organizations._ The first Nazi youth League (_Nationalsocialistischen
-Jugendbund_) was organized in 1922. In 1925 the Hitler Youth was
-officially recognized by the Nazi Party and became a Junior Branch of
-the SA. In 1931 Baldur von Schirach was appointed Reichs Youth Leader of
-the NSDAP with the rank of SA _Gruppenfuehrer_. (_1458-PS_)
-
-When the Nazi conspirators came to power the Hitler Jugend was a minor
-organization among many youth associations in Germany. At the end of
-1932 it had only 107,956 members—less than 5 percent of the total youth
-population of Germany (_2435-PS_). Schirach was appointed
-“_Jugendfuehrer des Deutschen Reichs_” (Youth Leader of the German
-Reich), in June 1933. In this position he was directly responsible to
-Hitler for the education and training of the German youth outside of the
-home and school in accordance with the ideology of the Nazi Party.
-(_1458-PS_)
-
-In June of 1933 on orders of Schirach, an armed band of Hitler youths
-occupied by force the headquarters of the Reich Committee of The German
-Youth Associations and took over all files and personnel records of the
-youth leagues represented by the Committee. By the same method the
-offices and property (including all youth hostels in Germany) of the
-Reich Association for German Youth Hostels was seized, and a Nazi
-representative of Schirach put in charge (_1458-PS_). By decree dated 22
-June 1933 Schirach dissolved the Grossdeutsches Bund and all of its
-affiliated organizations and took over their property; he dissolved The
-Reich Committee of The German Youth Associations, and required all other
-youth organizations to make a complete report of all organizational
-information, including names of all officers and members and inventory
-of all funds and property (_2229-PS_). The Youth Associations of all
-political parties and of all labor organizations were dissolved by
-decree of Schirach. By virtue of these decrees all youth organizations
-except those sponsored by the Catholic and Protestant Churches were
-abolished or incorporated in the Hitler Jugend (_1458-PS_; _2260-PS_).
-The Nazi-appointed Reichsbishop Mueller entered into an agreement with
-Schirach which transferred all members of the Evangelical Youth to the
-Hitler Jugend and provided that the Hitler Jugend alone would provide
-the state political and physical education of the Protestant youth. By
-the end of 1933 only the Catholic Youth organization remained untouched.
-(_1458-PS_)
-
-The Concordat entered into with the Holy See on July 20, 1933 provided
-for the continuance of the Catholic Youth Association (_2655-PS_).
-Contrary to the provisions of the Concordat, the Nazi conspirators
-immediately set out to smash the Catholic Youth organization and to
-force all young people into the Hitler Youth. Ten days after the signing
-of the Concordat, Schirach issued an order forbidding simultaneous
-membership in the Hitler Jugend and the Catholic Youth League
-(_2456-PS_). In 1934 Schirach wrote, “The denominational youth league
-(Catholic Youth Association) has no right to exist in our time.”
-(_1458-PS_). A year later Catholic youth associations were forbidden to
-wear uniforms, to assemble publicly, to wear insignia, or to engage in
-outdoor sport activity (_1482-PS_). Additional pressure was exerted on
-the Catholic Youth by the requirement of membership in the Hitler Youth
-as a prerequisite of public employment (_2451-PS_; _2900-PS_). Finally,
-in 1937, Schirach announced:
-
- “_The struggle for the unification of the German Youth is
- finished._ I considered it as my duty to conduct it in a hard
- and uncompromising manner. Many might not have realized why we
- went through so much trouble for the sake of the youth. And yet
- the National Socialist German Workers Party, whose trustee I
- felt I always was and always will be, this party considered _the
- struggle for the youth as the decisive element_ for the future
- of the German nation.” (_2306-PS_)
-
-(3) _The Nazi conspirators made membership in the Hitler Jugend
-compulsory._ The Hitler Youth Law of 1936 provided that “All of the
-German Youth in the Reich is organized within the Hitler Youth.”
-(_1392-PS_). Executive decrees later implemented this law by the
-establishment of severe penalties against anyone who deterred a youth
-from service in the Hitler Jugend, and confirmed the policy of excluding
-Jews from membership.
-
-The Hitler Jugend had been from its inception a formation of the Nazi
-Party. By virtue of the 1936 Youth Law it became an agency of the Reich
-Government while still retaining its position as a formation of the Nazi
-Party. (_1392-PS_).
-
-The membership statistics of the Hitler Jugend to 1940 were:
-
- End 1932 107,956
- End 1933 2,292,041
- End 1934 3,577,565
- End 1935 3,943,303
- End 1936 5,437,601
- End 1937 5,879,955
- End 1938 7,031,226
- End 1939 7,728,259
-
-And BDM (League of German Girls)—440,789. (_2435-PS_)
-
-(4) _Through the Hitler Jugend the Nazi conspirators imbued the youth
-with Nazi ideology and prepared them for membership in the Party and its
-formations._ Schirach said:
-
- “I am responsible to the Reich that the entire youth of Germany
- will be educated physically, morally and spiritually in the
- spirit of the National Socialist Idea of the State.” (_2306-PS_)
-
-_Mein Kampf_ was regarded as the “Bible” of the Hitler Jugend
-(_1458-PS_). On entering the _Jungvolk_ at the age of 10, children took
-the following oath:
-
- “In the presence of this blood-banner which represents our
- Fuehrer I swear to devote all my energies, and my strength to
- the Savior of our Country, Adolf Hitler. I am willing and ready
- to give up my life for him, so help me God. One People, one
- Reich, one Fuehrer.” (_2441-PS_)
-
-The Hitler Jugend organization operated solely on the Leadership
-Principle. The leader was always appointed from above and the leader’s
-will was absolute. (_1458-PS_; _2306-PS_; _2436-PS_; _2438-PS_)
-
-The Master Race doctrine and anti-semitism, including physical attacks
-on the Jews, was taught systematically in the Hitler Jugend training
-program. (_2436-PS_; _L-360-H_; _2441-PS_)
-
-The Hitler Jugend indoctrinated the youth with the idea that war is a
-noble activity. (_1458-PS_; _2436-PS_)
-
-The Hitler Jugend, in accordance with the policy of the Nazi Party,
-emphasized the importance and demanded the return of the colonies which
-had been taken from Germany by the “Versailles Shame Dictate.”
-(_1458-PS_; _2436-PS_; _2440-PS_; _2441-PS_)
-
-The Hitler Jugend taught that the guiding principle of German policy was
-the utilization of the space to the East (_1458-PS_; _2439-PS_). All
-activities carried on in support of the demands for modification of the
-Versailles Treaty, the restoration of colonies, and the acquisition of
-additional living space were closely coordinated with the (VDA) _Verein
-fuer das Deutschtum in Ausland_ (Office of Germans in foreign
-countries). (_L-360-H_)
-
-In order to carry out the program of indoctrination of the youth, more
-than 765,000 were actively engaged as Hitler Youth leaders by May 1939.
-Youth leaders were thoroughly trained, many of them in special “Youth
-Leaders” schools (_2435-PS_). More than 200,000 political indoctrination
-meetings (_Heimabend_) were held weekly. Each community was required by
-law to provide a suitable meeting house for the Hitler Jugend. Training
-and propaganda films were produced on an elaborate scale. In the winter
-of 1937-38 more than three million youths attended showings of these
-films. The Hitler Jugend press and propaganda office published at least
-thirteen magazines and large numbers of other publications and yearbooks
-appealing to all age groups and to the various interest groups of the
-youth. (_2435-PS_)
-
-One of the most important functions of the Hitler Jugend was to prepare
-the youth for membership in the Party and its formations. Hitler said at
-the Reichsparteitag, 1935:
-
- “He alone, who owns the youth, gains the Future! Practical
- consequences of this doctrine: The boy will enter the _Jungvolk_
- (boy 10-14) and the _Pimpf_ (members of the _Jungvolk_) will
- come to the Hitler Youth, and the boy of the Hitler Youth will
- join the SA, the SS and the other formations, and the SA man and
- the SS man will one day join the Labor Service, and from there
- he will go to the Armed Forces, and the soldiers of the people
- will return again to the organization of Movement, the Party,
- the SA, the SS, and never again will our people be so depraved
- as they were at one time.” (_2656-PS_; _2401-PS_)
-
-The _Streifendienst_, a special formation of the Hitler Jugend, was
-organized by virtue of an agreement between Himmler and Schirach for the
-purpose of securing and training recruits for the SS, with special
-emphasis on securing recruits for the Deaths Head Troops of the SS
-(concentration camp guards). (_2396-PS_)
-
-The farm service section of the Hitler Jugend also became a cadet corps
-of the SS by reason of the agreement entered into between Himmler and
-Schirach in 1938. This formation was to train for SS membership youths
-especially suited to become _Wehrbauer_ (militant peasants), who were to
-be settled in places where the Nazis needed especially trained farmers.
-(_2567-PS_)
-
-In 1937 the Adolf Hitler Schools were established in order to
-indoctrinate boys selected by the Party to be the future leaders of the
-Nazi state. The schools were operated by the Hitler Jugend for the
-Party. Boys entered at the age of 12 and remained in the school until 18
-years of age. (_2653-PS_)
-
-(5) _The Nazi conspirators used the Hitler Jugend for extensive
-pre-military training of youth._ In 1933 the Hitler Youth, in
-cooperation with the SA and the Wehrmacht, entered into a secret program
-of extensive pre-military training of the youth (_1850-PS_). Extensive
-pre-military training was carried on in all age groups of the Hitler
-Youth in close cooperation with the Wehrmacht. (_2438-PS_; _2441-PS_;
-_1992-PS_)
-
-In addition to general military training, specialized training was given
-in special formations. These included:
-
- Hitler Jugend Flying Units
-
- Hitler Jugend Naval Units
-
- Hitler Jugend Motorized Units
-
- Hitler Jugend Signal Units
-
- Hitler Jugend Medical Units
-
- Hitler Jugend Musical Units. (_2654-PS_).
-
-The extent of the military training in 1937 was set out by Hitler in a
-speech at Berlin.
-
- “The Naval Hitler Youth comprises 45,000 boys, the Motor Hitler
- Youth 60,000 boys. As part of the campaign for the encouragement
- of aviation 55,000 members of the Jungvolk were trained in
- gliding for group activities; 74,000 boys of the Hitler Youth
- are organized in its flying units; 15,000 boys passed their
- gliding test in the year 1937 alone.
-
- “Today 1,200,000 boys of the Hitler Youth receive regular
- instructions in small-bore rifle shooting from 7,000
- instructors.” (_2454-PS_; see also _2441-PS_.)
-
-A formal agreement between the Wehrmacht and the Hitler Jugend was
-published 11 August 1939. It recites that whereas 30,000 Hitler Jugend
-leaders had been trained annually in shooting and field exercises, the
-number would be doubled; that 60,000,000 shots had been fired in Hitler
-Youth training courses in 1938 and that a considerable increase in the
-figure was expected. The agreement recognized the close cooperation that
-existed between the Hitler Jugend and the Wehrmacht in the military
-training of youth and provided for a far more extensive program.
-(_2398-PS_)
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO RESHAPING OF
- EDUCATION AND TRAINING OF YOUTH
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6, especially 6 (a).│ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Section IV (D) 3 │ │
- │ (e). │ I │ 21
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document was referred to during the │ │
- │trial but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
-  200-PS │Confidential telegram from Berger to │ │
- │Reich Ministry for Occupied Eastern │ │
- │Territories, 8 July 1944 concerning │ │
- │forced labor of children. │ III │ 214
- │ │ │
- *318-PS │Agreement between Rosenberg and Leader │ │
- │of the National Socialist University │ │
- │Professors League (NSDoB), 2 December │ │
- │1941. (USA 728) │ III │ 255
- │ │ │
- *404-PS │Excerpts from Hitler, Mein Kampf, pp. │ │
- │456, 475. (USA 256) │ III │ 385
- │ │ │
- 1392-PS │Law on the Hitler Youth, 1 December │ │
- │1936. 1936 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p.│ │
- │993. │ III │ 972
- │ │ │
- 1397-PS │Law for the reestablishment of the │ │
- │Professional Civil Service, 7 April │ │
- │1933. 1933 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p.│ │
- │175. │ III │ 981
- │ │ │
-*1458-PS │The Hitler Youth by Baldur von Schirach,│ │
- │Leipzig, 1934. (USA 667) │ IV │ 22
- │ │ │
- 1462-PS │First Execution Order to the Law of the │ │
- │Hitler Youth, 25 March 1939. 1939 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 709. │ IV │ 44
- │ │ │
-*1482-PS │Secret letter, 20 July 1933 to │ │
- │provincial governments and the Prussian │ │
- │Gestapo from Frick, concerning │ │
- │Confessional Youth Organizations. (USA │ │
- │738) │ IV │ 51
- │ │ │
-*1850-PS │Conferences, 1933, calling for financing│ │
- │of military training of SA from Ministry│ │
- │of Interior Funds. (USA 742) │ IV │ 478
- │ │ │
-*1992-A-PS │Organization and Obligations of the SS │ │
- │and the Police from “National Political │ │
- │Education of the Army, January 1937”. │ │
- │(USA 439). │ IV │ 616
- │ │ │
- 2061-PS │Oath of Reich Officials and of German │ │
- │Soldiers, 20 August 1934. 1934 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 785. │ IV │ 702
- │ │ │
- 2078-PS │Decree concerning establishment of │ │
- │Ministry for Science, Education and │ │
- │Popular Culture, 1 May 1934. 1934 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 365. │ IV │ 706
- │ │ │
- 2084-PS │Law on formation of the Student │ │
- │Organization at Scientific Universities,│ │
- │22 April 1933. 1933 Reichsgesetzblatt, │ │
- │Part I, p. 215. │ IV │ 718
- │ │ │
- 2088-PS │Decree relating to tasks of Reichs │ │
- │Ministry for Education, 11 May 1934. │ │
- │1934 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 375. │ IV │ 718
- │ │ │
- 2115-PS │Second Executive Order to the Law for │ │
- │the Hitler Youth, 25 March 1939. 1939 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 710. │ IV │ 745
- │ │ │
-*2229-PS │The Reich Youth Leader at Work, │ │
- │published in National Socialist Party │ │
- │Press Service Release, 22 June 1933, pp.│ │
- │2-3. (USA 668) │ IV │ 870
- │ │ │
- 2260-PS │Settlement of Relationship between NSDAP│ │
- │and Stahlhelm (Steel Helmets) published │ │
- │in National Socialist Party Press │ │
- │Service release, 21 June 1933. │ IV │ 933
- │ │ │
-*2306-PS │Revolution of Education, by Baldur von │ │
- │Schirach, 1938, pp. 51-52, 63. (USA 860)│ IV │ 997
- │ │ │
- 2340-PS │German public officials law of 27 │ │
- │January 1937. 1937 Reichsgesetzblatt, │ │
- │Part I, p. 41. │ IV │ 1058
- │ │ │
- 2392-PS │Extracts from The Third Reich, 1933, │ │
- │Vol. I, pp. 144-154. │ V │ 54
- │ │ │
- 2393-PS │Extracts from The Third Reich, 1934, │ │
- │[Vol. II], pp. 218-224. │ V │ 58
- │ │ │
- 2394-PS │Extracts from The Third Reich, 1935, │ │
- │Vol. III, pp. 208-212. │ V │ 60
- │ │ │
- 2395-PS │Extracts from The Third Reich, 1936, │ │
- │Vol. IV, pp. 360-362. │ V │ 62
- │ │ │
-*2396-PS │Handbook of Collected Youth Laws, Vol. │ │
- │I, Group 1, pp. 19a, 19b, 20. (USA 673) │ V │ 63
- │ │ │
- 2397-PS │National Socialist Handbook for Law and │ │
- │Legislation by Dr. Hans Frank, p. 566. │ V │ 65
- │ │ │
-*2398-PS │Cooperation of Hitler Jugend with │ │
- │Wehrmacht, 11 August 1939, published in │ │
- │The Archive, No. 65, August 1939, pp. │ │
- │601-602. (USA 677) │ V │ 66
- │ │ │
- 2399-PS │Articles “School Community to replace │ │
- │parents’ advisory committee” and “NSDAP │ │
- │takes over education of university │ │
- │students”, published in The Archive, │ │
- │1934, pp. 1039, 1147-1148. │ V │ 67
- │ │ │
-*2401-PS │The Hitler Youth as recruits for future │ │
- │leaders, from Organization Book of │ │
- │NSDAP, 1938, pp. 80-81. (USA 430) │ V │ 69
- │ │ │
- 2435-PS │Extracts from The Coming Germany, The │ │
- │Education of the Youth in the Reich of │ │
- │Adolf Hitler, by Kaufmann. │ V │ 113
- │ │ │
-*2436-PS │Extracts from Enjoyment, Discipline, │ │
- │Belief, Official handbook for cultural │ │
- │work in camp. (USA 859) │ V │ 119
- │ │ │
- 2438-PS │Extracts from Boys in Service, handbook │ │
- │for boys 10 to 14 years of age. │ V │ 132
- │ │ │
- 2439-PS │Extracts from Girl in Vacation Camp, │ │
- │official publication of Reichs Youth │ │
- │Headquarters. │ V │ 136
- │ │ │
- 2440-PS │Extracts from Boys, Your World, the │ │
- │yearbook of the Hitler Youth. │ V │ 139
- │ │ │
-*2441-PS │Affidavit of Gregor Ziemer, 4 October │ │
- │1945, from his book “Education for │ │
- │Death”. (USA 679) │ V │ 141
- │ │ │
- 2442-PS │Guide of racial science and science of │ │
- │heredity of fostering congenitally sound│ │
- │progeny of family science. │ V │ 176
- │ │ │
- 2443-PS │Extracts from Education in the Greater │ │
- │German Reich. │ V │ 178
- │ │ │
- 2444-PS │Extracts from German Reading Book for │ │
- │Elementary Schools, second volume. │ V │ 181
- │ │ │
- 2445-PS │Extracts from German Reading Book for │ │
- │Elementary Schools, fourth volume. │ V │ 183
- │ │ │
- 2446-PS │Extracts from History Book for the │ │
- │German Youth. │ V │ 184
- │ │ │
- 2451-PS │Decree of Reichsminister of Education │ │
- │Candidates for Teacher’s Positions to │ │
- │Prove themselves in Hitler Youth, │ │
- │published in Voelkischer Beobachter, │ │
- │Berlin edition, 22 October 1935. │ V │ 187
- │ │ │
- 2452-PS │Extracts from Organization Book of │ │
- │NSDAP, 1943. │ V │ 187
- │ │ │
- 2453-PS │Education and Instruction in the │ │
- │Upper Schools, official publication of │ │
- │the Reich and Prussian Minister of │ │
- │Education, 1938. │ V │ 189
- │ │ │
-*2454-PS │Quotations from speeches of Hitler, │ │
- │published in Voelkischer Beobachter, │ │
- │Munich edition. (USA 676) │ V │ 196
- │ │ │
- 2455-PS │Statement by Hitler at Elbing, Germany, │ │
- │quoted in Voelkischer Beobachter, Berlin│ │
- │edition, 6 November 1933. │ V │ 198
- │ │ │
- 2456-PS │Youth and the Church, from Complete │ │
- │Handbook of Youth Laws. │ V │ 198
- │ │ │
- 2458-PS │Constitution of the German Student │ │
- │Corps, 1934 Reichs Ministerialblatt, pp.│ │
- │76-79. │ V │ 199
- │ │ │
-*2567-PS │Decree signed by Himmler and von │ │
- │Schirach, concerning cooperation of HJ │ │
- │and SS, printed in The Young Germany, │ │
- │Berlin, February 1939. (USA 674) │ V │ 301
- │ │ │
-*2653-PS │The Way of German Youth, from The Third │ │
- │Reich, 5th Year, 1937, pp. 117-118. (USA│ │
- │669) │ V │ 359
- │ │ │
-*2654-PS │Organization and Insignia of the Hitler │ │
- │Youth, edited by Reich Youth │ │
- │Headquarters of NSDAP. (USA 675) │ V │ 361
- │ │ │
- 2655-PS │Concordat between the Holy See and the │ │
- │German Reich, Article 31. 1933 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part II, p. 679, │ │
- │687-8. │ V │ 364
- │ │ │
- 2656-PS │The Bearer of Sovereignty, from speech │ │
- │of the Fuehrer at the Reichsparteitag, │ │
- │1935. │ V │ 365
- │ │ │
- 2900-PS │Speech by Frick at Anniversary meeting │ │
- │of Hitler Youth, published in The │ │
- │Archive, January 1936, p. 1339. │ V │ 567
- │ │ │
- 2901-PS │Extract from The Book of the NSDAP, p. │ │
- │95. │ V │ 568
- │ │ │
-*3054-PS │“The Nazi Plan”, script of a motion │ │
- │picture composed of captured German │ │
- │film. (USA 167) │ V │ 801
- │ │ │
-*3751-PS │Diary of the German Minister of Justice,│ │
- │1935 concerning prosecution of church │ │
- │officials and punishment in │ │
- │concentration camps. (USA 828; USA 858) │ VI │ 636
- │ │ │
-*L-360-H │Agreement between the League for │ │
- │Germandom in Foreign Countries and the │ │
- │Hitler Youth, 6 May 1933. (USA 671) │ VII │ 1108
- │ │ │
-*Chart No. 2 │Totalitarian Control of Propaganda and │ │
- │Education. (USA 21) │ VIII │ 771
-
-
- 9. PROPAGANDA, CENSORSHIP AND SUPERVISION
- OF CULTURAL ACTIVITIES
-
-A. _The party organization._
-
-(1) _The Reichspropagandaleitung_ (Party Propaganda Department) (RPL).
-This office was founded in 1932, as the central propaganda control
-office headed by Goebbels. Its functions were:
-
-(_a_) To direct, supervise and synchronize propaganda within the Nazi
-movement.
-
- “Propaganda of the NSDAP, its formations and affiliated
- associations is the responsibility of the
- _Reichspropagandaleiter_.
-
- “He determines all manifestations of the Movement, including its
- formations and affiliated associations, with regard to
- propaganda.
-
- “He issues the directives for the Party, including its
- formations and affiliated associations, for the realization of
- the cultural wishes of the Fuehrer.” (_2319-PS_)
-
-These functions were organized vertically through a close network of
-_Gauleiters_, _Kreisleiters_, and _Ortsgruppenleiters_ which reached
-even the smallest communities. In addition, synchronization of
-propaganda within the Movement was guaranteed through the _Reichsring
-fuer National-Sozialistische Propaganda und Volksaufklaerung_, (National
-Socialist Organization for Propaganda and People’s Enlightenment), an
-office within the _Reichspropagandaleitung_. The _Reichsring_
-constituted the center of control responsible for the complete
-coordination of Party and Movement in the field of propaganda.
-
- “The _Reichsring_ * * * had the task to ensure the uniform
- direction of propaganda of all formations and affiliated
- associations through the Party.” (_2319-PS_)
-
-(_b_) To imbue the Nazi Movement and the people with Nazi ideology.
-
- “(The _Reichspropagandaleiter_) upon his initiative, is
- concerned with the permeation of German people with the National
- Socialist ideology.
-
- “He enlightens the people about the achievements of Party and
- State.
-
- “He controls the entire German wireless system with regard to
- its internal organizational, cultural and economic
- possibilities;
-
- “Press, radio and film are in the service of propaganda.”
- (_2319-PS_)
-
-(c) To coordinate Party propaganda with that of the Reich Government.
-
- “The liaison officer has the task of centralizing all contacts
- with the Reich Ministries, public authorities, and corporations
- and to establish all such contacts with same * * *”. (_2319-PS_)
-
-(_d_) To investigate the effectiveness of Nazi propaganda. This function
-was assigned to the lower grades of the Party leadership, and to
-regional and local officials, who assembled and analyzed information on
-public reaction to the current content of propaganda.
-
-(_e_) Other activities of the _Reichspropagandaleitung_ were discharged
-by numerous functional departments which included, _inter alia_,
-“_Hauptstellen_” (Main Bureaus) or offices for the following:
-
-_1._ _Press_—preparation of all propaganda material issued by
- _Reichspropagandaleitung_ for dissemination to newspapers.
-_2._ _Exhibits and fairs_—supervision of propaganda aspects of exhibits
- and fairs in which the Party participated.
-_3._ _Mass or “Aktive” propaganda_—organization of propaganda campaigns
- within the movement; training and supplying speakers with
- propaganda materials.
-_4._ _Films_—Popularization of Nazi-inspired films; photographing official
- rallies.
-_5._ _Radio_—radio propaganda.
-_6._ _Culture_—making all forms of art conform to Nazi standards.
-
-Other Bureaus included Architecture, Style and Design, Works of Art,
-Formulation of Programs, and Training of Speakers. (_2319-PS_)
-
-The _Reichspropagandaleitung_ was regionally organized into _Gau-_,
-_Kreis-_, and _Ortsgruppenpropagandaaemter_ (_Gau_, district, and local
-propaganda offices). The _Gaupropagandaleiter_ (leader of the _Gau_
-propaganda office) was at the same time the _Gau_ representative of the
-Chamber of Culture (_Landeskulturwalter_) and in most cases also
-represented the regional office of the Propaganda Ministry, so that on
-the lower levels, Party and State propaganda were completely unified.
-(_2315-PS_)
-
-(2) _The office of Reichspressechef_ (Reich Press Chief).
-
-The office of Reich Press Chief of the NSDAP was created in 1934 by
-decree of the Fuehrer (_2319-PS_). The functions of this office were
-exclusive:
-
- “The Reich Press Office of the NSDAP is the central office for
- the entire political publishing activity of the Party. It
- represents the press interests of the Reich leadership of the
- NSDAP _vis a vis_ both the German and the foreign press. It
- alone has the authority to issue directives to the press of
- Reich policies concerning the treatment of Party affairs. It
- alone has the authority to issue press directives to all offices
- of Reich leadership. It is responsible for the political and
- editorial preparations, execution and utilization of all
- important Party activities in the Reich. It supplies the
- domestic and foreign press with information, news and
- commentaries about the Party. It keeps a record of press
- reaction to the Party work in publications of the domestic and
- foreign press.” (_2319-PS_)
-
-The Reich Press Chief exercised control over all press offices,
-including the chief editors of the National Socialist newspapers, as
-well as the _Gau_ press wardens of the Party. He also served as liaison
-officer between the Party press and the “Independent” press, and between
-Party and Government. (_2319-PS_)
-
-The executive functions of the Reich Press Chief were carried out by two
-offices:
-
-(_a_) _The Pressepolitisches Amt_ (Press Political Office).
-
-(_b_) _The Pressepersonalamt_ (Press Personnel Office), which was in
-charge of training journalists and keeping files on German and foreign
-journalists.
-
-The vertical organization of press controls, corresponding to that of
-the _Reichspropagandaleitung_, included _Gau-_, _Kreis-_ and
-_Ortsgruppen_ departments. Each was headed by an _Amtsleiter_, or press
-warden, who was responsible for the entire Party press within his sphere
-of jurisdiction. He supervised the editorial policy of the Party press,
-issued information bulletins about the activities of the Movement, and
-served as liaison officer between the Party and non-Party press. He also
-transmitted local information to headquarters for distribution and made
-recommendations concerning the appointments of local party editors. The
-_Gau-_ and _Kreis-_ press wardens, at the same time, served as regional
-and local representatives of the Home Press Division of the Propaganda
-Ministry and of the Reich Press Chamber. (_2319-PS_; _2315-PS_)
-
-(3) _The Reichsleiter fuer die Presse_ (Reich Press Leader).
-
-The Reich Press Leader, Max Amann, was charged with supervising all
-matters concerning the German publishing business. The
-_Organisationsbuch der NSDAP_ (1937) described his function as follows:
-
- “He is charged with the creation of a press for the German
- people, which is responsible and answerable to him, and which
- reflects the life and experiences of the German people’s
- community. In addition, the Reichsleiter for Press has the
- function of issuing regulations necessary to carry out the
- demands concerning publication policies established in Article
- 23 of the Party Program and to supervise their execution.”
- (_2319-PS_)
-
-Article 23 of the Party Platform referred to above, provided, _inter
-alia_, that (a) all editors and newspaper personnel must be “members of
-the nation”; (b) non-Germans are prohibited from financial participation
-in, or influence of, newspapers; (c) the publication of papers “which do
-not conduce to the national welfare” is prohibited; (d) tendencies in
-art or literature “of a kind likely to disintegrate our life as a
-nation” will be prosecuted; and (e) “institutions which militate against
-the requirements mentioned above” will be suppressed. (_1708-PS_)
-
-Thus the Reich Press Leader was not only empowered to control all
-publishing houses of the Party, but was assigned the task of bringing
-the entire German press into line with National Socialist ideology. To
-this end he was given wide and specific powers.
-
-His sphere of jurisdiction included specifically:
-
-(_a_) The administration, publishing, and financing of the Party press;
-
-(_b_) The establishment of newspapers by Party members or affiliated
-associations;
-
-(_c_) The incorporation of newspapers into the Party press combine;
-
-(_d_) The appointment of publishers and of their deputies;
-
-(_e_) The termination or alteration of contracts with newspapers;
-
-(_f_) The appointment of Commissars to supervise publishing houses.
-(_2319-PS_)
-
-In addition to controlling the administration and finance of the
-National Socialist publishing houses in the _Gau_, the Press Leader
-headed the _Zentralverlag_, which was the central publishing house and
-holding company of the entire Party publishing machine and all its
-official organs, such as _Der Voelkischer Beobachter_, _Der Angriff_,
-_Der SA Mann_, _Das Schwarze Korps_, _Die HJ_, etc. (_3016-PS_)
-
-It was one of the Reich Press Leader’s duties to turn all publishing by
-Party officials into a lucrative undertaking, and to set up an absolute
-monopoly in the publication of all political literature. To effectuate
-that objective, a decree was passed which made it mandatory for all
-“manuscripts which have National Socialist problems and subject matter
-as themes” to be offered first to _Eher Verlag_ publication. (_2383-PS_)
-
-The _Reichsleiter fuer die Press_, who was also president of the Reich
-Press Chamber, exercised economic controls over the entire German press.
-He made use of his position to expand the Party publishing machine at
-the expense of non-party newspapers. As president of the Reich Press
-Chamber, he was authorized to issue directives with the force of law. In
-that capacity he issued certain regulations which had the effect of
-prohibiting the ownership of newspapers by corporations of any kind,
-except the NSDAP or such groups as were approved by the Party.
-(_2315-PS_)
-
-These decrees enabled Amann to close down one or more papers in a
-particular locality “to safeguard reasonable standards of competition.”
-They thus provided, along with racial and other discriminatory
-legislation, the “legal” basis for the pressure which was brought to
-bear on such publishing firms as Ullstein and other opposition
-publications, in order to force them to sell out to the Party. These
-sales were in no sense voluntary; the alternative in each case was total
-suppression. The authorizing decree provided:
-
- “The President of the Reich Chamber of the Press will therefore
- endeavor at first in every individual case to effect agreements
- which will relieve him of the necessity of issuing orders for
- the closing of establishments.” (_2315-PS_)
-
-Max Amann has admitted in an affidavit that he discharged his duties as
-Reich Press Leader consistently with the statement of his functions
-contained in the Party Organization Book and with Article 23 of the
-Party Program. He has further stated that racial and other
-discriminatory legislation made it expedient for firms “owned or
-controlled by Jewish interests, or by political or religious interests
-hostile to the NSDAP * * * to sell their newspapers or assets to the
-Eher concern”; and that there was “no free market for the sale of such
-properties and the Franz Eher Verlag was generally the only bidder.” His
-affidavit concludes as follows:
-
- “It is a true statement to say that the basic purpose of the
- Nazi press program was to eliminate all press in opposition to
- the Party.” (_3016-PS_)
-
-(4) _Parteiamliche Prufungskommission zum Schutz des NS-Christums_
-(Office of Party Examining Commission for the Protection of National
-Socialist Publications) (PPK).
-
-The PPK was charged with the censorship and supervision of all
-literature with cultural or political implications. According to the
-Party Manual:
-
- “The functional scope of the official Party Examining Commission
- is not confined to any one group of publications but includes
- the entire publishing field. Thus the work of the Official Party
- Examining Commission is sub-divided into departments for books,
- magazines and newspapers. Out of these main departments a group
- of important special fields have emerged as more or less
- independent fields. They are specifically the editing of
- speeches, scientific books, textbooks, scientific periodicals
- and the calendar as a special type of magazine.” (_2319-PS_)
-
-The Examining Commission’s function was to protect National Socialist
-literature from attempts to destroy its propagandistic effect or to
-pervert its political and social content. The Party Manual stated:
-
- “It is the function of the Examining Commission to protect the
- National Socialist literature from abuse, corruption, and
- attempts at dissolution. Thus it forestalls the infiltration of
- elements within the National Socialist literature which are
- irreconcilable with it.” (_2319-PS_)
-
-In addition, the PPK concerned itself with the actual suppression of
-literature incompatible with Party tenets, and with the approval of
-those works which it deemed beneficial to the extension of the National
-Socialist ideology. The Party Manual specified as follows:
-
- “Particularly it is the function of the official Party Examining
- Commission to determine whether or not a work can be considered
- National Socialist literature.” (_2319-PS_)
-
-This office worked in close collaboration with the Delegate of the
-Fuehrer for the Total Supervision of the Intellectual and Ideological
-Training and Education of the People (Rosenberg). (_2319-PS_; _2383-PS_)
-
-(5) _The Beauftragte des Fuehrers fuer die Ueberwachung der gesamten
-geistigen und weltansschaulichen Schulung und Erziehung der NSDAP_
-(Delegate of the Fuehrer for the Total Supervision of the Intellectual
-and Ideological Training and Education of the Party) (BdF).
-
-The delegate of the Fuehrer was _Reichsleiter_ Alfred Rosenberg. The
-Office of the BdF was placed in charge of the Party’s intellectual and
-ideological training and education. Its declared objective was the
-uniform ideological orientation of the Party, Party formations, and
-affiliated associations. Its main functions, in furtherance of this
-objective, were the preparation of suitable training materials and the
-issuance of directives thereon; the preparation, editing, and
-establishment of curricula; the training of qualified teaching staffs;
-the counseling of Party agencies, formations, and affiliates on content
-and methods of indoctrination; and the elimination of such reading and
-teaching materials as were deemed inappropriate from a National
-Socialist point of view. To perform these tasks, Rosenberg had the
-assistance of a large organization with numerous functional divisions
-(_2319-PS_). The BdF took a major part in the work of Party
-organizations, affiliated associations, and schools and training
-institutes which were instrumental in the indoctrination of the German
-people and youth. (_2383-PS_)
-
-B. _The Reich government organization._
-
-The state organ of control was the _Reichsministerium fuer
-Volksaufklaerung und Propaganda_ (Reich Ministry for Popular
-Enlightenment and Propaganda). The Minister was Josef Goebbels. The
-Ministry was founded by decree dated 13 March 1933, which defined its
-duties as the “enlightenment of, and propaganda among, the people on the
-subject of the policy of the Reich government and on the national
-reconstruction of the homeland.” (_2029-PS_). By decree dated 30 June
-1933 the functions of the Minister were extended to include
-“jurisdiction over the whole field of spiritual indoctrination of the
-nation, of propagandizing the State, of cultural and economic
-propaganda, of enlightenment of the public at home and abroad;
-furthermore he is in charge of all institutions serving these purposes.”
-(_2030-PS_). In the words of Mueller, an authority on the Propaganda
-Ministry, these decrees formed the basis for the creation of a central
-agency for propaganda “the like of which heretofore existed nowhere in
-the world.” (_2434-PS_). The influence which this agency exerted on the
-everyday life and activities of the German citizen was illustrated by
-the multitude of civic and cultural affairs, including public
-entertainment, which fell under the sweep of its direction and control.
-(_2434-PS_)
-
-A few of the more important departments of the Propaganda Ministry,
-together with a brief description of their respective functions,
-follows:
-
-(1) _Personnel._ This department issued directives for unified personnel
-policy, and exercised general supervision over the personnel of public
-art instituted within the entire Reich.
-
-(2) _Law._ “The nuclear task of the law department is the publication
-and execution of national socialist cultural laws. The professions and
-institutions of literature and art had to be transformed from carriers
-of a liberal individualistic intellectual movement to the carriers of
-the tasks of public propaganda and leadership. To reach this goal
-required the enactment of governmental decrees for creating new
-organizations or the making of new laws.”
-
-(3) _Propaganda._ This department coordinated propaganda policies and
-issued over-all directives to the various functional departments (press,
-radio, etc.) which then carried out the directives. A special function
-was “enlightenment of the people as to Jewish question” and as to
-“racial policies.”
-
-(4) _Foreign._ This department was the Ministry’s listening post for
-political and economic developments abroad “to counteract the worldwide
-publicity activities of the enemy against our philosophy and our
-political objectives by exposing and rectifying the lies of the press”
-and to exploit the information in German propaganda. It also cooperated
-closely with the _Auslandsorganization der NSDAP_.
-
-(5) _Radio._ Hans Fritzsche headed this department. It supervised the
-political content of German broadcasting, issued directives as to the
-arrangement of programs and treatment of material, and cooperated with
-the Party in the technical organization of German radio.
-
-(6) The _Film Department_ was in charge of directing and guiding the
-German film industry, censoring of films, and developing the German
-weekly newsreel.
-
-(7) _Literature._ This agency, in close collaboration with BdF and PPK,
-controlled all German literary activities, censored new books, provided
-for the publication of German books abroad, and arranged for the
-translation and censorship of foreign books.
-
-(8) _Abteilung Deutsche Presse_ (German or Home Press Department). This
-department was headed by Fritzsche until he was relieved in 1942 to take
-charge of the Radio Division. It was responsible for political control
-over the entire German press; it controlled the editorial policy of the
-press and its personnel (through the Reich Press Chamber), and
-supervised the dissemination of news through the official German News
-Agency (DNB). The Home Press Division outlined the editorial policy of
-all newspapers and the comment of editors and journalists in its daily
-directives. (_Tendenz berichte_). These dealt with the daily contents of
-the paper, the methods of treatment of news material, the writing of
-headlines, the preference for or omission of certain items, and the
-modification or cessation of current campaigns. The directives were
-issued to the representatives of the press in person or sent through the
-facilities of the DNB to the local papers. (_2434-PS_; _2529-PS_)
-
-The Home Press Department of the Propaganda Ministry had an important
-participation in administering the provisions of the Editorial Control
-Law, which made the profession of editor “a public task, which is
-regulated as to its professional duties and rights by the state.” That
-law also included requirements for admission to the profession and other
-elaborate controls. (_2083-PS_)
-
-(9) _Periodical Literature._ This department supervised German
-periodical literature in the same manner as the _Abteilung Deutsche
-Presse_ controlled the daily press.
-
-Other divisions exercised supervision over the Theatre (selection and
-supervision of the entire dramatic production and influencing the
-programs of all German Theatres); the Arts; Music (“the entire cultural
-and political leadership of German musical life”); Special Cultural
-Tasks (“This department serves mainly to eliminate all Jews from German
-Cultural life”); and Foreign Tourists. (_2434-PS_)
-
-A large organization of faithful Party followers was recruited to
-discharge the manifold functions of the Propaganda Ministry. The staff
-numbered 1000 persons in 1939-1940. In the words of Mueller:
-
- “It is no accident; therefore, that the great majority of the
- official workers and other personnel of the Ministry consist of
- reliable National Socialists of which almost 100 are bearers of
- the Gold Party Pin.” (_2434-PS_)
-
-C. _The semi-autonomous professional organizations Reichskulturkammer_
-(Reich Chamber of Culture).
-
-The Reich Chamber of Culture was set up in September 1933 to control
-(under the supervision of the Propaganda Ministry and within the
-framework of general policy directives issued by that activity)
-personnel engaged in all fields of propaganda (_2082-PS_). Its tasks as
-described in the First Executive Decree of the above law, dated 1
-November 1933, were:
-
- “To promote German culture as responsible to the people and the
- Reich, to regulate the social and economic relations of the
- different groups in the cultural professions and to coordinate
- their aims.” (_2415-PS_)
-
-The _Reichskulturkammer_ was a so-called “_Nachgeordnete Dienststelle_”
-(Subordinate office) of the Propaganda Ministry. Together with its
-subordinate Chambers it was charged with supervising all personnel
-active in any field under the jurisdiction of the Propaganda Ministry.
-All persons employed in the cultural professions were obligated to
-register with one of the subordinate Chambers. The Chambers were also
-responsible for investigating the activities and political reliability
-of their members. Moreover, power was given to Chambers to prosecute
-members offending against Nazi standards or persons pursuing their
-occupation without being duly registered. The punitive powers included,
-expulsion from membership, which was tantamount to the loss of
-livelihood. The Chambers were also given power to issue directives,
-which had the validity of law, regulating the cultural activities under
-their control (_2529-PS_). The President of the Chamber of Culture was
-the Minister of Propaganda, Joseph Goebbels, who nominated the
-Vice-Presidents. In 1937, the latter consisted of Walter Funk, Max Amann
-(Reich Leader of the Press) and Leopold Gutterer (Secretary of State in
-the Propaganda Ministry).
-
-The Chamber of Culture was divided into seven functional chambers:
-
-(1) _Reichspressekammer_ (Reich Press Chamber). Max Amann was president
-of this chamber, which was, to a greater extent than the other chambers,
-a loose association of technical bodies and organizations, such as the
-Reich Association of German Newspaper Publishers. It integrated the
-activities of these groups and, through the composition of its governing
-body, ensured close coordination with Party and State propaganda
-machinery. (_2529-PS_; _3016-PS_)
-
-(2) _Reichskammer der bildenden Kunste_ (Reich Chamber of Fine Arts).
-This chamber supervised the activities of all architects, interior
-decorators, landscape gardeners, sculptors, painters, draftsmen, art
-publishers, etc. By 1937, all other art groups and associations had been
-dissolved, and all their members “obligated by profession” to join this
-chamber. (_2529-PS_)
-
-(3) _Reichsmusikkammer_ (Reich Music Chamber). This Chamber was
-organized to “oversee the practice and activity of musicians in their
-cultural, economic, and legal relationships with the world. * * * in
-order that music will still remain a prized possession of the German
-people.” (_2529-PS_)
-
-(4) _Reichstheaterkammer_ (Reich Theater Chamber). The Theater Chamber
-was the professional organization for the entire field of the
-professional theater. Its purpose was to supervise and promote the
-“cultural, social and economic conditions of the professions which it
-includes”. Actual censorship of stage production was the responsibility
-of the _Reichsdramaturg_. (_2529-PS_)
-
-(5) _Reichsfilmkammer_ (Reich Film Chamber). The primary function of
-this Chamber was to lift the film industry “out of the sphere of liberal
-economic thoughts” by giving it a sound economic foundation and thus
-enable it to “receive those tasks which it has to fulfill in the
-National Socialist State”. (_2529-PS_)
-
-(6) _Reichsschrifttumskammer_ (Reich Chamber of Literature). The Chamber
-of Literature had jurisdiction over all persons concerned with the
-“basic production” (writing and publishing) of literature. Its task was
-to protect writers “from undesirable elements” and to keep out of the
-book market everything “unGerman.” It had the further function of
-bringing literature to the people and making the writer more “aware of
-his duty to the nation.” Primary responsibility for critical evaluation
-and censorship of literature however, was left to the Propaganda
-Ministry. (_2529-PS_)
-
-(7) _Reichsrundfunkkammer_ (Reich Radio Chamber). The official gazette
-of the Reich Culture Chamber stated that the radio was the most
-immediate propaganda instrument of the National Socialist leadership;
-that the ideal and cultural life of the nation could be shown “totally”
-in and through the radio; and that since the radio constituted the most
-important technical means of influencing the masses it was necessary to
-establish a close tie between the radio and the Party.
-
-Functions of the Radio Chamber included: mobilizing of all technical
-possibilities of broadcasting, bringing the people closer to radio,
-planning the manufacture of cheap receiving sets, and propaganda in
-connection with the drive for new listeners. (_2529-PS_)
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO PROPAGANDA,
- CENSORSHIP, AND SUPERVISION OF CULTURAL ACTIVITIES
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6, especially 6 (a).│ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Section IV (D) 3 │ │
- │ (e). │ I │ 21
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document was referred to during the │ │
- │trial but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
-*1708-PS │The Program of the NSDAP. National │ │
- │Socialistic Yearbook, 1941, p. 153. (USA│ │
- │255; USA 324) │ IV │ 208
- │ │ │
- 2029-PS │Decree establishing the Reich Ministry │ │
- │of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda, │ │
- │13 March 1933. 1933 Reichsgesetzblatt, │ │
- │Part I, p. 104. │ IV │ 652
- │ │ │
- 2030-PS │Decree concerning the Duties of the │ │
- │Reich Ministry for Public Enlightenment │ │
- │and Propaganda, 30 June 1933. 1933 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 449. │ IV │ 653
- │ │ │
- 2082-PS │Law relating to the Reich Chamber of │ │
- │Culture of 22 September 1933. 1933 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 661. │ IV │ 708
- │ │ │
- 2083-PS │Editorial control law, 4 October 1933. │ │
- │1933 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 713. │ IV │ 709
- │ │ │
- 2315-PS │Order concerning the Supervision of │ │
- │District Leaders of Work of Reich │ │
- │Chamber of Culture, published in The Law│ │
- │of the Reich Chamber of Culture, Vol. 2,│ │
- │1 January to 30 June 1935. │ IV │ 1007
- │ │ │
-*2319-PS │Extracts from Organization Book of │ │
- │NSDAP, 4th edition, 1937. (USA 602) │ IV │ 1009
- │ │ │
-*2383-PS │Ordinance for execution of decree of │ │
- │Fuehrer concerning position of the Head │ │
- │of Party Chancellery of 16 January 1942,│ │
- │published in Decrees, Regulations, │ │
- │Announcements. (USA 410) │ V │ 9
- │ │ │
- 2415-PS │First decree for the implementation of │ │
- │law relating to The Reich Chamber of │ │
- │Culture, 1 November 1933. 1933 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I. │ V │ 89
- │ │ │
-*2434-PS │The Reich Ministry for Enlightenment of │ │
- │the People and for Propaganda, Berlin │ │
- │1940, by Georg Mueller. (USA 722) │ V │ 102
- │ │ │
- 2529-PS │Extracts from Handbook of Reich Chamber │ │
- │of Culture for 1937. │ V │ 262
- │ │ │
-*3016-PS │Affidavit of Max Amann, 19 November │ │
- │1945. (USA 757) │ V │ 735
- │ │ │
-*3469-PS │Affidavit of Hans Fritzsche, 7 January │ │
- │1946. (USA 721) │ VI │ 174
- │ │ │
-*Chart No. 2 │Totalitarian Control of Propaganda and │ │
- │Education. (USA 21) │ VIII │ 771
-
-
- 10. MILITARIZATION OF NAZI ORGANIZATIONS.
-
-A. _The Nazi conspirators placed many of their organizations on a
-progressively militarized footing with a view to the rapid
-transformation and use of such organizations as instruments of war._
-
-(1) _The Schutzstaffeln (SS)._ The SS was militarized beginning in March
-1933, when special, volunteer, armed units were created consisting of
-full-time garrisoned troops. These units, which rapidly grew in
-strength, were a part neither of the Wehrmacht, nor of the police, but
-were exclusively at the disposal of the Fuehrer. This militarization of
-the SS was in accordance with Nazi policy. (For documentation and
-further discussion see Chapter XV, Section 5.)
-
-(2) _The Sturmabteilung (SA)._ The SA was founded in 1921 as a
-para-military organization to fight political enemies of the Nazis.
-After the accession of the Nazis to power, the SA was used to provide
-pre-military training at a time when the Reichswehr was legally limited
-to a strength of 100,000 men. Thus the SA, from its inception, had a
-military purpose, which was carried out and gradually increased in
-scope. (For documentation and further discussion see Chapter XV, Section
-4.)
-
-(3) _The Hitler Jugend (HJ)._ One of the chief purposes of the Hitler
-Jugend was to provide for military training of German youth at a very
-early age. As early as 1933, the HJ entered into a secret program of
-extensive pre-military training for German youth in conjunction with the
-SA and the Wehrmacht. In addition to general military training, members
-of the HJ were given specialized training in various types of military
-units, such as flying units, naval units, motorized units, signal units,
-etc. (For documentation and further discussion, see Section 8, _supra_.)
-
-(4) _The National Socialist Motor Corps (NSKK)._ The original NSKK was
-founded under the name of NSAK (National Socialist Automobile Corps) on
-1 April 1930 by Hitler, who joined as its first member. By the end of
-1931 it had a membership of approximately 10,000, as compared to 300 at
-the beginning of that year (_2804-PS_). In 1934 the motorized Hitler
-Jugend and the motorized SA were placed under the NSKK. Hitler, on 23
-August of that year, decreed that:
-
- “the NSAK and the motorized SA are from now on welded together
- into a unit called NSKK. The NSKK is directly subordinate to
- me”. (_2804-PS_)
-
-Thus the NSKK was elevated to the position of an independent affiliated
-unit of the NSDAP, similar to the SA and the SS. The membership of the
-enlarged NSKK grew rapidly.
-
-The military purpose of the NSKK is evident from the following statement
-from The _Organizationbuch der NSDAP_ (1940):
-
- “The young driver who has received his training in the six-week
- courses of the NSKK will be well prepared in body and spirit
- when the time comes for his military service, and will wear with
- pride the dress of the Armed Forces of the Nation.”
- (_2320-B-PS_)
-
-The program of militarization proceeded rapidly:
-
- “More than one-third of all leaders and men of the NSKK, which
- had in the meantime grown to a membership of 350,000, were
- already active in the fight for power * * * Thus, the NSKK had
- in its ranks, in addition to the proud tradition of the period
- of our fight, also that of the World War. This front spirit and
- experience of a generation matured to manhood in the barrages,
- in the battles of attrition, in the battles of the Freikorps,
- and in the heroic fight of National Socialism for Germany’s
- rebirth, is passed on to our youth as a sacred heritage.”
- (_2804-PS_)
-
-The training given to NSKK members was intended to furnish seasoned
-recruits for the Nazi military forces.
-
- “Military motorized training of our youth is the cardinal task
- of the educational work of the NSKK. Here it collaborates most
- closely with the bearer of the arms of the Reich, the Wehrmacht,
- and it has done so already throughout the years before the
- seizure of power. The demands and needs of the Army, which
- continuously grew in scope after the awakening of our Nation and
- after our regained military freedom also caused the tasks and
- the work of the NSKK in the field of military motorized training
- to grow correspondingly * * * By order of the Fuehrer and
- Supreme Commander of the Wehrmacht, the NSKK has been given
- charge of the pre-military training of the entire young reserve
- of the motorized troop units of our Army in addition to
- post-military training.” (_2804-PS_)
-
-NSKK-trained men were intended to be assimilated into Reich Panzer
-units.
-
- “Well prepared physically and spiritually, the young German man
- who has now become a motorized soldier, can serve with a
- motorized or partially-motorized unit of the Army. To become a
- tank soldier is his only ambition.” (_2804-PS_)
-
-The NSKK was actually used for military purposes.
-
- “The men of the NSKK have considerably contributed to the
- liberation of the Sudetenland by the Fuehrer and have thus
- gained undying merit, not only for the Germans in the
- Sudetenland, but for the entire German people as a whole.”
- (_2804-PS_)
-
-Further evidence of actual military use of the NSKK is given in the
-following passage from “_Deutschland im Kampf_” written by
-_Ministerialdirigent_ A. J. Berndt of the Reich Propaganda Ministry and
-Lt. Col. von Wedel of the German Army High Command, in the issue of June
-1940:
-
- “The NSKK is playing a decisive part in the carrying out of
- considerable war-important tasks on the Inner Front, one of
- which is traffic. * * * Among the tasks of the NSKK are
- pre-military training, education, and schooling and motorized
- transport. Thus, for instance, the conducting of the entire
- transport system of the TODT Organization on the West Wall and
- the traffic in the Western War Theater are in the hands of the
- NSKK.” (_2810-PS_)
-
-(5) _The National Socialist Aviation Corps (NSFK)._ The NSFK was another
-organization affiliated with the NSDAP used by the Nazi conspirators for
-military purposes. It was the great training school for the Luftwaffe.
-
- “In the endeavor to assure for the German Luftwaffe a
- numerically strong and well prepared reserve, and to strengthen
- in the German people the conviction that Germany must retain its
- head-start in all spheres of aviation, the NSFK was founded by
- the Fuehrer on 17 April 1937 * * *.
-
- “The NSFK at the time of its creation, was given the following
- tasks by the Reichsmarshal:
-
- “1. Pre-military aviation training of the new blood for the
- Luftwaffe.
-
- “2. The keeping in training of the reservists of the aviation
- troops.
-
- “3. The combining and directing of all German air sports.
-
- “4. Promotion and extension of the aviation idea among the
- German people.
-
- “These tasks are so great that the cooperation of tens of
- thousands of active members is necessary to make carrying them
- out possible, so that the Luftwaffe may be able at any time to
- count on their fulfillment according to plan.” (_2811-PS_)
-
-The paramount military purpose of the NSFK is clearly indicated in the
-following admission by _Generalleutnant_ Friedrich Christiansen,
-_Korpsfuehrer_ of the NSFK:
-
- “Schooled in character, trained physically as a flier, and as a
- soldier, the member-to-be of the Luftwaffe leaves the NSFK.”
- (_2813-PS_)
-
-(6) _The Reichsarbeitdienst (RAD)_ (The Reich Labor Service). The Reich
-Labor Service was also subverted to military purposes by the Nazi
-conspirators.
-
-Membership in the RAD was made compulsory for both young men and women
-on 26 June 1935.
-
- “All young Germans of either sex between 18-25 years of age are
- obligated to serve their people in the Reich Labor Service. As
- the schooling of the Nation, it has as its object this education
- of the German Youth to National Socialist Ideology.
-
- “The Reich Labor Service for men is, thanks to its military
- nature, closely-knit units, and its particular education and
- training an ever-ready, powerful tool of the National Socialist
- Reich.” (_2805-PS_)
-
-The tens of thousands of members of the RAD were militarily trained and
-ready for action when Germany launched her campaigns of aggression.
-Actual military use of the men of the RAD is clearly shown in the 1 June
-1943 edition of “_Fuehren und Erziehen_” (Leadership and Education), the
-official magazine of the Reich Labor Service. A photograph depicts a
-Labor Service man repairing a bridge at the front, across which four
-infantrymen are proceeding, and is titled as follows:
-
- “The young crews who have gone through the educational
- institutions of the Reich Labor Service today represent the most
- active nucleus of our Army. * * * Our photograph shows labor men
- who in the East are preparing the way for infantry shock troops
- by repairing a bridge. Thus also the men of the Reich Labor
- Service are today one of the examples of eternal German
- soldierdom.” (_2806-PS_)
-
-The military uses of the RAD are further described in the following
-letter written by Goering to Reich Labor Service Leader Konstantin
-Hierl:
-
- “After the victorious termination of the campaign in Poland, I
- cannot but convey to you my sincere thanks for and unreserved
- recognition of the help rendered by the Reich Labor Service in
- the carrying out of the operations of the Luftwaffe. In guarding
- Army airfields, in clearing and quickly repairing former enemy
- airports, in road construction and in bringing up supplies,
- everywhere your men have done a real job and have thus
- contributed considerably to the successes of the German
- Luftwaffe.” (_2807-PS_)
-
-(7) _The TODT Organization (OT)._ The TODT Organization, or OT, was
-another NSDAP affiliate used to further the militaristic aims of the
-Nazi conspirators. The OT, originally an offshoot of the RAD, was
-created as a separate entity in June 1938 when Dr. Fritz Todt was
-charged with the construction of the Siegfried Line or West Wall. The
-military employment of the OT is clearly shown in the following passage
-from “_Maenner der OT_”, which was published by the Photographic Office
-of the Reich Propaganda Office:
-
- “No sooner had the greatest and most modern fortifications of
- the world, the West Wall, been completed by the workers of the
- OT, when these very same workers were called upon by the Fuehrer
- to prove their worth also in direct front service * * * and they
- thus helped * * * to achieve the greatest victory in history.
- When the great offensive in the west began, the brown workers’
- columns of the TODT organization followed immediately behind
- them. After the armistice with France had been signed, an
- entirely new situation developed for the TODT organization. Its
- columns had pushed deep into enemy country. Not seldom did they
- have direct contact with the enemy—their losses in dead and
- wounded and the Iron Cross awards are heroic proof of that.
- While, as the foremost construction workers of the German Reich,
- they had already proved their worth when building the West Wall,
- they were now able to perfect what they had learned in the fight
- against the British world enemy. From the Channel coast to the
- Atlantic Ocean, the front technicians and front workers of the
- OT now proceeded to create the prerequisites for a successful
- fight against England.” (_2808-PS_)
-
-Though the OT was in its origin technically a civilian organization, it
-subsequently became a para-military body which, before and during the
-war, cooperated fully with the German Army. On 2 July 1940, a directive
-was issued from the German High Command appointing a liaison officer.
-
- “* * * to establish the closest liaison and cooperation of the
- respective military offices with the main construction work of
- the TODT Organization.” (_2812-PS_)
-
-This militarization of the OT is further shown in the following passage
-from “_Nationalsozialistische Monatschefte_” for 1942:
-
- “From the Autobahn workers was developed the ‘Organization TODT’
- a body of hundreds of thousands of workers who help the
- Wehrmacht everywhere in eliminating obstacles, building bridges
- and erecting fortifications and shelters. The front soldier and
- the front worker stand side by side. Together they have shed
- their blood in this war and together they have won victories.
- Long-range guns on the Channel coast, U-boat bases on the
- Atlantic, and now the East will render the ‘OT’ immortal for all
- times to come.” (_2809-PS_)
-
-A letter from Fritz Sauckel to Hitler, dated 17 May 1943, states that
-the OT had supplied 248,200 workers by March 1943 for the completion of
-the Atlantic Wall, and praises the OT for its excellent work in this
-regard. (_407-VIII-PS_)
-
-By 1938, all phases of German life _had been_ mobilized for the
-accomplishment of militant aims.
-
-Hitler declared to the Reichstag on 20 February 1938:
-
- “Only now we have succeeded in setting before us the great tasks
- and in possessing the material things which are the
- prerequisites for the realization of great creative plans in all
- fields of our national existence. Thus, National Socialism has
- made up within a few years for what centuries before it had
- omitted. * * *
-
- “National Socialism has given the German people that leadership
- which as party not only mobilizes the nation but also organizes
- it, so that on the basis of the natural principle of selection,
- the continuance of a stable political leadership is safeguarded
- forever * * * National Socialism * * * possesses Germany
- entirely and completely since the day when, five years ago, I
- left the house in Wilhelmplatz as Reich Chancellor. There is no
- institution in this state which is not National Socialist. Above
- all, however, the National Socialist Party in these five years
- not only has made the nation National Socialist, but also has
- given itself that perfect organizational structure which
- guarantees its permanence for all future. _The greatest
- guarantee of the National Socialist revolution lies in the
- complete domination of the Reich and all its institutions and
- organizations, internally and externally, by the National
- Socialist Party. Its protection against the world abroad,
- however, lies in its new National Socialist armed forces._ * * *
-
- “In this Reich, anybody who has a responsible position is a
- National Socialist. * * * Every institution of this Reich is
- under the orders of the supreme political leadership. * * * The
- party leads the Reich politically, the armed forces defend it
- militarily. * * * There is nobody in any responsible position in
- this state who doubts that I am the authorized leader of this
- Reich.” (_2715-PS_)
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO MILITARIZATION OF
- NAZI ORGANIZATIONS
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6, especially 6 (a).│ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Section IV (D) 3 │ │
- │ (f). │ I │ 21
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document was referred to during the │ │
- │trial but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
- *407-VIII-PS │Telegram from Sauckel to Hitler, 17 May │ │
- │1943, concerning foreign labor. (USA │ │
- │210) │ III │ 394
- │ │ │
- 2320-B-PS │Extracts from Organization Book of │ │
- │NSDAP, 1940, p. 394. │ IV │ 1026
- │ │ │
-*2715-PS │Speech by Hitler to the Reichstag on 20 │ │
- │February 1938, published in The Archive,│ │
- │February 1938, Vol. 47, pp. 1441-1442. │ │
- │(USA 331). │ V │ 376
- │ │ │
- 2804-PS │Extracts from “Das NSKK” by Hans Helmut │ │
- │Krenzlein, NSKK Gruppenfuehrer, with │ │
- │foreword by Leader of NSKK, Korpsfuehrer│ │
- │A. Huehnlein. │ V │ 446
- │ │ │
- 2805-PS │Extract from Organization Book of NSDAP,│ │
- │1943, p. 465. │ V │ 447
- │ │ │
- 2806-PS │Extract from Leadership and Education, │ │
- │official magazine of Dutch Labor │ │
- │Service, 1 June 1943, p. 19. │ V │ 448
- │ │ │
- 2807-PS │Letter by Goering to Reich Labor Service│ │
- │Leader Konstantin Hierl, published by │ │
- │National Socialist Monthly, 1940, Vol. │ │
- │I, p. 155. │ V │ 448
- │ │ │
- 2808-PS │Men of the OT, published by Photographic│ │
- │Office of Reich Propaganda Office. │ V │ 448
- │ │ │
- 2809-PS │Extract from National Socialist Monthly,│ │
- │February-March, 1942, p. 167. │ V │ 449
- │ │ │
- 2810-PS │Extract from Germany in Battle, by │ │
- │Berndt of Reich Propaganda Ministry and │ │
- │von Wedel of German Army High Command, │ │
- │1940, p. 107. │ V │ 449
- │ │ │
- 2811-PS │Extracts from Organization Book of the │ │
- │NSDAP, 1938, pp. 470, 470(c). │ V │ 450
- │ │ │
- 2812-PS │Directive from German Army High Command,│ │
- │published in General Army Bulletin, │ │
- │1940, Vol. VII, p. 96. │ V │ 450
- │ │ │
- 2813-PS │Extract from The National Socialist Air │ │
- │Corps, p. 14. │ V │ 451
- │ │ │
-*3054-PS │“The Nazi Plan”, script of a motion │ │
- │picture composed of captured German │ │
- │film. (USA 167) │ V │ 801
-
-
-
-
- Chapter VIII
- ECONOMIC ASPECTS OF THE CONSPIRACY
-
-
-It is well known that the Nazi conspirators rearmed Germany on a vast
-scale. The purpose of that rearmament is revealed in the secret records
-of the plans and deliberations of the inner councils of the Nazis. These
-records show that the reorganization of the German government, the
-financial wizardry of Hjalmar Schacht, and the total mobilization of the
-German economy largely under Hjalmar Schacht, Hermann Goering, and
-Walter Funk, were directed at a single goal: aggressive war.
-
- I. ECONOMIC MOBILIZATION FOR WAR
-
-The significance of the economic measures adopted and applied by the
-conspirators can be properly appraised only if they are placed in the
-larger social and political context of Nazi Germany. These economic
-measures were adopted while the conspirators were directing their vast
-propaganda apparatus to the glorification of war. They were adopted
-while the conspirators were perverting physical training into training
-for war. They were adopted while these conspirators were threatening to
-use force and were planning to use force to achieve their material and
-political objects. In short, these measures constitute in the field of
-economics and government administration the same preparation for
-aggressive war which dominated every aspect of the Nazi state.
-
-In 1939 and 1940, after the Nazi aggression upon Poland, Holland,
-Belgium, and France, it became clear to the world that the Nazi
-conspirators had created probably the greatest instrument of aggression
-in history. That machine was built up almost in its entirety in a period
-of less than one decade. In May of 1939 Major General George Thomas,
-former Chief of the Military-Economic Staff in the Reich War Ministry,
-reported that the German Army had grown from seven Infantry divisions in
-1933 to thirty-nine Infantry divisions, among them four fully motorized
-and three mountain divisions; eighteen Corps Headquarters; five Panzer
-divisions; twenty-two machine gun battalions. Moreover, General Thomas
-stated that the German Navy had greatly expanded by the launching, among
-other vessels, of two battleships of thirty-five thousand tons, four
-heavy cruisers of ten thousand tons, and other warships; further, that
-the Luftwaffe had grown to a point where it had a strength of two
-hundred sixty thousand men, twenty-one squadrons, consisting of two
-hundred forty echelons, and thirty-three Anti-Aircraft Batteries.
-(_EC-28_) General Thomas further reported, in a lecture delivered on 24
-May 1939 in the Nazi Foreign Office, that out of the few factories
-permitted by the Versailles Treaty there had arisen * * *
-
- “The mightiest armament industry now existing in the world. It
- has attained the performances which in part equal the German
- wartime performances and in part even surpasses them. Germany’s
- crude steel production is today the largest in the world after
- the Americans. The aluminum production exceeds that of America
- and of the other countries of the world very considerably. The
- output of our rifle, machine gun, and artillery factories is at
- present larger than that of any other state.” (_EC-28_)
-
-These results—about which General Thomas spoke in his book entitled
-_Basic Facts for a History of German War and Armaments Economy_—were
-achieved only by making preparation for war the dominating objective of
-German economy. As General Thomas stated on page 479 of his book:
-
- “History will know only a few examples of cases where a country
- has directed, even in peace time, all its economic forces
- deliberately and systematically towards the requirements of war,
- as Germany was compelled to do in the period between the two
- World Wars.” (_2353-PS_)
-
-The task of mobilizing the German economy for aggressive war began
-promptly after the Nazi conspirators’ seizure of power. It was entrusted
-principally to Schacht, Goering, and Funk.
-
-Schacht was appointed President of the Reichsbank in March 1933, and
-Minister of Economics in August 1934. The world did not know, however,
-that the responsibility for the execution of this program was entrusted
-to the office of the Four Year Plan under Goering (_EC-408_). Nor did
-the world know that Schacht was designated Plenipotentiary for the War
-Economy on 21 May 1935, with complete control over the German civilian
-economy for war production in the Reich Defense Council, established by
-a top secret Hitler decree.
-
-A letter dated 24 June 1935, at Berlin, and signed by von Blomberg,
-reads in part:
-
- “* * * The Fuehrer and Reich Chancellor has nominated the
- President of the directorate of the Reichsbank, Dr. Schacht, to
- be Plenipotentiary-General for War Economy. * * *
-
- “* * * I point out the necessity of strictest secrecy once more
- * * *.” (_2261-PS_)
-
-Through Schacht’s financial genius monetary measures were devised to
-restore German industry to full production; and through the control of
-imports and exports, which he devised under his new plan of 1934, German
-production was channeled in accordance with the requirements of the
-German war machine.
-
-In 1936, with an eye to the experience in the First World War, the Nazi
-conspirators embarked on an ambitious plan to make Germany completely
-self-sufficient in strategic war materials such as rubber, gasoline, and
-steel, in a period of four years, so that Germany would be fully
-prepared for aggressive war. The responsibility for the execution of
-this program was entrusted to the office of the Four Year Plan under
-Goering. A “memorandum on the Four Year Plan and Preparation of the War
-Economy,” dated 30 December 1936, and marked “Secret Command Matter”,
-sets out that the Fuehrer and Reich Chancellor has conferred powers in
-regard to mobilization preparations in the economic field that need
-further definition. The third paragraph refers specifically to
-Minister-President, Generaloberst Goering as Commissioner of the Four
-Year Plan, by authority of the Fuehrer and Reich Chancellor granted 18
-October 1936. The existence of this program involved the reorganization
-and control of the whole German economy for war. (_EC-408_)
-
-The military objectives of the German economy were clearly stated by
-General Thomas in a lecture on 28 February 1939, delivered at the Staff
-Instructor’s course. He stated:
-
- “The National Socialist State, soon after taking over the power,
- has reorganized the German economy in all sections and directed
- it towards a military viewpoint, which had been requested by the
- Army for years. Due to the reorganization, agriculture, commerce
- and professions became those powerful instruments the Fuehrer
- needs for his extensive plans, and we can say today that
- Hitler’s mobile politics, as well as the powerful efforts of the
- Army and economy, would not have been possible without the
- necessary reorganization by the National Socialist Government.
- We can now say that the economic organization as a whole
- corresponds with the needs, although slight adjustments will
- have to be made yet. Those reorganizations made a new system of
- economics possible which was necessary in view of our internal
- and foreign political situation as well as our financial
- problems. The directed economy, as we have it today, concerning
- agriculture, commerce and industry, is not only the expression
- of the present State principles, but at the same time also the
- economy of the country’s defense.” (_EC-27_)
-
-This program was not undertaken in a vacuum; it was deliberately
-designed and executed to provide the necessary instrument of the Nazi
-conspirators’ plans for aggressive war. In September 1934 Schacht
-admitted to the American Ambassador in Berlin that the Hitler Party was
-absolutely committed to war, and that the people too were ready and
-willing. (_EC-461_) At the same time Schacht promulgated his new plan
-for the control of imports and exports in the interest of rearmament. A
-year later he was appointed Plenipotentiary for War Economy by top
-secret decree. (_2261-PS_)
-
-On 4 September 1936 Goering announced, at a Cabinet meeting attended by
-von Blomberg, Schacht, and others, that Hitler had issued instructions
-to the Reich War Minister on the basis that “the show-down with Russia
-is inevitable,” and added that “all measures have to be taken just as if
-we were actually in the stage of imminent danger of war.” (_EC-416_)
-
-In the same month the office of the Four Year Plan was created with the
-mission of making Germany self-sufficient for war in four years. Goering
-regarded it as his task, within four years, to put the entire economy in
-a state of readiness for war. (_EC-408_)
-
- 2. COLLABORATION OF THE INDUSTRIALISTS IN REARMAMENT
-
-Although the Nazi government officials provided the leadership in
-preparing Germany for war, they received also the enthusiastic and
-invaluable cooperation of the German industrialists.
-
-On the invitation of Goering, approximately 25 of the leading
-industrialists of Germany, together with Schacht, attended a meeting in
-Berlin on 20 February 1933. This was shortly before the German election
-of 5 March 1933. At this meeting Hitler announced the conspirators’ aim
-to seize totalitarian control over Germany, to destroy the parliamentary
-system, to crush all opposition by force, and to restore the power of
-the _Wehrmacht_. Among those present at that meeting were Gustav Krupp,
-head of the munitions firm, Alfried Krupp, A.G.; four leading officials
-of the I. G. Farben Works, one of the world’s largest chemical concerns;
-Albert Vogler, head of United Steel Works of Germany; and other leading
-industrialists. This meeting is described in the following affidavit of
-George von Schnitzler:
-
- “I, George von Schnitzler, a member of the Vorstand of I. G.
- Farben, make the following deposition under oath:
-
- “At the end of February 1933, four members of the Vorstand of I.
- G. Farben, including Dr. Bosch, the head of the Vorstand, and
- myself were asked by the office of the President of the
- Reichstag to attend a meeting in his house, the purpose of which
- was not given. I do not remember the two other colleagues of
- mine who were also invited. I believe the invitation reached me
- during one of my business trips to Berlin. I went to the meeting
- which was attended by about 20 persons, who I believe were
- mostly leading industrialists from the Ruhr.
-
- “Among those present I remember:
-
- “Dr. Schacht, who at that time was not yet head of the
- _Reichsbank_ again and not yet Minister of Economics.
-
- “Krupp von Bohlen, who in the beginning of 1933 presided over
- the _Reichsverband der Deutschen Industrie_, which later on was
- changed into the semi-official organization ‘_Reichsgruppe
- Industrie_.’
-
- “Dr. Albert Vogler, the leading man of the _Vereinigte
- Stahlwerke_.
-
- “Von Lowenfeld from an industrial work in Essen.
-
- “Dr. Stein, head of the _Gewerkschaft Auguste Victoria_, a mine
- which belongs to the I. G. Dr. Stein was an active member of the
- _Deutsche Volkspartei_.
-
- “I remember that Dr. Schacht acted as a kind of host.
-
- “While I had expected the appearance of Goering, Hitler entered
- the room, shook hands with everybody and took a seat at the top
- of the table. In a long speech, he talked mainly about the
- danger of communism over which he pretended that he just had won
- a decisive victory.
-
- “He then talked about the _Bundnis_—alliance—into which his
- party and the _Deutsch Nationale Volkspartei_ had entered. This
- latter party, in the meantime, had been reorganized by Herr von
- Papen. At the end he came to the point which seemed to me the
- purpose of the meeting. Hitler stressed the importance that the
- two aforementioned parties should gain the majority in the
- coming Reichstag election. Krupp von Bohlen thanked Hitler for
- his speech. After Hitler had left the room, Dr. Schacht proposed
- to the meeting the raising of an election fund of, as far as I
- remember, RM 3,000,000. The fund should be distributed between
- the two ‘allies’ according to their relative strength at the
- time being. Dr. Stein suggested that the _Deutsche Volkspartei_
- should be included * * *.” (_EC-439_)
-
-In a speech delivered to the industrialists in Berlin on 20 February
-1933, Hitler stated:
-
- “Private enterprise cannot be maintained in the age of
- democracy; it is conceivable only if the people have a sound
- idea of authority and personality. * * * I recognized even while
- in the hospital that one had to search for new ideas conducive
- to reconstruction. I found them in Nationalism, in the value of
- strength and power of individual personality. * * * If one
- rejects pacifism, one must put a new idea in its place
- immediately. Everything must be pushed aside, must be replaced
- by something better. * * * We must not forget that all the
- benefits of culture must be introduced more or less with an iron
- fist just as once upon a time the farmers were forced to plant
- potatoes.
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “With the very same courage with which we go to work to make up
- for what had been sinned during the last 14 years, we have
- withstood all attempts to move us off the right way.”
-
- “* * * We must first gain complete power if we want to crush the
- other side completely. While still gaining power, one should not
- start the struggle against the opponent. Only when one knows
- that one has reached the pinnacle of power, that there is no
- further possible development, shall one strike. * * *
-
- “* * * Now we stand before the last election. Regardless of the
- outcome there will be no retreat, even if the coming election
- does not bring about a decision. * * *
-
- “The question of restoration of the _Wehrmacht_ will not be
- decided at Geneva but in Germany, when we have gained internal
- strength through internal peace.” (_D-203_)
-
-In reply to these statements Goering, who was present at that same
-meeting, declared:
-
- “That the sacrifice asked for surely would be much easier for
- industry to bear if it realized that the election of March 5th
- will surely be the last one for the next ten years, probably
- even for the next hundred years.” (_D-203_)
-
-In a memorandum dated 22 February 1933, found in the personal files of
-Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach, Krupp briefly described this same
-meeting, and recalled that he had expressed to Hitler the gratitude of
-the 25 industrialists present. (_D-204_)
-
-In April 1933, after Hitler had entrenched himself in power, Gustav
-Krupp, as Chairman of the Reich Association of German Industry, which
-was the largest association of German industrialists, submitted to
-Hitler the plan of that association for the reorganization of German
-industry. In connection therewith Krupp undertook to bring the
-association into line with the aims of the conspirators, and to make it
-an effective instrument for the execution of their policies. In a letter
-of transmittal (_D-157_), Krupp stated that the plan of reorganization
-which he submitted on behalf of the association of industrialists, was
-characterized by the desire to coordinate economic measures and
-political necessity, adopting the Fuehrer conception of the new German
-state. In the plan of reorganization itself, Krupp stated:
-
- “The turn of political events is in line with the wishes which I
- myself and the board of directors have cherished for a long
- time. In reorganizing the Reich Association of German Industry,
- I shall be guided by the idea of bringing the new organization
- into agreement with the political aims of the Reich Government.”
- (_D-157_)
-
-The ideas of Krupp were subsequently adopted.
-
-Under the decree introducing the leadership principle into industry,
-each group of industry was required to have a leader who was to serve
-without compensation. The leaders were to be appointed and could be
-removed at the discretion of the Minister of Economics. The charter of
-each group was to be created by the leader, who was obligated to lead
-his group in accordance with the principles of the National Socialist
-State (_Reichsgesetzblatt_, 1934, Part I, 1194, Sec. 11, 12, 16). The
-introduction of the leadership principle into the organizations of
-business centralized authority and guaranteed the efficient execution of
-orders, which the government issued to business, in the effort to
-promote a war economy.
-
-The overwhelming support given by the German industrialists to the Nazi
-war program is described in a speech prepared by Gustav Krupp in January
-1944, for delivery at the University of Berlin:
-
- “War material is life-saving for one’s own people, and whoever
- works and performs in those spheres can be proud of it. Here,
- enterprise as a whole, finds its highest justification of
- existence. This justification, I may inject this here,
- crystallized especially during the time of interregnum between
- 1919 and 1933, when Germany was lying down disarmed. * * *
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “It is the one great merit of the entire German war economy that
- it did not remain idle during those bad years, even though its
- activity could not be brought to light for obvious reasons.
- Through years of secret work, scientific and basic groundwork
- was laid in order to be ready again to work for the German armed
- forces at the appointed hour without loss of time or experience.
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Only through the secret activity of German enterprise, together
- with the experience gained meanwhile through production of
- peacetime goods, was it possible, after 1933, to fall into step
- with the new tasks arrived at, restoring Germany’s military
- power. Only through all that could the entirely new and various
- problems, brought up by the Fuehrer’s Four-Year Plan for German
- enterprise, be mastered. It was necessary to supply the new raw
- materials, to explore and experiment, to invest capital in order
- to make German economy independent and strong—in short, to make
- it war-worthy.
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “I think I may state here that the German enterprises followed
- the new ways enthusiastically, that they made the great
- intentions of the Fuehrer their own by fair competition and
- conscious gratitude, and became his faithful followers. How else
- could the tasks between 1933 and 1939, and especially those
- after 1939, have been overcome?” (_D-317_)
-
- 3. THE USE OF ECONOMIC MEASURES TO FACILITATE REARMAMENT
-
-It must be emphasized that the secret rearmament program was launched
-immediately upon the seizure of power by the Nazi conspirators. On 4
-April 1933 the Reich Cabinet passed a resolution establishing a Reich
-Defense Council. The function of this council was secretly to mobilize
-for war. At the second meeting of the working committee of the
-Councillors for Reich Defense, the predecessor of the Reich Defense
-Council, which was held on 22 May 1933, the chairman was Keitel. Keitel
-stated that the Reich Defense Council would immediately undertake to
-prepare for war emergency. He stressed the urgency of the task of
-organizing a war economy, and announced that the council stood ready to
-brush aside all obstacles. Fully aware of the fact that their action was
-in flagrant violation of the Treaty of Versailles, Keitel emphasized the
-extreme importance of absolute secrecy:
-
- “No document ought to be lost, since otherwise it may fall into
- the hands of the enemies’ intelligence service. Orally
- transmitted, matters are not provable; they can be denied by us
- in Geneva.” (_EC-177_)
-
-The singleness of purpose with which the Nazi conspirators geared the
-German economy to the forging of a war machine is further shown by the
-secret minutes of the second meeting of the working committee of the
-Reich Defense Council, held on 7 February 1934. At this meeting at which
-Capt. Schmundt, Col. Guerian, Maj. Gen. von Reichenau, Maj. Warlimont,
-and Jodl—then a Lt. Col.—were present, Lieutenant-General Beck pointed
-out that:
-
- “The actual state of preparation is the purpose of this
- session.” (_EC-404_)
-
-Detailed measures of financing a future war were discussed and it was
-pointed out that the financial aspects of the war economy would be
-regulated by the Reich Finance Ministry and the Reichsbank, which was
-headed by Schacht. (_EC-404_)
-
-Under his secret appointment as Plenipotentiary-General of the War
-Economy, Schacht had the express function of placing all economic forces
-of the nation in the services of the Nazi war machine. The secret
-defense law of 21 May 1935 in effect gave Schacht charge of the entire
-war economy. In case of war he was to be virtual economic dictator of
-Germany. His task was to place all economic forces into service for the
-conduct of war and to secure economically the life of the German people.
-The Ministers of Economics, Food, Agriculture, Labor, and Forestry, as
-well as all Reich agencies directly under the Fuehrer, were subordinated
-to him. He was to be responsible for the financing as well as for the
-conduct of the war; and he was further authorized to issue ordinances
-within his sphere of responsibility, even if these deviated from
-existing laws. (_2261-PS_)
-
-The rearmament of Germany proceeded at a rapid pace. By summer of 1935
-the Nazi conspirators were emboldened to make plans for the reoccupation
-of the Rhineland, and at the tenth meeting of the working committee of
-the council the question of measures to be taken in connection with the
-proposed reoccupation of the Rhineland was discussed.
-
-At that meeting, on 26 June 1935, it was said that the Rhineland
-required special treatment because of the assurances given by Hitler to
-the French that no military action was being undertaken in the
-demilitarized zone. Among the matters requiring special treatment was
-the preparation of economic mobilization, a task specifically entrusted
-to Schacht as secret Plenipotentiary for the War Economy. In this
-connection it was stated:
-
- “* * * Since political entanglements abroad must be avoided at
- present under all circumstances, only these preparatory measures
- that are urgently necessary may be carried out. The existence of
- such preparations, or the intention of them must be kept in
- strictest secrecy in the zone itself as well as in the rest of
- the Reich.” (_EC-405_)
-
-Preparations of various types were thereupon discussed.
-
-The rapid success of German rearmament is attributable to the work of
-Schacht. In the fall of 1934, the Nazi conspirators announced the “New
-Plan”, which aimed at the control of imports and exports in order to
-obtain the raw materials needed for armaments and the foreign currency
-required to sustain the armament program. The “New Plan” was the
-creation of Schacht. Under the plan, Schacht controlled imports by
-extending the system of supervisory boards for import control, which was
-previously limited to the main groups of raw materials, to all goods
-imported into Germany. The requirement of licenses for imports enabled
-the Nazi conspirators to restrict imports to those commodities which
-served their war aims.
-
-Subsequently, in February 1935, the _Devisen_ Law was passed
-(_Reichsgesetzblatt_ 1935, I, 105). Under it, all transactions involving
-foreign exchange were subject to the approval of _Devisenstellen_
-(Foreign Exchange Control Offices). By thus controlling the disposition
-of foreign exchange, the conspirators were able to manipulate foreign
-trade so as to serve their ends.
-
-Every aspect of the German economy was geared to war under the guidance
-of the Nazi conspirators, particularly Schacht. In a study of the
-economic mobilization for war as of 30 September 1934, it was stated
-that steps had already been taken to build up stock piles, to construct
-new facilities for the production of scarce goods, to redeploy industry
-to secure areas, and to control fiscal and trade policies. The task of
-stock piling, it was announced, had been hampered by the requirement of
-secrecy and camouflage. Reserves of automobile fuels and stocks of coal
-were accumulated, and the production of synthetic oil was accelerated.
-Civilian supply was purposely organized so that most plants would be
-working for the German Armed Forces. Studies were made of the
-possibility of barter trade with supposedly neutral countries in case of
-war. (_EC-128_)
-
-Financing of the armament program presented a difficult problem for the
-conspirators. In 1934 and 1935, the German economy could by no
-possibility have raised funds for the Nazis’ extensive rearmament
-program through taxes and public loans. From the outset, the armament
-program involved “the engagement of the last reserves.” Moreover, apart
-from the problem of raising the huge sums required to sustain this
-program, the Nazi conspirators were exceedingly anxious, in the early
-stages, to conceal the extent of their armament activities.
-
-After considering various techniques of financing the armament program,
-Schacht proposed the use of “mefo” bills. One of the primary advantages
-of this method was the fact that through its use figures indicating the
-extent of rearmament, which would have become public through the use of
-other methods, could be kept secret. “Mefo” bills were used exclusively
-for armament financing. Transactions in “mefo” bills worked as follows:
-“Mefo” bills were drawn by armament contractors and accepted by a
-limited liability company. The spelling of the word “mefo” is taken from
-the name of this company, _Metallurgische Forschungsgesellschaft,
-m.b.h._ (_MEFO_). This company had a nominal capital of one million
-Reichsmarks and was merely a dummy organization. The bills were received
-by all German banks for possible rediscounting with the Reichsbank. The
-bills were guaranteed by the Reich. Their secrecy was assured by the
-fact that they appeared neither in the published statements of the
-Reichsbank nor in the budget figures.
-
-The “mefo” bill system continued to be used until 1 April 1938. Up to
-that date 12 billion Reichsmarks of “mefo” bills for the financing of
-rearmament had been issued. Since it was no longer deemed necessary to
-conceal the vast progress of German rearmament, “mefo” financing was
-discontinued at that time. (_EC-436_)
-
-Further sources of funds upon which Schacht drew to finance the secret
-armament program were the funds of political opponents of the Nazi
-regime, and Marks of foreigners on deposit in the Reichsbank. As Schacht
-boasted in a memorandum to Hitler dated 3 May 1935:
-
- “Our armaments are also financed partly with the credits of our
- political opponents.” (_1168-PS_)
-
-The outstanding “mefo” bills represented at all times a threat to the
-stability of the currency because they could be tendered to the
-Reichsbank for discount, in which case the currency circulation would
-automatically have to be increased. Thus, there was an ever-present
-threat of inflation. Schacht nevertheless continued on his course,
-because he stood with unswerving loyalty to the Fuehrer, because he
-fully recognized the basic idea of National Socialism, and because he
-felt that at the end, the disturbances, compared to the great task,
-could be considered irrelevant.
-
-High-ranking military officers paid tribute to Schacht’s contrivances on
-behalf of the Nazi war machine. An article written for the “Military
-Weekly Gazette” in January 1937 stated:
-
- “The German Defense Force commemorates Dr. Schacht today as one
- of the men who have done imperishable things for it and its
- development in accordance with directions from the Fuehrer and
- Reich Chancellor. The defense force owes it to Schacht’s skill
- and great ability that, in defiance of all currency difficulties
- it, according to plan, has been able to grow up to its present
- strength from an army of 100,000 men.”
-
-After the reoccupation of the Rhineland, the Nazi conspirators redoubled
-their efforts to prepare Germany for a major war. The Four Year Plan was
-proclaimed by Hitler in his address at the Nurnberg Party Convention on
-9 September 1936. It was given a statutory foundation by the decree
-concerning the execution of the Four Year Plan dated 18 October 1936
-(_Reichsgesetzblatt_ 1936, I, 887). By this decree Goering was put in
-charge of the plan. He was authorized to enact any legal and
-administrative measures deemed necessary by him for the accomplishment
-of his task, and to issue orders and instructions to all government
-agencies, including the highest Reich authorities. The purpose of the
-plan was to enable Nazi Germany to attain complete self-sufficiency in
-essential raw materials, notably motor fuel, rubber, textile fiber, and
-non-ferrous metals, and to intensify preparations for war. The
-development of synthetic products was greatly accelerated despite their
-high costs.
-
-Apart from the self-sufficiency program, however, the Nazi conspirators
-required foreign exchange to finance propaganda and espionage activities
-abroad. Thus, in a speech on 1 November 1937 before the
-_Wehrmachtakademie_, General Thomas stated:
-
- “If you consider that one will need during the war considerable
- means in order to organize the necessary propaganda, in order to
- pay for the espionage service, and for similar purposes, then
- one should be clear that our internal Mark would be of no use
- therefore, and that Foreign Exchange will be needed.” (_EC-14_)
-
-This need for foreign exchange was reduced in part by virtue of the
-espionage and propaganda services rendered free of charge to the Nazi
-state by leading German industrial concerns. A memorandum dated at Essen
-on 12 October 1935, which was found in the files of the Krupp company,
-contains the subheading: “Concerns:—distribution official propaganda
-literature abroad with help of our foreign connections.” It goes on to
-say that on the morning of 11 October the district representative of the
-Ribbentrop Private Foreign Office, _Dienststelle Ribbentrop_, made an
-appointment by telephone with Mr. Lachman to arrive at an appointed
-time. The memorandum continues:
-
- “In answer to my question, with whom I was dealing and which
- official bureau he represented, he informed me that he was not
- himself the district representative of Ribbentrop’s Private
- Foreign Office, but that a Mr. Landrat Bollman was such and that
- he himself had come at Mr. Bollman’s order.” (_D-206_)
-
-After discussing the confusion in the field of foreign propaganda, the
-memorandum states that Ribbentrop’s Foreign Office is creating a private
-organization for foreign propaganda, and that for this purpose the
-support of the Krupp firm and especially an index of addresses are
-needed. This request received the following response:
-
- “I informed Mr. Lachman that our firm has put itself years ago
- at the disposal of official bureaus for purposes of foreign
- propaganda, and that we had supported all requests addressed to
- us to the utmost.” (_D-206_)
-
-These activities are demonstrated by another document found in the files
-of the Krupp company. A memorandum prefaced by Herr Sonnenberg, on 14
-October 1937, reports a meeting at Essen on 12 October 1937. The
-government’s request for assistance in foreign intelligence activities
-met this response:
-
- “On our part we undertook to supply information to the Combined
- Services Ministry (R.K.M.) as required.” (_D-167_)
-
-Meanwhile the conspirators’ program of self-sufficiency was proceeding
-with great speed. The production of steel, for example, as shown in
-official German publication, rose as follows:
-
- _Tons_
- 1933 74,000
- 1934 105,000
- 1935 145,000
- 1936 186,000
- 1937 217,000
- 1938 477,000
-
-The production of gasoline increased at an even greater tempo: from
-387,000 tons in 1934 to 1,494,000 tons in 1938 (_Statistical Yearbook of
-the German Reich, 1939-1942_).
-
-The Nazi conspirators pressed the completion of the armament program
-with a sense of urgency betraying their awareness of the imminence of
-war. At a meeting on 4 September 1936 Goering pointed out that “all
-measures have to be taken just as if we were actually in the state of
-imminent danger of war.” He pointed out that:
-
- “* * * if war should break out tomorrow we would be forced to
- take measures from which we might possibly still shy away at the
- present moment. They are therefore to be taken.” (_EC-416_)
-
-The extreme urgency was manifested by Goering’s remark that
-
- “* * * existent reserves will have to be touched for the purpose
- of carrying us over this difficulty until the goal ordered by
- the Fuehrer has been reached; in case of war they are not a
- reliable backing in any case.” (_EC-416_)
-
-Schacht was advised by a top secret letter dated 31 August 1936 that
-Hitler ordered all formations of the air force to be ready by 1 April
-1937. (_1301-PS_)
-
-After their successes in Austria and the Sudetenland, the Nazi
-conspirators redoubled their efforts to equip themselves for the war of
-aggression which they planned to launch. In a conference on 14 October
-1938, shortly before the Nazis made their first demands on Poland,
-Goering stated:
-
- “* * * Everybody knows from the press what the world situation
- looks like, and therefore the Fuehrer has issued an order to him
- to carry out a gigantic program compared to which previous
- achievements are insignificant. There are difficulties in the
- way which he will overcome with the utmost energy and
- ruthlessness.” (_1301-PS_)
-
-The supply of foreign currency had sunken because of preparations for
-the invasion of Czechoslovakia. Replenishment was considered necessary.
-At the same conference, on 14 October 1938, Goering declared:
-
- “These gains made through the export are to be used for an
- increased armament. The armament should not be curtailed by
- export activities.” (_1301-PS_)
-
-Goering had received the order from the Fuehrer to increase armaments to
-an abnormal extent, the air force having first priority, and interpreted
-it as follows:
-
- “Within the shortest time, the air force should be increased
- five fold; also the navy should create war weapons more rapidly,
- and the army should produce large amounts of war weapons at a
- faster rate, particularly heavy artillery and heavy tanks. Along
- with this a larger production of armaments must go, especially
- fuel, rubber, powders and explosives must be moved to the
- foreground. This should be coupled with an accelerated expansion
- of highways, canals, and particularly of the railroads.”
- (_1301-PS_)
-
-In the course of these preparations for war, a clash of wills ensued
-between Goering and Schacht, as a result of which Schacht resigned his
-position as head of the Ministry of Economics and Plenipotentiary for
-the War Economy in November 1937. He was removed from the presidency of
-the Reichsbank in January 1939. Regardless of the details of this
-controversy, Schacht’s departure in no way implied any disagreement with
-the major war aims of the Nazis. Schacht took particular pride in his
-vast attainments in the financial and economic fields in aid of the Nazi
-war machine. In a letter to General Thomas Schacht wrote:
-
- “I think back with much satisfaction to the work in the Ministry
- of Economics which afforded me the opportunity to assist in the
- rearmament of the German people in the most critical period, not
- only in the financial but also in the economic sphere. I have
- always considered a rearmament of the German people as condition
- _sine qua non_ of the establishment of a new German nation.”
- (_EC-257_)
-
-In a letter written to General Von Blomberg, on 8 July 1937, Schacht
-wrote:
-
- “The direction of the war economy by the plenipotentiary would
- in that event never take place entirely independent from the
- rest of the war mechanism but would be aimed at accomplishment
- of the political war purpose with the assistance of all economic
- forces. I am entirely willing, therefore, to participate in this
- way in the preparation of the forthcoming order giving effect to
- the Defense Act.” (_EC-252_)
-
-In the spring of 1937, Schacht participated with representatives of the
-three branches of the armed forces in “war games in war economy” at
-Godesberg. A report of these exercises, entitled “War economy tasks in
-Godesberg undertaken by General Staff between the 25th of May and the
-2nd of June,” records the speech welcoming Dr. Schacht:
-
- “Before I start with the discussion of the war game in war
- economy, I have to express how grateful we all are that you,
- President Dr. Schacht, have gone to the trouble personally to
- participate in our final discussion today despite all your other
- activities. This proves to us your deep interest in war economy
- tasks shown at all times and your presence is renewed proof that
- you are willing to facilitate for us soldiers the difficult
- war-economic preparations and to strengthen the harmonious
- cooperation with your offices.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “I want to point out, however, that all matters and all
- information received has to be kept in strictest secrecy * * *.”
- (_EC-174_)
-
-The annexation of Austria was apparently a goal which Schacht had long
-sought, for in a speech to the employees of the former Austrian National
-Bank he declared:
-
- “* * * Austria has certainly a great mission, namely, to be the
- bearer of German culture, to insure respect and regard for the
- German name, especially in the direction of the southeast. Such
- a mission can only be performed within the Great German Reich
- and based on the power of a nation of 75 millions, which,
- regardless of the wish of the opponents, forms the heart and the
- soul of Europe.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “We have read a lot in the foreign press during the last few
- days that this aim, the union of both countries, is to a certain
- degree justified, but that the methods of effecting this union
- was terrible. This method which certainly did not suit one or
- the other power was nothing but the consequence of countless
- perfidies and brutal acts and violence which foreign countries
- have practiced against us * * *.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “* * * I am known for sometimes expressing thoughts which give
- offense and there I would not like to depart from this
- consideration. I know that there are even in this country a few
- people—I believe they are not too numerous—who find fault with
- the events of the last few days, but nobody, I believe, doubts
- the goal, and it should be said to all grumblers that you can’t
- satisfy everybody. One person says he would have done it maybe
- one way, but the remarkable thing is that they did not do it,
- and that it was only done by our Adolf Hitler; and if there is
- still something left to be improved, then those grumblers should
- try to bring about these improvements from the German Reich, and
- within the German community, but not to disturb us from
- without.” (_EC-297-A_)
-
-A memorandum of 7 January 1939, written by Schacht and other directors
-of the Reichsbank to Hitler, urged a balancing of the budget in view of
-the threatening danger of inflation. The memorandum continued:
-
- “* * * From the beginning the Reichsbank has been aware of the
- fact that a successful foreign policy can be attained only by
- the reconstruction of the German armed forces. It [the
- Reichsbank] therefore assumed to a very great extent the
- responsibility to finance the rearmament in spite of the
- inherent dangers to the currency. The justification thereof was
- the necessity, which pushed all other considerations into the
- background, to carry through the armament at once, out of
- nothing, and furthermore under camouflage, which made a
- respect-commanding foreign policy possible.” (_EC-369_)
-
-The Reichsbank directors, as experts on money, believed that a point had
-been reached where greater production of armaments was no longer
-possible. That was merely a judgment on the situation and not a moral
-stand, for there was no opposition to Hitler’s policy of aggression.
-Doubts were merely entertained as to whether that policy could be
-financed. Hitler’s letter to Schacht on the occasion of Schacht’s
-departure from the Reichsbank paid high tribute to Schacht’s great
-efforts in furthering the program of the Nazi conspirators. The armed
-forces by now had enabled Hitler to take Austria and the Sudetenland.
-Hitler, in his letter to Schacht declared:
-
- “Your name, above all, will always be connected with the first
- epoch of national rearmament.” (_EC-397_)
-
-Even though dismissed from the presidency of the Reichsbank, Schacht was
-retained as a minister without portfolio and special confidential
-adviser to Hitler. Funk stepped into Schacht’s position as president of
-the Reichsbank (_Voelkisher Beobachter_ of 21 January 1939). Funk was
-uninhibited by fears of inflation, and like Goering, under whom he had
-served in the Four Year Plan, he recognized no obstacles to the plan to
-attack Poland. In a letter written on 25 August 1939, only a few days
-before the attack on Poland, Funk reported to Hitler that the Reichsbank
-was prepared to withstand any disturbances of the international currency
-and credit system occasioned by a large-scale war. He said that he had
-secretly transferred all available funds of the Reichsbank abroad into
-gold, and that Germany stood ready to meet the financial and economic
-tasks which lay ahead. (_699-PS_)
-
-It seems clear that the Nazi conspirators directed the whole of the
-German economy toward preparation for aggressive war. To paraphrase the
-words of Goering, the conspirators gave the German people “guns instead
-of butter.” They also gave history its most striking example of a nation
-gearing itself in time of peace to the single purpose of aggressive war.
-Their economic preparations, formulated and applied with the energy of
-Goering, the financial wizardry of Schacht, and the willing complicity
-of Funk, among others, were the indispensable prerequisites for their
-subsequent campaign of aggression.
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO ECONOMIC ASPECTS OF
- THE CONSPIRACY
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6, especially 6 (a).│ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Section IV (E). │ I │ 21
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document was referred to during the │ │
- │trial but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
- *699-PS │Letter from Funk to Hitler, 25 August │ │
- │1939, reporting on economic affairs. (GB│ │
- │49) │ III │ 509
- │ │ │
-*1168-PS │Unsigned Schacht memorandum to Hitler, 3│ │
- │May 1935, concerning the financing of │ │
- │the armament program. (USA 37) │ III │ 827
- │ │ │
-*1301-PS │File relating to financing of armament │ │
- │including minutes of conference with │ │
- │Goering at the Air Ministry, 14 October │ │
- │1938, concerning acceleration of │ │
- │rearmament. (USA 123) │ III │ 868
- │ │ │
-*2261-PS │Directive from Blomberg to Supreme │ │
- │Commanders of Army, Navy and Air Forces,│ │
- │24 June 1935; accompanied by copy of │ │
- │Reich Defense Law of 21 May 1935 and │ │
- │copy of Decision of Reich Cabinet of 12 │ │
- │May 1935 on the Council for defense of │ │
- │the Reich. (USA 24) │ IV │ 934
- │ │ │
-*2353-PS │Extracts from General Thomas’ Basic │ │
- │Facts for History of German War and │ │
- │Armament Economy. (USA 35) │ IV │ 1071
- │ │ │
-*3787-PS │Report of the Second Meeting of the │ │
- │Reich Defense Council, 25 June 1939. │ │
- │(USA 782) │ VI │ 718
- │ │ │
-*3901-PS │Letter written November 1932 by Schacht,│ │
- │Krupp and others to the Reich President.│ │
- │(USA 851) │ VI │ 796
- │ │ │
-*D-157 │Letter from Krupp to Hitler, 25 April │ │
- │1933, with enclosure. (USA 765) │ VI │ 1063
- │ │ │
-*D-167 │Memoranda by Sonnenberg and Dr. Conn │ │
- │concerning exchange of intelligence │ │
- │involving Krupp works. (USA 766) │ VI │ 1069
- │ │ │
-*D-203 │Speech of Hitler to leading members of │ │
- │industry before the election of March │ │
- │1933. (USA 767) │ VI │ 1080
- │ │ │
-*D-204 │Statement of Krupp concerning political │ │
- │organization of state and economy, 22 │ │
- │February 1933 (USA 768) │ VI │ 1085
- │ │ │
-*D-206 │Memorandum, 12 October 1939, on │ │
- │distribution of propaganda abroad │ │
- │through foreign connections of Krupp │ │
- │firm. (USA 769) │ VI │ 1085
- │ │ │
-*D-317 │Krupp speech, “Thoughts about the │ │
- │Industrial Enterpriser”, January 1944. │ │
- │(USA 770) │ VII │ 21
- │ │ │
-*EC-14 │Speech before the Wehrmacht War College,│ │
- │1 November 1937, by Major-General │ │
- │Thomas. (USA 758) │ VII │ 246
- │ │ │
-*EC-27 │Address of Major-General Thomas before │ │
- │the Staff Instructors’ Course, on 28 │ │
- │February 1939 in Saarow-Pieskow. (USA │ │
- │759) │ VII │ 250
- │ │ │
-*EC-28 │Lecture of Major-General Thomas │ │
- │delivered, 24 May 1939, at the Foreign │ │
- │Office. (USA 760) │ VII │ 250
- │ │ │
-*EC-128 │Report on state of preparations for │ │
- │war-economic mobilization as of 30 │ │
- │September 1934. (USA 623) │ VII │ 306
- │ │ │
-*EC-174 │Summary “war economy” trip to Godesberg │ │
- │undertaken by General Staff between 25 │ │
- │May and 2 June 1937. (USA 761) │ VII │ 326
- │ │ │
-*EC-177 │Minutes of second session of Working │ │
- │Committee of the Reich Defense held on │ │
- │26 April 1933. (USA 390) │ VII │ 328
- │ │ │
-*EC-252 │Letter from Schacht to Blomberg, 8 July │ │
- │1937. (USA 762) │ VII │ 346
- │ │ │
-*EC-257 │Personal letter from Schacht to Thomas, │ │
- │29 December 1937. (USA 763) │ VII │ 347
- │ │ │
-*EC-286 │Correspondence between Schacht and │ │
- │Goering, March-April 1937, concerning │ │
- │price control. (USA 833) │ VII │ 380
- │ │ │
-*EC-293 │Letter from Schacht to Reich and │ │
- │Prussian Economics Minister, 24 December│ │
- │1935, concerning army demands for raw │ │
- │material. (USA 834) │ VII │ 391
- │ │ │
-*EC-297-A │Address in Vienna of the Reichsbank │ │
- │President, Dr. Schacht, 21 March 1938. │ │
- │(USA 632) │ VII │ 394
- │ │ │
-*EC-369 │Correspondence between Schacht and │ │
- │Hitler, January 1939. (USA 631) │ VII │ 426
- │ │ │
-*EC-383 │Letter 16 January 1937 with │ │
- │enclosure—article about Schacht │ │
- │appearing in the Military weekly │ │
- │Gazette. (USA 640) │ VII │ 436
- │ │ │
-*EC-397 │Letter from Hitler to Schacht, 19 │ │
- │January 1939. (USA 650) │ VII │ 438
- │ │ │
-*EC-404 │Minutes of conference of Sixth Session │ │
- │of Working Committee of Reichs Defense │ │
- │Council, held on 23 and 24 January 1934.│ │
- │(USA 764) │ VII │ 443
- │ │ │
-*EC-405 │Minutes of Tenth Meeting of Working │ │
- │Committee of Reichs Defense Council, 26 │ │
- │June 1935. (GB 160) │ VII │ 450
- │ │ │
-*EC-408 │Memorandum report about the Four Year │ │
- │Plan and preparation of the war economy,│ │
- │30 December 1936. (USA 579) │ VII │ 465
- │ │ │
-*EC-416 │Minutes of Cabinet Meeting, September │ │
- │1936. (USA 635) │ VII │ 471
- │ │ │
-*EC-436 │Affidavit of Puhl, 2 November 4 1945. │ │
- │(USA 620) │ VII │ 494
- │ │ │
-*EC-439 │Affidavit of Schnitzler, 10 November │ │
- │1945. (USA 618) │ VII │ 501
- │ │ │
-*EC-461 │Extracts from Ambassador Dodd’s Diary, │ │
- │1933-38. (USA 58) │ VII │ 515
- │ │ │
- Affidavit J │Affidavit of Erhard Milch, 23 January │ │
- │1946. │ VIII │ 653
- │ │ │
- Chart No. 9 │The Organization of German Business. │ VIII │ 778
-
-
-
-
- Chapter IX
- LAUNCHING OF WARS OF AGGRESSION
-
-
- I. THE PLOTTING OF AGGRESSIVE WAR
-
-The aggressive war phase of the case against the Nazi conspirators is,
-in the view of the American prosecution, the heart of the case.
-Everything else in this case, however dramatic, however sordid, however
-shocking and revolting to the common instinct of civilized peoples, is
-incidental or subordinate to, the fact of aggressive war.
-
-All the dramatic story of what went on in Germany in the early phases of
-the conspiracy—the ideologies used, the techniques of terror used, the
-suppressions of human freedom employed in the seizure of power, and even
-the concentration camps and the crimes against humanity, the
-persecutions, tortures and murders committed—all these things would
-have had little international juridical significance except for the fact
-that they were the preparation for the commission of aggressions against
-peaceful neighboring peoples. Even the aspects of the case involving
-“war crimes” in the strict sense are merely the inevitable, proximate
-result of the wars of aggression launched and waged by these
-conspirators, and of the kind of warfare they waged. It was total war,
-the natural result of the totalitarian party-dominated state that waged
-it; it was atrocious war, the natural result of the doctrines, designs
-and purposes of the Nazi conspirators.
-
-The substantive rule of law which is controlling on this part of the
-case is stated in Article 6 of the Charter of the International Military
-Tribunal, which, so far as is pertinent here, reads as follows:
-
- “_Article 6._ The Tribunal established by the Agreement referred
- to in Article 1 hereof for the trial and punishment of the major
- war criminals of the European Axis countries shall have the
- power to try and punish persons who, acting in the interests of
- the European Axis countries, either as individuals or as members
- of organizations, committed any of the following crimes.
-
- “The following acts, or any of them, are crimes coming within
- the jurisdiction of the Tribunal for which there shall be
- individual responsibility:
-
- “(a) _Crimes against peace_: namely, planning, preparation,
- initiation or waging of a war of aggression, or a war in
- violation of international treaties, agreements or assurances,
- or participation in a common plan or conspiracy for the
- accomplishment of any of the foregoing * * *”
-
- “Leaders, organizers, instigators and accomplices participating
- in the formulation or execution of a common plan or conspiracy
- to commit any of the foregoing crimes are responsible for all
- acts performed by any persons in execution of such plan.”
-
-Five important principles are contained in these portions of the
-Charter:
-
-(1) The Charter imposes “individual responsibility” for acts
-constituting “crimes against peace”;
-
-(2) The term “Crimes against peace” embraces planning, preparation,
-initiation, or waging of illegal war;
-
-(3) The term “Crimes against peace” also embraces participation in a
-common plan or conspiracy to commit illegal war;
-
-(4) An illegal war consists of either a war of aggression, or a war in
-violation of international treaties, agreements, or assurances; (these
-two kinds of illegal war might not necessarily be the same; it will be
-sufficient for the prosecution to show either that the war was
-aggressive irrespective of breach of international treaties, agreements
-or assurances, or that the war was in violation of international
-treaties, agreements or assurances irrespective of whether or not it was
-a war of aggression; but the American prosecution will undertake to
-establish that the wars planned, prepared, initiated, and waged by the
-Nazi conspirators were illegal for both reasons);
-
-(5) Individual criminal responsibility of a defendant is imposed by the
-Charter not merely by reasons of direct, immediate participation in the
-crime. It is sufficient to show that a defendant was a leader, an
-organizer, instigator, or accomplice who participated either in the
-formulation or in the execution of a common plan or conspiracy to commit
-crimes against peace. In this connection, the Charter declares that the
-responsibility of conspirators extends not only to their own acts but
-also to all acts performed by any persons in execution of the
-conspiracy.
-
-It is familiar law in the United States that if two or more persons set
-out to rob a bank in accordance with a criminal scheme to that end, and
-in the course of carrying out their scheme one of the conspirators
-commits the crime of murder, all the participants in the planning and
-execution of the bank robbery are guilty of murder, whether or not they
-had any other personal participation in the killing. This is a simple
-rule of law declared in the Charter. All the parties to a common plan or
-conspiracy are the agents of each other and each is responsible as
-principal for the acts of all the others as his agents.
-
-The documentary evidence assembled on this aggressive war aspect of the
-case will show the following: (1) the conspiratorial nature of the
-planning and preparation which underlay the Nazi aggressions already
-known to history; (2) the deliberate premeditation which preceded those
-acts of aggression; (3) the evil motives which led to the attacks; (4)
-the individual participation of named persons in the Nazi conspiracy for
-aggression; (5) the deliberate falsification of the pretexts claimed by
-the Nazi aggressors as they arose for their criminal activities.
-
-The critical period between the Nazi seizure of power and the initiation
-of the first war of aggression was very short. This critical period of
-illegal preparation and scheming, which ultimately set the whole world
-aflame, covered 6 years, from 1933 to 1939. Crowded into these 6 short
-years is the making of tragedy for mankind.
-
-A full understanding of these 6 years, and the 6 years of war that
-followed, requires that this period be divided into phases that reflect
-the development and execution of the Nazi master plan. These phases may
-be said to be six. The first was primarily preparatory, although it did
-involve overt acts. That phase covers roughly the period from 1933 to
-1936. In that period the Nazi conspirators, having acquired government
-control of Germany by the middle of 1933, turned their attention toward
-utilization of that control for foreign aggression. Their plan at this
-stage was to acquire military strength and political bargaining power to
-be used against other nations. In this they succeeded.
-
-The second phase of their aggression was shorter. As the conspiracy
-gained strength it gained speed. During each phase the conspirators
-succeeded in accomplishing more and more in less and less time until
-toward the end of the period, the rate of acceleration of their
-conspiratorial movement was enormous. The second phase of their
-utilization of control for foreign aggression involved the actual
-seizure and absorption of Austria and Czechoslovakia, in that order. By
-March 1939 they had succeeded in this phase.
-
-The third phase may be measured in months rather than years, from March
-to September 1939. The previous aggression being successful and having
-been consummated without the necessity of resorting to actual war, the
-conspirators had obtained much desired resources and bases and were
-ready to undertake further aggressions by means of war, if necessary. By
-September 1939 war was upon the world.
-
-The fourth phase of the aggression consisted of expanding the war into a
-general European war of aggression. By April 1941 the war which had
-theretofore involved Poland, the United Kingdom, and France, had been
-expanded by invasions into Scandinavia and into the Low Countries and
-into the Balkans.
-
-In the next phase the Nazi conspirators carried the war eastward by
-invasion of the territory of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
-The sixth phase consisted of collaboration with and instigation of their
-Pacific ally, Japan, and precipitated the attack on the United States at
-Pearl Harbor.
-
-The essential elements of the crime of aggressive war can be made out by
-a mere handful of captured German documents. These documents will leave
-no reasonable doubt concerning the aggressive character of the Nazi war
-or concerning the conspiratorial premeditation of that war. After the
-corpus of the crime has been demonstrated in this way, the documentary
-evidence will be discussed in subsequent sections, in a more or less
-chronological and detailed presentation of the relevant activities of
-the conspirators from 1933 to 1941.
-
-Each of the ten documents which will be discussed in this section has
-been selected to establish the basic facts concerning a particular phase
-of the development of the Nazi conspiracy for aggression. Each document
-has met three standards of selection: each is conspiratorial in nature;
-each is believed to have been hitherto unknown to history; and each is
-self-contained and tells its own story.
-
-A. _1933 to 1936._
-
-The period of 1933 to 1936 was characterized by an orderly, planned
-sequence of preparation for war. The essential objective of this period
-was the formulation and execution of the plan to rearm and re-occupy and
-fortify the Rhineland, in violation of the treaty of Versailles and
-other treaties, in order to acquire military strength and political
-bargaining powers to be used against other nations.
-
-A secret speech of Hitler’s delivered to all supreme commanders on 23
-November 1939, at 1200 hours, is sufficient to characterize this phase
-of the Nazi conspiracy (_789-PS_). The report of the speech was found in
-the OKW files captured at Flensberg. Hitler spoke as follows:
-
- “November 23, 1939, 1200 hours. Conference with the Fuehrer, to
- which all Supreme Commanders are ordered. The Fuehrer gives the
- following speech:
-
- “The purpose of this conference is to give you an idea of the
- world of my thoughts, which takes charge of me, in the face of
- future events, and to tell you my decisions. The building up of
- our armed forces was only possible in connection with the
- ideological [_weltanschaulich_] education of the German people
- by the Party.
-
- “When I started my political task in 1919, my strong belief in
- final success was based on a thorough observation of the events
- of the day and the study of the reasons for their occurrence.
- Therefore, I never lost my belief in the midst of setbacks which
- were not spared me during my period of struggle. Providence has
- had the last word and brought me success. On top of that, I had
- a clear recognition of the probable course of historical events,
- and the firm will to make brutal decisions. The first decision
- was in 1919 when I after long internal conflict became a
- politician and took up the struggle against my enemies. That was
- the hardest of all decisions. I had, however, the firm belief
- that I would arrive at my goal. First of all, I desired a new
- system of selection. I wanted to educate a minority which would
- take over the leadership. After 15 years I arrived at my goal,
- after strenuous struggles and many setbacks. When I came to
- power in 1933, a period of the most difficult struggle lay
- behind me. Everything existing before that had collapsed. I had
- to reorganize everything beginning with the mass of the people
- and extending it to the armed forces. First reorganization of
- the interior, abolishment of appearances of decay and defeatist
- ideas, education to heroism. While reorganizing the interior, I
- undertook the second task: to release Germany from its
- international ties. Two particular characteristics are to be
- pointed out: secession from the League of Nations and
- denunciation of the disarmament conference. It was a hard
- decision. The number of prophets who predicted that it would
- lead to the occupation of the Rhineland was large, the number of
- believers was very small. I was supported by the nation, which
- stood firmly behind me, when I carried out my intentions. After
- that the order for rearmament. Here again there were numerous
- prophets who predicted misfortunes, and only a few believers. In
- 1935 the introduction of compulsory armed service. After that
- militarization of the Rhineland, again a process believed to be
- impossible at that time. The number of people who put trust in
- me was very small. Then beginning of the fortification of the
- whole country especially in the west.
-
- “One year later, Austria came. This step also was considered
- doubtful. It brought about a considerable reinforcement of the
- Reich. The next step was Bohemia, Moravia and Poland. This step
- also was not possible to accomplish in one campaign. First of
- all, the western fortification 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 partial solution. The
- decision to march into Bohemia was made. Then followed the
- erection of the Protectorate, and with that basis for the action
- against Poland was laid, but I wasn’t quite clear at that time
- whether I should start first against the east and then in the
- west, or vice-versa”. (_789-PS_)
-
-There are some curious antitheses of thought in that, speech, as in most
-of Adolf Hitler’s speeches. In one sentence he combines guidance by
-providence with the making of “brutal decisions.” He constantly speaks
-of how very few people were with him, and yet the mass of the German
-people were with him. But he does give a brief summary of this early
-period: the organization of the mass of the people, the extension of
-organization to the armed forces, and the various “brutal decisions”
-that were made.
-
-A top secret letter dated 24 June 1935, from General von Blomberg to the
-Supreme Commanders of the Army, Navy, and Air Forces demonstrates the
-preparations for war in which the Nazi conspirators were engaged during
-this period. Attached to that letter is a copy of a Secret Reich Defense
-law of 21 May 1935, and a copy of a decision of the Reichcabinet of 21
-May 1935 on the Council for the Defense of the Reich (_2261-PS_). These
-documents were captured in the OKW files at Fechenheim. Von Blomberg’s
-letter reads as follows:
-
- “In the appendix I transmit one copy each of the law for the
- defense of the Reich of the 21 May 1935, and of a decision of
- the Reich Cabinet of 21 May 1935 concerning the Reich’s Defense
- Council. The publication of the Reich’s defense law is
- temporarily suspended by order of the Fuehrer and Reich
- Chancellor.
-
- “The Fuehrer and the Reichschancellor has nominated the
- President of the directorate of the Reichsbank, Dr. Schacht to
- be ‘Plenipotentiary-General for War economy’.
-
- “I request that the copies of the Reich’s defense law needed
- within the units of the armed forces be ordered before 1 July
- 1935 at armed forces office (L) where it is to be established
- with the request that the law should only be distributed down to
- Corps Headquarters outside of the Reichministry of war.
-
- “I point out the necessity of strictest secrecy once more.”
- (_2261-PS_)
-
-Underneath von Blomberg’s signature is an indorsement, “Berlin, 3
-September 1935; No. 1820/35 L Top Secret II a. To Defense-Economic Group
-G-3, copy transmitted (signed) Jodl.” (_2261-PS_)
-
-Attached to this letter is the statute referred to as the Reich’s
-Defense Law of 21 May 1935, enacted by the Reichscabinet. The law covers
-in detail preparations for a state of defense, mobilization, and
-appointment of the Plenipotentiary-General for War Economy (Schacht)
-with plenipotentiary authority for the economic preparation of the war.
-Part III provides for penalties. The law is signed, “The Fuehrer and
-Reichschancellor, Adolf Hitler; the Reichsminister of War, von Blomberg;
-the Reichsminister of the Interior, Frick.” At the bottom of it there is
-this note:
-
- “Note on the law for the defense of the Reich of 21 May 1935.
-
- “The publication of the law for the defense of the Reich of 21
- May 1935 will be suspended. The law became effective 21 May
- 1935.
-
- “The Fuehrer and Reichschancellor, Adolf Hitler.” (_2261-PS_)
-
-Thus, although the publication itself stated the law was made public,
-and although the law became effective immediately, publication was
-suspended by Adolf Hitler.
-
-There was also further attached to von Blomberg’s letter a copy of the
-decision of the Reichscabinet of 21 May 1935 on the Council for the
-Defense of the Realm. This decree deals largely with organization for
-economic preparation for the war. This law of May 1935 was the
-cornerstone of war preparations of the Nazi conspirators, and makes
-clear the relationship of Schacht to this preparation. (_2261-PS_)
-
-B. _Formulation and Execution of Plans to Invade Austria and
-Czechoslovakia._
-
-The next phase of aggression was the formulation and execution of plans
-to attack Austria and Czechoslovakia, in that order.
-
-One of the most striking and revealing of all the captured documents
-which have come to hand is one which has come to be known as the
-Hossbach notes of a conference in the Reichs Chancellery on 5 November
-1937 from 1615 to 2030 hours (_386-PS_). In the course of that meeting
-Hitler outlined to those present the possibilities and necessities of
-expanding their foreign policy, and requested, “That his statements be
-looked upon in the case of his death as his last will and testament.”
-The recorder of the minutes of this meeting, Colonel Hossbach, was the
-Fuehrer’s adjutant. Present at this conspiratorial meeting, among
-others, were Erich Raeder, Constantin von Neurath, and Hermann Wilhelm
-Goering. The minutes of this meeting reveal a crystalization towards the
-end of 1937 in the policy of the Nazi regime (_386-PS_). Austria and
-Czechoslovakia were to be acquired by force. They would provide
-“_lebensraum_” (living space) and improve Germany’s military position
-for further operations. While it is true that actual events unfolded
-themselves in a somewhat different manner than that outlined at this
-meeting, in essence the purposes stated at the meeting were carried out.
-These notes, which destroy any possible doubt concerning the Nazi’s
-premeditation of their crimes against peace, read as follows:
-
- “Berlin, 10 November 1937. Notes on the conference in the
- Reichskanzlei on 5 November 1937 from 1615 to 2030 hours.
-
- “Present: The Fuehrer and Reich Chancellor;
-
- “The Reichsminister for War, Generalfeldmarschall v. Blomberg;
-
- “The C-in-C Army, Generaloberst Freiherr v. Fritsch;
-
- “The C-in-C Navy, Generaladmiral Dr. h.c. Raeder;
-
- “The C-in-C Luftwaffe, Generaloberst Goering;
-
- “The Reichsminister for Foreign Affairs, Freiherr v. Neurath;
-
- “Oberst Hossbach [the adjutant who took the minutes].
-
- “The Fuehrer stated initially that the subject matter of today’s
- conference was of such high importance, that its detailed
- discussion would certainly in other states take place before the
- Cabinet in full session. However, he, the Fuehrer, had decided
- not to discuss this matter in the larger circle of the Reich
- Cabinet, because of its importance. His subsequent statements
- were the result of detailed deliberations and of the experiences
- of his four and a half years in government; he desired to
- explain to those present his fundamental ideas on the
- possibilities and necessities of expanding our foreign policy
- and in the interests of a far-sighted policy he requested that
- his statements be looked upon in the case of his death as his
- last will and testament.
-
- “The Fuehrer then stated: The aim of German policy is the
- security and the preservation of the nation and its propagation.
- This is consequently a problem of space. The German nation
- comprises eighty-five million people, which, because of the
- number of individuals and the compactness of habitation form a
- homogeneous European racial body, the like of which can not be
- found in any other country. On the other hand it justifies the
- demand for larger living space more than for any other nation.
- If there have been no political consequences to meet the demands
- of this racial body for living space then that is the result of
- historical development spread over several centuries and should
- this political condition continue to exist, it will represent
- the greatest danger to the preservation of the German nation at
- its present high level. An arrest of the deterioration of the
- German element in Austria and in Czechoslovakia is just as
- little possible as the preservation of the present state in
- Germany itself.
-
- “Instead of growth, sterility will be introduced, and as a
- consequence, tensions of a social nature will appear after a
- number of years, because political and philosophical ideas are
- of a permanent nature only as long as they are able to produce
- the basis for the realization of the actual claim of existence
- of a nation. The German future is therefore dependent
- exclusively on the solution of the need for living space. Such a
- solution can be sought naturally only for a limited period,
- about one to three generations.
-
- “Before touching upon the question of solving the need for
- living space, it must be decided whether a solution of the
- German position with a good future can be attained, either by
- way of an autarchy or by way of an increased share in universal
- commerce and industry.
-
- “Autarchy: Execution will be possible only with strict
- National-Socialist State policy, which is the basis; assuming
- this can be achieved the results are as follows:
-
- “A. In the sphere of raw materials, only limited, but not total
- autarchy can be attained:
-
- “1. Wherever coal can be used for the extraction of raw
- materials autarchy is feasible.
-
- “2. In the case of ores the position is much more difficult.
- Requirements in iron and light metals can be covered by
- ourselves. Copper and tin, however, can not.
-
- “3. Cellular materials can be covered by ourselves as long as
- sufficient wood supplies exist. A permanent solution is not
- possible.
-
- “4. Edible fats—possible.
-
- “B. In the case of foods, the question of an autarchy must be
- answered with a definite NO.
-
- “The general increase of living standards, compared with thirty
- to forty years ago, brought about a simultaneous increase of the
- demand and an increase of personal consumption even among the
- producers, the farmers, themselves. The proceeds from the
- production increase in agriculture have been used for covering
- the increased demand, therefore they represent no absolute
- increase in production. A further increase in production by
- making greater demands on the soil is not possible because it
- already shows signs of deterioration due to the use of
- artificial fertilizers, and it is therefore certain that, even
- with the greatest possible increase in production, participation
- in the world market could not be avoided.
-
- “The considerable expenditure of foreign currency to secure food
- by import, even in periods when harvests are good, increases
- catastrophically when the harvest is really poor. The
- possibility of this catastrophe increases correspondingly to the
- increase in population, and the annual 560,000 excess in births
- would bring about an increased consumption in bread, because the
- child is a greater bread eater than the adult.
-
- “Permanently to counter the difficulties of food supplies by
- lowering the standard of living and by rationing is impossible
- in a continent which had developed an approximately equivalent
- standard of living. As the solving of the unemployment problem
- has brought into effect the complete power of consumption, some
- small corrections in our agricultural home production will be
- possible, but not a wholesale alteration of the standard of food
- consumption. Consequently autarchy becomes impossible,
- specifically in the sphere of food supplies as well as
- generally.
-
- “Participation in world economy. There are limits to this which
- we are unable to transgress. The market fluctuations would be an
- obstacle to a secure foundation of the German position;
- international commercial agreements do not offer any guarantee
- for practical execution. It must be considered on principle that
- since the World War (1914-18), as industrialization has taken
- place in countries which formerly exported food. We live in a
- period of economic empires, in which the tendency to colonies
- again approaches the condition which originally motivated
- colonization; in Japan and Italy economic motives are the basis
- of their will to expand, and economic need will also drive
- Germany to it. Countries outside the great economic empires have
- special difficulties in expanding economically.
-
- “The upward tendency, which has been caused in world economy,
- due to armament competition, can never form a permanent basis
- for an economic settlement, and this latter is also hampered by
- the economic disruption caused by Bolshevism. There is a
- pronounced military weakness in those states who base their
- existence on export. As our exports and imports are carried out
- over those sea lanes which are dominated by Britain, it is more
- a question of security of transport than one of foreign
- currency, and this explains the great weakness in our food
- situation in wartime. 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 of movements of nations. It is explicable that this tendency
- finds no interest in Geneva and in satisfied states. Should the
- security of our food situation be our foremost thought, then the
- space required for this can only be sought in Europe, but we
- will not copy liberal capitalist policies which rely on
- exploiting colonies. It is not a case of conquering people, but
- of conquering agriculturally useful space. It would also be more
- to the purpose to seek raw material-producing territory in
- Europe directly adjoining the Reich and not overseas, and this
- solution would have to be brought into effect for one or two
- generations. What would be required at a later date over and
- above this must be left to subsequent, generations. The
- development of great worldwide national bodies is naturally a
- slow process and the German people, with its strong racial root
- [Volksstamm] has for this purpose the most favorable foundations
- in the heart of the European Continent. The history of all
- times—Roman Empire, British Empire—has proved that every space
- expansion can only be effected 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.” (_386-PS_)
-
-After this somewhat jumbled discussion of geopolitical economic theory
-and of the need for expansion and “_Lebensraum_”, Adolf Hitler, in these
-Hossbach notes, posed a question and proceeded to answer it:
-
- “The question for Germany is where the greatest possible
- conquest could be made at lowest cost.
-
- “German politics must reckon with its two hateful enemies,
- England and France, to whom a strong German colossus in the
- center of Europe would be intolerable. Both these states would
- oppose a further reinforcement of Germany, both in Europe and
- overseas, and in this opposition they would have the support of
- all parties. Both countries would view the building of German
- military strong points overseas as a threat to their overseas
- communications, as a security measure for German commerce, and
- retrospectively a strengthening of the German position in
- Europe.
-
- “England is not in a position to cede any of her colonial
- possessions to us owing to the resistance which she experiences
- in the Dominions. After the loss of prestige which England has
- suffered owing to the transfer of Abyssinia to Italian
- ownership, a return of East Africa can no longer be expected.
- Any resistance on England’s part would at best consist in the
- readiness to satisfy our colonial claims by taking away colonies
- which at the present moment are not in British hands, for
- example, Angola. French favors would probably be of the same
- nature.
-
- “A serious discussion regarding the return of colonies to us
- could be considered only at a time when England is in a state of
- emergency and the German Reich is strong and well armed. The
- Fuehrer does not share the opinion that the Empire is
- unshakeable.
-
- “Resistance against the Empire is to be found less in conquered
- territories than amongst its competitors. The British Empire and
- the Roman Empire cannot be compared with one another in regard
- to durability; after the Punic Wars the latter did not have a
- serious political enemy. Only the dissolving effects which
- originated in Christendom, and the signs of age which creep into
- all states, made it possible for the Ancient Germans to
- subjugate Ancient Rome.
-
- “Alongside the British Empire today a number of States exist
- which are stronger than it. The British Mother Country is able
- to defend its colonial possession only allied with other states
- and not by its own power. How could England alone, for example,
- defend Canada against attack by America, or its Far Eastern
- interests against an attack by Japan?
-
- “The singling out of the British Crown as the bearer of Empire
- unity is in itself an admission that the universal empire cannot
- be maintained permanently by power politics. The following are
- significant pointers in this respect:
-
- “(a) Ireland’s struggle for independence.
-
- “(b) Constitutional disputes in India where England, by her
- half measures, left the door open for Indians at a later date to
- utilize the non-fulfillment of constitutional promises as a
- weapon against Britain.
-
- “(c) The weakening of the British position in the Far East by
- Japan.
-
- “(d) The opposition in the Mediterranean to Italy which—by
- virtue of its history, driven by necessity and led by a
- genius—expands its power position and must consequently
- infringe British interests to an increasing extent. The outcome
- of the Abyssinian War is a loss of prestige for Britain which
- Italy is endeavoring to increase by stirring up discontent in
- the Mohammedan World.
-
- “It must be established in conclusion that the Empire cannot be
- held permanently by power politics by 45 million Britons, in
- spite of all the solidity of her ideals. The proportion of the
- populations in the Empire, compared with that of the Motherland,
- is nine to one, and it should act as a warning to us that if we
- expand in space, we must not allow the level of our population
- to become too low.
-
- “France’s position is more favorable than that of England. The
- French Empire is better placed geographically, the population of
- its colonial possessions represents a potential military
- increase. But France is faced with difficulties of internal
- politics. At the present time only 10 per cent approximately of
- the nations have parliamentary governments, whereas 90 per cent
- of them have totalitarian governments. Nevertheless, we have to
- take the following into our political consideration as power
- factors:
-
- “Britain, France, Russia and the adjoining smaller states.
-
- “The German question can be solved only by way of force, and
- this is never without risk. The battles of Frederick the Great
- for Silesia, and Bismarck’s wars against Austria and France had
- been a tremendous risk and the speed of Prussian action in 1870
- had prevented Austria from participating in the war. If we place
- the decision to apply force with risk at the head of the
- following expositions, then we are left to reply to the
- questions ‘when’ and ‘how’. In this regard we have to decide
- upon three different cases.
-
- “Case 1. Period 1943-45: After this we can only expect a change
- for the worse. The rearming of the Army, the Navy and the Air
- Force, as well as the formation of the Officers’ Corps, are
- practically concluded.
-
- “Our material equipment and armaments are modern; with further
- delay the danger of their becoming out-of-date will increase. In
- particular the secrecy of ‘special weapons’ cannot always be
- safeguarded. Enlistment of reserves would be limited to the
- current recruiting age groups and an addition from older
- untrained groups would be no longer available.
-
- “In comparison with the rearmament, which will have been carried
- out at the time by other nations, we shall decrease in relative
- power. Should we not act until 1943-45, then, dependent on the
- absence of reserves, any year could bring about the food crisis,
- for the countering of which we do not possess the necessary
- foreign currency. This must be considered as a ‘point of
- weakness in the regime.’ Over and above that, the world will
- anticipate our action and will increase counter-measures yearly.
- Whilst other nations isolate themselves we should be forced on
- the offensive.
-
- “What the actual position would be in the years 1943-45 no one
- knows today. It is certain, however, that we can wait no longer.
-
- “On the one side the large armed forces, with the necessity for
- securing their upkeep, the aging of the Nazi movement and of its
- leaders, and on the other side the prospect of a lowering of the
- standard of living and a drop in the birth rate, leaves us no
- other choice but to act. If the Fuehrer is still living, then it
- will be his irrevocable decision to solve the German space
- problem no later than 1943-45. The necessity for action before
- 1943-45 will come under consideration in cases 2 and 3.
-
- “Case 2. Should the social tensions in France lead to an
- internal political crisis of such dimensions that it absorbs the
- French Army and thus renders it incapable for employment in war
- against Germany, then the time for action against Czechoslovakia
- has come.
-
- “Case 3. It would be equally possible to act against
- Czechoslovakia if France should be so tied up by a war against
- another State that it cannot ‘proceed’ against Germany.
-
- “For the improvement of our military political position it must
- be our first aim, in every case of entanglement by war, to
- conquer Czechoslovakia and Austria, simultaneously, in order to
- remove any threat from the flanks in case of a possible advance
- Westwards. In the case of a conflict with France it would hardly
- be necessary to assume that Czechoslovakia would declare war on
- the same day as France. However, Czechoslovakia’s desire to
- participate in the war will increase proportionally to the
- degree to which we are being weakened. Its actual participation
- could make itself felt by an attack on Silesia, either towards
- the North or the West.
-
- “Once Czechoslovakia is conquered—and a mutual frontier,
- Germany-Hungary is obtained—then a neutral attitude by Poland
- in a German-French conflict could more easily be relied upon.
- Our agreements with Poland remain valid only as long as
- Germany’s strength remains unshakeable; should Germany have any
- setbacks then an attack by Poland against East Prussia, perhaps
- also against Pomerania, and Silesia, must be taken into account.
-
- “Assuming a development of the situation, which would lead to a
- planned attack on our part in the years 1943 to ’45, then the
- behaviour of France, England, Poland and Russia would probably
- have to be judged in the following manner.
-
- “The Fuehrer believes personally, that in all probability
- England and perhaps also France, have already silently written
- off Czechoslovakia, and that they have got used to the idea that
- this question would one day be cleaned up by Germany. The
- difficulties in the British Empire and the prospect of being
- entangled in another long-drawn-out European War, were decisive
- factors in the nonparticipation of England in a war against
- Germany. The British attitude would certainly not remain without
- influence on France’s attitude. An attack by France, without
- British support, is hardly probable assuming that its offensive
- would stagnate along our Western fortifications. Without
- England’s support, it would also not be necessary to take into
- consideration a march by France through Belgium and Holland, and
- this would also not have to be reckoned with by us in case of a
- conflict with France, as in every case it would have as a
- consequence, the enmity of Great Britain. Naturally we should in
- every case, have to bar our frontier during the operation of our
- attacks against Czechoslovakia and Austria. It must be taken
- into consideration here that Czechoslovakia’s defence measures
- will increase in strength from year to year, and that a
- consolidation of the inside values of the Austrian Army will
- also be effected in the course of years. Although the population
- of Czechoslovakia, in the first place is not a thin one, the
- embodiment of Czechoslovakia and Austria would nevertheless
- constitute the conquest of food for five to six million people,
- on the basis that a compulsory emigration of two million from
- Czechoslovakia, and of one million from Austria could be carried
- out. The annexation of the two States to Germany, militarily and
- politically, would constitute a considerable relief, owing to
- shorter and better frontiers, the freeing of fighting personnel
- for other purposes, and the possibility of reconstituting new
- armies up to a strength of about twelve Divisions, representing
- a new Division per one million population.
-
- “No opposition to the removal of Czechoslovakia is expected on
- the part of Italy; however, it cannot be judged today what would
- be her attitude in the Austrian question, since it would depend
- largely on whether the Duce were alive at the time or not.
-
- “The measure and speed of our action would decide Poland’s
- attitude. Poland will have little inclination to enter the war
- against a victorious Germany, with Russia in the rear.
-
- “Military participation by Russia must be countered by the speed
- of our operations; it is a question whether this needs to be
- taken into consideration at all, in view of Japan’s attitude.
-
- “Should Case 2 occur—paralyzation of France by a Civil
- War—then the situation should be utilized _at any time_ for
- operations against Czechoslovakia, as Germany’s most dangerous
- enemy would be eliminated.
-
- “The Fuehrer sees Case 3 looming near; it could develop from the
- existing tensions in the Mediterranean, and should it occur, he
- has firmly decided to make use of it any time, perhaps even as
- early as 1938.
-
- “Following recent experiences in the course of events of the war
- in Spain, the Fuehrer does not see an early end to hostilities
- there. Taking into consideration the time required for past
- offensives by Franco, a further three years duration of war is
- within the bounds of possibility. On the other hand, from the
- German point of view, a one hundred per cent victory by Franco
- is not desirable; we are more interested in a continuation of
- the war and preservation of the tensions in the Mediterranean.
- Should Franco be in sole possession of the Spanish Peninsula, it
- would mean the end of Italian intervention and the presence of
- Italy on the Balearic Isles. As our interests are directed
- towards continuing the war in Spain, it must be the task of our
- future policy to strengthen Italy in her fight to hold on to the
- Balearic Isles. However, a solidification of Italian positions
- on the Balearic Isles can not be tolerated either by France or
- by England and could lead to a war by France and England against
- Italy, in which case Spain, if entirely in white [Franco’s]
- hands, could participate on the side of Italy’s enemies. A
- subjugation of Italy in such a war appears very unlikely.
- Additional raw materials could be brought to Italy via Germany.
- The Fuehrer believes that Italy’s military strategy would be to
- remain on the defensive against France on the Western frontier
- and carry out operations against France from Libya, against the
- North African French colonial possessions.
-
- “As a landing of French-British troops on the Italian coast can
- be discounted, and as a French offensive via the Alps to Upper
- Italy would be extremely difficult, and would probably stagnate
- before the strong Italian fortifications, French lines of
- communication by the Italian fleet will to a great extent
- paralyze the transport of fighting personnel from North Africa
- to France, so that at its frontiers with Italy and Germany,
- France will have, at its disposal, solely the metropolitan
- fighting forces.
-
- “If Germany profits from this war by disposing of the
- Czechoslovakian and the Austrian questions, the probability must
- be assumed that England—being at war with Italy—would not
- decide to commence operations against Germany. Without British
- support, a warlike action by France against Germany is not to be
- anticipated.
-
- “The date of our attack on Czechoslovakia and Austria must be
- made independent of the course of the Italian-French-English war
- and would not be simultaneous with the commencement of military
- operations by these three States. The Fuehrer was also not
- thinking of military agreements with Italy, but in complete
- independence and by exploiting this unique favorable
- opportunity, he wishes to begin to carry out operations against
- Czechoslovakia. The attack on Czechoslovakia would have to take
- place with the speed of lightning [_blitzartig schnell_].
-
- “Fieldmarshal von Blomberg and Generaloberst von Fritsch in
- giving their estimate on the situation, repeatedly pointed out
- that England and France must not appear as our enemies, and they
- stated that the war with Italy would not bind the French Army to
- such an extent that it would not be in a position to commence
- operations on our Western frontier with superior forces.
- Generaloberst von Fritsch estimated the French forces which
- would presumably be employed on the Alpine frontier against
- Italy to be in the region of twenty divisions, so that a strong
- French superiority would still remain on our Western frontier.
- The French would, according to German reasoning, attempt to
- advance into the Rhineland. We should consider the lead which
- France has got in mobilization, and quite apart from the very
- small value of our then existing fortifications—which was
- pointed out particularly by Generalfieldmarshal von
- Blomberg—the four motorized divisions which had been laid down
- for the West would be more or less incapable of movement. With
- regard to our offensive in a Southeasterly direction,
- Fieldmarshal von Blomberg drew special attention to the strength
- of the Czechoslovakian fortifications, the building of which
- had, assumed the character of a Maginot Line and which would
- present extreme difficulties to our attack.
-
- “Generaloberst von Fritsch mentioned that it was the purpose of
- a study which he had laid on for this winter to investigate the
- possibilities of carrying out operations against Czechoslovakia
- with special consideration of the conquest of the
- Czechoslovakian system of fortifications; the Generaloberst also
- stated that owing to the prevailing conditions, he would have to
- relinquish his leave abroad, which was to begin on the 10
- November. This intention was countermanded by the Fuehrer, who
- gave as a reason that the possibility of the conflict was not to
- be regarded as being so imminent. In reply to statements by
- Generalfieldmarshal von Blomberg and Generaloberst von Fritsch
- regarding England and France’s attitude, the Fuehrer repeated
- his previous statements and said that he was convinced of
- Britain’s nonparticipation and that consequently he did not
- believe in military action by France against Germany. Should the
- Mediterranean conflict already mentioned, lead to a general
- mobilization in Europe, then we should have to commence
- operations against Czechoslovakia immediately. If, however, the
- powers who are not participating in the war should declare their
- disinterestedness, then Germany would, for the time being, have
- to side with this attitude.
-
- “In view of the information given by the Fuehrer, Generaloberst
- Goering considered it imperative to think of a reduction or
- abandonment of our military undertaking in Spain. The Fuehrer
- agreed to this, insofar as he believed this decision should be
- postponed for a suitable date.
-
- “The second part of the discussion concerned material armament
- questions.
-
- “(Signed) Hossbach”. (_386-PS_)
-
-The record of what happened thereafter is well-known to history. The
-Anschluss with Austria, under military pressure from the Nazis, occurred
-in March 1938. Pressure on Czechoslovakia resulted in the Munich Pact of
-September 1938. That Pact was violated, and Czechoslovakia invaded by
-Germany on 15 March 1939.
-
-Another captured document, a file kept by Colonel Schmundt, Hitler’s
-adjutant, reveals the truth concerning the deliberateness of the
-aggressions against Czechoslovakia (_388-PS_). The file was found in a
-cellar of the Platterhof at Obersalzberg, near Berchtesgaden. It
-consists of a work-file of originals and duplicates, incidental to the
-preparations for the annexation of Czechoslovakia. The German title is
-“_Grundlagen zur Studie Gruen_”, (Basic Principles for “Case Green”),
-“Green” being a codeword for the aggression against Czechoslovakia. Item
-No. 2 in this file is dated 22 April 1938. It is a summary, prepared by
-Schmundt, the adjutant, of a discussion on 21 April 1938 between Hitler
-and Wilhelm Keitel. This item, like the other items in the file, relates
-to “Case Green”. This meeting occurred within approximately one month
-following the successful annexation of Austria. In the carrying out of
-the conspiracy, it became necessary to revise the “Plan Green”, to take
-into account changed conditions, as a result of the bloodless success
-against Austria. Item 2 reads:
-
- “Berlin, 22 April 1938.
-
- “Bases of the Dissertation on _Gruen_.
-
- “Summary of discussion between Fuehrer and General Keitel of 21
- April:
-
- “A. Political Aspect.
-
- “1. Strategic surprise attack out of a clear sky without any
- cause or possibility of justification has been turned down. As
- result would be: hostile world opinion which can lead to a
- critical situation. Such a measure is justified only for the
- elimination of the _last_ opponent on the mainland.
-
- “2. Action after a time of diplomatic clashes, which gradually
- come to a crisis and lead to war.
-
- “3. Lightning-swift action as the result of an incident (for
- example, assassination of German ambassador in connection with
- an anti-German demonstration.)
-
- “Military Conclusions.
-
- “1. The preparations are to be made for the political
- possibilities (2 and 3). Case 2 is the undesired one since
- “_Gruen_” will have taken security measures.
-
- “2. The loss of time caused by transporting the bulk of the
- divisions by rail—which is unavailable, but should be cut down
- as far as possible—must not impede a lightning-swift blow at
- the time of the action.
-
- “3. ‘Separate thrusts’ are to be carried out immediately with a
- view to penetrating the enemy fortification lines at numerous
- points and in a strategically favorable direction. The thrusts
- are to be worked out to the smallest detail (knowledge of roads,
- composition of the columns according to their individual tasks).
- Simultaneous attacks by the Army and Air Force.
-
- “The Air Force is to support the individual columns (for example
- divebombers; sealing off installations at penetration points,
- hampering the bringing up of reserves, destroying signal
- communications traffic, thereby isolating the garrisons.)
-
- “4. Politically, the first four days of military action are the
- decisive ones. If there are no effective military successes, a
- European crisis will certainly arise. Accomplished Facts must
- prove the senselessness of foreign military intervention, draw
- Allies into the scheme (division of spoils) and demoralize
- ‘_Gruen_.’
-
- “Therefore: bridging the time gap between first penetration and
- employment of the forces to be brought up, by a determined and
- ruthless thrust by a motorized army. (e.g. via Pilsen, Prague.)
-
- “5. If possible, separation of transport movement ‘_Rot_’ from
- ‘_Gruen_’. [‘_Rot_’ was the code name for their then plan
- against the West.] A simultaneous strategic concentration
- ‘_Rot_’ can lead ‘_Rot_’ to undesired measures. On the other
- hand, it must be possible to put ‘_Case Rot_’ into operation at
- any time.
-
- “C. Propaganda.
-
- “1. Leaflets on the conduct of Germans in Czechoslovakia
- (_Gruenland_.)
-
- “2. Leaflets with threats for intimidation of the Czechs
- (_Gruenen_).
-
- [Initialled by Schmundt]” (_388-PS_)
-
-Particular attention should be drawn to paragraph 3 of this document,
-under the heading “Political Aspect”, which reads as follows:
-
- “Lightning-swift action as the result of an incident (example:
- Assassination of German ambassador as an upshot of an
- anti-German demonstration).” (_388-PS_)
-
-The document as a whole establishes that the conspirators were planning
-the creation of an incident to justify to the world their own aggression
-against Czechoslovakia. It establishes that consideration was being
-given to assassinating the German ambassador at Prague to create the
-requisite incident.
-
-C. _Formulation and Execution of the Plan to Invade Poland._
-
-The next phase of the aggression was the formulation and execution of
-the plan to attack Poland, resulting in the initiation of aggressive war
-in September 1939. Here again the careful and meticulous record keeping
-of Hitler’s adjutant, Schmundt, has provided a document in his own
-handwriting which throws down the mask (_L-79_). The document consists
-of minutes of a conference held on 23 May 1939. The place of the
-conference was the Fuehrer’s Study in the New Reich Chancellery.
-Goering, Raeder and Keitel were present. The subject of the meeting was,
-“Indoctrination on the political situation and future aims.”
-
-The authenticity and accuracy of Schmundt’s record of the meeting of 23
-May 1939 has been admitted by Keitel in a pretrial interrogation. The
-minutes read as follows:
-
- “Top Secret
-
- “To be transmitted by officer only
-
- “Minutes of a Conference on 23 May 39”
-
- “Place: The Fuehrer’s Study, New Reich Chancellery.
-
- “Adjutant on duty: Lt-Col. (G.S.) Schmundt.
-
- “Present: The Fuehrer, Field-Marshal Goering, Grand-Admiral
- Raeder, Col-Gen. von Brauchitsch, Col-Gen. Keitel, Col-Gen.
- Milch, Gen. (of Artillery) Halder, Gen. Bodenschatz, Rear-Adml.
- Schniewindt, Col. (G.S.) Jeschonnek, Col. (G.S.) Warlimont,
- Lt-Col. (G.S.) Schmundt, Capt. Engel (Army), Lieut-Commd.
- Albrecht, Capt. v. Below (Army).
-
- “Subject: Indoctrination on the political situation and future
- aims.
-
- “The Fuehrer defined as the purpose of the conference:
-
- “1. Analysis of the situation.
-
- “2. Definition of the tasks for the Armed Forces arising from
- the situation.
-
- “3. Exposition of the consequences of those tasks.
-
- “4. Ensuring the secrecy of all decisions and work resulting
- from these consequences.
-
- “Secrecy is the first essential for success.
-
- “The Fuehrer’s observations are given in systematized form
- below.
-
- “Our present situation must be considered from two points of
- view:
-
- “1. The actual development of events between 1933 and 1939;
-
- “2. The permanent and unchanging situation in which Germany
- lies.
-
- “In the period 1933-1939, progress was made in all fields.
-
- Our military situation improved enormously.
-
- “Our situation with regard to the rest of the world has remained
- the same.
-
- “Germany had dropped from the circle of Great Powers. The
- balance of power had been effected without the participation of
- Germany.
-
- “This equilibrium is disturbed when Germany’s demands for the
- necessities of life make themselves felt, and Germany re-emerges
- as a Great Power. All demands are regarded as ‘Encroachments’.
- The English are more afraid of dangers in the economic sphere
- than of the simple threat of force.
-
- “A mass of 80 million people has solved the ideological
- problems. So, too, must the economic problems be solved. No
- German can evade the creation of the necessary economic
- conditions for this. The solution of the problems demands
- courage. The principle, by which one evades solving the problem
- by adapting oneself to circumstances, is inadmissible.
- Circumstances must rather be adapted to aims. This is impossible
- without invasion of foreign states or attacks upon foreign
- property.
-
- “Living space, in proportion to the magnitude of the state, is
- the basis of all power. One may refuse for a time to face the
- problem, but finally it is solved one way or the other. The
- choice is between advancement or decline. In 15 or 20 years’
- time we shall be compelled to find a solution. No German
- statesman can evade the question longer than that.
-
- “We are at present in a state of patriotic fervour, which is
- shared by two other nations: Italy and Japan.
-
- “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.
-
- “After 6 years, the situation is today as follows:
-
- “The national-political unity of the Germans has been achieved,
- apart from minor exceptions. Further successes cannot be
- attained without the shedding of blood.
-
- “The demarcation of frontiers is of military importance.
-
- “The Pole is no ‘supplementary enemy’. Poland will always be on
- the side of our adversaries. In spite of treaties of friendship,
- Poland has always had the secret intention of exploiting every
- opportunity to do us harm.
-
- “Danzig is not the subject of the dispute at all. It is a
- question of expanding our living space in the East and of
- securing our food supplies, of the settlement of the Baltic
- problem. Food supplies can be expected only from thinly
- populated areas. Over and above the natural fertility,
- thorough-going German exploitation will enormously increase the
- surplus.
-
- “There is no other possibility for Europe.
-
- “Colonies: Beware of gifts of colonial territory. This does not
- solve the food problem. Remember—blockade.
-
- “If fate brings us into conflict with the West, the possession
- of extensive areas in the East will be advantageous. Upon record
- harvests we shall be able to rely 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 labour.
-
- “The Polish problem is inseparable from conflict with the West.
-
- “Poland’s internal power of resistance to Bolshevism is
- doubtful. Thus Poland is of doubtful value as a barrier against
- Russia.
-
- “It is questionable whether military success in the West can be
- achieved by a quick decision, questionable too is the attitude
- of Poland.
-
- “The Polish government will not resist pressure from Russia.
- Poland sees danger in a German victory in the West, and will
- attempt to rob us of the victory.
-
- “There is therefore no question of sparing Poland, and we are
- left with the decision:
-
- “_To attack Poland at the first suitable opportunity._ [This
- sentence is underscored in the original German text.]
-
- “We cannot expect a repetition of the Czech affair. There will
- be war. Our task is to isolate Poland. The success of the
- isolation will be decisive.
-
- “Therefore, the Fuehrer must reserve the right to give the final
- order to attack. There must be no simultaneous conflict with the
- Western Powers [France and England].
-
- “If it is not certain that a German-Polish conflict will not
- lead to war in the West, then the fight must be primarily
- against England and France.
-
- “Fundamentally therefore: Conflict with Poland—beginning with
- an attack on Poland—will only be successful if the Western
- Powers keep out of it. If this is impossible, then it will be
- better to attack in the West and to settle Poland at the same
- time.
-
- “The isolation of Poland is a matter of skillful politics.
-
- “Japan is a weighty problem. Even if at first for various
- reasons her collaboration with us appears to be somewhat cool
- and restricted, it is nevertheless in Japan’s own interest to
- take the initiative in attacking Russia in good time.
-
- “Economic relations with Russia are possible only if political
- relations have improved. A cautious trend is apparent in Press
- comment. It is not impossible that Russia will show herself to
- be disinterested in the destruction of Poland. Should Russia
- take steps to oppose us, our relations with Japan may become
- closer.
-
- “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 Fuehrer
- doubts the possibility of a peaceful settlement with England. We
- must prepare ourselves for the conflict. England sees in our
- development the foundation of a hegemony which would weaken
- England. England is therefore our enemy, and the conflict with
- England will be a life-and-death struggle.
-
- “_What will this struggle be like?_ [This sentence is
- underscored in the German original.]
-
- “England cannot deal with Germany and subjugate us with a few
- powerful blows. It is imperative for England that the war should
- be brought as near to the Ruhr basin as possible. French blood
- will not be spared (West Wall). The possession of the Ruhr basin
- will determine the duration of our resistance.
-
- “The Dutch and Belgium air bases will be occupied by armed
- forces. Declarations of neutrality must be ignored. If England
- and France intend the war between Germany and Poland to lead to
- a conflict, they will support Holland and Belgium in their
- neutrality and make them build fortifications in order finally
- to force them into cooperation.
-
- “Albeit under protest, Belgium and Holland will yield to
- pressure.
-
- “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 Zuider Zee.
-
- “The war with England and France will be a life-and-death
- struggle.
-
- “The idea that we can get off cheaply is dangerous; there is no
- such possibility. We must burn our boats, and it is no longer a
- question of justice or injustice, but of life or death for 80
- million human beings.
-
- “_Question: Short or long war?_
-
- “Every country’s armed forces or government must aim at a short
- war. The government, however, must also be prepared for a war of
- 10-15 years’ duration.
-
- “History has always shown that the people have believed that
- wars would be short. In 1914, the opinion still prevailed that
- it was impossible to finance a long war. Even today this idea
- still persists in many minds. But on the contrary, every state
- will hold out as long as possible, unless it immediately suffers
- some grave weakening (e.g. Ruhr basin). England has similar
- weaknesses.
-
- “England knows that to lose a war will mean the end of her world
- power.
-
- “_England_ is the driving force against Germany.
-
- “Her strength lies in the following:
-
- “1. The British themselves are proud, courageous, tenacious,
- firm in resistance and gifted as organizers. They know how to
- exploit every new development. They have the love of adventure
- and bravery of the Nordic race. Quality is lowered by dispersal.
- The German average is higher.
-
- “2. World power in itself. It has been constant for 300 years.
- Extended by the acquisition of allies, this power is not merely
- something concrete, but must also be considered as a
- psychological force embracing the entire world. Add to this
- immeasurable wealth, with consequential financial credit.
-
- “3. Geopolitical safety and protection by strong sea power and a
- courageous air force.
-
- “_England’s weakness_:
-
- “If in the World War I we had had two battleships and two
- cruisers more, and if the battle of Jutland had begun in the
- morning, the British fleet would have been defeated and England
- brought to her knees. It would have meant the end of this war.
- It was formerly not sufficient to defeat the fleet. Landings had
- to be made in order to defeat England. England could provide her
- own food supplies. Today that is no longer possible.
-
- “The moment England’s food supply routes are cut, she is forced
- to capitulate. The import of food and fuel depends on the
- fleet’s protection.
-
- “If the German Air Force attacks English territory, England will
- not be forced to capitulate in one day. But if the fleet is
- destroyed immediate capitulation will be the result.
-
- “There is no doubt that a surprise attack can lead to a quick
- decision. It would be criminal, however, for the government to
- rely entirely on the element of surprise.
-
- “Experience has shown that surprise may be nullified by—
-
- “1. Disclosure outside the limit of the military circles
- concerned.
-
- “2. Mere chance, which may cause the collapse of the whole
- enterprise.
-
- “3. Human failings.
-
- “4. Weather conditions.
-
- “The final date for striking must be fixed well in advance.
- Beyond that time, the tension cannot be endured for long. It
- must be borne in mind that weather conditions can render any
- surprise intervention by Navy and Air Force impossible.
-
- “This must be regarded as a most unfavorable basis of action.
-
- “1. An effort must be made to deal the enemy a significant or
- the final decisive blow right at the start. Consideration of
- right and wrong or treaties do not enter into the matter. This
- will only be possible if we are not involved in a war with
- England on account of Poland.
-
- “2. In addition to the surprise attack, preparation for a long
- war must be made, while opportunities on the Continent for
- England are eliminated.
-
- “The Army will have to hold positions essential to the Navy and
- Air Force. If Holland and Belgium are successfully occupied and
- held, and if France is also defeated, the fundamental conditions
- for a successful war against England will have been secured.
-
- “England can then be blockaded from Western France at close
- quarters by the Air Force, while the Navy with its submarines
- extend the range of the blockade.
-
- “_Consequences_:
-
- “England will not be able to fight on the Continent:
-
- “Daily attacks by the Air Force and Navy will cut all her
- life-lines:
-
- “Germany will not bleed to death on land.
-
- “Such strategy has been shown to be necessary by World War I and
- subsequent military operations. World War I is responsible for
- the following strategic considerations which are imperative—
-
- “1. With a more powerful Navy at the outbreak of the War, or a
- wheeling movement by the Army towards the Channel ports, the end
- would have been different.
-
- “2. A country cannot be brought to defeat by an air force. It is
- impossible to attack all objectives simultaneously, and the
- lapse of time of a few minutes would evoke defense
- counter-measures.
-
- “3. The unrestricted use of all resources is essential.
-
- “4. Once the Army, in cooperation with the Air Force and Navy,
- has taken the most important positions, industrial production
- will cease in flow in to the bottomless pit of the Army’s
- battles, and can be diverted to benefit the Air Force and Navy.
-
- “The Army must, therefore, be capable of taking these positions.
- Systematic preparation must be made for the attack.
-
- “Study to this end is of the utmost importance.
-
- “The aim will always be to force England to her knees.
-
- “A weapon will only be of decisive importance in winning
- battles, so long as the enemy does not possess it.
-
- “This applies to gas, submarines and the Air Force. It would be
- true of the latter, for instance, as long as the English Fleet
- had no available countermeasures; it will no longer be the case
- in 1940 and 1941. Against Poland, for example, tanks will be
- effective, as the Polish Army possesses no counter-measures.
-
- “Where straightforward pressure is no longer considered to be
- decisive, its place must be taken by the elements of surprise
- and by masterly handling. * * *”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Purpose:
-
- “1. Study of the entire problem.
-
- “2. Study of the events.
-
- “3. Study of the means needed.
-
- “4. Study of the necessary training.
-
- “Men with great powers of imagination and high technical
- training must belong to the staff, as well as officers with
- sober sceptic powers of understanding.
-
- “Working principles:
-
- “1. No one is to take part in this who does not have to know of
- it.
-
- “2. No one can find out more than he must know.
-
- “3. When must the person in question know it at the very latest?
- No one may know anything before it is necessary that he know it.
-
- “On Goering’s question, the Fuehrer decided that:
-
- “_a._ The armed forces determine what shall be built.
-
- “_b._ In the shipbuilding program, nothing is to be changed.
-
- “_c._ The armament programs are to be modeled on the years 1943
- or 1944.
-
- [Schmundt certified this text.]” (_L-79_)
-
-These minutes demonstrate that the Nazi conspirators were proceeding in
-accordance with a plan. They demonstrate the cold-blooded premeditation
-of the assault on Poland. They demonstrate that the questions concerning
-Danzig, which the Nazis had agitated with Poland as a political pretext,
-were not true questions, but were false issues, issues agitated to
-conceal their motive of aggressive, expansion for food, and
-_Lebensraum_.
-
-Just one week prior to the launching of the attack on Poland, Hitler
-made an address to his chief military commanders, at Obersalzberg, on 22
-August 1939. [Three reports of this meeting are available: (_L-3_;
-_798-PS_; and _1014-PS_). The first of the three documents (_L-3_) was
-obtained through an American newspaperman, and purported to be original
-minutes of the Obersalzberg meeting, transmitted to the newspaperman by
-some other person. There was no proof of actual delivery to the
-intermediary by the person who took the notes. That document (_L-3_)
-therefore, merely served as an incentive to search for something better.
-The result was that two other documents (_798-PS_) and (_1014-PS_) were
-discovered in the OKW files at Flensberg. These two documents indicate
-that Hitler on that day made two speeches, one apparently in the morning
-and one in the afternoon. Comparison of those two documents with the
-first document (_L-3_) led to the conclusion that the first document was
-a slightly garbled merger of the two speeches, and therefore was not
-relied upon.]
-
-On this day of 22 August 1939, Hitler addressed the supreme commanders
-of the three branches of the armed forces, as well as the commanding
-generals, (_Oberbefehlshabers_) as follows:
-
- “I have called you together to give you a picture of the
- political situation, in order that you may have insight into the
- individual element on which I base my decision to act, and in
- order to strengthen your confidence. After this, we will discuss
- military details.
-
- “It was clear to me that a conflict with Poland had to come
- sooner or later. I had already made this decision in Spring.
- [Apparently this referred to (_L-79_).] But I thought I would
- first turn against the West in a few years, and only afterwards
- against the East. But the sequence cannot be fixed. One cannot
- close one’s eyes even before a threatening situation. I wanted
- to establish an acceptable relationship with Poland, in order to
- fight first against the West, but this plan which was agreeable
- to me could not be executed, since essential points have
- changed.
-
- “It became clear to me that Poland would attack us, in case of a
- conflict in the West.
-
- “Poland wants access to the sea.
-
- “The further development became obvious after the occupation of
- the Memel region, and it became clear to me that under the
- circumstances a conflict with Poland could arise at an
- unopportune moment.
-
- “I enumerate as reasons for this reflection, first of all, two
- personal constitutions, my own personality, and that of
- Mussolini. Essentially, it depends on me, my existence, because
- of my political activity.
-
- “Furthermore, the fact that probably no one will ever again have
- the confidence of the whole German people as I do. There will
- probably never again be a man in the future with more authority.
- My existence is, therefore, a factor of great value. But I can
- be eliminated at any time by a criminal or an idiot.
-
- “The second personal factor is Il Duce. His existence is also
- decisive. If something happens to him, Italy’s loyalty to the
- alliance will no longer be certain. The basic attitude of the
- Italian Court is against the Duce. Above all, the Court sees in
- the expansion of the empire a burden. The Duce is the man with
- the strongest nerves in Italy.
-
- “The third factor, favorable for us is Franco. We can only ask
- benevolent neutrality from Spain, but this depends on Franco’s
- personality. He guarantees a certain uniformity and steadiness
- of the present system in Spain. We must take into account the
- fact that Spain does not as yet have a Fascist Party of our
- internal unity.
-
- “On the other side, a negative picture, as far as decisive
- personalities are concerned. There is no outstanding personality
- in England or France.
-
- “For us it is easy to make decisions. We have nothing to lose:
- we can only gain. Our economic situation is such, because of our
- restrictions, that we cannot hold out more than a few years.
- Goering can confirm this. We have no other choice; we must act.
- Our opponents risk much and gain only little. England’s stake in
- a war is unimaginably great. Our enemies have men who are below
- average. No personalities, no masters, no men of action.
-
- “Besides the personal factor, the political situation is
- favorable for us; in the Mediterranean rivalry among Italy,
- France, and England; in the Orient tension, which leads to the
- alarming of the Mohammedan world.
-
- “The English empire did not emerge from the last war
- strengthened. From a maritime point of view, nothing was
- achieved: Conflict between England and Ireland, the south
- African Union became more independent, concessions had to be
- made to India, England is in great danger, unhealthy industries.
- A British statesman can look into the future only with concern.
-
- “France’s position has also deteriorated, particularly in the
- Mediterranean.
-
- “Further favorable factors for us are these:
-
- “Since Albania, there is an equilibrium of power in the Balkans.
- Yugoslavia carries the germ of collapse because of her internal
- situation.
-
- “Rumania did not grow stronger. She is liable to attack and
- vulnerable. She is threatened by Hungary and Bulgaria. Since
- Kemal’s death, Turkey has been ruled by small minds, unsteady
- weak men.
-
- “All these fortunate circumstances will no longer prevail in two
- to three years. No one knows how long I shall live. Therefore
- conflict better now.
-
- “The creation of Greater Germany was a great achievement
- politically but militarily it was questionable, since it was
- achieved through a bluff of the political leaders. It is
- necessary to test the military, if at all possible, not by
- general settlement, but by solving individual tasks.
-
- “The relation to Poland has become unbearable. My Polish policy
- hitherto was in contrast to the ideas of the people. My
- propositions to Poland, the Danzig corridor, were disturbed by
- England’s intervention. Poland changed her tune towards us. The
- initiative cannot be allowed to pass to others. This moment is
- more favorable than in two to three years. An attempt on my life
- or Mussolini’s could only change the situation to our
- disadvantage. One cannot eternally stand opposite one another
- with cocked rifle. A suggested compromise would have demanded
- that we change our convictions and make agreeable gestures. They
- talked to us again in the language of Versailles. There was
- danger of losing prestige. Now the probability is still great
- that the West will not interfere. We must accept the risk with
- reckless resolution. A politician must accept a risk as much as
- a military leader. We are facing the alternative to strike or to
- be destroyed with certainty sooner or later.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Now it is also a great risk. Iron nerves, iron resolution.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “We need not be afraid of a blockade. The East will supply us
- with grain, cattle, coal, lead and zinc. It is a big arm, which
- demands great efforts. I am only afraid that at the last minute
- some _Schweinhund_ will make a proposal for mediation.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Goering answers with thanks to the Fuehrer and the assurance
- that the armed forces will do their duty.” (_798-PS_)
-
-In his second speech on 22 August 1939 the Fuehrer had this to say:
-
- “It may also turn out differently regarding England and France.
- One cannot predict it with certainty. I figure on a
- trade-barrier, not on blockade, and with severance of relations.
- Most iron determination on our side. Retreat before nothing.
- Everybody shall have to make a point of it that we were
- determined from the beginning to fight the Western powers.
- Struggle for life or death. Germany has won every war as long as
- she was united. Iron, unflinching attitude of all superiors,
- greatest confidence, faith in victory, overcoming of the past by
- getting used to heaviest strain. A long period of peace would
- not do us any good. Therefore it is necessary to expect
- everything. Manly bearing. It is not machines that fight each
- other, but men. We have the better quality of men. Mental
- factors are decisive. The opposite camp has weaker people. In
- 1918, the Nation fell down because the mental prerequisites were
- not sufficient. Frederic the Great secured final success only
- through his mental power.
-
- “Destruction of Poland in the foreground. The aim is 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. Quick decision because of the season.
-
- “I shall give a propagandistic cause for starting the war, never
- mind whether it be plausible or not. The victor shall not be
- asked, later on, whether we told the truth or not. In starting
- and making a war, not the Right is what matters but Victory.
-
- “Have no pity. Brutal attitude. 80,000,000 people shall get what
- is their right. Their existence has to be secured. The strongest
- has the Right. Greatest severity.
-
- “Quick decision necessary. Unshakable faith in the German
- soldier. A crisis may happen only if the nerves of the leaders
- give way.
-
- “First aim: advance to the Vistula and Narew. Our technical
- superiority will break the nerves of the Poles. Every
- newly-created Polish force shall again be broken at once.
- Constant war of attrition.
-
- “New German frontier according to healthy principle. Possibly a
- protectorate as a buffer. Military operations shall not be
- influenced by these reflections. Complete destruction of Poland
- is the military aim. To be fast is the main thing. Pursuit until
- complete elimination.
-
- “Conviction that the German _Wehrmacht_ is up to the
- requirements. The start shall be ordered, probably by Saturday
- morning.” (_1014-PS_)
-
-D. _Expansion into General War of Aggression: Scandinavia, The Low
-Countries, The Balkans._
-
-The aggressive war having been initiated in September 1939, and Poland
-having been defeated shortly after the initial assaults, the Nazi
-aggressors converted the war into a general war of aggression extending
-into Scandinavia, into the Low Countries, and into the Balkans. (Under
-the division of the case agreed by the four Chief Prosecutors, this
-phase of aggression was left for development to the British prosecuting
-staff, and is discussed in Sections 9, 10 and 11 of this Chapter,
-_infra_.)
-
-E. _Aggression Against the U. S. S. R._
-
-The attack upon Russia was preceded with premeditation and deliberation.
-Just as, in the case of aggression against Czechoslovakia, the Nazis had
-a code name for the secret operation, “Case Green”, so in the case of
-aggression against the Soviet Union, they had a code name, “Case
-Barbarossa”. A secret directive, Number 21, issued from the Fuehrer’s
-Headquarters on 18 December 1940, relating to “Case Barbarossa,” was
-captured among the OKW files at Flensberg (_446-PS_). This directive was
-issued more than six months in advance of the attack. (Other evidence
-shows that the planning occurred even earlier.) This order, signed by
-Hitler and initialled by Jodl and Keitel, was issued in nine copies, of
-which we have the fourth. The directive reads:
-
- “The German Armed Forces must be prepared to crush Soviet Russia
- in a quick campaign before the end of the war against England.
- (Case Barbarossa.)
-
- “For this purpose the Army will have to employ all available
- units with the reservation that the occupied territories will
- have to be safeguarded against surprise attacks.
-
- “For the Eastern campaign the Air force will have to free such
- strong forces for the support of the Army that a quick
- completion of the ground operations may be expected and that
- damage of the Eastern German territories will be avoided as much
- as possible. This concentration of the main effort in the East
- is limited by the following reservation: That the entire battle
- and armament area dominated by us must remain sufficiently
- protected against enemy air attacks and that the attacks on
- England and especially the supply for them must not be permitted
- to break down.
-
- “Concentration of the main effort of the Navy remains
- unequivocally against England also during an Eastern campaign.
-
- “If occasion arises I will order the concentration of troops for
- action against Soviet Russia eight weeks before the intended
- beginning of operations.
-
- “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 an
- attack will not be recognized.
-
- “The preparations of the High Command are to be made on the
- following basis:
-
- “I. _General Purpose_:
-
- “The mass of the Russian Army in Western Russia is to be
- destroyed in daring operations by driving forward deep wedges
- with tanks and the retreat of intact battle-ready troops into
- the wide spaces of Russia is to be prevented.
-
- “In quick pursuit a (given) line is to be reached from where the
- Russian Air force will no longer be able to attack German Reich
- territory. The first goal of operations is the protection from
- Asiatic Russian from the general line Volga-Archangelsk. In case
- of necessity, the last industrial area in the Urals left to
- Russia could be eliminated by the Luftwaffe.
-
- In the course of these operations the Russian Baltic Sea Fleet
- will quickly erase its bases and will no longer be ready to
- fight.
-
- “Effective intervention by the Russian Air force is to be
- prevented through forceful blows at the beginning of the
- operations.” (_446-PS_)
-
-Another secret document captured from the OKW files establishes the
-motive for the attack on the Soviet Union (_2718-PS_). It also
-establishes the full awareness of the Nazi conspirators of the Crimes
-against Humanity which would result from their attack. The document is a
-memorandum of 2 May 1941 concerning the results of a discussion on that
-day with the State Secretaries concerning “Case Barbarossa.” The
-memorandum reads in part:
-
- “Matter for Chief; 2 copies; first copy to files Ia. Second copy
- to General Schubert. May 2nd, 1941. Memorandum. About the result
- of today’s discussion with the State Secretaries about
- Barbarossa.
-
- “1. The war can only be continued if all armed forces are fed by
- Russia in the third year of 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.” (_2718-PS_)
-
-F. _Collaboration with Japan: Precipitation Of The Pearl Harbor Attack._
-
-With the unleashing of the German aggressive war against the Soviet
-Union in June 1941, the Nazi conspirators and, in particular Ribbentrop,
-called upon the Eastern co-architect of the New Order, Japan, to attack
-in the rear. The Nazi’s incited and kept in motion a force reasonably
-calculated to result in an attack on the United States. For a time, they
-preferred that the United States not be involved in the conflict, due to
-military considerations. However, their incitement resulted in the
-attack on Pearl Harbor, and long prior to that attack, they had assured
-the Japanese that they would declare War on the United States should a
-United States-Japanese conflict occur. It was in reliance on these
-assurances that the Japanese struck at Pearl Harbor.
-
-These matters are disclosed in a document, captured from the files of
-the German Foreign Office, which consists of notes dated 4 April 1941,
-signed by Schmidt, regarding discussions between the Fuehrer and the
-Japanese Foreign Minister Matsuoka, in the presence of Ribbentrop
-(_1881-PS_). Pertinent parts of this document read as follows:
-
- “Matsuoka then also expressed the request, that the Fuehrer
- should instruct the proper authorities in Germany to meet as
- broad-mindedly as possible the wishes of the Japanese Military
- Commission. Japan was in need of German help particularly
- concerning the U-boat warfare, which could be given by making
- available to them the latest experiences of the war as well as
- the latest technical improvements and inventions. * * *
-
- “Japan would do her utmost to avoid a war with the United
- States. In case that the country should decide to attack
- Singapore, the Japanese navy, of course, had to be prepared for
- a fight with the United States, because in that case America
- would probably side with Great Britain. He (Matsuoka) personally
- believed, that the United States could be restrained by
- diplomatic exertions from entering the war at the side of Great
- Britain. Army and Navy had, however, to count on the worse
- situation, that is war against America. They were of the opinion
- that such a war would extend for five years or longer and would
- take the form of guerilla warfare in the Pacific and would be
- fought out in the South Sea. For this reason the German
- experiences in her guerilla warfare are of the greatest value to
- Japan. It was a question how such a war would best be conducted
- and how all the technical improvements of submarine, in all
- details such as periscopes and such like, could best be
- exploited by Japan. “To sum up, Matsuoka requested that the
- Fuehrer should see to it that the proper German authorities
- would place at the disposal of the Japanese these developments
- and inventions concerning navy and army, which were needed by
- the Japanese.
-
- “The Fuehrer promised this and pointed out that Germany too
- considered a conflict with the United States undesirable, but
- that it had already made allowance for such a contingency. In
- Germany one was of the opinion that America’s contribution
- depended upon the possibilities of transportation, and that this
- again is conditioned by the available tonnage. Germany’s war
- against tonnage, however, means a decisive weakening not merely
- against England, but also against America. Germany has made her
- preparations so that no American could land in Europe. She would
- conduct a most energetic fight against America with her U-boats
- and her Luftwaffe, and due to her superior experience, which
- would still have to be acquired by the United States, she would
- be vastly superior, and that quite apart from the fact, that the
- German soldier naturally ranks high above the American.
-
- “In the further course of the discussion the Fuehrer pointed
- out, that Germany on her part would immediately take the
- consequences, if Japan would get involved with the United
- States. It did not matter with whom the United States would
- first get involved, if with Germany or with Japan. They would
- always try to eliminate one country at a time, not to come to an
- understanding with the other country subsequently. Therefore
- Germany would strike, as already mentioned, without delay in
- case of a conflict between Japan and America, because the
- strength of the tripartite powers lies in their joined action,
- their weakness would be if they would let themselves be beaten
- individually.
-
- “Matsuoka once more repeated his request, that the Fuehrer might
- give the necessary instructions, in order that the proper German
- authorities would place at the disposal of the Japanese the
- latest improvements and inventions, which are of interest to
- them. Because the Japanese navy had to prepare immediately for a
- conflict with the United States.
-
- “As regards Japanese-American relationship, Matsuoka explained
- further that he has always declared in his country, that sooner
- or later a war with the United States would be unavoidable, if
- Japan continued to drift along as at present. In his opinion
- this conflict would happen rather sooner than later. His
- argumentation went on, why should Japan, therefore, not
- decisively strike at the right moment and take the risk upon
- herself of a fight against America? Just thus would she perhaps
- avoid a war for generations, particularly if she gained
- predominance in the South Seas. There are, to be sure, in Japan
- many who hesitate to follow those trends of thought. Matsuoka
- was considered in those circles a dangerous man with dangerous
- thoughts. He, however, stated that, if Japan continued to walk
- along her present path, one day she would have to fight anyway
- and that this would then be under less favorable circumstances
- than at present.
-
- “The Fuehrer replied that he could well understand the situation
- of Matsuoka, because he himself was in similar situations (the
- clearing of the Rhineland, declaration of sovereignty of armed
- Forces). He too was of the opinion that he had to exploit
- favorable conditions and accept the risk of an anyhow
- unavoidable fight at a time when he himself was still young and
- full of vigor. How right he was in his attitude was proven by
- events. Europe now was free. He would not hesitate a moment
- instantly to reply to any widening of the war, be it by Russia,
- be it by America. Providence favored those who will not let
- dangers come to them, but who will bravely face them.
-
- “Matsuoka replied, that the United States or rather their ruling
- politicians had recently still attempted a last manoeuver
- towards Japan, by declaring that America would not fight Japan
- on account of China or the South Seas provided that Japan gave
- free passage to the consignment of rubber and tin to America to
- their place of destination. However, America would war against
- Japan the moment she felt that Japan entered the war with the
- intention to assist in the destruction of Great Britain. * * *
-
- “The Fuehrer commented on this, that this attitude of America
- did not mean anything but that the United States had the hope,
- that, as long as the British World Empire existed, one day they
- could advance against Japan together with Great Britain,
- whereas, in case of the collapse of the World Empire, they would
- be totally isolated and could not do anything against Japan.
-
- “The Reich Foreign Minister interjected that the Americans
- precisely under all circumstances wanted to maintain the
- powerful position of England in East Asia, but that on the other
- hand it is proved by this attitude, to what extent she fears a
- joint action of Japan and Germany.
-
- “Matsuoka continued that it seemed to him of importance to give
- to the Fuehrer an absolutely clear picture of the real attitude
- inside Japan. For this reason he also had to inform him
- regretfully of the fact that he (Matsuoka) in his capacity as
- Japanese Minister for Foreign Affairs could not utter in Japan
- itself a single word of all that he had expounded before the
- Fuehrer and the Reich Foreign Minister regarding his plans. This
- would cause him serious damage in political and financial
- circles. Once before, he had committed the mistake, before he
- became Japanese Minister for Foreign Affairs, to tell a close
- friend something about his intentions. It seems that the latter
- had spread these things and thus brought about all sorts of
- rumors, which he as Foreign Minister had to oppose
- energetically, though as a rule he always tells the truth. Under
- those circumstances he also could not indicate, how soon he
- could report on the questions discussed to the Japanese Premier
- or to the Emperor. He would have to study exactly and carefully
- in the first place the development in Japan, so as to make his
- decision at a favorable moment, to make a clean breast of his
- proper plans towards the Prince Konoye and the Emperor. Then the
- decision would have to be made within a few days, because the
- plans would otherwise be spoiled by talk.
-
- “Should he, Matsuoka, fail to carry out his intentions, that
- would be proof that he is lacking in influence, in power of
- conviction, and in tactical capabilities. However, should he
- succeed, it would prove that he had great influence in Japan. He
- himself felt confident that he would succeed.
-
- “On his return, being questioned, he would indeed admit to the
- Emperor, the Premier and the Ministers for the Navy and the
- Army, that Singapore had been discussed; he would, however,
- state that it was only on a hypothetical basis.
-
- “Besides this Matsuoka made the express request not to cable in
- the matter of Singapore because he had reason to fear that by
- cabling something might leak out. If necessary he would send a
- courier.
-
- “The Fuehrer agreed and assured after all, that he could rest
- entirely assured of German reticence.
-
- “Matsuoka replied he believed indeed in German reticence, but
- unfortunately could not say the same of Japan.
-
- “The discussion was terminated after the exchange of some
- personal parting words.
-
- “Berlin, the 4th of April 1941.
-
- “(signed) SCHMIDT” (_1881-PS_)
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO THE PLOTTING OF
- AGGRESSIVE WAR
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6 (a). │ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Section IV (F); │ │
- │ V. │ I │ 22, 29
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document was referred to during the │ │
- │trial but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
- *386-PS │Notes on a conference with Hitler in the│ │
- │Reich Chancellery, Berlin, 5 November │ │
- │1937, signed by Hitler’s adjutant, │ │
- │Hossbach, and dated 10 November 1937. │ │
- │(USA 25) │ III │ 295
- │ │ │
- *388-PS │File of papers on Case Green (the plan │ │
- │for the attack on Czechoslovakia), kept │ │
- │by Schmundt, Hitler’s adjutant, │ │
- │April-October 1938. (USA 26) │ III │ 305
- │ │ │
-  442-PS │General Order No. 16 on the preparation │ │
- │of a landing operation against England, │ │
- │16 July 1940, initialled by Jodl and │ │
- │Keitel. │ III │ 399
- │ │ │
- *446-PS │Top Secret Fuehrer Order No. 21 signed │ │
- │by Hitler and initialled by Jodl, │ │
- │Warlimont and Keitel, 18 December 1940, │ │
- │concerning the Invasion of Russia (case │ │
- │Barbarossa). (USA 31) │ III │ 407
- │ │ │
- *789-PS │Speech of the Fuehrer at a conference, │ │
- │23 November 1939, to which all Supreme │ │
- │Commanders were ordered. (USA 23) │ III │ 572
- │ │ │
- *798-PS │Hitler’s speech to Commanders-in-Chief, │ │
- │at Obersalzberg, 22 August 1939. (USA │ │
- │29) │ III │ 581
- │ │ │
-*1014-PS │Hitler’s speech to Commanders-in-Chief, │ │
- │22 August 1939. (USA 30) │ III │ 665
- │ │ │
-*1881-PS │Notes on conference between Hitler and │ │
- │Matsuoka in presence of Ribbentrop in │ │
- │Berlin, 4 April 1941. (USA 33) │ IV │ 522
- │ │ │
-*2261-PS │Directive from Blomberg to Supreme │ │
- │Commanders of Army, Navy and Air Forces,│ │
- │24 June 1935; accompanied by copy of │ │
- │Reich Defense Law of 21 May 1935 and │ │
- │copy of Decision of Reich Cabinet of 12 │ │
- │May 1935 on the Council for defense of │ │
- │the Reich. (USA 24) │ IV │ 934
- │ │ │
-*2718-PS │Memorandum “About the result of today’s │ │
- │discussion with State Secretaries about │ │
- │Barbarossa”, 2 May 1941. (USA 32) │ V │ 378
- │ │ │
- *D-660 │Extracts from Hutchinson’s Illustrated │ │
- │edition of Mein Kampf. (GB 128) │ VII │ 164
- │ │ │
-**L-3 │Contents of Hitler’s talk to Supreme │ │
- │Commander and Commanding Generals, │ │
- │Obersalzberg, 22 August 1939. (USA 28) │ │
- │(Referred to but not offered in │ │
- │evidence) │ VII │ 752
- │ │ │
- *L-79 │Minutes of conference, 23 May 1939, │ │
- │“Indoctrination on the political │ │
- │situation and future aims”. (USA 27) │ VII │ 847
-
-
- 2. PREPARATION FOR AGGRESSION: 1933-1936
-
-By 1933 the Nazi Party, the NSDAP, had reached very substantial
-proportions. At that time its plans called for the acquisition of
-political control of Germany. This was indispensable for consolidation,
-within the country, of all the internal resources and potentialities.
-
-As soon as there was sufficient progress along this line of internal
-consolidation, the next step was to become disengaged from some of the
-external disadvantages of existing international limitations and
-obligations.
-
-The restrictions of the Versailles Treaty were a bar to the development
-of strength in all the fields necessary if Germany were to make war.
-Although there had been an increasing amount of circumvention and
-violation from the very time that the Versailles Treaty came into
-effect, such operations under disguise and subterfuge could not attain
-proportions adequate for the objectives of the Nazis. To get the Treaty
-of Versailles out of the way was indispensable to the development of the
-extensive military power which they had to have for their purposes. It
-was as a part of the same plan and for the same reason that Germany
-withdrew from the Disarmament Conference and from the League of Nations.
-It was impossible for the Nazis to carry out their plan on the basis of
-existing international obligations or on the basis of the orthodox kind
-of future commitments.
-
-Every military and diplomatic operation undertaken by the Nazis was
-preceded by a plan of action and a careful coordination of all
-participating forces. At the same time each event was part of a long
-prepared plan of aggression. Each represented a necessary step in the
-preparation of the schedule of aggressions which was subsequently
-carried out.
-
-Three of the steps in preparation for aggression were first, the
-withdrawal from the Disarmament Conference and the League of Nations;
-second, the institution of compulsory military service; and, third, the
-reoccupation of the demilitarized zone of the Rhineland. Each of these
-steps was progressively more serious in the matter of international
-relations. In each of these steps Germany anticipated the possibility of
-sanctions being applied by other countries, and, particularly, a strong
-military action from France with the possible assistance of England.
-However, the conspirators were determined that nothing less than a
-preventive war would stop them, and they also estimated correctly that
-no one or combination of big powers would undertake the responsibility
-for such a war. The withdrawal from the Disarmament Conference and from
-the League of Nations was, of course, action that did not violate any
-international obligation. The League Covenant provided the procedure for
-withdrawal. These actions, however, cannot be disassociated from the
-general conspiracy and the plan for aggression. The announcement of the
-institution of universal military service was a more daring action. It
-was a violation of the Versailles Treaty, but the Nazis got away with
-it. Then came outright military defiance, with the occupation of the
-demilitarized zone of the Rhineland.
-
-A. _Planning to Overthrow the Versailles Treaty._
-
-The determination and the plans of the Nazi conspirators to remove the
-restrictions of Versailles, started very early. This fact is confirmed
-by their own statements, their boasts of long planning and careful
-execution. Hitler, in his speech to all Supreme Commanders on 23
-November 1939, stated that his primary goal was to wipe out Versailles
-(_789-PS_). And Jodl, as Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces,
-delivered an address after four years of war, on 7 November 1943, in
-which he traced the development of German strength (_L-172_). The
-seizure of power to him meant the restoration of fighting sovereignty,
-including conscription, occupation of the Rhineland, and rearmament,
-with special emphasis on modern armor and air forces. In his speech,
-entitled “The Strategic Position at the Beginning of the 5th Year of
-War,” General Jodl gave a retrospective summary of the war for the
-benefit of the Reich and Gau leaders. He stated:
-
- “Introduction: Reichsleiter Bormann has requested me to give you
- a review today of the strategic position in the beginning of the
- 5th Year of War.
-
- “I must admit that it was not without hesitation that I
- undertook this none too easy task. It is not possible to do it
- justice with a few generalities. It is not necessary to say
- openly what is. No one—the Fuehrer has ordered—may know more
- or be told more than he needs for his own immediate task, but I
- have no doubt at all in my mind, Gentlemen, but that you need a
- great deal in order to be able to cope with your tasks. It is in
- your Gaus, after all, and among their inhabitants that all the
- enemy propaganda, the defeatism, and the malicious rumours
- concentrate, that try to find themselves a plan among our
- people. Up and down the country the devil of subversion strides.
- All the cowards are seeking a way out, or—as they call it—a
- political solution. They say, we must negotiate while there is
- still something in hand, and all these slogans are made use of
- to attack the natural sense of the people, that in this war
- there can only be a fight to the end. Capitulation is the end of
- the Nation, the end of Germany. Against this wave of enemy
- propaganda and cowardice you need more than force. You need to
- know the true situation and for this reason I believe that I am
- justified in giving you a perfectly open and uncolored account
- of the state of affairs. This is no forbidden disclosure of
- secrets, but a weapon which may perhaps help you to fortify the
- morale of the people. For this war will not only be decided by
- the force of arms but by the will of the whole people. Germany
- was broken in 1918 not at the front but at home. Italy suffered
- not military defeat but morale defeat. She broke down
- internally. The result has been not the peace she expected
- but—through the cowardice of these criminal traitors—a fate
- thousand times harder than continuation of the war at our side
- would have brought to the Italian people. I can rely on you,
- Gentlemen, that since I give concrete figures and data
- concerning our own strength, you will treat these details as
- your secret; all the rest is at your disposal without
- restriction for application in your activities as leaders of the
- people.
-
- “The necessity and objectives of this war were clear to all and
- everyone at the moment when we entered upon the War of
- Liberation of Greater Germany and by attacking parried the
- danger which menaced us both from Poland and from the Western
- powers. Our further incursions into Scandinavia, in the
- direction of the Mediterranean, and in that of Russia—these
- also aroused no doubts concerning the general conduct of the war
- so long as we were successful. It was not until more serious
- set-backs were encountered and our general situation began to
- become increasingly acute, that the German people began to ask
- itself whether perhaps we had not undertaken more than we could
- do and set our aims too high. To provide an answer to this
- questioning and to furnish you with certain points of view for
- use in your own explanatory activities is one of the main points
- of my present lecture; I shall divide it into three parts:
-
- “I. A review of the most important development up to the
- present.
-
- “II. Consideration of the present situation.
-
- “III. The foundation of our morale and our confidence in
- victory.
-
- “In view of my position as military advisor to the Fuehrer, I
- shall confine myself in my remarks to the problems of my own
- personal sphere of action, fully appreciating at the same time
- that in view of the protean nature of this war, I shall in this
- way be giving expression only to one side of events.
-
- “I. _Review_
-
- “1. The fact that the National Socialist movement and its
- struggle for internal power were the preparatory stage of the
- outer liberation from the bonds of the Dictate of Versailles is
- not one on which I need enlarge in this circle. I should like
- however to mention at this point how clearly all thoughtful
- regular soldiers realize what an important part has been played
- by the National Socialist movement in reawakening the will to
- fight [_Wehrwillen_] in nurturing fighting strength
- [_Wehrkraft_] and in rearming the German people. In spite of all
- the virtue inherent in it, the numerically small _Reichswehr_
- would never have been able to cope with this task, if only
- because of its own restricted radius of action. Indeed, what the
- Fuehrer aimed at—and has so happily been successful in bringing
- about—was the fusion of these two forces.
-
- “2. The seizure of power in its turn has meant in the first
- place restoration of fighting sovereignty
- [_Wehrhoheit_—conscription, occupation of the Rhineland] and
- rearmament with special emphasis being laid on the creation of a
- modern armoured and air arm.
-
- “3. The Austrian ‘_Anschlluss_’ in its turn, brought with it not
- only the fulfillment of an old national aim but also had the
- effect both of reinforcing our fighting strength and of
- materially improving our strategic position. Whereas up till
- then the territory of Czechoslovakia had projected in a most
- menacing way right into Germany (a wasp waist in the direction
- of France and an air base for the Allies, in particular Russia),
- Czechoslovakia herself was now enclosed by pincers.
-
- “Its own strategic position had now become so unfavorable that
- she was bound to fall a victim to any attack pressed home with
- rigour before effective aid from the West could be expected to
- arrive.
-
- “This possibility of aid was furthermore made more difficult by
- the construction of the West Wall, which, in contra-distinction
- to the Maginot Line, was not a measure based on debility and
- resignation but one intended to afford rear cover for an active
- policy in the East.
-
- “4. 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 favourable strategic premises.
-
- “This brings me to the actual outbreak of the present war, and
- the question which next arises is whether the moment for the
- struggle with Poland—in itself unavoidable—was favorably
- selected or not. The answer to this question is all the less in
- doubt since the opponent—after all, not inconsiderable in
- himself—collapsed unexpectedly quickly, and the Western Powers
- who were his friends, while they did declare war on us and form
- a second front, yet for the rest made no use of the
- possibilities open to them of snatching the initiative from our
- hands. Concerning the course of the Polish campaign, nothing
- further need be said beyond that it proved in a measure which
- made the whole world sit up and take notice a point which up
- till then had not been certain by any means; that is, the high
- state of efficiency of the young Armed Forces of Great Germany.”
- (_L-172_)
-
-In this speech General Jodl identifies himself fully with the Nazi
-movement. His own words show that he was not a mere soldier. Insofar as
-he is concerned, his speech identifies the military with the political,
-it also shows the deliberation with which the Treaty of Versailles was
-abrogated by Germany and the demilitarized zone of the Rhineland was
-militarized and fortified.
-
-In one of Adolf Hitler’s reviews of the six-year period between his
-ascendancy to power and the outbreak of hostilities, he not only
-admitted but boasted about the orderly and coordinated long-range
-planning. The minutes of conference of the Fuehrer kept by Schmundt, his
-adjutant, contain the following passage:
-
- “In the period 1933-1939 progress was made in all fields. Our
- military system improved enormously.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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.” (_L-79_)
-
-B. _Economic and Financial Preparations for Aggressive War._
-
-One of the most significant preparations for aggressive war is found in
-the Secret Reich Defense Law of 21 May 1935 (_2261-PS_). The law went
-into effect upon its passage. It stated at its outset that it was to be
-made public instanter, but at the end of it Adolf Hitler signed the
-decree ordering that it be kept secret. General Thomas, who was in
-charge of War Armament Economy and for some time a high-ranking member
-of the German High Command, refers, to this law as the cornerstone of
-war preparations. He points out that, although the law was not made
-public until the outbreak of war, it was put into immediate execution as
-a program for preparations. These statements are made at page 25 of
-General Thomas’ work, “A History of the German War and Armament Economy,
-1923-1944.” (_2353-PS_)
-
-This secret law remained in effect until 4 September 1939, at which time
-it was replaced by another secret defense law (_2194-PS_) revising the
-system of defense organization and directing more detailed preparations
-for the approaching status of “mobilization,” which was clearly an
-euphemism for war.
-
-The covering letter, under which this second Reich Defense Law, was sent
-to the Ministry for Economy and Labor for Saxony in Dresden, on 6
-December 1939, was classified Top Secret and read as follows:
-
- “Transportation Section, attention of Construction Chief
- Counsellor Hirches, or representative in the office of the Reich
- Protector in Bohemia and Moravia, received Prague, 5 September
- 1939, No. 274.
-
- “Inclosed please find a copy of the Reich Defense Law of 4
- September 1938 and a copy each of the decrees of the Reich
- Minister of Transportation, dated 7 October 1938, RL 10.2212/38,
- top secret, and of 17 July 1939, RL/LV 1.2173/39, top secret.
- For your information and observance, by order, signed
- Kretzchmar. 3 inclosures completed to Dresden, 4 September 1939,
- signed Schneider 3 inclosures. Receipt for the letter of 4
- September 1939, with 3 inclosures, signed 5 September, 1939, and
- returned to construction Counsellor Kretzchmar.” (_2194-PS_)
-
-Thus the second secret Reich Defense Law was transmitted under top
-secret cover.
-
-The general plan for the breach of the Treaty of Versailles and for the
-ensuing aggressions was carried out in four ways: (1) secret rearmament
-from 1933 to March 1935; (2) the training of military personnel (that
-includes secret or camouflage training); (3) production of munitions of
-war; (4) the building of an air force.
-
-The facts of rearmament and of secrecy are self-evident from the events
-that followed. The significant phase of this activity lies in the fact
-that it was necessary in order to break the barriers of the Treaty of
-Versailles and of the Locarno Pact, and to make ready for aggressive
-wars which were to follow.
-
-Those activities by their nature and extent, could only have been for
-aggressive purposes. The highest importance which the German government
-attached to the secrecy of the program is emphasized by the disguised
-methods of financing utilized both before and after the announcement of
-conscription, and the rebuilding of the army, on 16 March 1935.
-
-The point is illustrated by an unsigned memorandum by Schacht dated 3
-May 1935, entitled, “The Financing of the Armament program,
-“_Finanzierung der Ruestung_.” (1168-PS) It is not signed by Schacht,
-but in an interrogation on 16 October 1945, he identified it as being
-his memorandum. The memorandum reads as follows:
-
- “Memorandum from Schacht to Hitler [identified by Schacht as
- Exhibit A, interrogation 16 October 1945, page 40] May 3, 1935.
-
- “Financing of Armament. The following explanations are based
- upon the thought, that the accomplishment of the armament
- program with speed and in quantity is _the_ problem of German
- politics, that everything else therefore should be subordinated
- to this purpose as long as the main purpose is not imperiled by
- neglecting all other questions. Even after March 16, 1935, the
- difficulty remains that one cannot undertake the open
- propagandistic treatment of the German people for support of
- armament without endangering our position internationally
- (without loss to our foreign trade). The already nearly
- impossible financing of the armament program is rendered hereby
- exceptionally difficult.
-
- “Another supposition must be also emphasized. The printing press
- can be used only for the financing of armament to such a degree,
- as permitted by maintaining of the money value. Every inflation
- increases the prices of foreign raw materials and increases the
- domestic prices, is therefore like a snail biting its own tail.
- The circumstance that our armament had to be camouflaged
- completely till March 16, 1935, and even since this date the
- camouflage had to be continued to a larger extent, making it
- necessary to use the printing press (bank note press) already at
- the beginning of the whole armament program, while it would have
- been natural, to start it (the printing press) at the final
- point of financing. In the porte-feuille of the Reichsbank are
- segregated notes for this purpose, that is, armament, of 3,775
- millions and 866 millions, altogether 4,641 millions, out of
- which the armament notes amount to Reichsmarks 2,374 millions,
- that is, of April 30, 1935. The Reichsbank has invested the
- amount of marks under its jurisdiction, but belonging to
- foreigners in blank notes of armament. Our armaments are also
- financed partly with the credits of our political opponents.
- Furthermore, 500 million Reichsmarks were used for financing of
- armament, which originated out of [_Reichsanleihe_], the federal
- loans, placed with savings banks. In the regular budget, the
- following amounts were provided. For the budget period 1933-34,
- Reichsmarks 750 millions; for the budget period 1934-35,
- Reichsmarks 1,100 millions; and for the budget period 1935-36,
- Reichsmarks 2,500 millions.
-
- “The amount of deficits of the budget since 1928 increases after
- the budget 1935-36 to 5 to 6 millions Reichsmarks. This total
- deficit is already financed at the present time by short term
- credits of the money market. It therefore reduces in advance the
- possibilities of utilization of the public market for the
- armament. The Minister of Finance [_Reichsfinanzminister_],
- correctly points out at the defense of the budget: As a
- permanent yearly deficit is an impossibility, as we cannot
- figure with security with increased tax revenues in amount
- balancing the deficit and any other previous debits, as on the
- other hand a balanced budget is the only secure basis for the
- impending great task of military policy. For all these reasons
- we have to put in motion a fundamental and conscious budget
- policy which solves the problem of armament financing by organic
- and planned reduction of other expenditures not only from the
- point of receipt, but also from the point of expenditure, that
- is, by saving.
-
- “How urgent this question is, can be deduced from the following,
- that a large amount of task has been started by the state and
- party and which is now in process, all of which are not covered
- by the budget, but from contributions and credits, which have to
- be raised by industry in addition to the regular taxes.
-
- “The existing of various budgets side by side, which serve more
- or less public tasks, is the greatest impediment for gaining a
- clear view over the possibilities of financing the armaments. A
- whole number of ministries and various branches of the party
- have their own budgets, and for this reason have possibilities
- of incomes and expenses, though based on the sovereignty of
- finance of the state, but not subject to the control of the
- Minister of Finance and therefore also not subject to the
- control of the cabinet. Just as in the sphere of politics the
- much too far-reaching delegation of legislative powers to
- individuals brought about various states within the states,
- exactly in the same way the condition of various branches of
- state and party, working side by side and against each other,
- has a devastating effect on the possibility of financing. If on
- this territory concentration and unified control is not
- introduced very soon, the solution of the already impossible
- task of armament financing is endangered.
-
- “We have the following tasks:
-
- “(1) A deputy is entrusted with finding all sources and
- revenues, which have its origin in contributions to the federal
- government, to the state and party and in profits of public and
- party enterprises.
-
- “(2) Furthermore experts, entrusted by the Fuehrer, have to
- examine how these amounts were used and which of these amounts
- can in the future be withdrawn from their previous purpose.
-
- “(3) The same experts have to examine the investments of all
- public and party organizations, to which extent this property
- can be used for the purpose of armament financing.
-
- “(4) The federal Ministry of Finance is to be entrusted to
- examine the possibilities of increased revenues by way of new
- taxes or increasing of existing taxes.
-
- “The up-to-date financing of armaments by the Reichsbank under
- existing political conditions was a necessity and the political
- success proved the correctness of this action. The other
- possibilities of armament financing have to be started now under
- any circumstances. For this purpose all absolutely non-essential
- expenditures for other purposes must not take place and the
- total financial strength of Germany, limited as it is, has to be
- concentrated for the one purpose of armament financing. Whether
- the problem of financing, as outlined in this program, succeeds,
- remains to be seen, but without such concentration, it will fail
- with absolute certainty.” (_1168-PS_)
-
-C. _Renunciation of Armament Provisions of Versailles Treaty._
-
-21 May 1935 was a very important date in the Nazi calendar. It was on
-that date that the Nazis passed the secret Reich Defense Law
-(_2261-PS_). The secrecy of their armament operations had already
-reached the point beyond which they could no longer maintain successful
-camouflage. Since their program called for still further expansion, they
-unilaterally renounced the armament provisions of the Versailles Treaty
-on the same date, 21 May 1935. Hitler’s speech to the Reichstag on that
-day (_2288-PS_) was published in “_Voelkischer Beobachter_” under the
-heading “The Fuehrer Notifies the World of the Way to Real Peace.”
-Hitler declared:
-
- “1. The German Reich Government refuses to adhere to the Geneva
- Resolution of 17 May.
-
- “The Treaty of Versailles was not broken by Germany
- unilaterally, but the well-known paragraphs of the dictate of
- Versailles were violated, and consequently invalidated, by those
- powers who could not make up their minds to follow the
- disarmament requested of Germany with their own disarmament as
- agreed upon by Treaty.
-
- “2. Because the other powers did not live up to their
- obligations under the disarmament program, the Government of the
- German Reich no longer considers itself bound to those articles,
- which are nothing but a discrimination against the German nation
- for an unlimited period of time, since, through them, Germany is
- being nailed down in a unilateral manner contrary to the spirit
- of the agreement.” (_2288-PS_)
-
-In conjunction with other phases of planning and preparation for
-aggressive war, there were various programs for direct and indirect
-training of a military nature. They included not only the training of
-military personnel, but also the establishment and training of other
-military organizations, such as the Police Force, which could be and
-were absorbed by the Army. The extent of this program for military
-training is indicated by Hitler’s boast of the expenditure of ninety
-billion Reichsmarks during the period 1933 to 1939, in the building up
-of the armed forces.
-
-In a speech by Adolf Hitler delivered on 1 September, 1939, (_2322-PS_),
-which was published in the “_Voelkischer Beobachter_” under the heading
-“The Fuehrer announces the Battle for the Justice and Security of the
-Reich”, the following passage occurred:
-
- “For more than six years now, I have been engaged in building up
- the German Armed Forces. During this period more than ninety
- billion Reichsmarks were spent building up the _Wehrmacht_.
- Today, ours are the best-equipped armed forces in the world, and
- they are superior to those of 1914. My confidence in them can
- never be shaken.” (_2322-PS_)
-
-The secret nature of this training program and the fact of its early
-development is illustrated by a report to Hess, in 1932, concerning the
-secret training of flying personnel, as well as the early plans to build
-a military air force (_1143-PS_). This report was sent in a letter from
-Schickedantz to Rosenberg, for delivery to Hess. Apparently Schickedantz
-was very anxious that no one but Hess should get this letter, and
-therefore sent it to Rosenberg for personal delivery to Hess. The letter
-points out that the civilian pilots should be so organized as to enable
-their transfer into the military air force organization. The letter
-dated 20 October 1932, reads:
-
- “Dear Alfred [Rosenberg]: I am sending you enclosed a
- communication from the RWM forwarded to me by our confidential
- man (_Vertrauensmann_) which indeed is very interesting. I
- believe we will have to take some steps so that the matter will
- not be procured secretly for the Stahlhelm. This report is not
- known to anybody else. I intentionally did not inform even our
- tall friend.” [Rosenberg, in an interrogation on 5 October 1945,
- identified this “tall friend” as being Von Albensleben.] “I am
- enclosing an additional copy for Hess, and ask you to transmit
- the letter to Hess by messenger, as I do not want to write a
- letter to Hess for fear that it might be read somewhere. _Mit
- bestem Gruss_, Yours Amo.” (_1143-PS_)
-
-Enclosed in the report is:
-
- “Air Force Organization”
-
- “Purpose: Preparation of material and training of personnel to
- provide for the case of the armament of the air force.
-
- “Entire management as a civilian organization will be
- transferred to Col. Von Willberg, at present commander of
- Breslau, who, retaining his position in the Reichwehr, is going
- on leave of absence.
-
- “(a) Organizing the pilots of civilian air lines in such a way
- as to enable their transfer to the air force organization.
-
- “(b) Prospects to train crews for military flying. Training to
- be done within the organization for military flying of the
- Stahlhelm [steel helmet] which is being turned over to Col.
- Hanel, retired.
-
- “All existing organizations for sport flying are to be used for
- military flying. Directions on kinds and tasks of military
- flying will be issued by this Stahlhelm directorate. The
- Stahlhelm organization will pay the military pilots 50 marks per
- hour flight. These are due to the owner of the plane in case he
- himself carries out the flight. They are to be divided in case
- of non-owners of the plane, between flight organization,
- proprietor and crew in the proportion of 10:20:20. Military
- flying is now paid better than flying for advertisement (40). We
- therefore have to expect that most proprietors of planes or
- flying associations will go over to the Stahlhelm organization.
- It must be achieved that equal conditions will be granted by the
- RWM, also the NSDAP organization.” (_1143-PS_)
-
-D. _Secret Rearmament_
-
-The program of rearmament and the objectives of circumventing and
-breaching the Versailles Treaty are forcefully shown by a number of Navy
-documents, showing the participation and cooperation of the German navy
-in this rearmament program which was secret at first. When it was deemed
-safe to say so, the Navy openly acknowledged that it had always been its
-objective to break the Versailles Treaty.
-
-In 1937 the Navy High Command (OKM) published a secret book entitled,
-“The Fight of the Navy Against Versailles, 1919 to 1935”, written by Sea
-Captain Schussler (_C-156_). The preface refers to the fight of the navy
-against the unbearable regulations of the peace treaty of Versailles.
-The table of contents includes a variety of navy activities, such as
-saving of coastal guns from destruction as required by Versailles;
-independent armament measures behind the back of the government and
-behind the back of the legislative bodies; resurrection of the U-boat
-arm; economic rearmament; and camouflaged rearmament from 1933 to the
-freedom from the restrictions in 1935. (_C-156_)
-
-This book points out the significant effect of seizure of power by the
-Nazis in 1933 on increasing the size and determining the nature of the
-rearmament program. It also refers to the far-reaching independence in
-the building and development of the navy, which was only hampered
-insofar as concealment of rearmament had to considered in compliance
-with the Versailles Treaty (_C-156_). With the restoration of what was
-called the military sovereignty of the Reich in 1935—the reoccupation
-of the demilitarized zone of the Rhineland—the external camouflage of
-rearmament was eliminated.
-
-This book of the German navy bears the symbol of the Nazi Party, the
-Swastika, in the spread eagle on the cover sheet, and it is headed
-“secret”, underscored (_C-156_). Raeder has identified this book in an
-interrogation and explained that the Navy tried to fulfill the letter of
-the Versailles Treaty and at the same time to make progress in naval
-development. The following are pertinent extracts from the book:
-
- “The object and aim of this memorandum under the heading
- ‘Preface’, is to draw a technically reliable picture based on
- documentary records and the evidence of those who took part in
- the fight of the Navy against the unbearable regulations of the
- peace treaty of Versailles. It shows that the Reich navy after
- the liberating activities of the Free Corps and of Scapa Flow
- did not rest, but found ways and means to lay with unquenchable
- enthusiasm, in addition to the building up of the 15,000-man
- navy, the basis for a greater development in the future, and so
- create by work of soldiers and technicians the primary condition
- for a later rearmament. It must also distinguish more clearly
- the services of these men, who, without being known in wide
- circles, applied themselves with extraordinary zeal in
- responsibility in the service of the fight against the peace
- treaty; thereby stimulated by the highest feeling of duty, they
- risked, particularly in the early days of their fight,
- themselves and their position unrestrainedly in the partially
- self-ordained task. This compilation makes it clearer, however,
- that even such ideal and ambitious plans can be realized only to
- a small degree if the concentrated and united strength of the
- whole people is not behind the courageous activity of the
- soldier. Only when the Fuehrer had created the second and even
- more important condition for an effective rearmament in the
- coordination of the whole nation and in the fusion of the
- political, financial and spiritual power, could the work of the
- soldier find its fulfillment. The framework of this peace
- treaty, the most shameful known in world history, collapsed
- under the driving power of this united will, [signed] The
- Compiler”. (_C-156_)
-
-The summary of the contents indicated in the chapter titles is
-significant:
-
- “I. First, defensive action against the execution of the Treaty
- of Versailles (from the end of the war to the occupation of the
- Ruhr, 1923).
-
- “1. Saving of coastal guns from destruction to removal of
- artillery equipment and ammunition, hand and machine weapons. *
- * *
-
- “3. Limitation of destruction in Heligoland.
-
- “II. Independent armament measures behind the back of the Reich
- Government and of the legislative body (from 1923 to the Lomann
- case in 1927).
-
- “1. An attempt to increase the personnel strength of the Reich
- Navy.
-
- “2. Contributing to the strengthening of patriotism among the
- people.
-
- “3. Activities of Captain Lohmann.
-
- “4. Preparation for the resurrection of the German U-boat arm.
-
- “5. Building up of the air force.
-
- “6. Attempt to strengthen our mine arm (_Die Mine_).
-
- “7. Economic rearmament.
-
- “8. Miscellaneous measures.
-
- “a. The Aerogeodetic, and;
-
- “b. Secret evidence.
-
- “III. Planned armament work countenance by the Reich government
- but behind the back of the legislative body from 1927 to the
- seizure of power, 1933.
-
- “IV. Rearmament under the leadership of the Reich Government in
- camouflage (from 1933 to the freedom from restrictions, 1935).”
- (_C-156_)
-
-The following is a passage from Chapter IV:
-
- “The unification of the whole nation which was combined with the
- taking over of power on 30 January 1933 was of the decisive
- influence on the size and shape of further rearmament.
-
- “While the second chamber, _Reichsrat_, approached its
- dissolution and withdrew as a legislative body, the _Reichstag_
- assumed a composition which could only take a one-sided attitude
- toward the rearmament of the armed forces. The government took
- over the management of the rearmament program upon this
- foundation.
-
- “Development of the Armed Forces.”
-
- “This taking over of the management by the Reich Government
- developed for the armed forces in such a manner that the War
- Minister, General von Blomberg, and through him the three
- branches of the armed forces, received far-reaching powers from
- the Reich Cabinet for the development of the armed forces. The
- whole organization of the Reich was included in this way. In
- view of these powers the collaboration of the former inspecting
- body in the management of the secret expenditure was from then
- on dispensed with. There remained only the inspecting duty of
- the accounting office of the German Reich.
-
- “Independence of the Commander in Chief of the Navy”
-
- “The commander-in-chief of the Navy, Admiral Raeder, honorary
- doctor, had received the help of a far-reaching independence in
- the building and development of the navy. This was only hampered
- insofar as the previous concealment of rearmament had to be
- continued in consideration of the Versailles Treaty. Besides the
- public budget there remained the previous special budget, which
- was greatly increased in view of the considerable credit for the
- provision of labor, which was made available by the Reich. Wide
- powers in the handling of these credits were given to the
- Director of the Budget Department of the navy, up to 1934
- Commodore Schussler, afterwards Commodore Foerster. These took
- into consideration the increased responsibility of the Chief of
- the Budget.
-
- “Declaration of Military Freedom”
-
- “When the Fuehrer, relying upon the strength of the armed forces
- executed in the meanwhile, announced the restoration of the
- military sovereignty of the German Reich, the last-mentioned
- limitation on rearmament works namely, the external camouflage,
- was eliminated. Freed from all the shackles which have hampered
- our ability to move freely on and under water, on land and in
- the air for one and a half decades, and carried by the
- newly-awakened fighting spirit of the whole nation, the armed
- forces, and as part of it, the navy, can lead with full strength
- towards its completion the rearmament already under way with the
- goal of securing for the Reich its rightful position in the
- world.” (_C-156_)
-
-An interrogation of Raeder concerning this book went as follows:
-
- “Q. I have here a document, _C-156_, which is a photostatic copy
- of the work prepared by the High Command of the Navy, and covers
- the struggle of the Navy against the Versailles Treaty from 1919
- to 1935. I ask you initially whether you are familiar with the
- work?
-
- “A. I know this book. I read it once when it was edited.
-
- “Q. Was that an official publication of the Germany navy?
-
- “A. This Captain Schuessler, indicated there, was Commander in
- the Admiralty. Published by the OKM, which was an idea of these
- officers to put all these things together.
-
- “Q. Do you recall the circumstances under which the
- authorization to prepare such a work was given to him?
-
- “A. I think he told me that he would write such a book as he
- told us here in the foreword.
-
- “Q. In the preparation of this work he had access to the
- official naval files, and based his work on the items contained
- therein?
-
- “A. Yes, I think so. He would have spoken with other persons,
- and he would have had the files, which were necessary.
-
- “Q. Do you know whether before the work was published, a draft
- of it was circulated among the officers in the Admiralty for
- comment?
-
- “A. No, I don’t think so. Not before it was published. I saw it
- only when it was published.
-
- “Q. Was it circulated freely after its publication?
-
- “A. It was a secret object. I think the upper commands in the
- Navy had knowledge of it.
-
- “Q. It was not circulated outside of the naval circles?
-
- “A. No.
-
- “Q. What then is your opinion concerning the comments contained
- in the work regarding the circumventing of the provisions of the
- Versailles Treaty?
-
- “A. I don’t remember very exactly what is in here. I can only
- remember that the Navy had always the object to fulfill the word
- of the Versailles Treaty, but wanted to have some advantages.
- But the flying men were exercised one year before they went into
- the Navy. Quite young men. So that the word of the Treaty of
- Versailles was filled. They didn’t belong to the Navy, as long
- as they were exercised in flying, and the submarines were
- developed but not in Germany, and not in the Navy, but in
- Holland. There was a civil bureau, and in Spain there was an
- Industrialist; in Finland, too, and they were built much later
- when we began to act with the English government about the
- Treaty of thirty-five to one-hundred, because we could see that
- then the Treaty of Versailles would be destroyed by such a
- treaty with England, and so in order to keep the word of
- Versailles, we tried to fulfill the word of Versailles, but
- tried to have advantages.
-
- “Q. Would the fair statement be that the Navy High Command was
- interested in avoiding the limited provisions of the Treaty of
- Versailles regarding the personnel and limits of armaments, but
- would it attempt to fulfill the letter of the treaty, although
- actually avoiding it?
-
- “A. That was their endeavor”.
-
-Raeder had his explanations:
-
- “Q. Why was such a policy adopted?
-
- “A. We were much menaced in the first years after the first war
- by danger that the Poles would attack East Prussia and so we
- tried to strengthen a little our very, very weak forces in this
- way, and so all our efforts were directed to the aim to have a
- little more strength against the Poles, if they would attack us;
- it was nonsense to them of attacking the Poles in this state,
- and for the Navy a second aim was to have some defense against
- the entering of French forces into the Ostsee, or East Sea,
- because we knew the French had intentions to sustain the Poles
- from ships that came into the Ostsee Goettinger, and so the Navy
- was a defense against the attack by the Poles, and against the
- entrance of French shipping into an Eastern Sea. Quite defensive
- aims.
-
- “Q. When did the fear of attack from Poles first show itself in
- official circles in Germany would you say?
-
- “A. When the first years they took Wilma. In the same minute we
- thought that they would come to East Prussia. I don’t know
- exactly the year, because those judgments were the judgments of
- the German government ministers, of the Army and Navy Ministers,
- Groner and Noske.
-
- “Q. Then those views in your opinion were generally held
- existing perhaps as early as 1919 or 1920, after the end of the
- First World War?
-
- “A. Oh, but the whole situation was very, very uncertain, and
- about those years in the beginning, I can not give you a very
- exact thing, because I was then two years in the Navy archives
- to write a book about the war, and how the cruisers fought in
- the first war. Two years, so I was not with these things.”
-
-The same kind of aims and purposes are reflected in the table of
-contents of a history of the German Navy, 1919 to 1939, found in
-captured official files of the German Navy (_C-17_). Although a copy of
-the book itself has not been found, the project was written by Oberst
-Scherff, Hitler’s special military historian. The table of contents
-however, is available. It refers by numbers to groups of documents and
-notes in the documents, which evidently were intended as working
-material for the basis of the chapters to be written in accordance with
-the table of contents. The title of this table of contents fairly
-establishes the navy planning and preparations that were to get the
-Versailles Treaty out of the way, and to rebuild the navy strength
-necessary for war. Some of the headings in the table of contents read:
-
- “_Part A (1919—The year of Transition.)_
-
- “Chapter VII.
-
- First efforts to circumvent the Versailles Treaty and to limit
- its effects.
-
- “Demilitarization of the Administration, incorporation of naval
- offices in civil ministries, etc. Incorporation of greater
- sections of the German maritime observation station and the
- sea-mark system in Heligoland and Kiel, of the Ems-Jade-Canal,
- etc. into the Reich Transport Ministry up to 1934;
-
- “Noskos’ proposal of 11.8.1919 to incorporate the Naval
- Construction Department in the Technical High School, Berlin;
-
- “Formation of the “Naval Arsenal Kiel”.
-
- “(b) The saving from destruction of coastal fortifications and
- guns.
-
- “1. North Sea. Strengthening of fortifications with new
- batteries and modern guns between the signing and the taking
- effect of the Versailles Treaty; dealings with the Control
- Commission—information, drawings, visits of inspection, result
- of efforts.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “2. Baltic. Taking over by the Navy of fortresses Pilau and
- Swinemunde;
-
- “Salvage for the Army of one-hundred and eighty-five movable
- guns and mortars there.
-
- “3. The beginnings of coastal air defense.
-
- “_Part B (1920-1924. The Organizational New Order)_
-
- Chapter V.
-
- “_The Navy_
- “_Fulfillment and avoidance of the Versailles Treaty_
- “_Foreign Countries_
-
- “(a) _The inter-allied Control Commissions._
-
- “(b) _Defense measures against the fulfillment of the Versailles
- Treaty and independent arming behind the back of the Reich
- Government and the legislative bodies._
-
- “1. Dispersal of artillery gear and munitions, of hand and
- automatic weapons.
-
- “2. Limitation of demolition work in Heligoland.
-
- “3. Attempt to strengthen personnel of the navy, from 1923.
-
- “4. The activities of Captain Lohmann (founding of numerous
- associations at home and abroad, participations, formation of
- “sports” unions and clubs, interesting the film industry in
- naval recruitment).
-
- “5. Preparation for re-establishing the German U-boat arm since
- 1920. (Projects and deliveries for Japan, Holland, Turkey,
- Argentine and Finland. Torpedo testing.)
-
- “6. Participation in the preparation for building of the
- Luftwaffe (preservation of aerodromes, aircraft construction,
- teaching of courses, instruction of midshipmen in anti-air raid
- defense, training of pilots).
-
- “7. Attempt to strengthen the mining branch.
-
- _Part C (1925-1932. Replacement of Tonnage)_ Chapter IV.
- “_The Navy, The Versailles Treaty, Foreign Countries._
-
- “(a) _The activities of the Inter-allied Control Commissions (up
- to 31.1.27; discontinuance of the activity of the Naval Peace
- Commission)_
-
- “_Independent armament measures behind the back of the Reich
- Government and legislative bodies up to the Lohmann case._
-
- “1. The activities of Captain Lohmann (continuation), their
- significance as a foundation for the rapid reconstruction work
- from 1935.
-
- “2. Preparation for the re-strengthening of the German U-boat
- arm from 1925 (continuation), the merit of Lohmann in connection
- with the preparation for rapid construction in 1925,
- relationship to Spain, Argentine, Turkey: the first post war
- U-boat construction of the German Navy in Spain since 1927; 250
- ton specimen in Finland, preparation for rapid assembly;
- electric torpedo; training of U-boat personnel abroad in Spain
- and Finland. Formation of U-boat school in 1932 disguised as an
- anti-U-boat school.
-
- “3. Participation in the preparation for the reconstruction of
- the Luftwaffe (continuation). Preparations for a Naval Air Arm,
- Finance Aircraft Company Sevra, later Luftdienst CMRH; Naval
- Flying School Warnemunde; Air Station List, training of sea
- cadet candidates, Military tactical questions “Air Defense
- Journeys”, technical development, experimental station planning,
- trials, flying boat development DOX etc., catapult aircraft,
- arming, engines ground organization, aircraft torpedoes, the
- Deutschland Flight 1925 and the Seaplane Race 1926.
-
- “4. Economic rearmament (“the Tebeg”—Technical Advice and Supply
- Company as a disguised Naval Office abroad for investigating the
- position of raw materials for industrial capacity and other War
- economic questions.)
-
- “5. Various measures. (The NV Aerogeodetic Company—secret
- investigations.)
-
- “(c) _Planned armament work with the tacit approval of the Reich
- government, but behind the backs of the legislative bodies_
- (1928 to the taking over of power.)
-
- “1. The effect of the Lohmann case on the secret preparations;
- winding up of works which could not be advocated; resumption and
- carrying on of other work.
-
- “2. Finance question. (“Black Funds” and the Special Budget).
-
- “3. The Labor Committee and its objectives.
-
- “(d) _The Question of Marine Attaches_ (The continuation under
- disguise; open re-appointment 1932-1933).
-
- “(e) _The question of Disarmament of the Fleet abroad and in
- Germany_ (The Geneva Disarmament Conference 1927; the London
- Naval Treaty of 1930; the Anglo-French-Italian Agreement 1931.
- The League of Nations Disarmament Conference 1932).
-
- “_Part D (1933-1939. The Germany Navy during the Military
- Freedom Period)_
-
- “I. National Socialism and the question of the Fleet and of
- prestige at sea.
-
- “II. Incorporation of the navy in the National Socialist State.”
-
- “III. The Re-armament of the Navy under the Direction of the
- Reich Government in a Disguised Way.” (_C-17_)
-
-The policy development of the navy is also reflected from the financial
-side. The planned organization of the navy budget for armament measures
-was based on a co-ordination of military developments and political
-objectives. Military-political development was accelerated after the
-withdrawal from the League of Nations. (_C-17_)
-
-A captured document, entitled “_Chef der Marineleitung_, Berlin, 12 May
-1934,” and marked “Secret Commando Matter,” discusses the “Armament Plan
-(A.P.) for the 3rd Armament Phase.” (_C-153_). This document, which
-bears the facsimile signature of Raeder at the end, speaks of war tasks,
-war and operational plans, armament target, etc., and shows that it was
-distributed to many of the High Command of the Navy. Dated 12 May 1934,
-it shows that a primary objective was readiness for a war without any
-alert period. The following are pertinent extracts:
-
- * * * “The planned organization of armament measures is
- necessary for the realization of the target; this again requires
- a coordinated and planned expenditure in peace time. This
- organization of financial measures over a number of years
- according to the military viewpoint is found in the armament
- program and provides
-
- “_a._ for the _military leaders_ a sound basis for their
- operational considerations and
-
- “_b._ for the political leaders a clear picture of what may be
- achieved with the military means available at a given time.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “All theoretical and practical A-preparations are to be drawn up
- with a primary view to readiness for a war without any alert
- period.” (C-153)
-
-The conspiratorial nature of these Nazi plans and preparations long
-before the outbreak of hostilities is illustrated in many other ways.
-Thus, in 1934, Hitler instructed Raeder to keep secret the U-Boat
-construction program; also the actual displacement and speed of certain
-ships. Work on U-Boats had been going on, as already indicated, in
-Holland and Spain. The Nazi theory was ingenious in that respect. The
-Versailles Treaty forbade re-arming by the Germans in Germany, but the
-Nazis said it did not forbid them to rearm in Holland, Spain, and
-Finland.
-
-Secrecy was equally important then because of the pending naval
-negotiations with England. The subject was discussed in a conversation
-between Raeder and Adolf Hitler in June 1934. The record of that
-conversation (_C-189_) is not signed by Raeder, but in an interrogation
-on 8 November 1945, Raeder admitted that (_C-189_) was a record of this
-conversation, and that it was in his handwriting, though he did not sign
-his name at the end. The report is headed, “Conversation with the
-Fuehrer in June 1934 on the occasion of the resignation of the
-Commanding Officer of the _Karlsruhe_.” It reads:
-
- “1. Report by the C-in-C Navy concerning displacement of D. and
- E. (defensive weapons).
-
- “Fuehrer’s instructions: No mention must be made of a
- displacement of 25-26,000 tons, but only of improved 10,000-ton
- (ships). Also, the speed over 26 nautical miles may be stated.
-
- “2. C-in-C Navy expresses the opinion that later on the Fleet
- must anyhow be developed to oppose England, that therefore from
- 1936 onwards, the large ships must be armed with 35 c.m. guns
- (Like the King George Class).
-
- “3. The Fuehrer demands to keep the construction of the U-Boats
- completely secret. Plebiscite also in consideration of the
- Saar.” (_C-189_)
-
-In order to continue the increase in navy strength, as planned, more
-funds were needed than the navy had available. Hitler therefore proposed
-to put funds of the Labor Front at the disposal of the navy. This
-appears from another Raeder memorandum of a conversation between Raeder
-with Hitler, on 2 November 1934 (_C-190_). This report, again, is not
-signed, but it was found in Raeder’s personal file and seems clearly his
-memorandum. It is headed: “Conversation with the Fuehrer on 2.11.34 at
-the time of the announcement by the Commanding Officer of the “Emden”.
-It reads:
-
- “1. When I mentioned that the total funds to be made available
- for the armed forces for 1935 would presumably represent only a
- fraction of the required sum, and that therefore it was possible
- that the navy might be hindered in its plans, he replied that he
- did not think the funds would be greatly decreased. He
- considered it necessary that the navy be speedily increased by
- 1938 with the deadlines mentioned. In case of need, he will get
- Dr. Ley to put 120-150 million from the Labor Front at the
- disposal of the navy, as the money would still benefit the
- workers. Later in a conversation with Minister Goering and
- myself, he went on to say that he considered it vital that the
- navy be increased as planned, as no war could be carried on if
- the navy was not able to safeguard the ore imports from
- Scandinavia.
-
- “2. Then, when I mentioned that it would be desirable to have
- six U-Boats assembled at the time of the critical situation in
- the first quarter of 1935, he stated that he would keep this
- point in mind, and tell me when the situation demanded that the
- assembling should commence.” (_C-190_)
-
-Then there is an asterisk and a note at the bottom:
-
- “The order was not sent out. The first boats were launched in
- the middle of June 35 according to plan.” (_C-190_)
-
-The development of the armament industry by the use of foreign markets
-was a program encouraged by the navy, so that this industry would be
-able to supply the requirements of the navy in case of need. A directive
-of Raeder, dated 31 January 1933, and classified “Secret Commando
-Matter,” requires German industry to support the armament of the navy
-(_C-29_). It provides:
-
- “_TOP SECRET_
- _General directions for support given by the German Navy to the German
- Armament Industry_
-
- “The effects of the present economic depression have led here
- and there to the conclusion that there are no prospects of an
- active participation of the German Armament Industry abroad,
- even if the Versailles terms are no longer kept. There is no
- profit in it and it is therefore not worth promoting.
- Furthermore, the view has been taken that the increasing
- “self-sufficiency” would in any case make such participation
- superfluous.
-
- “However obvious these opinions may seem, formed because of the
- situation as it is today, I am nevertheless forced to make the
- following contradictory corrective points:
-
- “_a._ The economic crisis and its present effects must perforce
- be overcome sooner or later. Though equality of rights in war
- politics is not fully recognized today, it will, by the
- assimilation of weapons, be achieved at some period, at least to
- a certain extent,
-
- “_b._ The consequent estimation of the duties of the German
- Armament Industry lies mainly in the _Military-political_
- sphere. It is impossible for this industry to satisfy,
- militarily and economically, the growing demands made of it by
- limiting the deliveries to our own armed forces. Its capacity
- must therefore be increased by the delivery of supplies to
- foreign countries over and above our own requirements.
-
- “_c._ Almost every country is working to the same end today,
- even those which, unlike Germany, are not tied down by
- restrictions. Britain, France, North America, Japan, and
- especially Italy are making supreme efforts to ensure markets
- for their armament industries. The use of their diplomatic
- representations, of the propaganda voyages of their most modern
- ships and vessels, of sending missions and also of the
- guaranteeing of loans and insurance against deficits are not
- merely to gain commercially advantageous orders for their
- armament industries, but first and foremost to expand their
- output from the point of view of military policy.
-
- “_d._ It is just when the efforts to do away with the
- restrictions imposed on us have succeeded, that the German Navy
- has an ever-increasing and really vital interest in furthering
- the German Armament Industry and preparing the way for it in
- every direction in the competitive battle against the rest of
- the world.
-
- “_e._ If, however the German Armament Industry is to be able to
- compete in foreign countries, it must inspire the _confidence_
- of its purchasers. The condition for this is that secrecy for
- our own ends be not carried too far. The amount of material to
- be kept secret under all circumstances in the interest of the
- defence of the country is comparatively small. I would like to
- issue a warning against the assumption that, at the present
- stage of technical development in foreign industrial states, a
- problem of vital military importance which we perhaps have
- solved, has not been solved there. Solutions arrived at today,
- which may become known, if divulged to a third person by
- naturally always possible indiscretion, have often been already
- superseded by new and better solutions on our part, even at that
- time or at any rate after the copy has been made. It is of
- greater importance that we should be technically well to the
- fore in any really fundamental matters, than that less important
- points should be kept secret unnecessarily and excessively.
-
- “_f._ To conclude: I attach particular importance to
- guaranteeing the continuous support of the industry concerned by
- the navy, even after the present restrictions have been relaxed.
- If the purchasers are not made confident that something special
- is being offered them, the industry will not be able to stand up
- to the competitive battle and therefore will not be able to
- supply the requirements of the German Navy in case of need.”
- (C-29)
-
-This surreptitious rearmament, in violation of treaty obligations,
-starting even before the Nazi came into power, is illustrated by a 1932
-order of Raeder, chief of the naval command, addressed to the main naval
-command, regarding the concealed construction of torpedo tubes in
-E-Boats (_C-141_). He ordered that torpedo tubes be removed and stored
-in the naval arsenal but be kept ready for immediate refitting. By using
-only the number permitted under the Treaty, at a given time, and by
-storing them after satisfactory testing, the actual number of
-operationally effective E-Boats was constantly increased.
-
-This German order for the concealed armament of E-Boats, issued by
-Raeder on 10 February 1932, provides:
-
- “In view of our treaty obligations and the Disarmament
- Conference steps must be taken to prevent the 1st
- E-Boat-Half-Flotilla, which in a few months will consist of
- exactly similar newly built (E)-Boats, from appearing openly as
- a formation of torpedo-carrying boats as it is not intended to
- count these E-Boats against the number of torpedo-carrying boats
- allowed us.
-
- “I therefore order:
-
- “1. S2-S5, will be commissioned in the shipyard Luerssen,
- Vegesack without armament, and will be fitted with easily
- removable cover-sheet-metal on the spaces necessary for
- torpedo-tubes. The same will be arranged by T.M.I. [Inspectorate
- of Torpedoes and Mining] in agreement with the naval arsenal,
- for the Boat ‘S1’ which will dismantle its torpedo-tubes, on
- completion of the practice shooting, for fitting on another
- boat.
-
- “2. The torpedo-tubes of all S-Boats will be stored in the naval
- arsenal ready for immediate fitting. During the trial runs the
- torpedo-tubes will be taken on board one after the other for a
- short time to be fitted and for practice shooting so that only
- one boat at a time carries torpedo armament. For public
- consumption this boat will be in service for the purpose of
- temporary trials by the T.V.A. [Technical Research
- Establishment].
-
- “It should not anchor together with the other, unarmed boats of
- the Half-Flotilla because of the obvious similarity of type. The
- duration of firing, and consequently the length of time the
- torpedo-tubes are aboard, is to be as short as possible.
-
- “3. Fitting the torpedo-tubes on all E-Boats is intended as soon
- as the situation of the political control allows it.” (_C-141_)
-
-Along similar lines the navy was also carrying on the concealed
-preparation of auxiliary cruisers, under the disguised designation of
-Transport Ships O. The preparations under this order were to be
-completed by 1 April 1935. At the very time of construction of these
-ships as commercial ships, plans were made for their conversion. This
-was the result of a Top Secret order from the command office of the
-navy, dated 12 March 1934, and signed in draft by Groos. This order
-bears the seal of the _Reichministerium, Marineleitung_, over the draft
-signature. It provides:
-
- “Subject: Preparation of Auxiliary Cruisers.
-
- “It is intended to include in the Establishment Organization 35
- (_AG-Aufstellungsgliederung_) a certain number of auxiliary
- cruisers which are intended for use in operations on the high
- seas.
-
- “In order to disguise the intention and all the preparations the
- ships will be referred to as “Transport Ships O”. It is
- requested that in future this designation only will be used.
-
- “The preparations are to be arranged so that they can be
- completed by 1.4.35.” (_C-166_)
-
-In the official navy files, notes were kept year by year, from 1927 to
-1940, on the reconstruction of the German Navy. One of these notes
-discloses that the displacement of the battleship
-“_Scharnhorst-Gneisenau_” was actually greater than the tonnage which
-had been notified to the British under the treaty obligations:
-
- “The true displacement of the battleship
- ‘_Scharnhorst-Gneisenau_’ _and_ ‘F/G’ exceeds by 20 percent in
- both cases the displacement reported to the British.” (_C-23_)
-
-There is annexed to this document a table with reference to different
-ships, and two columns, headed “Displacement by Type”; one column reads
-“Actual Displacement,” and the other, “Notified Displacement.” The
-actual displacement of the “_Scharnhorst_”, is thus shown to be 31,300
-tons, although the notified displacement was only 26,000 tons. On the
-“F/G” actual was 41,700, while notified was 35,000. On the “HI”, actual
-was 56,200 tons, while notified was 46,850. And so on down the list.
-(_C-23_)
-
-In these notes there also occurs the statement:
-
- “In a clear cut program for the construction, the Fuehrer and
- Reich Chancellor has set the navy the task of carrying out the
- aims of his foreign policy.” (_C-23_)
-
-The German Navy constantly planned and committed violations of armament
-limitation, and with characteristic German thoroughness had prepared
-superficial pretexts to explain away these violations. Following a
-conference with the chief of “A” section [the military department of the
-Navy], an elaborate survey list was prepared and compiled, giving a
-careful list of the quantity and type of German naval armament and
-ammunition on hand under manufacture or construction (_C-32_). A
-statement of the justification or defense that might be used was
-included in those instances where the Versailles Treaty was violated or
-its allotment has been exceeded. The list contained 30 items under
-“Material Measures” and 14 items under “Measures of Organization.” The
-variety of details covered necessarily involved several sources within
-the navy, which must have realized their significance.
-
-This Top Secret document, which is headed “A Survey Report of German
-Naval Armament after Conference with Chief of “A” Section, dated 9
-September 1933,” contains three columns, one headed “Measure,” one
-headed “Material Measures, Details,” and the third headed “Remarks.” The
-“Remarks” contain the pretext or justification for explaining away the
-violations of the treaty. The following are examples:
-
-“1. Exceeding the permitted number of mines.” Then figures are given.
-“Remarks: Further mines are in part ordered, in part being delivered.”
-(_C-32_)
-
-“Number 2. Continuous storing of guns from the North Sea area for Baltic
-artillery batteries.” The remarks column reads, “Justification:
-Necessity for over-hauling. Cheaper repairs.” (_C-32_)
-
-“Number 6. Laying gun-platforms in the Kiel area.” Remarks: “The offense
-over and above that in serial number 3 lies in the fact that all
-fortifications are forbidden in the Kiel area. This justification will
-make it less severe; pure defense measures.” (_C-32_)
-
-“Number 7. Exceeding the calibre permitted for coastal batteries.”
-Remarks: “Possible justification is that, though the calibre is larger,
-the number of guns is less.” (_C-32_)
-
-“Number 8. Arming of mine-sweepers.” Remarks: “The guns are taken from
-the fleet reserve stores, have been temporarily installed only for
-training purposes. All nations arm their mine-sweeping forces (equality
-of rights).” (_C-32_)
-
-“Number 13. Exceeding the number of machine guns, et cetera, permitted.”
-Remarks: “Can be made light of.” (_C-32_)
-
-“Number 18. Construction of U-boat parts.” Remarks: “Difficult to
-detect. If necessary can be denied.” (_C-32_)
-
-“Number 20. Arming of fishing vessels.” Remarks: “For warning shots.
-Make little of it.” And so on throughout the list (_C-32_). This
-document must have been used as a guide for negotiators who were
-attending the Disarmament Conference, as to the position that they might
-take.
-
-E. _Withdrawal From the Disarmament Conference and the League of
-Nations: Building of the Air Force._
-
-At this point, on 14th October 1933, Germany withdrew from the
-International Disarmament Conference and from the League of Nations. The
-Nazis took this opportunity to break away from the international
-negotiations and to take an aggressive position on an issue which would
-not be serious enough to provoke reprisal from other countries. At the
-same time, Germany attached so much importance to this action that it
-considered the possibility of the application of sanctions by other
-countries. In anticipation of the probable nature of such sanctions and
-the countries which might apply them, plans were made for armed
-resistance on land, at sea, and in the air. Military preparations were
-ordered in a directive from the Reichsminister for Defense (von
-Blomberg) to the head of the Army High Command (Fritsch), the head of
-the Navy High Command, (Raeder), and the Reichsminister for Air,
-(Goering) (_C-140_). This directive, dated 25 October 1933, 11 days
-after the withdrawal from the Disarmament Conference and the League of
-Nations, provides:
-
- “1. The enclosed directive gives the basis for preparation of
- the armed forces in the case of sanctions being applied against
- Germany.
-
- “2. I request the chiefs of the Army and Navy High Command and
- the Reichsminister for Air to carry out the preparations in
- accordance with the following points:
-
- “(_a_) Strictest secrecy. It is of the utmost importance that no
- facts become known to the outside world from which preparation
- for resistance against sanctions can be inferred or which is
- incompatible with Germany’s existing obligations in the sphere
- of foreign policy regarding the demilitarized zone. If
- necessary, the preparations must take second place to this
- necessity.” (_C-140_)
-
-One of the immediate consequences of this action was that following the
-withdrawal from the League of Nations, Germany’s armament program was
-still further increased. As it was ordered on 12 May, 1934:
-
- “5. Owing to the speed of military political development since
- Germany quitted Geneva and based on the progress of the army,
- the new A-Plan will only be drawn up for a period of two years.
- The third A phase lasts accordingly from 1.4.34 to 31.3.36.”
- (_C-153_)
-
-On 10 March 1935, Goering announced that Germany was building a military
-air force. At page 1830 of _Das Archiv_ it is stated:
-
- “The Reich Minister for Aviation, General of the Airmen,
- Goering, in his talk with the special correspondent of the Daily
- Mail, Ward Price, expressed himself on the subject of the German
- Air Force.
-
- “General Goering said:
-
- “In the extension of our national defense [_Sicherheit_], it was
- necessary, as we repeatedly told the world, to take care of
- defense in the air. As far as that is concerned, I restricted
- myself to those measures absolutely necessary. The guiding line
- of my actions was, not the creation of an aggressive force which
- would threaten other nations, but merely the completion of a
- military aviation which would be strong enough to repel, at any
- time, attacks on Germany.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “In conclusion, the correspondent asked whether the German Air
- Force will be capable of repelling attacks on Germany. General
- Goering replied to that exactly as follows:
-
- “The German Air Force is just as passionately permeated with the
- will to defend the Fatherland to the last as it is convinced, on
- the other hand, that it will never be employed to threaten the
- peace of other nations.” (_2292-PS_)
-
-Since they had gone as far as they could on rearmament and the secret
-training of personnel, the next step necessary to the conspirators’
-program for aggressive war was a large-scale increase in military
-strength. This could no longer be done under disguise and camouflage,
-and would have to be known to the world. Accordingly, on 16 March 1935,
-there was promulgated a law for universal military service, in violation
-of Article 173 of the Versailles Treaty. That law appeared in the
-_Reichsgesetzblatt_, Title I, Vol. I, 1935, page 369. The text of the
-law itself provides:
-
- “In this spirit the German Reich Cabinet has today passed the
- following law:
-
- “Law for the Organization of the Armed Forces of March 16, 1935.
-
- “The Reich Cabinet has passed the following law which is
- herewith promulgated:
-
- “Section 1.
-
- “Service in the Armed Forces is based upon compulsory military
- duty.
-
- “Section 2.
-
- “In peace time, the German Army, including the police troops
- transferred to it, is organized into: 12 Corps and 36 Divisions.
-
- “Section 3.
-
- “The Reich Minister of War is charged with the duty of
- submitting immediately to the Reich Ministry detailed laws on
- compulsory military duty.” (_1654-PS_)
-
-The law is signed first by the Fuehrer and Reich Chancellor Adolf
-Hitler, and then by many other officials, including von Neurath, Frick,
-Schacht, Goering, Hess, and Frank. (_1654-PS_)
-
-F. _Assurances._
-
-As a part of their program to weaken resistance in other states, the
-Nazis followed a policy of making false assurances, thereby tending to
-create confusion and a false sense of security. Thus, on 21 May 1935,
-the same date on which Germany renounced the armament provisions of the
-Versailles Treaty, Hitler announced the intent of the German Government
-to respect the territorial limitations of the Versailles and Locarno
-Treaties. In his speech in the Reichstag on that date Hitler stated:
-
- “Therefore, the Government of the German Reich shall absolutely
- respect all other articles pertaining to the cooperation
- [_zusammenleben_] of the various nations including territorial
- agreements; revisions which will be unavoidable as time goes by
- it will carry out by way of a friendly understanding only.
-
- “The Government of the German Reich has the intention not to
- sign any treaty which it believes not to be able to fulfill.
- However, it will live up to every treaty signed voluntarily even
- if it was composed before this government took over. Therefore,
- it will in particular adhere to all the allegations under the
- Locarno Pact as long as the other partners of the pact also
- adhere to it.” (_2288-PS_)
-
-For convenient reference, the territorial limitations in the Locarno and
-Versailles Treaties, include the following:
-
-Article 1 of the Rhine Pact of Locarno, 16 October 1925, provides:
-
- “The High Contracting parties, collectively and severally,
- guarantee, in the manner provided in the following Articles: the
- maintenance of the territorial status quo, resulting from the
- frontiers between Germany and Belgium and between Germany and
- France and the inviolability of the said frontiers, as fixed by,
- or in pursuance of the Treaty of Peace, signed at Versailles, on
- June 28, 1919, and also the observance of the stipulation of
- Articles 42 and 43 of the said Treaty, concerning the
- demilitarized zone.”
-
-That has reference, of course, to the demilitarized zone of the
-Rhineland.
-
-Article 42 of the Versailles Treaty, 28 June 1919, provides:
-
- “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 the line drawn 50 kilometers to the
- east of the Rhine.”
-
-Article 43 provides:
-
- “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.”
-
-G. _Reoccupation of the Rhineland._
-
-The demilitarized zone of the Rhineland was a sore spot with the Nazis
-ever since its establishment after World War I. Not only was this a blow
-to their increasing pride, but it was a bar to any effective strong
-position which Germany might want to take on any vital issues. In the
-event of any sanctions against Germany, in the form of military action,
-the French and other powers would get well into Germany east of the
-Rhine, before any German resistance could even be put up. Therefore, any
-German plans to threaten or breach international obligations, or for any
-kind of aggression, required the preliminary reoccupation and
-refortification of this open Rhineland territory. Plans and preparations
-for the reoccupation of the Rhineland started very early.
-
-A document apparently signed in the handwriting of von Blomberg, deals
-with what is called “Operation _Schulung_”, meaning schooling or
-training (_C-139_). It is dated 2 May 1935 and refers to prior staff
-discussions on the subject. It is addressed to the Chief of the Army
-Command, who at that time was Fritsch; the Chief of the Navy High
-Command (Raeder); and the Reich Minister for Air (Goering). The document
-does not use the name “Rhineland” and does not, in terms, refer to it.
-It seems clear, however, that it was a plan for the military
-reoccupation of the Rhineland, in violation of the Treaty of Versailles
-and the Rhine Pact of Locarno. The first part, headed “Secret Document,”
-provides:
-
- “For the operation, suggested in the last staff talks of the
- Armed Forces, I lay down the _Code name Schulung_ [training].
-
- “The supreme direction of the operation ‘_Schulung_’ rests with
- the Reich Minister of Defense as this is a joint undertaking of
- the three services.
-
- “Preparations for the operation will begin forthwith according
- to the following directives:
-
- “1. General.
-
- “1. The operation must, on issue of the code word ‘Carry out
- _Schulung_,’ be executed by a surprise blow at lightning speed.
- _Strictest_ secrecy is necessary in the preparations and only
- the very smallest number of officers should be informed and
- employed in the drafting of reports, drawings, etc., and these
- officers only in person.
-
- “2. There is no time for mobilization of the forces taking part.
- These will be employed in their peace-time strength and with
- their peace-time equipment.
-
- “3. The preparation for the operation will be made without
- regard to the present inadequate state of our armaments. Every
- improvement of the state of our armaments will make possible a
- greater measure of preparedness and thus result in better
- prospects of success.” (_C-139_)
-
-The rest of the order deals with military details. There are certain
-points in this order which are inconsistent with any theory that it was
-merely a training order, or that it might have been defensive in nature.
-The operation was to be carried out as a surprise blow at lightning
-speed. The air forces were to provide support for the attack. There was
-to be reinforcement by the East Prussian division. Furthermore, since
-this order is dated 2 May 1935, which is about 6 weeks after the
-promulgation of the Conscription Law of 16 March 1935, it could hardly
-have been planned as a defensive measure against any expected sanctions
-which might have been applied by reason of the passage of the
-Conscription Law.
-
-The actual reoccupation of the Rhineland did not take place until 7
-March, 1936, and this early plan (_C-139_) necessarily underwent
-revision to suit changed conditions and specific objectives. That the
-details of this particular plan were not ultimately the ones that were
-carried out in reoccupying the Rhineland does not detract from the fact
-that as early as 2 May 1935, the Germans had already planned that
-operation, not merely as a staff plan but as a definite operation. It
-was evidently not on their timetable to carry out the operation so soon,
-if it could be avoided. But they were prepared to do so if necessary.
-
-It is significant to note the date of this order is the same as the date
-of the signing of the Franco-Russian Pact, which the Nazis later
-asserted as their excuse for the Rhineland reoccupation.
-
-The military orders on the basis of which the Rhineland reoccupation was
-actually carried into execution on 7 March 1936, were issued on 2 March
-1936 by the War Minister and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, von
-Blomberg. They were addressed to the Commander-in-Chief of the Army
-(Fritsch), the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy (Raeder), and the Air
-Minister and C-in-C of the Air Force (Goering) (_C-159_). That order,
-classified “Top Secret”, in the original bears Raeder’s initial in green
-pencil, with a red pencil note, “To be submitted to the C-in-C of the
-Navy”.
-
-The first part of the Order reads:
-
- “Supreme Command of the Navy:
-
- “1. The Fuehrer and Reich Chancellor has made the following
- decision:
-
- “By reason of the Franco-Russian alliance, the obligations
- accepted by Germany in the Locarno Treaty, as far as they apply
- to Articles 42 and 43 of the Treaty of Versailles, which
- referred to the demilitarized zone, are to be regarded as
- obsolete.
-
- “2. Sections of the army and air force will therefore be
- transferred simultaneously in a surprise move to garrisons of
- the demilitarized zone. In this connection, I issue the
- following orders: * * *” (_C-159_)
-
-There follow detailed orders for the military operation.
-
-The order for Naval cooperation was issued on 6 March 1936, in the form
-of an order on behalf of the Reich Minister for War, von Blomberg,
-signed by Keitel, and addressed to the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy
-(Raeder) (_C-194_). The order set out detailed instructions for the
-Commander-in-Chief of the Fleet and the admirals commanding the Baltic
-and North Sea. The short covering letter is as follows:
-
- “To: C-in-C Navy:
-
- “The Minister has decided the following after the meeting:
-
- “1. The inconspicuous air reconnaissance in the German bay, not
- over the line Texel-Doggerbank, from midday on Z-Day onward, has
- been approved. C-in-C air force will instruct the air command VI
- from midday 7 March to hold in readiness single reconnaissance
- aircraft to be at the disposal of the C-in-C fleet.
-
- “2. The Minister will reserve the decision to set up a U-Boat
- reconnaissance on line, until the evening of 7 March. The
- immediate transfer of U-Boats from Kiel to Wilhelmshaven has
- been approved.
-
- “3. The proposed advance measures for the most part exceed
- Degree of Emergency A and therefore are out of the question as
- the first counter-measures to be taken against military
- preparations of neighboring states. It is far more essential to
- examine the advance measures included in Degree of Emergency A,
- to see whether one or other of the especially conspicuous
- measures could not be omitted.” (_C-194_)
-
-The reoccupation and fortification of the Rhineland was carried out on 7
-March 1936. For the historical emphasis of this occasion, Hitler made a
-momentous speech on the same day, in which he declared:
-
- “Men of the German Reichstag! France has replied to the repeated
- friendly offers and peaceful assurances made by Germany by
- infringing the Reich pact through a military alliance with the
- Soviet Union exclusively directed against Germany. In this
- manner, however, the Locarno Rhine Pact has lost its inner
- meaning and ceased in practice to exist. Consequently, Germany
- regards herself, for her part, as no longer bound by this
- dissolved treaty. The German government are now constrained to
- face the new situation created by this alliance, a situation
- which is rendered more acute by the fact that the Franco-Soviet
- treaty has been supplemented by a Treaty of Alliance between
- Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union exactly parallel in form. In
- accordance with the fundamental right of a nation to secure its
- frontiers and ensure its possibilities of defense, the German
- government have today restored the full and unrestricted
- sovereignty of Germany in the demilitarized zone of the
- Rhineland.” (_2289-PS_)
-
-The German reoccupation of the demilitarized zone of the Rhineland
-caused extensive international repercussions. As a result of the
-protests lodged with the League of Nations, the Council of the League
-made an investigation and announced the following finding, which is
-published in the League of Nations monthly summary, March, 1936, Volume
-16, Page 78. [It is also quoted in the _American Journal of
-International Law_, page 487 (1936)]:
-
- “That the German government has committed a breach of Article 43
- of the Treaty of Versailles, by causing on March 7, 1936,
- military forces to enter and establish themselves in the
- demilitarized zone, referred to in Article 42 and the following
- articles of that Treaty, and in the Treaty of Locarno. At the
- same time, on March 7, 1936, the Germans reoccupied the
- Rhineland in flagrant violation of the Versailles and Locarno
- Treaties. They again tried to allay the fears of other European
- powers and lead them into a false sense of security by
- announcing to the world ‘we have no territorial demands to make
- in Europe.’”
-
-The last phrase occurred in Hitler’s speech on 7 March 1936:
-
- “We have no territorial claims to make in Europe. We know above
- all that all the tensions resulting either from false
- territorial settlements or from the disproportion of the numbers
- of inhabitants to their living space cannot, in Europe, be
- solved by war.” (_2289-PS_)
-
-The existence of prior plans and preparations for the reoccupation and
-fortification of the Rhineland is indisputable. The method and sequence
-of these plans and their accomplishments are clearly indicative of the
-increasingly aggressive character of the Nazi objectives, international
-obligations and considerations of humanity notwithstanding.
-
-The Nazi conspirators were determined, as these documents have shown, to
-use whatever means were necessary to abrogate and overthrow the Treaty
-of Versailles and its restrictions upon the military armament and
-activity of Germany. In this process, they conspired and engaged in
-secret armament and training, the secret production of munitions of war,
-and they built up an air force. They withdrew from the International
-Disarmament Conference and the League of Nations on 14 October 1933.
-They instituted universal military service on 16 March 1935. On 21 May
-1935 they falsely announced that they would respect the territorial
-limitations of Versailles and Locarno. On March 7 1936 they reoccupied
-and fortified the Rhineland and at the same time, falsely announced that
-they had no territorial demands in Europe.
-
-The accomplishment of all these objectives, particularly the repudiation
-of the Versailles Treaty restrictions, opened the gates for the numerous
-aggressions which were to follow.
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO PREPARATION FOR
- AGGRESSION: 1933-1936
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6 (a). │ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Sections IV (F) │ │
- │ 1, 2; V. │ I │ 22, 29
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document was referred to during the │ │
- │trial but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
-  *789-PS │Speech of the Fuehrer at a conference, │ │
- │23 November 1939, to which all Supreme │ │
- │Commanders were ordered. (USA 23) │ III │ 572
- │ │ │
- *1143-PS │Letter from Schickendanz to Rosenberg, │ │
- │20 October 1932, for personal │ │
- │transmission to Hess concerning │ │
- │organization of Air Force. (USA 40) │ III │ 806
- │ │ │
- *1168-PS │Unsigned Schacht memorandum to Hitler, 3│ │
- │May 1935, concerning the financing of │ │
- │the armament program. (USA 37) │ III │ 827
- │ │ │
- *1639-A-PS │Mobilization book for the Civil │ │
- │Administration, 1939 Edition, issued │ │
- │over signature of Keitel. (USA 777) │ IV │ 143
- │ │ │
-**1654-PS │Law of 16 March 1935 reintroducing │ │
- │universal military conscription. 1935 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 369. │ │
- │(Referred to but not offered in │ │
- │evidence) │ IV │ 163
- │ │ │
- *2194-PS │Top secret letter from Ministry for │ │
- │Economy and Labor, Saxony, to Reich │ │
- │Protector in Bohemia and Moravia, │ │
- │enclosing copy of 1938 Secret Defense │ │
- │Law of 4 September 1938. (USA 36) │ IV │ 843
- │ │ │
- *2261-PS │Directive from Blomberg to Supreme │ │
- │Commanders of Army, Navy and Air Forces,│ │
- │24 June 1935; accompanied by copy of │ │
- │Reich Defense Law of 21 May 1935 and │ │
- │copy of Decision of Reich Cabinet of 12 │ │
- │May 1935 on the Council for defense of │ │
- │the Reich. (USA 24) │ IV │ 934
- │ │ │
- *2288-PS │Adolf Hitler’s speech before the │ │
- │Reichstag, published in Voelkischer │ │
- │Beobachter, Southern Germany Special │ │
- │Edition, No. 142a, 22 May 1935. (USA 38)│ IV │ 993
- │ │ │
- *2289-PS │Hitler’s speech in the Reichstag, 7 │ │
- │March 1936, published in Voelkischer │ │
- │Beobachter, Berlin Edition, No. 68, 8 │ │
- │March 1936. (USA 56) │ IV │ 994
- │ │ │
- *2292-PS │Interview of Goering by representative │ │
- │of London Daily Mail, concerning the │ │
- │German Air Force, from German report in │ │
- │The Archive, March 1935, p. 1830. (USA │ │
- │52) │ IV │ 995
- │ │ │
- *2322-PS │Hitler’s speech before the Reichstag, 1 │ │
- │September 1939. (USA 39) │ IV │ 1026
- │ │ │
- *2353-PS │Extracts from General Thomas’ Basic │ │
- │Facts for History of German War and │ │
- │Armament Economy. (USA 35) │ IV │ 1071
- │ │ │
-  2907-PS │Notes of conferences of Reich Ministers │ │
- │on 12 September 1933, 13 October 1933, │ │
- │and 14 October 1933. │ V │ 572
- │ │ │
- *3054-PS │“The Nazi Plan”, script of a motion │ │
- │picture composed of captured German │ │
- │film. (USA 167) │ V │ 801
- │ │ │
- *3308-PS │Affidavit by Paul Otto Gustav Schmidt, │ │
- │28 November 1945. (GB 288) │ V │ 1100
- │ │ │
- *3474-PS │Manuscript notes by Bodenschatz on │ │
- │conference of German Air Forces leaders,│ │
- │2 December 1936. (USA 580) │ VI │ 199
- │ │ │
- *3575-PS │Memorandum, 19 November 1938, concerning│ │
- │meeting of Reich Defense Council. (USA │ │
- │781) │ VI │ 267
- │ │ │
-  3581-PS │Letter from Minister of Interior to │ │
- │Minister of Propaganda Goebbels, 20 July│ │
- │1934, concerning unauthorized press │ │
- │releases about military affairs. │ VI │ 278
- │ │ │
-  3585-PS │Letter from Chief of Staff of Army (von │ │
- │Fritsch) to Minister of War, 8 October │ │
- │1934, enclosing memorandum signed by │ │
- │Brauchitsch 29 September 1934, on │ │
- │military situation in East Prussia. │ VI │ 279
- │ │ │
-  3586-PS │Directive to Counter-Intelligence units,│ │
- │16 October 1934, directing that new │ │
- │troop units which may be activated │ │
- │should be listed in telephone books only│ │
- │under camouflage designations. │ VI │ 281
- │ │ │
-  3587-PS │Memorandum from Beck, 14 November 1934, │ │
- │forbidding public use of designation │ │
- │“General Staff”. │ VI │ 282
- │ │ │
-  *C-17 │Extracts from History of the German Navy│ │
- │1919-1939. (USA 42) │ VI │ 819
- │ │ │
-  *C-23 │Unsigned documents found in official │ │
- │Navy files containing notes year by year│ │
- │from 1927 to 1940 on reconstruction of │ │
- │the German Navy, and dated 18 February │ │
- │1938, 8 March 1938, September 1938. (USA│ │
- │49) │ VI │ 827
- │ │ │
-  *C-29 │Directive of 31 January 1933 by Raeder │ │
- │for German Navy to support the armament │ │
- │industry. (USA 46) │ VI │ 830
- │ │ │
-  *C-32 │Survey report of German Naval Armament │ │
- │after conference with Chief of “A” │ │
- │Section, 9 September 1933. (USA 50) │ VI │ 833
- │ │ │
-  *C-135 │Extract from history of war organization│ │
- │and of the scheme for mobilization. (GB │ │
- │213) │ VI │ 946
- │ │ │
-  *C-139 │Directive for operation “Schulung” │ │
- │signed by Blomberg, 2 May 1935. (USA 53)│ VI │ 951
- │ │ │
-  *C-140 │Directive for preparations in event of │ │
- │sanctions, 25 October 1935, signed by │ │
- │Blomberg. (USA 51) │ VI │ 952
- │ │ │
-  *C-141 │Order for concealed armament of E-boats,│ │
- │10 February 1932, signed by Raeder. (USA│ │
- │47) │ VI │ 955
- │ │ │
-  *C-153 │Naval Armament Plan for the 3rd Armament│ │
- │Phase, signed by Raeder, 12 May 1934. │ │
- │(USA 43) │ VI │ 967
- │ │ │
-  *C-156 │Concealed Rearmament under Leadership of│ │
- │Government of Reich, from “Fight of the │ │
- │Navy against Versailles 1919-1935”. (USA│ │
- │41) │ VI │ 970
- │ │ │
-  *C-159 │Order for Rhineland occupation signed by│ │
- │Blomberg, 2 March 1936. (USA 54) │ VI │ 974
- │ │ │
-  *C-166 │Order from Command Office of Navy, 12 │ │
- │March 1934, signed in draft by Groos, │ │
- │concerning preparation of auxiliary │ │
- │cruisers. (USA 48) │ VI │ 977
- │ │ │
-  *C-175 │OKW Directive for Unified Preparation │ │
- │for War 1937-1938, with covering letter │ │
- │from von Blomberg, 24 June 1937. (USA │ │
- │69) │ VI │ 1006
- │ │ │
-  *C-189 │Conversation with the Fuehrer in June │ │
- │1934 on occasion of resignation of │ │
- │Commanding Officer of “Karlsruhe”. (USA │ │
- │44) │ VI │ 1017
- │ │ │
-  *C-190 │Memorandum of conversation with Hitler │ │
- │on financing Naval rearmament and │ │
- │assembling six submarines, 2 November │ │
- │1934. (USA 45) │ VI │ 1018
- │ │ │
-  *C-194 │Orders by Keitel and Commander-in-Chief │ │
- │of Navy, 6 March 1936, for Navy │ │
- │cooperation in Rhineland occupation. │ │
- │(USA 55) │ VI │ 1019
- │ │ │
-  *EC-177 │Minutes of second session of Working │ │
- │Committee of the Reich Defense held on │ │
- │26 April 1933. (USA 390) │ VII │ 328
- │ │ │
-  *EC-404 │Minutes of conference of Sixth Session │ │
- │of Working Committee of Reichs Defense │ │
- │Council, held on 23 and 24 January 1934.│ │
- │(USA 764) │ VII │ 443
- │ │ │
-  *EC-405 │Minutes of Tenth Meeting of Working │ │
- │Committee of Reichs Defense Council, 26 │ │
- │June 1935. (GB 160) │ VII │ 450
- │ │ │
-  *EC-406 │Minutes of Eleventh Meeting of Reichs │ │
- │Defense Council, 6 December 1935. (USA │ │
- │772) │ VII │ 455
- │ │ │
-  *EC-407 │Minutes of Twelfth Meeting of Reichs │ │
- │Defense Council, 14 May 1936. (GB 247) │ VII │ 462
- │ │ │
-  *L-79 │Minutes of conference, 23 May 1939, │ │
- │“Indoctrination on the political │ │
- │situation and future aims”. (USA 27) │ VII │ 847
- │ │ │
-  *L-172 │“The Strategic Position at the Beginning│ │
- │of the 5th Year of War”, a lecture │ │
- │delivered by Jodl on 7 November 1943 at │ │
- │Munich to Reich and Gauleiters. (USA 34)│ VII │ 920
- │ │ │
-  *TC-44 │Notice by German government of existence│ │
- │of German Air Force, 9 March 1935. (GB │ │
- │11) VIII │ 386 │
- │ │ │
-   TC-45 │Proclamation to German People of 16 │ │
- │March 1935. │ VIII │ 388
- │ │ │
-   TC-46 │German memorandum to Signatories of │ │
- │Locarno Pact reasserting full German │ │
- │sovereignty over Rhineland, 7 March │ │
- │1936. │ VIII │ 394
- │ │ │
-Statement VII │The Development of German Naval │ │
- │Policy—1933-1939 by Erich Raeder, │ │
- │Moscow, fall 1945. │ VIII │ 684
- │ │ │
-Statement XIV │Hungarian Relations with Germany Before │ │
- │and During the War by Nicholas Horthy, │ │
- │Jr., Nurnberg, 22 February 1946. │ VIII │ 756
-
-
- 3. AGGRESSION AGAINST AUSTRIA
-
-A. _The Events Leading up to the Autumn of 1937 and the Strategic
-Position of the National Socialists in Austria._
-
-(1) _The National Socialist Aim of Absorption of Austria._ In order to
-understand more clearly how the Nazi conspirators proceeded after the
-meeting in the Reichschancellery on 5 November 1937, at which Hitler
-laid plans for the conquest of Austria and Czechoslovakia (_386-PS_), it
-is advisable to review the steps which had already been taken in Austria
-by the National Socialists of both Germany and Austria. The position
-which the Nazis had reached by the Fall of 1937 made it possible for
-them to complete their absorption of Austria much sooner and with less
-cost than was contemplated in this meeting.
-
-The acquisition of Austria had long been a central aim of the German
-National Socialists. On the first page of _Mein Kampf_, Hitler had
-written, “German-Austria must return to the great German mother-land.”
-He continued by stating that this purpose, of having common blood in a
-common Reich, could not be satisfied by a mere economic union. This aim
-was regarded as a serious program which the Nazis were determined to
-carry out.
-
-This fact is borne out by an affidavit executed in Mexico City on 28
-August 1945 by George S. Messersmith, United States Ambassador in Mexico
-City (_1760-PS_). Mr. Messersmith was Consul General of the United
-States of America in Berlin from 1930 to the late Spring of 1934. He was
-then made American Minister in Vienna, where he stayed until 1937. In
-this affidavit he states that the nature of his work brought him into
-frequent contact with German Government officials, many of whom were, on
-most occasions, amazingly frank in their conversations, and made no
-concealment of their aims.
-
-In particular, Mr. Messersmith states that he had contact with the
-following twenty governmental officials, among others: Hermann Goering,
-General Milch, Hjalmar Schacht, Hans Frank, Wilhelm Frick, Count
-Schwerin von Krosigk, Josef Goebbels, Richard Walter Darré, Robert Ley,
-Hans Heinrich Lammers, Otto Meissner, Franz von Papen, Walter Funk,
-General Wilhelm Keitel, Admiral Erich von Raeder, Admiral Karl Doenitz,
-Dr. Behle, Dr. Stuckart, Gustav Krupp von Bohlen, and Dr. Davidson. Mr.
-Messersmith further states that in addition to this contact with
-officials of the Government he maintained contact with individuals in
-all parties in Germany in order to keep himself and the Government
-informed of political developments in Germany.
-
-With regard to the Austrian matter, he states that from the very
-beginning of the Nazi Party he was told by both high and secondary
-government officials in Germany that incorporation of Austria into
-Germany was both a political and economic necessity and that this
-incorporation was going to be accomplished “by whatever means were
-necessary.” He further states:
-
- “I can assert that it was fully understood by everyone in
- Germany who had any knowledge whatever of what was going on that
- Hitler, and the Nazi Government were irrevocably committed to
- this end and the only doubt which ever existed in conversations
- or statements to me was ‘how’ and ‘when.’” (_1760-PS_).
-
-As Mr. Messersmith relates, at the beginning of the Nazi regime in 1933
-Germany was too weak to make open threats of force against any country.
-It developed a policy of securing its aims in Austria in the same manner
-as in Germany—by obtaining a foothold in the Cabinet, particularly in
-the Ministry of Interior which controls the police, and quickly
-eliminating the opposition elements. Mr. Messersmith states that
-throughout his stay in Austria he was told on any number of occasions by
-high officials of the Austrian Government, including Chancellor
-Dollfuss, Chancellor Schuschnigg, and President Miklas, that the German
-Government kept up constant pressure upon the Austrian Government to
-appoint ministers with Nazi orientation.
-
-(2) _Pressure Used, Including Terror and Intimidation, Culminating in
-the Unsuccessful Putsch of 25 July 1934._ To achieve their end the Nazis
-used various pressures. They used economic pressure. The law of 24 March
-1933 imposed a prohibitive 1,000 reichsmark penalty on trips to Austria,
-thus bringing hardship to Austria, which relied heavily on its tourist
-trade (_Reichsgesetzblatt_ 1933, I, 311). The Nazis used propaganda. And
-they used terroristic acts, primarily bombings.
-
-Mr. Messersmith’s affidavit (_1760-PS_) goes into some detail with
-respect to these means. Although they were committed by National
-Socialists in Austria, high Nazi officials in Germany admitted to Mr.
-Messersmith that they were instigating and directing these waves of
-terror in Austria. They made no effort to conceal their use of terror,
-which they justified on the ground that terror was a necessary
-instrument to impose the will of the party not only in Germany but in
-other countries. Mr. Messersmith recalls specifically that General Milch
-of the Air Force stated that the terrorism in Austria was being directed
-by the Nazi Party in Berlin.
-
-Mr. Messersmith points out that all these outrages were a common
-occurrence. They had peaks and distinct periods, one in mid-1933 and
-another in early 1934. He points out that the wave of outrages in May
-and June 1934 diminished markedly for a few days during the meeting of
-Hitler and Mussolini in Venice, in mid-June 1934. (At that time
-Mussolini was strongly supporting the Austrian Government and interested
-in its independence.) Mr. Messersmith’s affidavit quotes extensively
-from dispatches sent from the American Legation in Vienna to the State
-Department during this period. These dispatches indicate that the terror
-was often directed at Catholic Churches and institutions, and at
-railways and tourist centers.
-
-Mr. Messersmith also recalls that in addition, the Nazis maintained a
-threat of violent action against Austria through the “Austrian Legion.”
-This was a para-military force of several thousand men, armed by the
-Nazis in Germany, and stationed in Germany near the Austrian border. It
-included Austrian Nazis who fled from Austria after committing crimes.
-
-These terroristic activities of the Nazis in Austria continued until
-July 25, 1934. On that day members of the NSDAP attempted a
-revolutionary putsch and killed Chancellor Dollfuss. A message from Mr.
-Hadow, of the British Legation in Vienna, to Sir John Simon contains
-details of the putsch (_2985-PS_). The official version of events given
-verbally by the Austrian Government to the diplomatic Corps, as set
-forth in this document, stated that approximately a hundred men
-attempting the putsch seized the Federal Chancellery. Chancellor
-Dollfuss was wounded in trying to escape, being shot twice at close
-quarters. The Radio Building in the center of the town was overwhelmed,
-and the announcer was compelled to broadcast the news that Dollfuss had
-resigned and Doctor Rintelen had taken his place as Chancellor.
-
-Although the putsch failed, the insurgents kept control of the
-Chancellery Building and agreed to give it up only after they had a
-safe-conduct to the German border. The insurgents contacted the German
-Minister, Dr. Rieth, by telephone, and subsequently had private
-negotiations with him in the building. At about 7:00 p. m. they yielded
-the building, but Chancellor Dollfuss died about 6:00 p. m., not having
-had the services of a doctor.
-
-The German Government denied all complicity in the putsch and
-assassination. Hitler removed Dr. Rieth as Minister on the ground that
-he had offered a safe-conduct to the rebels without making inquiry of
-the German Government, and had thus without any reason dragged the
-German Reich into an internal Austrian affair. This statement appears in
-the letter which Hitler sent to Franz von Papen on the 26th day of July
-1934. (_2799-PS_)
-
-Although the German Government denied any knowledge or complicity in
-this putsch, there is ample basis for the conclusion that the German
-Nazis bear responsibility for the events. Light is shed on this matter
-in the extensive record of the trial of the Austrian Nazi, Planetta, and
-others who were convicted for the murder, and in the Austrian Brown Book
-issued after July 25. Mr. Messersmith’s affidavit offers further
-evidence:
-
- “The events of the Putsch of July 25, 1934, are too well known
- for me to repeat them in this statement. I need say here only
- that there can be no doubt that the Putsch was ordered and
- organized by the Nazi officials from Germany through their
- organization in Austria made up of German Nazis and Austrian
- Nazis. Dr. Rieth, the German Minister in Vienna, was fully
- familiar with all that was going to happen and that was being
- planned. The German Legation was located directly across the
- street from the British Legation and the Austrian secret police
- kept close watch on the persons who entered the German Legation.
- The British had their own secret service in Vienna at the time
- and they also kept a discreet surveillance over people entering
- the German Legation. I was told by both British and Austrian
- officials that a number of the men who were later found guilty
- by the Austrian Courts of having been implicated in the Putsch
- had frequented the German Legation. In addition, I personally
- followed very closely the activities of Dr. Rieth and I never
- doubted on the basis of all my information that Dr. Rieth was in
- close touch and constant touch with the Nazi agents in Austria;
- these agents being both German and Austrian. Dr. Rieth could not
- have been unfamiliar with the Putsch and the details in
- connection therewith. I recall too very definitely from my
- conversations with the highest officials of the Austrian
- Government after the Putsch, their informing me that Dr. Rieth
- had been in touch with von Rintelen, who it had been planned by
- the Nazis was to succeed Chancellor Dollfuss had the Putsch been
- successful.
-
- “It may be that Dr. Rieth was himself not personally sympathetic
- with the plans for the Putsch but there is no question that he
- was fully familiar with all these plans and must have given his
- assent thereto and connived therein.
-
- “As this Putsch was so important and was a definite attempt to
- overthrow the Austrian Government and resulted in the murder of
- the Chancellor of Austria, I took occasion to verify at the time
- for myself various other items of evidence indicating that the
- Putsch was not only made with the knowledge of the German
- Government but engineered by it. I found and verified that
- almost a month before the Putsch, Goebbels told Signor Cerruti,
- the Italian Ambassador in Berlin, that there would be a Nazi
- Government in Vienna in a month.” (_1760-PS_)
-
-Mr. William Dodd, Ambassador of the United States to Germany, published
-in 1941 his Diary, covering the years 1933-1938 (_2832-PS_). The diary
-contains an entry for July 26, 1934, which makes the following
-observations. First, Ambassador Dodd noted that in February, 1934, Ernst
-Hanfstaengl had advised him that he had brought what was virtually an
-order from Mussolini to Hitler to leave Austria alone and to dismiss and
-silence Theodor Habicht, the German agent in Munich who had been
-agitating for annexation of Austria. On 18 June, in Venice, Hitler was
-reported to have promised Mussolini to leave Austria alone.
-
-Mr. Dodd further states:
-
- “On Monday, July 23, after repeated bombings in Austria by
- Nazis, a boat loaded with explosives was seized on Lake
- Constance by the Swiss police. It was a shipment of German bombs
- and shells to Austria from some arms plant. That looked ominous
- to me, but events of the kind had been so common that I did not
- report it to Washington.
-
- “Today evidence came to my desk that last night, as late as
- eleven o’clock, the government issued formal statements to the
- newspapers rejoicing at the fall of Dollfuss and proclaiming the
- Greater Germany that must follow. The German Minister in Vienna
- had actually helped to form the new Cabinet. He had, as we now
- know, exacted a promise that the gang of Austrian Nazi murderers
- should be allowed to go into Germany undisturbed. But it was
- realized about 12 o’clock that, although Dollfuss was dead, the
- loyal Austrians had surrounded the government palace and
- prevented the organization of a new Nazi regime. They held the
- murderers prisoners. The German Propaganda Ministry therefore
- forbade publication of the news sent out an hour before and
- tried to collect all the releases that had been distributed. A
- copy was brought to me today by a friend.
-
- “All the German papers this morning lamented the cruel murder
- and declared that it was simply an attack of discontented
- Austrians, not Nazis. News from Bavaria shows that thousands of
- Austrian Nazis living for a year in Bavaria on German support
- had been active for ten days before, some getting across the
- border contrary to law, all drilling and making ready to return
- to Austria. The German propagandist Habicht was still making
- radio speeches about the necessity of annexing the ancient realm
- of the Hapsburgs to the Third Reich, in spite of all the
- promises of Hitler to silence him. But now that the drive has
- failed and the assassins are in prison in Vienna, the German
- Government denounces all who say there was any support from
- Berlin.
-
- “I think it will be clear one day that millions of dollars and
- many arms have been pouring into Austria since the spring of
- 1933. Once more the whole world is condemning the Hitler regime.
- No people in all modern history has been quite so unpopular as
- Nazi Germany. This stroke completes the picture. I expect to
- read a series of bitter denunciations in the American papers
- when they arrive about ten days from now.” (_2832-PS_)
-
-In connection with the German Government’s denial of any connection with
-the putsch and the murder of Dollfuss, the letter of appointment which
-Hitler wrote to Vice-Chancellor von Papen on 26 July 1934 is
-significant. This letter appears in a standard German reference work,
-_Dokumente der Deutschen Politik, II, Page 83_ (_2799-PS_). (In
-considering the letter the report wide-spread at the time should be
-recalled, that von Papen narrowly missed being purged on 30 June, 1944,
-along with Ernst Roehm and others.) The letter reads as follows:
-
- “26 July 1934
-
- “Dear Mr. von Papen
-
- “As a result of the events in Vienna I am compelled to suggest
- to the Reichs President the removal of the German Minister to
- Vienna, Dr. Rieth, from his post, because he, at the suggestion
- of Austrian Federal Ministers and the Austrian rebels
- respectively consented to an agreement made by both these
- parties concerning the safe conduct and retreat of the rebels to
- Germany without making inquiry of the German Reich Government.
- Thus the Minister has dragged the German Reich into an internal
- Austrian affair without any reason.
-
- “The assassination of the Austrian Federal Chancellor which was
- strictly condemned and regretted by the German Government has
- made the situation in Europe, already fluid, more acute, without
- any fault of ours. Therefore, it is my desire to bring about if
- possible an easing of the general situation, and especially to
- direct the relations with the German Austrian State, which have
- been so strained for a long time, again into normal and friendly
- channels.
-
- “For this reason, I request you, dear Mr. von Papen, to take
- over this important task, just because you have possessed and
- continue to possess my most complete and unlimited confidence
- ever since we have worked together in the Cabinet—
-
- “Therefore, I have suggested to the Reichs President that you,
- upon leaving the Reich-Cabinet and upon release from the office
- of Commissioner for the Saar, be called on special mission to
- the post of the German Minister in Vienna for a limited period
- of time. In this position you will be directly subordinated to
- me.
-
- “Thanking you once more for all that you have at one time done
- for the coordination of the Government of the National
- Revolution and since then together with us for Germany, I
- remain,
-
- Yours, very sincerely,
- Adolf Hitler.”
- (_2799-PS_)
-
-Four years later, on July 25, 1938, after the Anschluss with Austria,
-German officials no longer expressed regrets over the death of Dollfuss.
-They were eager and willing to reveal what the world already knew—that
-they were identified with and sponsors of the murder of the former
-Chancellor. A dispatch from the American Consul General in Vienna to the
-Secretary of State, dated July 26, 1938, relates to the Nazis’
-celebration of the murder of Dollfuss, held on July 24 and July 25,
-1938, four years after the event. It states:
-
- “The two high points of the celebration were the memorial
- assembly on the 24th at Klagenfurt, capital of the province of
- Carinthia, where in 1934 the Vienna Nazi revolt found its widest
- response, and the march on the 25th to the former Federal
- Chancellery in Vienna by the surviving members of the S.S.
- Standarte 89, which made the attack on the Chancellery in
- 1934—a reconstruction of the crime, so to say.
-
- “The assembled thousands at Klagenfurt were addressed by the
- Fuehrer’s deputy, Rudolf Hess, in the presence of the families
- of the 13 National Socialists who were hanged for their part in
- the July putsch. The Klagenfurt memorial celebration was also
- made the occasion for the solemn swearing in of the seven
- recently appointed Gauleiters of the Ostmark.
-
- “From the point of view of the outside world, the speech of
- Reichs Minister Hess was chiefly remarkable for the fact that
- after devoting the first half of his speech to the expected
- praise of the sacrifices of the men, women and youths of Austria
- in the struggle for a greater Germany, he then launched into a
- defense of the occupation of Austria and an attack on the ‘lying
- foreign press’ and on those who spread the idea of a new war.
- The world was fortunate, declared Hess, that Germany’s leader
- was a man who would not allow himself to be provoked. ‘The
- Fuehrer does what is necessary for his people in sovereign calm.
- * * * and labors for the peace of Europe’ even though
- provocators, ‘completely ignoring the deliberate threat to peace
- of certain small states,’ deceitfully claim that he is a menace
- to the peace of Europe.
-
- “The march on the former Federal Chancellery, now the
- Reichsstatthalterei, followed the exact route and time schedule
- of the original attack. The marchers were met at the Chancellery
- by the Reichsstatthalter Seyss-Inquart, who addressed them and
- unveiled a memorial tablet. From the Reichsstatthalterei the
- Standarte marched to the old RAVAG broadcasting center from
- which false news of the resignation of Dollfuss had been
- broadcast, and there unveiled a second memorial tablet.
- Steinhausl, the present Police President of Vienna, is a member
- of the S. S. Standarte 89”. (_L-273_)
-
-The original plaque is now rubble. But a photograph of it was found in
-The National Library in Vienna. [The photograph was offered in evidence
-at the trial. See _2968-PS_.] The plaque reads: “154 German men of 89 SS
-Standarte stood up here for Germany on July 26, 1934. Seven found death
-at the hands of the hangman”. The words chosen for this marble tablet,
-and it may be presumed that they were words chosen carefully, reveal
-clearly that the men involved were not mere malcontent Austrian
-revolutionaries, but were regarded as German men, were members of a
-para-military organization, who stood up here “for Germany.” In 1934
-Hitler repudiated Dr. Rieth because he “dragged the German Reich into an
-internal Austrian affair without any reason”. In 1938 Nazi Germany
-proudly identified itself with this murder, took credit for it, and took
-responsibility for it.
-
-(3) _The Program Culminating in the Pact of July 11, 1936._ In
-considering the activities of the Nazi conspirators in Austria between
-25 July 1934 and November 1937, there is a distinct intermediate point,
-the Pact of 11 July 1936. Accordingly, developments in the two-year
-period, July 1934 to July 1936, will first be reviewed.
-
-(_a_) _Continued Aim of Eliminating Austria’s Independence—Conversation
-and Activities of von Papen._ The Nazi conspirators pretended to respect
-the independence and sovereignty of Austria, notwithstanding the aim of
-Anschluss stated in _Mein Kampf_. But in truth and in fact they were
-working from the very beginning to destroy the Austrian State.
-
-A dramatic recital of the position of von Papen in this regard is
-provided in Mr. Messersmith’s affidavit. It states:
-
- “When I did call on von Papen in the German Legation, he greeted
- me with ‘Now you are in my Legation and I can control the
- conversation.’ In the baldest and most cynical manner he then
- proceeded to tell me that all of Southeastern Europe, to the
- borders of Turkey, was Germany’s natural hinterland, and that he
- had been charged with the mission of facilitating German
- economic and political control over all this region for Germany.
- He blandly and directly said that getting control of Austria was
- to be the first step. He definitely stated that he was in
- Austria to undermine and weaken the Austrian Government and from
- Vienna to work towards the weakening of the Governments in the
- other states to the South and Southeast. He said that he
- intended to use his reputation as a good Catholic to gain
- influence with certain Austrians, such as Cardinal Innitzer,
- towards that end. He said that he was telling me this because
- the German Government was bound on this objective of getting
- this control of Southeastern Europe and there was nothing which
- could stop it and that our own policy and that of France and
- England was not realistic.
-
- “The circumstances were such, as I was calling on him in the
- German Legation, that I had to listen to what he had to say and
- of course I was prepared to hear what he had to say although I
- already knew what his instructions were. I was nevertheless
- shocked to have him speak so baldly to me and when he finished I
- got up and told him how shocked I was to hear the accredited
- representative of a supposedly friendly state to Austria admit
- that he was proposing to engage in activities to undermine and
- destroy that Government to which he was accredited. He merely
- smiled and said, of course this conversation was between us and
- that he would of course, not be talking to others so clearly
- about his objectives. I have gone into this detail with regard
- to this conversation as it is characteristic of the absolute
- frankness and directness with which high Nazi officials spoke of
- their objectives.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “On the surface, however, German activities consisted
- principally of efforts to win the support of prominent and
- influential men through insidious efforts of all kinds,
- including the use of the German Diplomatic Mission in Vienna and
- its facilities and personnel. Von Papen as German Minister
- entertained frequently and on a lavish scale. He approached
- almost every member of the Austrian Cabinet, telling them, as
- several of them later informed me, that Germany was bound to
- prevail in the long run and that they should join the winning
- side if they wished to enjoy positions of power and influence
- under German control. Of course, openly and outwardly he gave
- solemn assurance that Germany would respect Austrian
- independence and that all that she wished to do was to get rid
- of elements in the Austrian Government like the Chancellor,
- Schuschnigg and Starhemberg as head of the Heimwehr and others,
- and replace them by a few ‘nationally-minded’ Austrians, which
- of course meant Nazis. The whole basic effort of von Papen was
- to bring about Anschluss.
-
- “In early 1935, the Austrian Foreign Minister, Berger-Waldenegg,
- informed me that in the course of a conversation with von Papen,
- the latter had remarked ‘Yes, you have your French and English
- friends now and you can have your independence a little longer’.
- The Foreign Minister, of course, told me this remark in German
- but the foregoing is an accurate translation. The Foreign
- Minister told me that he had replied to von Papen ‘I am glad to
- have from your own lips your own opinion which agrees with what
- your Chief has just said in the Saar and which you have taken
- such pains to deny.’
-
- “Von Papen undoubtedly achieved some successes, particularly
- with men like Glaise-Horstenau and others who had long favored
- the ‘Grossdeutschum’ idea, but who nevertheless had been greatly
- disturbed by the fate of the Catholic Church. Without conscience
- or scruple, von Papen exploited his reputation and that of his
- wife as ardent and devout Catholics to overcome the fears of
- these Austrians in this respect.” (_1760-PS_)
-
-(_b_) _Continued Existence of Nazi Organizations with a Program of Armed
-Preparedness._ The wiles of von Papen represented only one part of the
-total program of the Nazi conspiracy. At the same time Nazi activities
-in Austria, forced underground during this period, were carried on.
-
-Mr. Messersmith’s affidavit discloses the following: The Nazi
-organization, weakened in the events following the putsch, began
-reorganization work. An informant furnished the Austrian Government with
-a memorandum of a meeting of Austrian Nazi chiefs held in Bavaria,
-September, 1934. The memorandum shows that they agreed to prepare for
-new terroristic acts, to proceed brutally against persons cooperating
-with the Schuschnigg Government when the next action against the
-Government took place, and to appear disposed to negotiate but to arm
-for the struggle. A copy of this memorandum was furnished to Mr.
-Messersmith. At the same time the Austrian Legion was kept in readiness
-in Germany. This large, organized hostile group constituted a continuing
-menace for Austria. (_1760-PS_)
-
-The fact of the reorganization of the Nazi party in Austria is
-corroborated by a report of one of the Austrian Nazis, Rainer
-(_812-PS_). (_812-PS_ contains three parts. First there is a letter
-dated 22 August 1939 from Rainer, then Gauleiter at Salzburg, to
-Seyss-Inquart, then Reich Minister. That letter encloses a letter dated
-6 July 1939, written by Rainer to Reich Commissioner and Gauleiter Josef
-Buerckel. In that letter, in turn, Rainer inclosed a report on the
-events in the NSDAP of Austria from 1933 to 11 March 1938, the day
-before the invasion of Austria.)
-
-The letter from Rainer to Buerckel indicates that he was asked to
-prepare a short history of the role of the party. He states that after
-the Anschluss Hitler and the general public gave Seyss-Inquart alone
-credit for effecting the Anschluss. It is Rainer’s belief that credit
-belongs to the entire Party, the leaders of which had to remain
-underground. And so Rainer writes his report to show that the Party as a
-whole is entitled to “the glory which was excessively ascribed to one
-person, Dr. Seyss-Inquart”.
-
-Apparently Seyss-Inquart heard from Buerckel what Rainer said, and wrote
-to Rainer asking for an explanation. To avoid misunderstanding, Rainer
-prepared for Seyss-Inquart a copy of his letter to Buerckel and his
-report.
-
-The Rainer report tells of the disorganization of the Nazi party in
-Austria and of its reconstitution. The second and third paragraphs of
-the report state:
-
- “Thus the first stage of battle commenced which ended with the
- July rising of 1934. The decision for the July rising was right,
- the execution of it was faulty. The result was a complete
- destruction of the organization; the loss of entire groups of
- fighters through imprisonment or flight into the ‘Alt-Reich’;
- and with regard to the political relationship of Germany to
- Austria, a formal acknowledgment of the existence of the
- Austrian State by the German Government. With the telegram to
- PAPEN, instructing him to reinstitute normal relationships
- between the two states, the Fuehrer had liquidated the first
- stage of the battle; and a new method of political penetration
- was to begin. By order of the Fuehrer the Landesleitung Munich
- was dissolved, and the party in Austria was left to its own
- resources.
-
- “There was no acknowledged leader for the entire party in
- Austria. New leaderships were forming in the nine Gaus. The
- process was again and again interrupted by the interference of
- the police; there was no liaison between the formations, and
- frequently there were two, three or more rival leaderships. The
- first evident, acknowledged speaker of almost all the Gaus in
- Autumn 1934 was engineer REINTHALLER (already appointed
- Landesbauernfeuhrer (leader of the country’s farmers) by Hess).
- He endeavored to bring about a political appeasement by
- negotiations with the government, with the purpose of giving the
- NSDAP legal status again, thus permitting its political
- activities. Simultaneously Reinthaller started the
- reconstruction of the illegal political organization, at the
- head of which he had placed engineer NEUBACHER.” (_812-PS_)
-
-(_c_) _Secret Contacts Between German Officials, Including Papen, and
-the Austrian Nazis: the Use by the Austrian Nazis of “Front”
-Personalities._ Two cardinal factors about the Nazi organization in
-Austria should be borne in mind. First, although the Fuehrer had on the
-surface cast the Austrian Nazis adrift, in fact German officials,
-including Papen, maintained secret contact with the Austrian Nazis, in
-line with Hitler’s desires. German officials consulted and gave advice
-and support to the organization of the Austrian Nazis. In the second
-place, the Austrian Nazis remained an illegal organization, organizing
-for the eventual use of force in an “emergency.” But in the meanwhile
-they deemed it expedient to act behind “front” personalities, such as
-Seyss-Inquart, who had no apparent taint of illegality.
-
-Mr. Messersmith relates in his affidavit that he obtained a copy of a
-document outlining this Nazi program.
-
- “For two years following the failure of the July 25 Putsch, the
- Nazis remained relatively quiet in Austria. Very few terroristic
- acts occurred during the remainder of 1934 and as I recall in
- 1935 and most of 1936; this inactivity was in accordance with
- directives from Berlin as direct evidence to that effect, which
- came to my knowledge at that time, proved. Early in January, the
- Austrian Foreign Minister, Berger-Waldenegg, furnished me a
- document which I considered accurate in all respects and which
- stated:
-
- ‘The German Minister here, von Papen, on the occasion of
- his last visit to Berlin, was received three times by
- Chancellor Hitler for fairly long conversations, and he
- also took this opportunity to call on Schacht and von
- Neurath. In these conversations the following
- instructions were given to him:
-
- ‘During the next two years nothing can be undertaken
- which will give Germany external political difficulties.
- On this ground, everything must be avoided which could
- awaken the appearance of Germany interfering in the
- internal affairs of Austria. Chancellor Hitler will,
- therefore, also for this reason not endeavor to
- intervene in the present prevailing difficult crisis in
- the National Socialist Party in Austria, although he is
- convinced that order could be brought into the Party at
- once through a word from him. This word, however, he
- will, for foreign political reasons, give all the less,
- as he is convinced that the, for him, desirable ends may
- be reached also in another way. Naturally, Chancellor
- Hitler declared to the German Minister here, this does
- not indicate any disinterestedness in the idea of
- Austria’s independence. Also, before everything, Germany
- cannot for the present withdraw Party members in
- Austria, and must, therefore, in spite of the very real
- exchange difficulties, make every effort to bring help
- to the persecuted National Socialist sufferers in
- Austria. As a result, Minister of Commerce Schacht
- finally gave the authorization that from then on 200,000
- marks a month were to be set aside for this end (support
- of National Socialists in Austria). The control and the
- supervision of this monthly sum was to be entrusted to
- Engineer Reinthaller, who, through the fact that he
- alone had control over the money, would have a definite
- influence on the Party followers. In this way it would
- be possible to end most quickly and most easily the
- prevailing difficulties and division in the Austrian
- National Socialist Party.
-
- ‘The hope was also expressed to Herr von Papen that the
- recently authorized foundation of German “Ortsgruppen”
- of the National Socialist Party in Austria (made up of
- German citizens in Austria) would be so arranged as not
- to give the appearance that Germany is planning to
- interfere in Austrian internal affairs.’” (_1760-PS_)
-
-The report of Gauleiter Rainer to Reichskommissar Buerckel in July 1939,
-outlines the further history of the party and the leadership squabbles
-following the retirement of Reinthaller. In referring to the situation
-in 1935, he mentions some of the contacts with the Reich Government in
-the following terms:
-
- “In August some further arrests took place, the victims of which
- were, apart from the Gauleaders, also Globocnik and Rainer.
- SCHATTENFROH then claimed, because of an instruction received
- from the imprisoned LEOPOLD, to have been made deputy country
- leader. A group led by engineer RAFFELSBERGER had at this time
- also established connections with departments of the Alt-Reich
- (Ministry of Propaganda, German Racial Agency, etc.) and made an
- attempt to formulate a political motto in the form of a program
- for the fighting movement of Austria.” (_812-PS_)
-
-The Rainer report sets forth the situation a little later in 1936:
-
- “The principles of the construction of the organization were:
- The organization is the bearer of the illegal fight and the
- trustee of the idea to create a secret organization, in a simple
- manner, and without compromise, according to the principle of
- organizing an elite to be available to the illegal land-party
- council upon any emergency. Besides this, all political
- opportunities should be taken and all legal people and legal
- chances should be used without revealing any ties with the
- illegal organization. Therefore, cooperation between the illegal
- party organization and the legal political aides was anchored at
- the top of the party leadership. All connections with the party
- in Germany were kept secret in accordance with the orders of the
- Fuehrer. These said that the German state should officially be
- omitted from the creation of an Austrian NSDAP; and that
- auxiliary centers for propaganda, press, refugees, welfare, etc.
- should be established in the foreign countries bordering
- Austria.
-
- “Hinterleitner already contacted the lawyer Seyss-Inquart, who
- had connections with Dr. Wachter which originated from
- Seyss-Inquart’s support of the July uprising. On the other side
- Seyss-Inquart had a good position in the legal field and
- especially well-established relations with Christian-Social
- politicians. Dr. Seyss-Inquart came from the ranks of the
- ‘Styrian Heimatschutz’ and became a party member when the entire
- ‘Styrian Heimatschutz’ was incorporated into the NSDAP. Another
- personality who had a good position in the legal field was Col.
- Glaise-Horstenau who had contacts with both sides. The agreement
- of 11 July 1936 was strongly influenced by the activities of
- these two persons. Papen mentioned Glaise-Horstenau to the
- Fuehrer as being a trusted person.” (_812-PS_)
-
-The Rainer report thus discloses the dual tactics of the Austrian Nazis
-during this period of keeping quiet and awaiting developments. They were
-maintaining their secret contacts with Reich officials, and using
-“front” personalities such as Glaise-Horstenau and Seyss-Inquart. The
-Nazis made good use of such figures, who were more discreet in their
-activities and could be referred to as “Nationalists”. They presented,
-supported, and obtained consideration of demands which could not be
-negotiated by out-and-out Nazis like Captain Leopold. Seyss-Inquart did
-not hold any public office until January 1937, when he was made
-Councillor of State. But Rainer, describing him as a trustworthy member
-of the Party through the ranks of the Styrian Heimatschutz, points him
-out as one who strongly influenced the agreement of 11 July 1936.
-
-That the Nazis, but not the Austrian Government, did well to trust
-Seyss-Inquart, is indicated by a letter, dated 14 July 1939, addressed
-to Field Marshal Goering (_2219-PS_). The letter ends with the “Heil
-Hitler” close and is not signed, but it was undoubtedly written by
-Seyss-Inquart. It was found among Seyss-Inquart’s personal files. On the
-first page of the letter there appears a note in ink, not indicated in
-the partial English translation, reading: “Air Mail. 15 July, 1515
-hours, Berlin, brought to Goering’s office.”
-
-The main text of the letter consists of a plea for intercession in
-behalf of one Muehlmann, who unfortunately got in Buerckel’s bad graces.
-An extract from the letter, which shows Seyss-Inquart as one whose
-loyalty to Hitler and the aims of the Nazi conspiracy led him to fight
-for the Anschluss with all the means at his disposal, reads:
-
- At Present In Vienna, 14 July 1939
-
- “To the General Field Marshal
-
- Sir:
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “If I may add something about myself, it is the following: I
- know that I am not of an active fighting nature, unless final
- decisions are at stake. At this time of pronounced activism
- (_Aktivismus_) this will certainly be regarded as a fault in my
- personality. Yet I know that I cling with unconquerable tenacity
- to the goal in which I believe. That is Greater Germany
- (_Grossdeutschland_) and the FUEHRER. And if some people are
- already tired out from the struggle and some have been killed in
- the fight, I am still around somewhere and ready to go into
- action. This, after all, was also the development until the year
- 1938. Until July 1934 I conducted myself as a regular member of
- the party. And if I had quietly, in whatever form, paid my
- membership dues the first one, according to a receipt, I paid in
- December 1931. I probably would have been an undisputed,
- comparatively old fighter and party member of Austria, but I
- would not have done any more for the union. I told myself in
- July 1934 that we must fight this clerical regime on its own
- ground in order to give the Fuehrer a chance to use whatever
- method he desires. I told myself that this Austria was worth a
- mass. I have stuck to this attitude with an iron determination
- because I and my friends had to fight against the whole
- political church, the Freemasonry, the Jewry, in short, against
- everything in Austria. The slightest weakness which we might
- have displayed would undoubtedly have led to our political
- annihilation; it would have deprived the Fuehrer of the means
- and tools to carry out his ingenious political solution for
- Austria, as became evident in the days of March 1938. I have
- been fully conscious of the fact that I am following a path
- which is not comprehensible to the masses and also not to my
- party comrades. I followed it calmly and would without
- hesitation follow it again because I am satisfied that at one
- point I could serve the FUEHRER as a tool in his work, even
- though my former attitude even now gives occasion to very worthy
- and honorable party comrades to doubt my trustworthiness. I have
- never paid attention to such things because I am satisfied with
- the opinion which the FUEHRER and the men close to him have of
- me.” (_2210-PS_)
-
-A letter from Papen to Hitler dated 27 July 1935 shows how Papen thought
-the doctrines of National Socialism could be used to effect the aim of
-Anschluss. It consists of a report entitled “Review and Outlook, One
-Year after the Death of Chancellor Dollfuss.” After reviewing the
-success that the Austrian Government had had in establishing Dollfuss as
-a martyr and his principles as the patriotic principles of Austria,
-Papen stated:
-
- “National Socialism must and will overpower the new Austrian
- ideology. If today it is contended in Austria that the NSDAP is
- only a centralized Reich German party and therefore unable to
- transfer the spirit of thought of National Socialism to groups
- of people of a different political make-up, the answer must
- rightly be that the national revolution in Germany could not
- have been brought about in a different way. But when the
- creation of the people’s community in the Reich will be
- completed, National socialism could, in a much wider sense than
- this is possible through the present party organization—at
- least apparently—, certainly become the rallying point for all
- racially German units beyond the borders. Spiritual progress in
- regard to Austria cannot be achieved today with any centralized
- tendency. If this recognition would once and for all be stated
- clearly from within the Reich, then it would easily become
- possible to effect a breakthrough into the front of the New
- Austria. A Nurnberg Party Day designated as ‘The German Day’ as
- in old times and the proclamation of a national socialistic
- peoples’ front, would be a stirring event for all beyond the
- borders of the Reich. Such attacks would win us also the
- particularistic Austrian circles, whose spokesman, the
- legitimistic Count Dubsky wrote in his pamphlet about the
- ‘Anschluss’: The Third Reich will be with Austria, or it will
- not be at all. National Socialism must win it or it will perish,
- if it is unable to solve this task * * *.” (_2248-PS_)
-
-Other reports from Papen to Hitler, hereinafter mentioned, show that he
-maintained covert contact with the National Socialist groups in Austria.
-From the very start of his mission Papen was thinking of ways and means
-of using the principle of National Socialism for “National Germans”
-outside the borders of Germany. Papen was working for Anschluss, and
-although he preferred to use the principles of National Socialism rather
-than rely on the party organization, he was prepared to defend the party
-organization as a necessary means of establishing those principles in
-the German Reich.
-
-(_d_) _Assurances and Reassurances._ The German Government did more than
-keep up a pretense of noninterference with Austrian groups. It employed
-the psychological inducement of providing assurances that it had no
-designs on Austria’s independence. If Austria could but hope for the
-execution of those assurances, she could find her way clear to the
-granting of concessions, and obtain relief from the economic and
-internal pressures.
-
-A letter from Papen, while in Berlin, to Hitler, dated 17 May 1935,
-indicated that a forthright, credible statement by Germany reassuring
-Austria would be most useful for German diplomatic purposes and the
-improvement of relationships between Austria and German groups in
-Austria (_2247-PS_). Papen had a scheme for pitting Schuschnigg and his
-Social-Christian forces against Starhemberg, the Vice-Chancellor of
-Austria, who was backed by Mussolini. He hoped to persuade Schuschnigg
-to ally his forces with the NSDAP in order to emerge victorious over
-Starhemberg. Papen indicated that he obtained this idea from Captain
-Leopold, leader of the illegal National Socialists. His letter states in
-part:
-
- “* * * I suggest that we take an active part in this game. The
- fundamental idea should be to pit Schuschnigg and his
- Christian-social Forces, who are opposed to a home front
- dictatorship, against Starhemberg. The possibility of thwarting
- the measures arranged between Mussolini and Starhemberg should
- be afforded to him, in such way that he would submit the offer
- to the government of a definitive German-Austrian compromise of
- interests. According to the convincing opinion of the leader of
- the NSDAP in Austria, Capt. Leopold, the totalitarian principle
- of the NSDAP in Austria must be replaced in the beginning by a
- combination of that part of the Christian-elements which favors
- the Greater Germany idea and the NSDAP. If Germany recognizes
- the national independence of Austria and guarantees full freedom
- to the Austrian national opposition, then as a result of such a
- compromise the Austrian government would be formed in the
- beginning by a coalition of these forces. A further consequence
- of this step would be the possibility of the participation of
- Germany in the Danube pact, which would take the sting out of
- its acuteness due to the settlement of relations between Germany
- and Austria. Such a measure would have a most beneficial
- influence on the European situation and especially on our
- relationship with England. One may object, that Mr. Schuschnigg
- will hardly be determined to follow such a pattern, that he will
- rather in all probability immediately communicate our offer to
- our opponents. Of course, one should first of all explore the
- possibility of setting Schuschnigg against Starhemberg through
- the use of ‘Go betweens’. The possibility exists. If Mr.
- Schuschnigg finally says ‘No’ and makes our offer known in Rome,
- then the situation would not be any worse but, on the contrary,
- the efforts of the Reich government to make peace with Austria
- would be revealed—without prejudice to other interests.
- Therefore even in the case of refusal this last attempt would be
- an asset. I consider it completely possible, that in view of the
- far spread dislike of the Alpine countries of the pro-Italian
- course and in view of the sharp tensions within the federal
- government (_Bundesregierung_), Mr. Schuschnigg will grasp this
- last straw—always under the supposition that the offer could
- not be interpreted as a trap by the opponents, but that it bears
- all the mark of an actually honest compromise with Austria.
- Assuming success of this step, we would again establish our
- active intervention in Central European politics, which, as
- opposed to the French-Czech and Russian political maneuvers,
- would be a tremendous success, both morally and practically.
- Since there are 2 weeks left to accomplish very much work in the
- way of explorations and Conferences, an immediate decision is
- necessary. The Reich Army Minister (_Reichswehrminister_) shares
- the opinion presented above and the Reich Foreign Minister
- (_Reichsaussenminister_) wanted to discuss it with you my
- Fuehrer.
-
- (Signed) Papen”. (_2247-PS_)
-
-In other words, Papen wanted a strong assurance and credible assurance,
-of Austria’s independence. As he put it, Germany had nothing to lose
-with what it could always call a mere effort at peace. And she might be
-able to convince Schuschnigg to establish an Austrian coalition
-government with the NSDAP. If she did this, she would vastly strengthen
-her position in Europe. Finally, Papen urged haste.
-
-Exactly four days later (21 May 1935) in a Reichstag address Hitler
-responded to Papen’s suggestion, asserting:
-
- “Germany neither intends nor wishes to interfere in the internal
- affairs of Austria, to annex Austria or to conclude an
- Anschluss”. (_TC-26_)
-
-Despite this assurance, Papen suggested and Hitler announced, for a
-complexity of reasons, a policy completely at variance with their
-intentions, which had been and continued to be to interfere in Austria’s
-internal affairs and to conclude an Anschluss.
-
-(_e_) _Temporary Continuance of a Quiet Pressure Policy._ On 1 May 1936
-Hitler branded as a lie any statement that tomorrow or the day after
-Germany would fall upon Austria. His words were published in the
-_Voelkische-Beobachter_, SD, 2-3 May 1936, p. 2. (_2367-PS_)
-
-If Hitler meant what he said, it was only in the most literal and
-misleading sense that he would not fall upon Austria “tomorrow or the
-day after”. For the conspirators well knew that the successful execution
-of their purpose required for a while longer the quiet policy they had
-been pursuing in Austria.
-
-A memorandum of a conversation which occurred when William Bullitt,
-American Ambassador to France, called upon von Neurath, German Minister
-for Foreign Affairs, on 18 May 1936, recounts von Neurath’s explanation
-why Germany was trying to prevent rather than encourage an outbreak by
-the Nazis in Austria (_L-150_). The Nazis were growing stronger in
-Austria, anyway, in view of their appeal to the young people. And the
-German Government was doing nothing active in foreign affairs until the
-Rhineland, reoccupied two months before, had been “digested”, and until
-fortifications were constructed on the French frontier. Finally, Italy
-still had a conflicting interest in Austria, and Germany wished to avoid
-any involvement with Italy.
-
-(_f_) _The agreement of 11 July 1936._ But if Germany was not yet ready
-for open conflict in Austria, its diplomatic position was vastly
-improved over 1934, a fact which influenced Austria’s willingness to
-make concessions to Germany and come to terms. As Mr. Messersmith points
-out, Italy, formerly a protector of Austria, had embarked on her
-Abyssinian adventure, and this, together with the refortification of the
-Rhineland, strengthened Germany’s position (_1760-PS_). This weakening
-of Austria helped pave the way for the Pact of 11 July 1936. (_TC-22_)
-
-The formal part of the agreement of July 11, 1936, between the German
-Government and the Government of the Federal State of Austria, looks
-like a great triumph for Austria. It contains a confusing provision to
-the effect that Austria, in its policy, especially with regard to
-Germany, will regard herself as a German state. But the other two
-provisions clearly state that Germany recognizes the full sovereignty of
-Austria, and that it regards the inner political order of Austria
-(including the question of Austrian National Socialism) as an internal
-concern of Austria upon which it will exercise neither direct nor
-indirect influence.
-
-But there was much more substance to the day’s events. Mr. Messersmith’s
-summary, as set forth in his affidavit, is more revealing:
-
- “Even more important than the terms of the agreement published
- in the official communique, was the contemporaneous informal
- understanding, the most important provisions of which were, that
- Austria would (1) appoint a number of individuals enjoying the
- Chancellor’s confidence but friendly to Germany to positions in
- the Cabinet; (2) would devise means to give the ‘national
- opposition’ a role in the political life of Austria and within
- the framework of the Patriotic Front, and (3) would amnesty all
- Nazis save those convicted of the most serious offenses. This
- amnesty was duly announced by the Austrian Government and
- thousands of Nazis were released, and the first penetration of
- the _Deutsche Nationaler_ into the Austrian Government was
- accomplished by the appointment of Dr. Guido Schmidt as
- Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, and of Dr. Edmund
- Glaise-Horstenau as Minister Without Portfolio”. (_1760-PS_)
-
-These and other provisions of the secret part of the Agreement of July
-11 are set forth briefly and in general terms in an affidavit by Kurt
-Schuschnigg, former Chancellor of Austria, dated November 19, 1945
-(_2994-PS_). By two of those provisions Austria agreed to permit Nazi
-organizations on Austrian soil, and also use of the swastika and singing
-of the Horst Wessel song—all for German subjects. On its credit side,
-Austria was to get repeal of the 1,000 mark barrier on tourist trade,
-and in general tourist trade between the two countries was to resume.
-
-In view of the strategy and tactics of the Nazis, these were substantial
-concessions made by Austria to obtain Germany’s diplomatic, formal
-assurance of Austrian independence and non-intervention in Austrian
-internal affairs. The release of imprisoned Nazis to the community
-presented potential police problems. And as Mr. Messersmith pointed out
-in a 1934 dispatch, quoted in his affidavit, any prospect that the
-National Socialists might come to power would make it more difficult to
-obtain effective police and judicial action against the Nazis for fear
-of reprisals by the future Nazi Government against those taking action
-against Nazis even in the line of duty (_1760-PS_). The preservation of
-internal peace in Austria was thus dependent upon Germany’s living up to
-its obligations under the Accord.
-
-(4) _Germany’s Continuing Program of Weakening the Austrian Government._
-
-(_a_) _Germany’s Instructions to the Austrian National Socialists
-Concerning Future Plans._ In the pact of 11 July 1936 Germany agreed not
-to influence directly or indirectly the internal affairs of Austria,
-including the matter of Austrian National Socialism. On 16 July 1936,
-just five days later, Hitler violated that provision. The report of
-Gauleiter Rainer to Reich Commissioner Buerckel states:
-
- “* * * At that time the Fuehrer wished to see the leaders of the
- party in Austria in order to tell them his opinion on what
- Austrian National Socialists should do. Meanwhile Hinterleitner
- was arrested, and Dr. Rainer became his successor and leader of
- the Austrian party. On 16 July 1936, Dr. Rainer and Globocnik
- visited the Fuehrer at the ‘Obersalzburg’ where they received a
- clear explanation of the situation and the wishes of the
- Fuehrer. On 17 July 1936, all illegal Gauleiters met in Anif
- near Salzburg, where they received a complete report from Rainer
- on the statement of the Fuehrer and his political instructions
- for carrying out the fight. At the same conference the
- Gauleiters received organizational instructions from Globocnik
- and Hiedler.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Upon the proposal of Globocnik, the Fuehrer named Lt. Gen.
- (Gruppenfuehrer) Keppler as chief of the mixed commission which
- was appointed, in accordance with the state treaty of 11 July
- 1936, to supervise the correct execution of the agreement. At
- the same time Keppler was given full authority by the Fuehrer
- for the party in Austria. After Keppler was unsuccessful in his
- efforts to cooperate with Leopold, he worked together with Dr.
- Rainer, Globocnik, Reinthaller as leader of the peasants,
- Kaltenbrunner as leader of the SS, and Dr. Jury as deputy-leader
- of the Austrian party, as well as with Glaise-Horstenau and
- Seyss-Inquart.” (_812-PS_)
-
-A new strategy was developed for the Austrian Nazis. Mr. Messersmith
-describes it briefly in his affidavit:
-
- “The sequel of the agreement was the only one which could have
- been expected in view of all the facts and previous recorded
- happenings. Active Nazi operations in Austria were resumed under
- the leadership; of a certain Captain Leopold, who it was known
- definitely was in frequent touch with Hitler. The Nazi program
- was now to form an organization through which the Nazis could
- carry on their operations openly and with legal sanction in
- Austria. There were formed in Austria several organizations
- which had a legal basis but which were simply a device by which
- the Nazis in Austria could organize, and later seek inclusion as
- a unit in the Patriotic Front. The most important of these was
- the _Ostmarkischer Verein_, the sponsor of which was the
- Minister of the Interior Glaise-Horstenau. Through the influence
- of Glaise-Horstenau and the pro-Nazi Neustadter-Sturmer, this
- organization was declared legal by the Courts. I made specific
- mention of the foregoing because it shows the degree to which
- the situation in Austria had disintegrated as a result of the
- underground and open Nazi activities directed from Germany.”
- (_1760-PS_)
-
-A report from Papen to Hitler dated 1 September 1936 indicates Papen’s
-strategy after 11 July 1936 for destroying Austria’s independence. Papen
-had taken a substantial step forward with the agreement of July 11.
-Incidentally, after that agreement he was promoted from Minister to
-Ambassador. Now his tactics were developed in the following terms, as
-explained in the last three paragraphs of his letter of September 1:
-
- “* * * The progress of normalizing relations with Germany at the
- present time is obstructed by the continued persistence of the
- Ministry of Security, occupied by the old anti-National
- Socialistic officials. Changes in personnel are therefore of
- utmost importance. But they are definitely not to be expected
- prior to the conference on the abolishing of the Control of
- Finances (Finanzkontrolle) at Geneva. The Chancellor of the
- League has informed Minister de Glaise-Horstenau, of his
- intention, to offer him the portfolio of the Ministry of the
- Interior. As a guiding principle (Marschroute) I recommend on
- the tactical side, continued, patient psychological treatment,
- with slowly intensified pressure directed at changing the
- regime. The proposed conference on economic relations, taking
- place at the end of October, will be a very useful tool for the
- realization of some of our projects. In discussion with
- government officials as well as with leaders of the illegal
- party (Leopold and Schattenfroh) who conform completely with the
- agreement of July 11. I am trying to direct the next
- developments in such a manner to aim at corporative
- representation of the movement in the fatherland front
- (Vaterlaendischen Front) but nevertheless refraining from
- putting National Socialists in important positions for the time
- being. However such positions are to be occupied only by
- personalities, having the support and the confidence of the
- movement. I have a willing collaborator in this respect in
- Minister Glaise-Horstenau.
-
- (Signature) Papen”
- (_2246-PS_)
-
-To recapitulate, this report of von Papen, discloses the following
-plans:
-
- 1. obtaining a change in personnel in Ministry of Security in
- due course;
-
- 2. obtaining cooperative representation of the Nazi movement in
- the Fatherland Front;
-
- 3. not putting avowed National Socialists in important positions
- yet, but using “nationalist” personalities;
-
- 4. using economic pressure, and “patient psychological
- treatment, with slowly intensified pressure directed at changing
- the regime.”
-
-(_b_) _Nazi Demands and Demonstrations._ The Nazi demanded even more
-open recognition. In January 1937 Captain Leopold submitted a memorandum
-of demands. They are listed in Mr. Messersmith’s affidavit (_1760-PS_).
-They were not formally received by the Austrian Cabinet, but they were
-known to and considered by the Cabinet. They included the following
-demands: (1) An amnesty for all punishments or privations suffered for
-National Socialist or National activity or sympathy; (2) equal treatment
-for National Socialists, including freedom of political activity and
-cultural activity; (3) abolition of laws and sanctions used by the
-Government against Nazi activity. The memorandum advocated cooperation
-on the basis of political principles including: A broadening of the
-Patriotic Front; changes in the Cabinet; an alliance with the Reich;
-common racial stock as a political aim; the application of anti-Semitic
-measures; and an early plebiscite on Anschluss.
-
-Mr. Messersmith’s affidavit also states that these demands, and
-Leopold’s petition for a nationalistic party, were supported by frequent
-demonstrations and much propaganda work. As early as 29 July 1936, when
-the Olympic Torch was carried through Vienna, there were violent Nazi
-disorders. From that time on there were frequent arrests for
-distributing illegal literature or staging illegal demonstrations.
-(_1760-PS_)
-
-(_c_) _Schuschnigg’s Concessions._ Gauleiter Rainer’s historical review
-points out that due to the activities of the Reich officials and the
-Austrians who acted as the Nazi “fronts”, it was possible to obtain the
-appointment of Seyss-Inquart as _Staatsrat_ (Councillor of State) in
-July, 1937. (_812-PS_)
-
-Schuschnigg’s affidavit mentions the Olympic Torch incident, and in
-addition the demonstration of the illegal Nazis at the time of the visit
-of von Neurath to Vienna in February 1937. Schuschnigg also points out
-other examples of the pressure increasingly exerted by Germany on
-Austria. One of his main reasons for entering into the July 11 agreement
-was to eliminate Germany’s 1,000 mark penalty on tourists to Austria.
-The penalty was removed, but Germany made it illegal for a tourist to
-bring more than 5 marks out of the country. And German buyers of cattle
-and wood purchased only from Austrian Nazis. (_2994-PS_)
-
-Schuschnigg further reports that the incidents and pressure culminated
-in the so-called Tavs Plan, discovered by the Austrian police in
-November, 1937, containing instructions for unrest to break out among
-the Nazis at a prearranged time. The German Government would submit an
-ultimatum that National Socialists must be brought into the Government
-or the German Army would invade. (_2994-PS_)
-
-It may be recalled that during this period Schuschnigg made concessions.
-He appointed Seyss-Inquart as Councillor of State in July, 1937. He had
-previously appointed a “Committee of Seven” to discuss with him the
-desires of the national opposition. He played a delaying game,
-presumably in the hope that a change in the foreign situation would
-provide him with external support.
-
-B. _Germany’s Diplomatic Preparations for Conquest._
-
-The program of the Nazi conspiracy aimed at weakening Austria externally
-and internally, by removing its support from without as well as by
-penetrating within. This program was of the utmost significance, since
-the events of 25 July 1934 inside Austria were overshadowed by the fact
-that Mussolini had brought his troops to the Brenner Pass and poised
-them there as a strong protector of his northern neighbor.
-
-Accordingly, interference in the affairs of Austria, and steady increase
-in the pressure needed to acquire control over that country, required
-removal of the possibility that Italy or any other country would come to
-Austria’s aid. But the program of the conspiracy for the weakening and
-isolation of Austria was integrated with its foreign policy program in
-Europe generally.
-
-The Nazi conspirators’ diplomatic preparation for war is described in a
-second affidavit of George S. Messersmith (_2385-PS_), which may be
-summarized as follows: In 1933 the Nazis openly acknowledged the
-ambition to expand the territorial borders of the Reich to include
-Austria and Czechoslovakia. As for the other countries of Southeast
-Europe, the professed objective was stated at that time not in terms of
-territorial acquisition but rather in terms of political and economic
-control. And the stated objectives were not limited to Southeast Europe,
-for important Nazis even in 1933 were stating their desire for the
-Ukraine as the granary of Germany.
-
-When they came to power, the Nazis had two principal objectives. They
-wanted to establish their power in Germany. And they wanted to rearm and
-establish Germany’s armed power. They wanted peace until they were
-ready. But they wanted to acquire the ability to carry out their program
-in Europe by force if necessary, although preferably by a threat of
-force. They accordingly embarked upon their vast rearmament program. It
-proceeded very rapidly. Goering and General Milch often said to
-Messersmith or in his presence that the Nazis were concentrating on air
-power in their rearmament, as the weapon of terror most likely to give
-Germany a dominant position and the weapon which could be developed most
-rapidly.
-
-In addition to material preparation for war, there was preparation for
-war in the psychological sense. Throughout Germany youth of all ages
-could be observed in military exercises and field maneuvers.
-
-Moreover, as Mr. Messersmith also observes,
-
- “Military preparation and psychological preparation were coupled
- with _diplomatic_ preparation designed to so disunite and
- isolate their intended victims as to render them defenseless
- against German aggression.” (_2385-PS_)
-
-In 1933 the difficulties facing Germany in the political and diplomatic
-field loomed large. France was the dominant military power on the
-continent. She had woven a system of mutual assistance in the West and
-in the East. The Locarno Pact of 1928, supplemented by the
-Franco-Belgian alliance, guaranteed the territorial status quo in the
-West. Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, and Rumania were allied in the Little
-Entente and each in turn was united with France by mutual assistance
-pacts. Since 1922, France and Poland had likewise been allied against
-external aggression. Italy had made plain her special interest in
-Austrian independence.
-
-Nazi Germany launched a vigorous diplomatic campaign to break up the
-existing alliances and understandings, to create divisions among the
-members of the Little Entente and the other Eastern European powers.
-
-Specifically, Nazi Germany countered these alliances with promises of
-economic gain for cooperating with Germans. To some of these countries
-she offered extravagant promises of territorial and economic rewards.
-She offered Carinthia, in Austria, to Yugoslavia. She offered part of
-Czechoslovakia to Hungary and part of Poland. She offered Yugoslav
-territory to Hungary at the same time that she was offering land in
-Hungary to Yugoslavia.
-
-As Mr. Messersmith states in his affidavit:
-
- “Austria and Czechoslovakia were the first on the German program
- of aggression. As early as 1934, Germany began to woo neighbors
- of these countries with promises of a share in the loot. To
- Yugoslavia in particular they offered Carinthia. Concerning the
- Yugoslav reaction, I reported at the time:
-
- ‘* * * The major factor in the internal situation in the
- last week has been the increase in tension with respect
- to the Austrian Nazi refugees in Yugoslavia. * * * There
- is very little doubt but that Goering, when he made his
- trip to various capitals in Southeastern Europe about
- six months ago, told the Yugoslavs that they would get a
- part of Carinthia, when a National Socialist Government
- came into power in Austria. * * * The Nazi seed sown in
- Yugoslavia has been sufficient to cause trouble and
- there are undoubtedly a good many people there who look
- with a great deal of benevolence on those Nazi refugees
- who went to Yugoslavia in the days following July 25.’
-
- “Germany made like promises of territorial gains to Hungary and
- to Poland in order to gain their cooperation or at least their
- acquiescence in the proposed dismemberment of Czechoslovakia. As
- I learned from my diplomatic colleagues in Vienna, von Papen and
- von Mackensen in Vienna and in Budapest in 1935, were spreading
- the idea of division of Czechoslovakia, in which division
- Germany was to get Bohemia, Hungary to get Slovakia, and Poland
- the rest. This did not deceive any of these countries for they
- knew that the intention of Nazi Germany was to take all.
-
- “The Nazi German Government did not hesitate to make
- inconsistent promises when it suited its immediate objectives. I
- recall the Yugoslav Minister in Vienna saying to me in 1934 or
- 1935, that Germany had made promises to Hungary of Yugoslav
- territory while at the same time promising to Yugoslavs portions
- of Hungarian territory. The Hungarian Minister in Vienna later
- gave me the same information.
-
- “I should emphasize here in this statement that the men who made
- these promises were not only the died-in-the-wool Nazis but more
- conservative Germans who already had begun to willingly lend
- themselves to the Nazi program. In an official despatch to the
- Department of State from Vienna dated October 10, 1935, I wrote
- as follows:
-
- ‘* * * Europe will not get away from the myth that
- Neurath, Papen and Mackensen are not dangerous people
- and that they are “diplomats of the old school.” They
- are in fact servile instruments of the regime and just
- because the outside world looks upon them as harmless,
- they are able to work more effectively. They are able to
- sow discord just because they propagate the myth that
- they are not in sympathy with the regime.’” (_2385-PS_)
-
-In other words, Nazi Germany was able to promote these divisions and
-increase its own aggressive strength by using as its agents in making
-these promises men who on outward appearances were merely conservative
-diplomats. It is true that Nazis openly scoffed at any notion of
-international obligations. It is true that the real trump in Germany’s
-hand was its rearmament and more than that its willingness to go to war.
-And yet the attitude of the various countries was not influenced by
-those considerations alone. Schuschnigg laid great stress upon, and was
-willing to go to some lengths to obtain, an assurance of independence.
-All these countries found it possible to believe apparently substantial
-personages, like von Neurath, for example. They were led to rely on the
-assurances given, which seemed more impressive since the diplomats
-making them were represented as men who were not Nazis and would not
-stoop to go along with the base designs of the Nazis.
-
-Germany’s approach toward Great Britain and France was in terms of
-limited expansion as the price of peace. They signed a naval limitations
-treaty with England and discussed a Locarno Air Pact. In the case of
-both France and England, they limited their statement of intentions and
-harped on fears of Communism and war.
-
-In making these various promises, Germany was untroubled by notions of
-the sanctity of international obligations. High-ranking Nazis, including
-Goering, Frick, and Frank, openly stated to Mr. Messersmith that Germany
-would observe her international undertakings only so long as it suited
-Germany’s interests to do so. As Mr. Messersmith states in his
-affidavit:
-
- “High-ranking Nazis with whom I had to maintain official
- contact, particularly men such as Goering, Goebbels, Ley, Frick,
- Frank, Darré and others, repeatedly scoffed at my position as to
- the binding character of treaties and openly stated to me that
- Germany would observe her international undertakings only so
- long as it suited Germany’s interests to do so. Although these
- statements were openly made to me as they were, I am sure, made
- to others, these Nazi leaders were not really disclosing any
- secret for on many occasions they expressed the same ideas
- publicly.” (_2385-PS_)
-
-France and Italy worked actively in Southeastern Europe to counter
-Germany’s moves. France made attempts to promote an East Locarno Pact
-and to foster an economic accord between Austria and the other Danubian
-powers. Italy’s effort was to organize an economic bloc of Austria,
-Hungary, and Italy.
-
-But Germany foiled these efforts by redoubling its promises of loot, by
-continuing its armament, and by another significant stratagem. The Nazis
-stirred up internal dissensions to disunite and weaken their intended
-victims. They supported the Austrian Nazis and the Henlein Party in
-Czechoslovakia. They probed what Goebbels called the “sore spots.” In
-Yugoslavia they played on the differences between the Croats and the
-Serbs, and in particular played on the fear of the restoration of the
-Hapsburgs in Austria, a fear which was very real in Yugoslavia. In
-Hungary, Poland, and Rumania they stirred up other fears and hatreds.
-These measures had considerable effect in preventing these countries
-from joining any which were opposed to German designs.
-
-The Nazis consolidated their power in Germany very quickly. The German
-people became increasingly imbued with the Nazi military spirit. Within
-Germany, resistance to the Nazis disappeared. Army officers, including
-many who originally aided the Nazis with the limited objective of
-restoring the German Army, increasingly became imbued with aggressive
-designs as they saw how remarkably their power was growing.
-
-The power of Nazi Germany outside the borders of the Reich increased
-correspondingly. Other countries feared its military might. Important
-political leaders in Yugoslavia, in Hungary, and in Poland became
-convinced that the Nazi regime would gain its ends and that the best
-course was to play along with Germany. These countries became apathetic
-toward the development of Anschluss with Austria and cooperative toward
-the dismemberment of Czechoslovakia. Mr. Messersmith’s despatches from
-Europe to the State Department, setting out the developments in these
-countries, are included in his second affidavit. (_2385-PS_)
-
-As for Italy, Germany’s initial objective was to sow discord between
-Yugoslavia and Italy, by promising Yugoslavia Italian territory,
-particularly Trieste. This was to prevent France from reaching agreement
-with them and to block an East Locarno Pact. As Mr. Messersmith states:
-
- “While Italy openly opposed efforts at Anschluss with Austria in
- 1934, Italian ambitions in Abyssinia provided Germany with the
- opportunity to sow discord between Italy and France and England,
- and to win Italy over to acceptance of Germany’s program in
- exchange for German support of Italy’s plans in Abyssinia.”
- (_2385-PS_)
-
-That paved the way for the Austro-German declaration of 11 July 1936.
-And in the Fall of 1936, Germany extended the hand of friendship and
-common purpose to Italy in an alliance—the Rome-Berlin Axis. This,
-together with Germany’s alliance with Japan, put increasing pressure on
-England and increased the relative strength of Germany.
-
-And so, by means of careful preparation in the diplomatic field, among
-others, the Nazi conspirators had woven a position for themselves so
-that they could seriously consider plans for war and outline a
-timetable. That timetable was developed in the conference with Hitler in
-the Reichschancellery on 5 November 1937. (_386-PS_)
-
-C. _Crystallization of the Plan to Wage Aggressive War in Europe and to
-Seize Austria and Czechoslovakia._
-
-At the meeting of the conspirators in the Reichschancellery on 5
-November 1937, the Fuehrer insisted that Germany should have more space
-in Europe (_386-PS_). It was concluded that the space required must be
-taken by force, three different cases were outlined as possibilities,
-and it was decided that the problem would have to be solved before the
-period 1943 to 1945. The nature of a war in the near future was
-envisaged, specifically against Austria and Czechoslovakia. Hitler said
-that for the improvement of Germany’s military political position the
-first aim of the Nazis in every case of entanglement by war must be to
-conquer Czechoslovakia and Austria simultaneously, in order to remove
-any threat from the flanks in case of a possible advance Westwards.
-Hitler then calculated that the conquest of Czechoslovakia and Austria
-would constitute the conquest of food for from five to six million
-people, assuming that the comprehensive emigration of one million from
-Austria could be carried out. He further pointed out that the annexation
-of the two states to Germany would constitute a considerable relief,
-both militarily and politically, since they would provide shorter and
-better frontiers, would free fighting personnel for other purposes, and
-would make possible the reconstitution of new armies. (_386-PS_)
-
-The minutes of this meeting reveal a crystallization in the policy of
-the Nazi conspirators. It had always been their aim to acquire Austria.
-At the outset a revolutionary Putsch was attempted, using the personnel
-of the Austrian Nazis, but that failed. The next period was one of
-surface recognition of the independence of Austria and the use of
-devious means to strengthen the position of the Nazis internally in
-Austria. Now, however, it became clear that the need for Austria, in the
-light of the larger aggressive purposes of the Nazi conspirators, was
-sufficiently great to warrant the use of force in order to obtain
-Austria with the desired speed. The Nazis were, in fact, able to secure
-Austria, after having weakened it internally and removed from it the
-support of other nations, merely by setting the German military machine
-in motion and making a threat of force. The German armies were able to
-cross the border and secure the country without the necessity of firing
-a shot. Careful planning for war and the readiness to use war as an
-instrument of political action made it possible in the end for the Nazis
-to master Austria without having to fight for it.
-
-The German High Command had previously considered preparations against
-Austria. On 24 June 1937 the Reich Minister for War and Commander in
-Chief of the Armed Forces, General von Blomberg, issued a Top Secret
-Directive (_C-175_). The importance of this directive, establishing a
-unified preparation of the Armed Forces for war, is indicated by the
-fact that the carbon copy received by the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy
-was one of only four copies. This directive from General von Blomberg
-stated that the general political situation indicated that Germany need
-not consider an attack from any side, and also that Germany did not
-intend to unleash a European war. It then stated, in point 1:
-
- “Nevertheless 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 attacks at any time
-
- “_b._ to enable the military exploitation of politically
- favorable opportunities should they occur.” (_C-175_)
-
-The directive then indicated that there would be certain preparations of
-a general nature for war.
-
- “2. The preparations of a general nature include:
-
- “_a._ The permanent preparedness for mobilization of the
- German Armed Forces, even before the completion of
- rearmament and full preparedness for war.
-
- “_b._ 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.” (_C-175_)
-
-The directive finally indicated, in Part 3, that there might be special
-preparation for war in Austria:
-
- “Armed intervention in Austria in the event of her restoring the
- Monarchy.
-
- “The object of this operation will be to compel Austria by armed
- force to give up a restoration.
-
- “Making use of the domestic political divisions of the Austrian
- people, the march in will be made in the general direction of
- Vienna and will break any resistance.” (_C-175_)
-
-This plan is indicated in the document as having been superseded by new
-and more detailed plans following the meeting of November 5, 1937.
-
-The plans of the conspirators were further revealed in two conversations
-held by William Bullitt, United States Ambassador to France with Schacht
-and with Goering in November, 1937. Both Schacht and Goering told
-Bullitt that Germany was determined to annex Austria. Goering further
-added that there could be no final solution of the Sudeten-German
-question other than inclusion in the Reich. (_L-151_)
-
-D. _Pressure and Threats Resulting in Further Concessions:
-Berchtesgaden, 12 February 1938._
-
-Chancellor Schuschnigg states in an affidavit (_2995-PS_) that in 1938
-von Papen suggested to him that he should meet Hitler at Berchtesgaden.
-After several discussions Schuschnigg agreed to go, provided three
-conditions were met:
-
- (1) He must be invited by Hitler.
-
- (2) He must be previously informed of the precise agenda and assured
-that the agreement of 11 July 1936 would be maintained.
-
- (3) There was to be an agreement in advance that the communique to
-be published at the end of the meeting would affirm the 11 July 1936
-agreement.
-
-Von Papen brought back word from Hitler inviting Schuschnigg and
-agreeing with these conditions, particularly the maintenance of the July
-1936 treaty. (_2995-PS_)
-
-The official German communique of this conference between Hitler and
-Schuschnigg at Obersalzberg on 12 February 1938 was calm (_2461-PS_).
-The communique stated that the unofficial meeting was caused by the
-mutual desire to clarify by personal conversations the questions
-relating to the relationship between the German Reich and Austria. The
-communique listed, as among those present, Schuschnigg and his Foreign
-Minister Schmidt, Hitler and his Foreign Minister Ribbentrop, and von
-Papen. The communique concluded: “Both statesmen are convinced that the
-measures taken by them constitute at the same time an effective
-contribution toward the peaceful development of the European situation.”
-(_2461-PS_). A similar communique was issued by the Austrian Government.
-
-In fact, as a result of the conference great concessions were obtained
-by the German Government from Austria. The principal concessions are
-contained in the official Austrian communique dated 16 February 1938
-(_2464-PS_). The communique announced a reorganization of the Austrian
-Cabinet, including the appointment of Seyss-Inquart to the position of
-Minister of Security and Interior. In addition, announcement was made of
-a general political amnesty to Nazis convicted of crimes. (_2464-PS_)
-
-Two days later, on 18 February 1938, another concession was divulged in
-the official German and Austrian communique concerning the equal rights
-of Austrian National Socialists in Austria (_2469-PS_). The communique
-announced that pursuant to the Berchtesgaden conference, the Austrian
-National Socialists would be taken into the Fatherland Front, the single
-legal political party of Austria.
-
-Schuschnigg’s affidavit on his Berchtesgaden visit on February 12, 1938
-(_2995-PS_) points out that considerable pressure was brought to bear on
-him at the Berghof. Several Generals—Keitel, Sperrle, and Reichenau,
-names which were omitted from the formal communique later issued—were
-present on his arrival. The conference started with a two-hour
-conference between Schuschnigg and Hitler alone. Hitler made no precise
-demands but attacked Schuschnigg violently. In the words of the
-affidavit:
-
- “I furthermore state and affirm that, immediately after arriving
- at the Berghof, I commenced a conference with Hitler. Hitler and
- I were alone for two hours. Hitler attacked in a violent manner
- the politics of Austria, both of the past and present. He
- furthermore informed me that he, Hitler, had ‘decided to bring
- the Austrian question to a solution so-or-so, even if he had to
- immediately use military force.’ At no time during the first two
- hours of our conversation did Hitler ever make any precise
- demands or requests of me, but spent the whole of the two hours
- accusing me and menacing me as a traitor to Austrian politics.
- Especially he informed me that, according to his knowledge,
- Austria could no longer reckon with any assistance from other
- European Powers, and that Austria now stood alone in the world.
- He furthermore added—‘Schuschnigg, you now have the chance to
- put your name alongside the names of other famous German
- leaders, such as Goering, Hess, Frick, Epp, Goebbels, and
- others.’ * * * “. (_2995-PS_)
-
-After Hitler’s violent threats, Schuschnigg had discussions of a calmer
-nature with von Ribbentrop and von Papen. They talked soothingly and
-comfortingly to Schuschnigg but reached the same conclusion, that he
-should yield to German demands, which in practical effect meant Nazi
-control of the Government of Austria.
-
- “I furthermore state and affirm that I was next called before
- Joachim von Ribbentrop with my Secretary for Foreign Affairs,
- Guido Schmidt, and, in the presence of Franz von Papen,
- Ribbentrop exhibited to me a typewritten draft containing the
- conditions and demands made by Hitler upon me and Austria. He
- furthermore added that Hitler has informed me, Ribbentrop, ‘that
- these demands that I now offer to you are the final demands of
- the Fuehrer and that he, Hitler, is not prepared to further
- discuss them’. He further stated that, ‘you must accept the
- whole of these demands herein contained’. Ribbentrop then
- advised me to accept the demands at once. I protested, and
- referred him to my previous agreements with von Papen, made
- prior to coming to Berchtesgaden, and made it clear to
- Ribbentrop that I was not prepared to be confronted with such
- unreasonable demands as he had then and there placed before me.
- Von Papen, still present, apologized and informed me that he,
- von Papen, was entirely surprised and not at all informed about
- the aims of the Fuehrer, as here laid down. He further stated,
- and informed me, that he, von Papen, could only offer his advice
- and that he should now accede to, and sign, these demands. He
- furthermore informed me that I could be assured that Hitler
- would take care that, if I signed these demands and acceded to
- them, that from that time on Germany would remain loyal to this
- Agreement and that there would be no further difficulties for
- Austria.” (_2995-PS_)
-
-Finally, after obtaining some minor concessions from Ribbentrop,
-Schuschnigg met with Hitler again. This time Hitler not only put
-pressure upon Schuschnigg, but also, upon learning that the approval of
-President Miklas of Austria was necessary, indicated clearly to
-Schuschnigg that military action would follow if Miklas did not approve
-the agreement. In the words of Schuschnigg’s affidavit:
-
- “I further state and say, that I then went before Hitler again.
- Hitler was very excited and informed me that he would make a
- final test with Austria, and stated further: ‘that you must
- fulfill the conditions of the demands made by me on you within
- three days, or else I will order the march into Austria.’ I
- replied: ‘I am not able to take over the obligation to fulfill
- your demands, for I am only the Chancellor of Austria, and that
- obligation you attempt to place upon me is the duty only of the
- Federal President, Miklas; I am only able to sign the draft and,
- when I arrive in Vienna, to present it to the Federal
- President’. Hitler then flung open the door and yelled ‘Keitel’.
- At the same time, Hitler asked me to wait outside. Keitel then
- came in to Hitler. After twenty minutes or more I was again
- called before Hitler and, when before him, he, Hitler, informed
- me as follows: ‘For the first time in my life, I have changed my
- mind. You must sign the demands that I have made upon you, then
- report them to the Federal President, Miklas, and within three
- days from now Austria must fulfill the Agreement, otherwise
- things will take their natural course’. I then agreed to sign
- the demands and, while waiting in Hitler’s private room, he,
- Hitler, in an entirely changed mood, said to Franz von Papen,
- who was also present, ‘Herr von Papen, through your assistance I
- was appointed Chancellor of Germany and thus the Reich was saved
- from the abyss of communism. I will never forget that’. Papen
- replied: ‘_Jawohl, Mein Fuehrer_’.
-
- “I furthermore say and affirm that I, in the presence of
- Ribbentrop, Guido Schmidt, von Papen, and Hitler, signed the
- demands, and retained a copy for the Austrian Government. “I
- further state and affirm that, on the way back to Vienna from
- Berchtesgaden, Franz von Papen accompanied me and my party.
- Between the Berghof and Berchtesgaden, von Papen informed me as
- follows: ‘Now, you have your own impression of how excited the
- Fuehrer can get, but that happens very seldom, and I am
- convinced that the next time you meet him, you will have an
- amicable conversation with him.’” (_2995-PS_)
-
-The pressure put on Schuschnigg at Berchtesgaden is also disclosed in
-von Papen’s notes on his last meeting with Schuschnigg, on 26 February
-1938, the last two paragraphs of which read:
-
- “I then introduced into the conversation the widespread opinion
- that he had acted under ‘brutal pressure’ in Berchtesgaden. I
- myself had been present and been able to state that he had
- always and at every point had complete freedom of decision. The
- Chancellor replied he had actually been under considerable moral
- pressure, he could not deny that. He had made notes on the talk
- which bore that out. I reminded him that despite this talk he
- had not seen his way clear to make any concessions, and I asked
- him whether without the pressure he would have been ready to
- make the concessions he made late in the evening. He answered:
- ‘To be honest, no!’ It appears to me of importance to record
- this statement.” (_1544-PS_)
-
-For diplomatic purposes von Papen, who had been at Berchtesgaden, kept
-up the pretense that there had been no pressure. But General Jodl,
-writing the account of current events for his diary, was more candid.
-This hand-written diary discloses not only the pressure at Berchtesgaden
-but also the fact that for some days thereafter, General Keitel and
-Admiral Canaris worked out a scheme for shamming military pressure, in
-order to coerce President Miklas into ratifying the agreement. And so
-the Nazi conspirators kept up the military pressure, with threats of
-invasion, for some days after the Berchtesgaden conference, in order to
-produce the desired effect on Miklas. (_1780-PS_)
-
-The following entries, for Feb. 11-Feb. 14 were made in Jodl’s diary:
-
- “_11 February_:
-
- “In the evening and on 12 February General K. with General V.
- Reichenau and Sperrle at the Obersalzberg. Schuschnigg together
- with G. Schmidt are again being put under heaviest political and
- military pressure. At 2300 hours Schuschnigg signs protocol.
-
- “_13 February_:
-
- “In the afternoon General K. asks Admiral C. and myself to come
- to his apartment. He tells us that the Fuehrer’s order is to the
- effect that military pressure by shamming military action should
- be kept up until the 15th. Proposals for these deceptive
- maneuvers are drafted and submitted to the Fuehrer by telephone
- for approval.
-
- “_14 February_:
-
- “At 2:40 o’clock the agreement of the Fuehrer arrives. Canaris
- went to Munich to the Counter-Intelligence office VII and
- initiates the different measures.
-
- “The effect is quick and strong. In Austria the impression is
- created that Germany is undertaking serious military
- preparations.” (_1780-PS_)
-
- The proposals for deceptive maneuvers mentioned by Jodl were
- signed by Keitel. Underneath his signature appeared a pencilled
- note that the Fuehrer approved the proposals. Among the rumors
- which Keitel proposed for the intimidation of Austria were the
- following:
-
- “1. To take no real preparatory measures in the Army or
- Luftwaffe. No troop movements or redeployments.
-
- “2. Spread false, but quite credible news, which may lead to the
- conclusion of military preparations against Austria.
-
- “_a._ through V-men (V-Maenner) in Austria,
-
- “_b._ through our customs personnel (staff) at the
- frontier,
-
- “_c._ through travelling agents.
-
- “3. Such news could be:
-
- “_a._ Furloughs are supposed to have been barred in the
- Sector of the VII A.K.
-
- “_b._ (Rolling Stock) is being assembled in Munich,
- Augsburg, and Regensburg.
-
- “_c._ Major General Muff, the Military Attache in Vienna
- has been called for a conference to Berlin. (As a matter
- of fact, this is the case).
-
- “_d._ The Police Stations located at the frontier of
- Austria, have called up reinforcements.
-
- “_e._ Custom officials report about the imminent
- maneuvers of the Mountain Brigade (_Gebirgsbrigade_) in
- the region of Freilassing, Reichenhall and
- Berchtesgaden.” (_1775-PS_)
-
-The pattern of intimidation and rumor was effective, for in due course,
-as is shown in the communiques already referred to, President Miklas
-ratified the Berchtesgaden agreement, which foreshadowed a National
-Socialist Austria.
-
-E. _Events Culminating in the German Invasion on 12 March 1938._
-
-(1) _The Plebiscite._ The day after his appointment as Minister of the
-Interior, Seyss-Inquart flew to Berlin for a conference with Hitler.
-(_2484-PS_)
-
-On 9 March 1938, three weeks after Seyss-Inquart had been put in charge
-of the police, Schuschnigg announced that he would hold a plebiscite
-throughout Austria on the following Sunday, 13 March 1938. The question
-was: “Are you for an independent and social, a Christian, German and
-united Austria?” A “yes” answer to this question was clearly compatible
-with the agreement made by the German Government on 11 July 1936, and
-carried forward at Berchtesgaden on 12 February 1938. Moreover, for a
-long while the Nazis had been demanding a plebiscite on the question of
-Anschluss. But the Nazis apparently appreciated the likelihood of a
-strong “yes” vote on the question put by Schuschnigg, and they could not
-tolerate the possibility of such a vote of confidence in the Schuschnigg
-Government. They took this occasion to overturn the Austrian Government.
-
-Although the Plebiscite was not announced until the evening of 9 March,
-the Nazi Organization received word about it earlier in the day. It was
-determined by the Nazis that they had to ask Hitler what to do about the
-situation, and that they would prepare a letter of protest against the
-Plebiscite from Seyss-Inquart to Schuschnigg, and that pending Hitler’s
-approval, Seyss-Inquart would pretend to negotiate with Schuschnigg
-about details of the plebiscite.
-
-In the words of Gauleiter Rainer’s report to Reichscommissioner
-Buerckel:
-
- “The _Landesleitung_ received word about the planned plebiscite
- through illegal information services, on 9 March 1938 at 10 a.
- m. At the session which was called immediately afterwards,
- Seyss-Inquart explained that he had known about this for only a
- few hours, but that he could not talk about it because he had
- given his word to keep silent on this subject. But during the
- talks he made us understand that the illegal information we
- received was based on truth, and that in view of the new
- situation, he had been cooperating with the _Landesleitung_ from
- the very first moment. Klausner, Jury, Rainer, Globocnik and
- Seyss-Inquart were present at the first talks which were held at
- 10 a. m. There it was decided that first, the Fuehrer had to be
- informed immediately; secondly, the opportunity for the Fuehrer
- to intervene must be given to him by way of an official
- declaration made by Minister Seyss-Inquart to Schuschnigg; and
- thirdly, Seyss-Inquart must negotiate with the government until
- clear instructions and orders were received from the Fuehrer.
- Seyss-Inquart and Rainer together composed a letter to
- Schuschnigg, and only one copy of it was brought to the Fuehrer
- by Globocnik, who flew to him on the afternoon of 9 March 1938.”
- (_812-PS_)
-
-(2) _Germany’s Preparation for the Use of Force._ When news of the
-Plebiscite reached Berlin, it started a tremendous amount of activity.
-Hitler was determined not to tolerate the plebiscite. Accordingly, he
-called his military advisers and ordered preparation for the march into
-Austria. He made diplomatic preparations by explaining in a letter to
-Mussolini the reasons why he was going to march into Austria. In the
-absence of von Ribbentrop, who was temporarily detained in London, von
-Neurath took over the affairs of the Foreign Office again.
-
-The terse and somewhat disconnected notes in General Jodl’s diary give a
-vivid account of the activity in Berlin. The entry for the 10th of March
-1938 reads:
-
- “By surprise and without consulting his ministers, Schuschnigg
- ordered a plebiscite for Sunday, 13, March, which should bring
- strong majority for the Legitimists in the absence of plan or
- preparation.
-
- “Fuehrer is determined not to tolerate it. The same night, March
- 9 to 10, he calls for Goering. General v. Reichenau is called
- back from Cairo Olympic Committee. General v. Schebert is
- ordered to come, as well as Minister Glaise Horstenau, who is
- with the District leader (_Gauleiter_) Buerckel in the
- Palatinate. General Keitel communicates the facts at 1:45. He
- drives to the Reichskanzlei at 10 o’clock. I follow at 10:15,
- according to the wish of General v. Viebahn, to give him the old
- draft.
-
- “Prepare case Otto.
-
- “1300 hours: General K informs Chief of Operational Staff (and)
- Admiral Canaris. Ribbentrop is being detained in London. Neurath
- takes over the Foreign Office.
-
- “Fuehrer wants to transmit ultimatum to the Austrian Cabinet. A
- personal letter is dispatched to Mussolini and the reasons are
- developed which force the Fuehrer to take action.
-
- “1830 hours: Mobilization order is given to the Command of the
- 8th Army (Corps Area 3) 7th and 13th Army Corps; without reserve
- Army.” (_1780-PS_)
-
-In a directive of the Supreme High Command of the Armed Forces, dated 11
-March 1938 and initialed by Jodl and Keitel, Hitler stated his mixed
-political and military intentions:
-
- “1. If these measures prove unsuccessful, I intend to invade
- Austria with armed forces to establish constitutional conditions
- and to prevent further outrages against the pro-German
- population.
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “4. The forces of the Army and Air Force detailed for this
- operation must be ready for invasion and/or ready for action on
- the 12th of March 1938 at the latest from 1200 hours.
-
- “I reserve the right to give permission for crossing and flying
- over the frontier, and to decide the actual moment for invasion.
-
- “5. The behavior of the troops must give the impression that we
- do not want to wage war against our Austrian brothers. It is in
- our interest that the whole operation shall be carried out
- without any violence but in the form of a peaceful entry
- welcomed by the population. Therefore any provocation is to be
- avoided. If, however, resistance is offered it must be broken
- ruthlessly by force of arms.” (_C-102_)
-
-An implementing directive of 11 March 1938 issued by Jodl provided
-further:
-
- “If Czechoslovakian troops or militia units are encountered in
- Austria, they are to be regarded as hostile.
-
- “The Italians are everywhere to be treated as friends especially
- as Mussolini has declared himself uninterested in the solution
- of the Austrian Question”. (_C-103_)
-
-The military preparations for invasion were complete.
-
-(3) _The Events of 11 March in Austria._ The events of 11 March 1938 in
-Austria are available in three separate accounts. Although these
-accounts differ in some minor details, they afford each other almost
-complete corroboration with regard to the way in which the German
-Government deprived Austria of its sovereignty.
-
-The first account is contained in a third affidavit executed by
-Schuschnigg (_2996-PS_). Schuschnigg first states that he had been
-discussing the plebiscite with Seyss-Inquart, and that Seyss-Inquart had
-made some procedural objections but in general indicated his general
-willingness to support the plebiscite. Schuschnigg went to bed on March
-10 thinking the plebiscite would be a success. But on the morning of
-March 11 he was told that traffic from Germany had stopped, and that
-German Army forces were moving to the border. After 10 a. m.
-Seyss-Inquart came to Schuschnigg’s office with Glaise-Horstenau.
-Glaise-Horstenau had just come from Berlin and reported that Hitler was
-in a rage. (_2996-PS_)
-
-Schuschnigg’s affidavit then relates the three ultimatums presented by
-the German Government:
-
- “Seyss-Inquart was then and there called to the telephone and,
- upon his return, read to me from a scrap of paper which he held
- in his hand, the contents of a telephone call which he alleged
- was just then received by him from Goering in Berlin. The
- contents as he read it to me was as follows: ‘The Chancellor
- must revoke the proposed plebiscite within the time of one hour,
- and after three or four weeks, Austria must oblige herself to
- carry out a plebiscite concerning the Anschluss according to the
- SAAR status, otherwise the German Army is ordered to pass the
- Austrian frontier’.
-
- “I further state and say that after informing the Federal
- President of this demand made on Austria by Germany, we decided
- to recall the Plebiscite, and thereupon I informed Seyss-Inquart
- and Glaise-Horstenau of our intentions.
-
- “Seyss-Inquart said that he would go to the telephone and inform
- Goering in Berlin concerning the decision of the Austrian
- Government, at that time made. In a few minutes, he,
- Seyss-Inquart, returned to my office, and informed me further,
- as follows:
-
- ‘I have had a telephone conversation with Goering, and
- Goering has ordered me to inform the Federal Chancellor
- Schuschnigg, as follows:
-
- ‘“The situation can only be saved for Austria when
- Schuschnigg resigns as the Chancellor of Austria within
- two hours and Seyss-Inquart is appointed as the new
- Chief of the Austrian Government; if Seyss-Inquart does
- not inform me, Goering, within two hours, I, Goering,
- will suppose that you are hindered from doing so”’.
-
- “I then reported to the Federal President the new developments,
- and, after some conversation with him and other members of the
- Government, I decided to resign. The Federal President
- reluctantly accepted my resignation at 3:30 p. m. on the
- afternoon of the 11th of March 1938. He expressed himself
- unwilling to appoint Seyss-Inquart as the Federal Chancellor—he
- therefore asked me to continue my duties as caretaker Chancellor
- until he had decided who would succeed me as Federal Chancellor.
- I accepted and remained as ‘caretaker Chancellor’ from 3:30 p.
- m., 11 March 1938 until about 11:30 p. m. the same night, when
- Seyss-Inquart was appointed to the position of Federal
- Chancellor.
-
- “I further state and say that at about 3:30 p. m. on the
- afternoon of 11 March 1938, the Foreign Office of the Austrian
- Government contacted the Embassy of Germany in Vienna, to
- ascertain if the demands that had been then and there made by
- Goering on Austria were the official demands of the German
- Government. The Military Attache of Germany in Vienna, one
- Lieutenant General Muff, came before the Austrian Federal
- President, and repeated the contents of the German ultimatums
- that had previously been delivered to us by Seyss-Inquart.
-
- “I furthermore state and say, that the Federal President, at
- about 7:30 or 8:00 o’clock p. m. on the night of 11 March 1938
- ordered me, as caretaker Chancellor, to broadcast the events of
- the day and to protest against the demands made on Austria
- during that day by Germany. Furthermore, to inform the world
- that Austria had been forced to give in to those demands of
- Germany through superior force * * *.” (_2996-PS_)
-
-The report from Gauleiter Rainer to Reichscommissioner Buerckel also
-discusses the events of March 11. In general, Rainer’s report
-corroborates Schuschnigg’s affidavit. (_812-PS_)
-
-Another document recalls vividly the events of 11 March 1938. This
-document, which was found in a building of the courtyard of the German
-Air Ministry, is a binder containing typed transcripts of some 27
-telephone conversations, held in Goering’s office in the Air Ministry on
-11 March 1938 and up to 14 March 1938. Most of the conversations were
-conducted by Goering, although at least one was held by Hitler
-(_2949-PS_). (For purposes of convenience these telephone calls are
-marked with an identifying letter, running from A through Z and then
-beginning again with AA).
-
-The first group of conversations took place between Field Marshal
-Goering, who was identified as F., and Seyss-Inquart, who was identified
-as S. The transcript is in part, in the language of these two persons
-and is in part a summary of the actual conversations. At 2:45 p. m. the
-following conversation occurred:
-
- “F: How do you do, doctor. My brother-in-law, is he with you?
-
- “S: No.
-
- “Thereupon the conversation took approximately the following
- turn:
-
- “F: How are things with you? Have you resigned, or do you have
- any news?
-
- “S. The Chancellor has cancelled the elections for Sunday, and
- therefore he has put S. and the other gentlemen in a difficult
- situation. Besides having called off the elections, extensive
- precautionary measures are being ordered, among others curfew at
- 8 p. m.
-
- “F: Replied that in his opinion the measures taken by Chancellor
- Schuschnigg were not satisfactory in any respect. At this moment
- he could not commit himself officially. F. will take a clear
- stand very shortly. In calling off the elections, he could see a
- postponement only, not a change of the present situation which
- had been brought about by the behavior of the Chancellor
- Schuschnigg in breaking the Berchtesgaden agreement.
-
- “Thereupon a conversation took place between F. and the Fuehrer.
- Afterwards F. phoned again S. This conversation was held at
- 15:05.
-
- “F: Told S. that Berlin did not agree whatsoever with the
- decision made by Chancellor Schuschnigg since he did not enjoy
- any more the confidence of our government because he had broken
- the Berchtesgaden agreement, and therefore further confidence in
- his future actions did not exist. Consequently, the National
- Minister, S. and the others, are being requested to immediately
- hand in their resignation to the Chancellor, and also to ask the
- Chancellor to resign. F. added that if after a period of one
- hour no report had come through the assumption would be made
- that S. would no more be in the position to phone. That would
- mean that the gentlemen had handed in their resignations. S. was
- then told to send the telegram to the Fuehrer as agreed upon. As
- a matter of course, an immediate commission by the Federal
- President for S. to form a new cabinet would follow
- Schuschnigg’s resignation.” (_2949-PS, Part A_)
-
-Thus Goering told Seyss-Inquart that it was not enough for Schuschnigg
-to cancel the election. And twenty minutes later he telephoned
-Seyss-Inquart to state that Schuschnigg must resign. When informed at
-about an hour later that Schuschnigg had resigned, he pointed out that
-in addition it was necessary to have Seyss-Inquart at the head of the
-Cabinet.
-
-An hour later Goering phoned Dombrowski at the German Embassy in Vienna.
-He was concerned that the Nazi Party and all its formations should be
-legalized promptly:
-
- “Goering: Now to go on. The Party has definitely been legalized?
-
- “Dombrowski: But that is * * * it isn’t necessary to even
- discuss that.
-
- “Goering: With all of its organizations.
-
- “Dombrowski: With all of its organizations within this country.
-
- “Goering: In uniform?
-
- “Dombrowski: In uniform.
-
- “Goering: Good.
-
- “Dombrowski: calls attention to the fact that the SA and SS have
- already been on duty for one-half hour which means everything is
- all right.” (_2949-PS, Part C_)
-
-In addition Goering stated that the Cabinet must be formed by 7:30 p.
-m., and he transmitted instructions, to be delivered to Seyss-Inquart,
-as to who should be appointed to the cabinet:
-
- “Goering: Yes, and by 7:30 he also must talk with the Fuehrer
- and as to the Cabinet, Keppler will bring you the names. One
- thing I have forgotten, Fishbeck must have the Department of
- Economy and Commerce.
-
- “Dombrowski: That’s understood.
-
- “Goering: Kaltenbrunner is to have the Department of Security
- and Bahr is to have the armed forces. The Austrian Army is to be
- taken by Seyss-Inquart himself and you know all about the
- Justice Department.
-
- “Dombrowski: Yes, yes.
-
- “Goering: Give me the name.
-
- “Dombrowski: Well, your brother-in-law. Isn’t that right?
-
- “Goering: Yes?
-
- “Dombrowski: Yes.
-
- “Goering: That’s right and then also Fishbeck.” (_2949-PS, Part
- C_)
-
-About twenty minutes later, at 5:26 p. m., Goering received the news
-that Miklas was refusing to appoint Seyss-Inquart as Chancellor. He
-issued instructions for an ultimatum to be delivered to Miklas. The
-telephone conversation between Goering and Seyss-Inquart went as
-follows:
-
- “G: Now remember the following: You go immediately together with
- Lt. General Muff and tell the Federal President that if the
- conditions which are known to you are not accepted immediately,
- the troops who are already stationed at and advancing to the
- frontier will march in tonight along the whole line, and Austria
- will cease to exist. Lt. General Muff should go with you and
- demand to be admitted for conference immediately. Please, do
- inform us immediately about Miklas’ position. Tell him, there is
- no time now for any joke. Just through the false report we
- received before action was delayed, but now the situation is
- that tonight the invasion will begin from all the corners of
- Austria. The invasion will be stopped and the troops will be
- held at the border only if we are informed by 7:30 that Miklas
- has entrusted you with the Federal Chancellorship. (There
- follows a sentence which is broken up) M. does not matter
- whatever it might be, the immediate restoration of the Party
- with all its organizations (again interruption) and then call
- out all the National Socialists all over the country. They
- should now be in the streets. So remember, report must be given
- till 7:30. Lt. General Muff is supposed to come along with you.
- I shall inform him immediately. If Miklas could not understand
- it in 4 hours, we shall make him understand it now in 4
- minutes.” (_2949-PS, Part E_)
-
-An hour later, at 6:28 p. m. Goering had an extensively interrupted
-telephone conversation with Keppler and Muff and Seyss-Inquart. When
-told that Miklas had refused to appoint Seyss-Inquart, Goering replied:
-
- “Goering: Well, then Seyss-Inquart has to dismiss him; just go
- upstairs again and just tell him plainly that SI shall call on
- the National Socialists guard, and in 5 minutes the troops will
- march in by my order”. (_2949-PS, Part H_)
-
-After an interruption, Seyss-Inquart came to the telephone and informed
-Goering that Miklas was still sticking to his old viewpoint, although a
-new person had gone in to talk to him and there might be definite word
-in about ten minutes. The conversation proceeded as follows:
-
- “G: Listen, so I shall wait a few more minutes, till he comes
- back, then you inform me via Blitz conversation in the Reich
- Chancellery—as usually, but it has to be done fast. I hardly
- can justify it as a matter of fact. I am not entitled to do so;
- if it cannot be done, then you have to take over the power; all
- right?
-
- “S. But if he threatens?
-
- “G. Yes.
-
- “S. Well, I see, then we shall be ready (_antreten_).
-
- “G. Call me via Blitz.” (_2949-PS, Part H_)
-
-It is plain that Goering and Seyss-Inquart had agreed on a plan for
-Seyss-Inquart to take over power if Miklas remained obdurate. The plan
-involved both the use of the National Socialist forces in Austria and
-invasion by German troops.
-
-Later that night, at about 8:00 o’clock, Goering and Seyss-Inquart had
-another conversation. This was after the ultimatum had expired.
-Seyss-Inquart informed Goering that Miklas was still refusing to name
-Seyss-Inquart as Chancellor. The conversation then proceeded as follows:
-
- “G: O.K. I shall give the order to march in and then you make
- sure that you get the power. Notify the leading people about the
- following which I shall tell you now! Everyone who offers
- resistance or organizes resistance, will immediately be
- subjected to our court-martial, the court-martial of our
- invading troops. Is that clear?
-
- “S: Yes.
-
- “G: Including leading personalities, it doesn’t make any
- difference.
-
- “S: Yes, they have given the order, not to offer any resistance.
-
- “G: Yes, it does not matter: The Federal President did not
- authorize you, and that also can be considered as resistance.
-
- “S: Yes.
-
- “G: Well, now you are officially authorized.
-
- “S: Yes.
-
- “G: Well, good luck, Heil Hitler.” (_2349-PS, Part I_)
-
-Another historical event—the famous telegram which Seyss-Inquart sent
-to the German Government requesting it to send troops into Austria to
-help put down disorder—was discussed over the telephone. A conversation
-held at 8:48 between Goering and Keppler proceeded as follows:
-
- “G: Well, I do not know yet. Listen: The main thing is, that
- Inquart takes over all powers of the Government, that he keeps
- the radio stations occupied.
-
- “K: Well, we represent the Government now.
-
- “G: Yes, that’s it. You are the Government. Listen carefully:
- The following telegram should be sent here by Seyss-Inquart.
- Take the notes:
-
- ‘The provisional Austrian Government which after the
- dismissal of the Schuschnigg Government, consider it its
- task to establish peace and order in Austria, sends to
- the German Government the urgent request, to support it
- in its task and to help it to prevent bloodshed. For
- this purpose it asks the German Government to send
- German troops as soon as possible’.
-
- “K: Well, SA and SS are marching through the streets, but
- everything is quiet. Everything has collapsed with the
- professional groups (?)” (_2949-PS, Part L_)
-
-And a few minutes later the conversation continued as follows:
-
- “G: Then our troops will cross the border today.
-
- “K: Yes.
-
- “G: Well, and he should send the telegram as soon as possible.
-
- “K: Will send the telegram to SI in the office of the Federal
- Chancery.
-
- “G: Please, show him, the text of the telegram and do tell him
- that we are asking him—well, he does not even have to send the
- telegram—all he needs to do is to say: agreed.
-
- “K: Yes.
-
- “G: Either call me at the Fuehrer’s or at my place. Well, good
- luck. Heil Hitler!” (_2949-PS, Part L_)
-
-It will be recalled that in the first conversation (Part A), held at
-3:05 p. m., Goering had requested Seyss-Inquart to send the telegram
-agreed upon. But now the matter was so urgent that Goering dictated the
-exact wording of the telegram over the telephone.
-
-And an hour later, at 9:54 p. m., a conversation between Dr. Dietrich in
-Berlin and Keppler in Vienna went as follows:
-
- “D: I need the telegram urgently.
-
- “K: Tell the General Field Marshal that Seyss-Inquart agrees.
-
- “D: This is marvelous. Thank you.
-
- “K: Listen to the radio. News will be given.
-
- “D: Where?
-
- “K: From Vienna.
-
- “D: So Seyss-Inquart agrees?
-
- “K: _Jawohl!_” (_2949-PS, Part M_)
-
-(4) _The Order to Invade Austria._ Communications with Austria were now
-suspended. But the German military machine had been set in motion. A
-Directive, dated 11 March 1938 at 2045 hours, from Supreme Commander of
-the Armed Forces, initialled by General Jodl and signed by Hitler,
-ordered the invasion of Austria because of its failure to comply with
-the German ultimatum. The directive reads:
-
- “Re: Operation Otto
-
- “_Directive No. 2_
-
- “1. The demands of the German ultimatum to the Austrian
- government have not been fulfilled.
-
- “2. The Austrian Armed Forces have been ordered to withdraw in
- front of the entry of German troops and to avoid fighting.
-
- “The Austrian Government has ceased to function of its own
- accord.
-
- “3. To avoid further bloodshed in Austrian towns, the entry of
- the German Armed Forces into Austria will commence, according to
- directive No. 1, at daybreak on 12.3.
-
- “I expect the set objectives to be reached by exerting all
- forces to the full, as quickly as possible.
-
- (signed) ADOLF HITLER” (_C-182_)
-
-(5) _Communications with Rome—Avoidance of Disaster._ But at the very
-time that Hitler and Goering had embarked on this military undertaking,
-they still had a question mark in their minds—Italy. Italy had massed
-forces on the Italian-Austrian border on the occasion of the 25 July
-1934 putsch. Italy had traditionally been the political protector of
-Austria.
-
-At 10:25 p. m. that evening, however, Hitler heard from Prince Philip of
-Hessen, his Ambassador at Rome, that he had just returned from the
-Palazzo Venezia, and Mussolini had accepted the whole affair in a
-very-friendly manner. The telephone conversation went thus:
-
-“Hesen: I have just come back from Palazzo Venezia. The Duce accepted
-the whole thing in a very-friendly manner. He sends you his regards. He
-had been informed from Austria, Schuschnigg gave him the news. He had
-then said it would be a complete impossibility. It would be a bluff,
-such a thing could not be done. So he was told that it was unfortunately
-arranged thus and it could not be changed any more. Then Mussolini said
-that Austria would be immaterial to him.
-
-“Fuehrer: Then, please, tell Mussolini, I will never forget him for
-this.
-
-“H: Yes.
-
-“F: Never, never, never, whatever happens. I am still ready to make a
-quite different agreement with him.
-
-“H: Yes, I told him that, too.
-
-“F: As soon as the Austrian affair has been settled, I shall be ready to
-go with him through thick and thin, nothing matters.
-
-“H: Yes, my Fuehrer.
-
-“F: Listen, I shall make any agreement—I am no longer in fear of the
-terrible position which would have existed militarily in case we had
-gotten into a conflict. You may tell him that I do thank him ever so
-much, never, never shall I forget that.
-
-“H: Yes, my Fuehrer.
-
-“F: I will never forget it, whatever will happen. If he should ever need
-any help or be in any danger, he can be convinced that I shall stick to
-him whatever might happen, even if the whole world were against him.
-
-“H: Yes, my Fuehrer.” (_2949-PS, Part N_)
-
-It will be recalled that Jodl referred in his diary (_1780-PS_) to the
-letter which Hitler sent to Mussolini. In this letter, dated 11 March
-1938, after stating that Austria had been declining into anarchy, Hitler
-wrote: “I have decided to reestablish order in my Fatherland, order and
-tranquility, and to give to the popular will the possibility of settling
-its own fate in unmistakable fashion openly and by its own decision.” He
-stated that this was only an act of self-defense, that he had no hostile
-intentions toward Italy. (_2510-PS_)
-
-After the invasion, when in Linz, Austria, Hitler communicated his
-gratitude to Mussolini once more, this time by telegraph: “Mussolini, I
-will never forget you for this.” (_2467-PS_)
-
-(6) _The Appointment of Seyss-Inquart as Chancellor._ Late in the
-evening of March 11, President Miklas appointed Seyss-Inquart as
-Chancellor. The radio announcement of Seyss-Inquart’s appointment was
-made at 11:15 p. m. (_2465-PS_)
-
-(7) _Later Communications with London—Misleading Explanations._ On
-Sunday, 13 March 1938, the day after the invasion, Goering, who had been
-left in charge of the Reich by Hitler, telephoned Ribbentrop in London.
-Their conversation disclosed the way in which the Nazis soothed and
-misled other nations:
-
- “G: As you know the Fuehrer has entrusted me with the
- administration of the current government procedures (_Fuehrung
- der Regierungsgeschaft_). And therefore I wanted to inform you.
- There is overwhelming joy in Austria, that you can hear over the
- radio.
-
- “R: Yes, it is fantastic, isn’t it?
-
- “G: Yes, the last march into the Rhineland is completely
- overshadowed. The Fuehrer was deeply moved, when he talked to me
- last night. You must remember it was the first time that he saw
- his homeland again. Now, I mainly want to talk about political
- things. Well, this story we had given an ultimatum, that is just
- foolish gossip. From the very beginning the National Socialist
- ministers and the representatives of the people
- (_Volksreferenten_) have presented the ultimatum. Later on, more
- and more prominent people of the Movement Party participated,
- and as a natural result, the Austrian National Socialist
- ministers asked us to back them up, so they would not be
- completely beaten up against and be subjected to terror and
- civil war. Then we told them we would not allow Schuschnigg to
- provoke a civil war, under no circumstances. Whether by
- Schuschnigg’s direct order, or with consent the Communists and
- the Reds had been armed, and were already making demonstrations,
- which were photographed with “Heil Moskau” and so on; naturally;
- all these facts caused some danger for Wiener-Neustadt. Then you
- have to consider that Schuschnigg made his speeches, telling
- them the Fatherland Front (_Vaterlandische Front_) would fight
- to its last man; one could not know that they would capitulate
- like that and therefore Seyss-Inquart who already had taken over
- the government asked us to march in immediately. Before we had
- already marched up to the frontier since we could not know
- whether there would be a civil war or not. These are the actual
- facts which can be proved by documents. * * *”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “G: No, no, I think so, too. Only, I did not know if you spoke
- already to these people. I want that you once more,—but no—not
- at all once more,—but generally speaking—tell the following to
- Halifax and Chamberlain: It is not correct that Germany has
- given any ultimatum. This is a lie by Schuschnigg, because the
- ultimatum was presented to him by S-I, Glaise-Horstenau and
- Jury. Furthermore, it is not true that we have presented an
- ultimatum to the Federal President, but it also was given by the
- others and as far as I know just a military-attache came along,
- asked by S-I, because of a technical question; he was supposed
- to ask whether in case S-I would ask for the support of German
- troops, Germany would grant this request. Furthermore, I want to
- state that S-I asked us expressly by phone as by telegram to
- send troops because he did not know about the situation in
- Wiener-Neustadt, Vienna, and so on; because arms had been
- distributed there. And then he could not know how the Fatherland
- Front might react since they always had had such a big mouth.
-
- “R: Mr. Goering, tell me, how is the situation in Vienna, is
- everything settled yet?
-
- “G: Yes. Yesterday I landed hundreds of airplanes with some
- companies, in order to secure the airfield and they were
- received with joy. Today the advance unit of the 17 division
- marches in, together with the Austrian troops. Also I want to
- point out that the Austrian troops did not withdraw but that
- they got together and fraternized immediately with the German
- troops, wherever they were stationed.” (_2949-PS, Part W_)
-
-In view of the previous conversations, these are interesting
-explanations—that the ultimatum was made by Seyss-Inquart alone and not
-by Goering; that Lt. Gen. Muff, the military attache, came along merely
-to answer a technical question; and that Seyss-Inquart asked expressly
-by telephone and by telegram for troops. But perhaps this conversation
-can best be understood in light of the actual physical scene of time and
-place:
-
- “G: Well, do come! I shall be delighted to see you.
-
- “R: I shall see you this afternoon.
-
- “G: The weather is wonderful here. Blue sky. I am sitting here
- on my balcony—all covered with blankets—in the fresh air,
- drinking my coffee. Later on I have to drive in, I have to make
- the speech, and the birds are twittering, and here and there I
- can hear over the radio the enthusiasm, which must be wonderful
- over there.
-
- “R: That is marvelous.” (_2949-PS, Part W_)
-
-The British Foreign Office had protested the tactics employed by the
-German Government. In a letter dated 12 March 1938 Ambassador Neville
-Henderson, at the British Embassy, Berlin, wrote to Lord Halifax,
-Foreign Minister, as follows:
-
- “My Lord,
-
- “With reference to your telegram No. 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.” (_3045-PS_)
-
-The enclosure was the note of March 11th from the British Embassy to 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 re-admission
- 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, H.M.G. in
- the U.K. 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.”
- (_3045-PS_)
-
-Von Neurath wrote a letter of response dated 12 March 1938. He first
-objected to the fact that the British Government was undertaking the
-role of protector of Austria’s independence:
-
- “In the name of the German Government I must point out here that
- the Royal British Government has 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 third Powers.”
- (_3287-PS_)
-
-Then, in response to the assertions regarding Germany’s ultimatum, Von
-Neurath set out what he stated to be the true version of events:
-
- “* * * 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 asked 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 unforeseeable 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.” (_3287-PS_)
-
-In light of the documents already adverted to, this version of events
-given by von Neurath is palpably untrue.
-
-F. _The Invasion and Absorption of Austria._
-
-(1) _The Invasion and Immediate Events: Control of Austria in Fact._ In
-accordance with the directive of March 11 (_C-182_), the German Army
-crossed the Austrian border at daybreak on 12 March 1938. Hitler issued
-a proclamation to the German people announcing and purporting to justify
-the invasion (_TC-47_). The British Government and the French Government
-filed protests.
-
-The German Government and the Austrian National Socialists swiftly
-secured their grip on Austria. Seyss-Inquart welcomed Hitler at Linz and
-they both expressed their joy over events of the day. Seyss-Inquart in
-his speech declared Article 88 of the Treaty of St. Germain inoperative.
-(_2485-PS_)
-
-A telegram from the American Legation in Vienna to the Secretary of
-State, on 12 March 1938, gave a picture of what was happening in Vienna:
-
- “Secretary of State,
-
- Washington.
-
- 70, March 12, noon.
-
- “Numerous German bombers flying over Vienna dropping leaflets
- ‘National Socialist Germany greets its possession National
- Socialist Austria and its new government in true indivisible
- union’.
-
- “Continual rumors small German troop movements into Austria and
- impending arrival Austrian legion.
-
- “SS and SA in undisputed control in Vienna.
-
- “Police wear swastika arm bands. Schuschnigg and Schmidt rumored
- arrested.
-
- “Himmler and Hess here.
-
- WILEY” (_L-292_)
-
-(2) _Statutes of Consolidation: Control of Austria in Law._ The
-law-making machine was put to work on the task of consolidation. First,
-Miklas was caused to resign as President (_2466-PS_). Seyss-Inquart
-became both Chancellor and President. He then signed a Federal
-Constitutional Law of 13 March 1938, for the Reunion of Austria with the
-German Reich, which in turn was incorporated into the Reich Statute of
-Reunion passed the same day (_2307-PS_). This Federal Constitutional Law
-declared Austria to be a province of the German Reich.
-
-By annexing Austria into the German Reich, Germany violated Article 80
-of the Treaty of Versailles, which provides:
-
- “Germany acknowledges and will respect the independence of
- Austria within the frontier which may be fixed in a treaty
- between that State and the principle Allied and Associated
- Powers; she agrees that this independence shall be inalienable,
- * * *”
-
-Similarly, the Austrian invasion violated Article 88 of the Treaty of
-St. Germain, which provides:
-
- “The independence of Austria is inalienable otherwise than with
- the consent of the Council of the League of Nations.
- Consequently Austria undertakes in the absence of the consent of
- the said Council to abstain from any act which might directly or
- indirectly or by any means whatever compromise her independence,
- particularly, and until her admission to membership of the
- League of Nations, by participation in the affairs of another
- Power.”
-
-This basic constitutional law provided for a plebiscite to be held on 10
-April 1938, concerning the question of reunion. But this was a mere
-formality. The plebiscite could only confirm the union. It could not
-undo Germany’s union with and control over Austria. To illustrate the
-way in which legal consolidation was swiftly assured, with Austria
-occupied by troops, it is not necessary to do more than review some of
-the statutes passed within the month. Hitler placed the Austrian Federal
-Army under his command and required all members of the Army to take an
-oath of allegiance to Hitler as their Supreme Commander (_2936-PS_).
-Public officials of the Province of Austria were required to take an
-oath of office swearing obedience to Hitler, Fuehrer of the German Reich
-and People; Jewish officials, as defined, were not permitted to take the
-oath. (_2311-PS_)
-
-Hitler and Frick signed a decree applying to Austria various Reich laws,
-including the law of 1933 against formation of new parties and the 1933
-law for the preservation of unity of party and state (2310-PS). Hitler,
-Frick, and Goering ordered that the Reich Minister of the Interior be
-the central authority for carrying out the reunion of Austria with the
-German Reich. (_1060-PS_)
-
-In connection with Germany’s extensive propaganda campaign to ensure
-acceptability of the German regime, Goebbels established a Reich
-Propaganda Office in Vienna (_2935-PS_). The ballot, addressed to
-soldiers of the former Austrian Army as “German soldier”, asked the
-voters whether they agreed with the “accomplishment” and “ratification”
-on March 13, 1938, of the reuniting of Austria with Germany (_1659-PS_).
-The groundwork was fully laid before the holding of the plebiscite “for
-German men and women of Austria” promised in the basic law of March 13.
-(_2307-PS_)
-
-(3) _The Importance of Austria in Further Aggressions._ Germany’s desire
-to consummate the Anschluss with Austria, and its determination to
-execute that aim in the way and at the time that it did (with threat of
-military force, quickly, and despite political risks), was due to the
-importance of Austria in its further plans of aggression. The conference
-of the conspirators held on November 5, 1937, which laid plans for
-aggressive war in Europe, outlined as objectives in Austria the conquest
-of food, through expulsion of a million people, and an increase in
-fighting strength in part through the improvement in frontier.
-(_386-PS_)
-
-Austria yielded material resources. Moreover she provided ready cash,
-taken from the Jews and from the Austrian Government. One of the first
-orders passed after the Anschluss was an order signed by Hitler, Frick,
-Schwerin von Krosigk, and Schacht, for the transfer to the Reich of the
-assets of the Austrian National Bank. (_2313-PS_)
-
-Austria yielded human resources. Three months after Anschluss, there was
-enacted a decree requiring 21-year-old men to report for active military
-service. (_1660-PS_)
-
-And the acquisition of Austria improved the military strategic position
-of the German Army. In a lecture delivered by General Jodl, Chief of the
-General Staff of the Armed Forces, on 7 November 1943, at Munich, to the
-Gauleiters, Jodl reviewed the situation in 1938:
-
- “The Austrian ‘Anschluss’ in its turn, brought with it not only
- the fulfilment of an old national aim but also had the effect
- both of reinforcing our fighting strength and of materially
- improving our strategic position. Whereas up till then the
- territory of Czechoslovakia had projected in a most menacing way
- right into Germany (a wasp waist in the direction of France and
- an air base for the Allies, in particular Russia),
- Czechoslovakia herself was now enclosed by pincers. Its own
- strategic position had now become so unfavorable that she was
- bound to fall a victim to any attack pressed home with rigor
- before effective aid from the WEST could be expected to arrive.”
- (_L-172_)
-
-The Nazi conspirators were now ready to carry out the second part of
-their second phase of their aggressions. Czechoslovakia was next.
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO AGGRESSION AGAINST
- AUSTRIA
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6 (a). │ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Sections IV (F) 3│ │ 23-24,
- │ (a, b); V. │ I │ 29
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document was referred to during the │ │
- │trial but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
-  *386-PS │Notes on a conference with Hitler in the│ │
- │Reich Chancellery, Berlin, 5 November │ │
- │1937, signed by Hitler’s adjutant, │ │
- │Hossbach, and dated 10 November 1937. │ │
- │(USA 25) │ III │ 295
- │ │ │
-  *812-PS │Letter from Rainer to Seyss-Inquart, 22 │ │
- │August 1939 and report from Gauleiter │ │
- │Rainer to Reichskommissar Gauleiter │ │
- │Buerckel, 6 July 1939 on events in the │ │
- │NSDAP of Austria from 1933 to 11 March │ │
- │1938. (USA 61) │ III │ 586
- │ │ │
-**1060-PS │Order pursuant to law concerning Reunion│ │
- │of Austria with German Reich, 16 March │ │
- │1938. 1938 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p.│ │
- │249. (Referred to but not offered in │ │
- │evidence.) │ III │ 717
- │ │ │
- *1544-PS │Von Papen’s notes, 26 February 1938, on │ │
- │his parting visit with Chancellor │ │
- │Schuschnigg. (USA 71) │ IV │ 103
- │ │ │
-**1659-PS │Second Order concerning Plebiscite and │ │
- │Election for the Greater German │ │
- │Reichstag of 24 March 1938. 1938 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 303. │ │
- │(Referred to but not offered in │ │
- │evidence.) │ IV │ 170
- │ │ │
-  1660-PS │Decree for registration for active │ │
- │service in Austria in the year 1938 of │ │
- │16 June 1938. 1938 Reichsgesetzblatt, │ │
- │Part I, p. 631. │ IV │ 171
- │ │ │
- *1760-PS │Affidavit of George S. Messersmith, 28 │ │
- │August 1945. (USA 57) │ IV │ 305
- │ │ │
- *1775-PS │Propositions to Hitler by OKW, 14 │ │
- │February 1938. (USA 73) │ IV │ 357
- │ │ │
- *1780-PS │Excerpts from diary kept by General │ │
- │Jodl, January 1937 to August 1939. (USA │ │
- │72) │ IV │ 360
- │ │ │
- *2219-PS │Excerpt from letter from Seyss-Inquart │ │
- │to Goering, 14 July 1939. (USA 62) │ IV │ 854
- │ │ │
- *2246-PS │Report of von Papen to Hitler, 1 │ │
- │September 1936, concerning Danube │ │
- │situation. (USA 67) │ IV │ 930
- │ │ │
- *2247-PS │Letter from von Papen to Hitler, 17 May │ │
- │1935, concerning intention of Austrian │ │
- │government to arm. (USA 64) │ IV │ 930
- │ │ │
- *2248-PS │Report of von Papen to Hitler, 27 July │ │
- │1935, concerning National Socialism in │ │
- │Austria. (USA 63) │ IV │ 932
- │ │ │
- *2307-PS │Law concerning reunion of Austria with │ │
- │German Reich, 13 March 1938. 1938 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 237. (GB │ │
- │133) │ IV │ 997
- │ │ │
-**2310-PS │First Decree of Fuehrer and Reich │ │
- │Chancellor concerning Introduction of │ │
- │German Reich Law into Austria, 15 March │ │
- │1938. 1938 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p.│ │
- │247. (Referred to but not offered in │ │
- │evidence.) │ IV │ 1004
- │ │ │
-**2311-PS │Decree of Fuehrer and Reich Chancellor │ │
- │concerning Administration of the Oath to│ │
- │Officials of Province of Austria, 15 │ │
- │March 1938. 1938 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part│ │
- │I, p. 245. (Referred to but not offered │ │
- │in evidence.) │ IV │ 1005
- │ │ │
-**2313-PS │Order for Transfer of Austrian National │ │
- │Bank to Reichsbank, 17 March 1938. 1938 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 254. │ │
- │(Referred to but not offered in │ │
- │evidence.) │ IV │ 1006
- │ │ │
-**2367-PS │Hitler’s speech of 1 May 1936, published│ │
- │in Voelkischer Beobachter, Southern │ │
- │German edition, 2-3 May 1936. (Referred │ │
- │to but not offered in evidence.) │ IV │ 1101
- │ │ │
- *2385-PS │Affidavit of George S. Messersmith, 30 │ │
- │August 1945. (USA 68) │ V │ 23
- │ │ │
- *2461-PS │Official German communique of meeting of│ │
- │Hitler and Schuschnigg, 12 February │ │
- │1938, published in Documents of German │ │
- │Politics, 1939, Vol. VI, Part 1. (GB │ │
- │132) │ V │ 206
- │ │ │
- *2463-PS │Telegram from Seyss-Inquart to Hitler, │ │
- │11 March 1938, published in Documents of│ │
- │German Politics, 1939, Vol. VI, Part 1. │ │
- │(USA 703) │ V │ 207
- │ │ │
-**2464-PS │Official Austrian communique of the │ │
- │reorganization of the Austrian Cabinet │ │
- │and general political amnesty, 16 │ │
- │February 1938, published in Documents of│ │
- │German Politics, 1939, Vol. VI, Part 1. │ │
- │(Referred to but not offered in │ │
- │evidence.) │ V │ 208
- │ │ │
-**2465-PS │Announcement of appointment of │ │
- │Seyss-Inquart as Federal Chancellor, 11 │ │
- │March 1938, published in Documents of │ │
- │German Politics, 1938, Vol. VI, Part 1. │ │
- │(Referred to but not offered in │ │
- │evidence.) │ V │ 209
- │ │ │
-**2466-PS │Official communique of resignation of │ │
- │Austrian President Miklas, 13 March │ │
- │1938, published in Documents of German │ │
- │Politics, 1939, Vol. VI, Part 1. │ │
- │(Referred to but not offered in │ │
- │evidence.) │ V │ 209
- │ │ │
-  2467-PS │Hitler’s telegram to Mussolini from │ │
- │Linz, 13 March 1938, published in │ │
- │Documents of German Politics, 1939, Vol.│ │
- │VI, Part 1. │ V │ 210
- │ │ │
-**2469-PS │Official German and Austrian communique │ │
- │concerning equal rights of Austrian │ │
- │National Socialists in Austria, 18 │ │
- │February 1938, published in Documents of│ │
- │German Politics, 1939, Vol. VI, Part 1. │ │
- │(Referred to but not offered in │ │
- │evidence.) │ V │ 210
- │ │ │
-**2484-PS │Official German communique of visit of │ │
- │Austrian Minister Seyss-Inquart to │ │
- │Hitler, Berlin, 17 February 1938, │ │
- │published in Documents of German │ │
- │Politics, 1939, Vol. VI, Part 1. │ │
- │(Referred to but not offered in │ │
- │evidence.) │ V │ 234
- │ │ │
-**2485-PS │Address by Federal Chancellor │ │
- │Seyss-Inquart from Balcony of City Hall │ │
- │at Linz, 12 March 1938, published in │ │
- │Documents of German Politics, Vol. VI, │ │
- │Part 1, p. 144-145. (Referred to but not│ │
- │introduced in evidence.) │ V │ 234
- │ │ │
-  2510-PS │Hitler letter to Mussolini, 11 March │ │
- │1938, published in Documents of German │ │
- │Politics, Vol. VI, Part 1, pp. 135-7, │ │
- │No. 24. │ V │ 244
- │ │ │
-**2799-PS │Letter from Hitler to von Papen, 26 July│ │
- │1934, published in Documents of German │ │
- │Politics, Vol. II, p. 83, No. 38. │ │
- │(Referred to but not offered in │ │
- │evidence.) │ V │ 441
- │ │ │
-  2831-PS │Letter from Office of Extraordinary and │ │
- │Plenipotentiary Ambassador of German │ │
- │Government to Reich Chancellery, │ │
- │inclosing report on Political situation │ │
- │in Austria, 14 January 1937. │ V │ 498
- │ │ │
- *2832-PS │Entry for July 26, 1934 from Ambassador │ │
- │Dodd’s diary. (USA 58) │ V │ 500
- │ │ │
-  2909-PS │Affidavit of August Eigruber, 9 November│ │
- │1945. │ V │ 578
- │ │ │
-**2935-PS │Order concerning establishment of Reich │ │
- │Propaganda Office in Vienna, 31 March │ │
- │1938. 1938 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p.│ │
- │350. (Referred to but not offered in │ │
- │evidence.) │ V │ 604
- │ │ │
-**2936-PS │Instruction of the Fuehrer and Reich │ │
- │Chancellor, concerning the Austrian │ │
- │Federal Army, 13 March 1938, published │ │
- │in Documents of German Politics, 1938, │ │
- │Vol. VI, Part 1, p. 150. (Referred to │ │
- │but not offered in evidence.) │ V │ 604
- │ │ │
- *2949-PS │Transcripts of telephone calls from Air │ │
- │Ministry, 11-14 March 1938. (USA 76) │ V │ 628
- │ │ │
- *2968-PS │Memorandum from U. S. Army officer │ │
- │concerning plaque erected in Austrian │ │
- │Chancellery in memoriam to killers of │ │
- │Dollfuss. (USA 60) │ V │ 677
- │ │ │
-  2985-PS │Telephone message of Mr. Hadow, British │ │
- │Legation, Vienna, to Sir John Simon, 26 │ │
- │July 1934. │ V │ 687
- │ │ │
-**2994-PS │Affidavit of Kurt von Schuschnigg, │ │
- │former Chancellor of Austria, concerning│ │
- │Austrian-German Treaty of 11 July 1936. │ │
- │(USA 66) (Objection to admission in │ │
- │evidence upheld) │ V │ 703
- │ │ │
-  2995-PS │Affidavit of Kurt von Schuschnigg, │ │
- │former Chancellor of Austria, concerning│ │
- │his visit to Berchtesgaden on 12 │ │
- │February 1938. │ V │ 709
- │ │ │
-  2996-PS │Affidavit of Kurt von Schuschnigg, │ │
- │former Chancellor of Austria, concerning│ │
- │events of 11 March 1938. │ V │ 713
- │ │ │
- *3045-PS │Letter, 12 March 1938, to British │ │
- │Embassy enclosing letter from Henderson │ │
- │to Halifax, 11 March 1938. (USA 127) │ V │ 765
- │ │ │
- *3054-PS │“The Nazi Plan”, script of a motion │ │
- │picture composed of captured German │ │
- │film. (USA 167) │ V │ 801
- │ │ │
-  3062-PS │Memorandum found in Goering’s office, 19│ │
- │November 1936, concerning Guido Schmidt,│ │
- │Foreign Minister of Austria under │ │
- │Schuschnigg. │ V │ 868
- │ │ │
- *3254-PS │The Austrian Question, 1934-1938, by │ │
- │Seyss-Inquart, 9 September 1945. (USA │ │
- │704) │ V │ 961
- │ │ │
- *3270-PS │Goering’s speech on 27 March in Vienna, │ │
- │published in Documents of German │ │
- │Politics, Vol. VI, Part 1, p. 183. (USA │ │
- │703) │ V │ 1047
- │ │ │
- *3271-PS │Letter from Seyss-Inquart to Himmler, 19│ │
- │August 1939. (USA 700) │ V │ 1047
- │ │ │
- *3287-PS │Letter from von Neurath to Henderson, 12│ │
- │March 1938. (USA 128) │ V │ 1090
- │ │ │
- *3308-PS │Affidavit by Paul Otto Gustav Schmidt, │ │
- │28 November 1945. (GB 288) │ V │ 1100
- │ │ │
-  3390-PS │Letter from Seyss-Inquart to Keppler, 25│ │
- │October 1937. │ VI │ 105
- │ │ │
-  3392-PS │Letter from Seyss-Inquart to Keppler, 3 │ │
- │September 1937. │ VI │ 109
- │ │ │
-  3395-PS │Letter from Seyss-Inquart to Keppler, 3 │ │
- │September 1937. │ VI │ 113
- │ │ │
- *3396-PS │Letter from Seyss-Inquart to Dr. Jury. │ │
- │(USA 889) │ VI │ 114
- │ │ │
- *3397-PS │Letter from Keppler to Seyss-Inquart, 8 │ │
- │January 1938. (USA 702) │ VI │ 115
- │ │ │
-  3400-PS │Minutes of meeting of German │ │
- │Association, 28 December 1918, and │ │
- │Constitution and By-Laws thereof found │ │
- │in personal files of Seyss-Inquart for │ │
- │period of 1918 to 1943. │ VI │ 118
- │ │ │
- *3425-PS │Voluntary statement made by │ │
- │Seyss-Inquart with advice of counsel, 10│ │
- │December 1945. (USA 701) │ VI │ 124
- │ │ │
-  3467-PS │Law on Limitation of travel to Republic │ │
- │Austria 29 May 1933. 1933 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, No. 57, p. │ │
- │311. │ VI │ 169
- │ │ │
- *3471-PS │Letter from Keppler to Bodenschatz, 21 │ │
- │February 1938, with enclosures noting │ │
- │activity of Leopold as leader of │ │
- │Austrian Nazis and possible appointment │ │
- │of Klausner as his successor. (USA 583) │ VI │ 195
- │ │ │
- *3472-PS │Letter from Keppler to Goering, 9 │ │
- │February 1938, requesting that Leopold │ │
- │be forbidden to negotiate with │ │
- │Schuschnigg except with approval of │ │
- │Reich authorities. (USA 582) │ VI │ 196
- │ │ │
- *3473-PS │Letter from Keppler to Goering, 6 │ │
- │January 1938, giving details of Nazi │ │
- │intrigue in Austria. (USA 581) │ VI │ 197
- │ │ │
-  3574-PS │Filing notice regarding discussion │ │
- │between Chief of CI and Chief of Foreign│ │
- │CI on 31 January 1938, 2 February 1938, │ │
- │signed Canaris. │ VI │ 265
- │ │ │
-  3576-PS │Letter from Keppler to Goering, 19 │ │
- │February 1938, with enclosure reporting │ │
- │on situation in Austria as of 18 │ │
- │February. │ VI │ 271
- │ │ │
-  3577-PS │Letter presumably from Buerkel to │ │
- │Goering, dated Vienna, 26 March 1938, │ │
- │concerning Aryanization of Jewish-held │ │
- │business in Austria and disposition of │ │
- │resulting funds. │ VI │ 275
- │ │ │
-    *C-102 │Document signed by Hitler relating to │ │
- │operation “Otto”, 11 March 1938. (USA │ │
- │74) │ VI │ 911
- │ │ │
-    *C-103 │Directive signed by Jodl, 11 March 1938,│ │
- │on conduct towards Czech or Italian │ │
- │troops in Austria. (USA 75) │ VI │ 913
- │ │ │
-    *C-175 │OKW Directive for Unified Preparation │ │
- │for War 1937-1938, with covering letter │ │
- │from von Blomberg, 24 June 1937. (USA │ │
- │69) │ VI │ 1006
- │ │ │
-    *C-182 │Directive No. 2 from Supreme Commander │ │
- │Armed Forces, initialled Jodl, 11 March │ │
- │1938. (USA 77) │ VI │ 1017
- │ │ │
-    *L-150 │Memorandum of conversation between │ │
- │Ambassador Bullitt and von Neurath, │ │
- │German Minister for Foreign Affairs, 18 │ │
- │May 1936. (USA 65) │ VII │ 890
- │ │ │
-    *L-151 │Report from Ambassador Bullitt to State │ │
- │Department, 23 November 1937, regarding │ │
- │his visit to Warsaw. (USA 70) │ VII │ 894
- │ │ │
-    *L-172 │“The Strategic Position at the Beginning│ │
- │of the 5th Year of War”, a lecture │ │
- │delivered by Jodl on 7 November 1943 at │ │
- │Munich to Reich and Gauleiters. (USA 34)│ VII │ 920
- │ │ │
-    *L-273 │Report of American Consul General in │ │
- │Vienna to Secretary of State, 26 July │ │
- │1938, concerning anniversary of │ │
- │assassination of Chancellor Dollfuss. │ │
- │(USA 59) │ VII │ 1094
- │ │ │
-     L-281 │Text of Schuschnigg radio address of 11 │ │
- │March 1938, contained in telegram from │ │
- │American Legation in Vienna to the │ │
- │Secretary of State, 11 March 1938. │ VII │ 1096
- │ │ │
-     L-291 │Telegram from American Embassy Berlin to│ │
- │Secretary of State, 11 March 1938, │ │
- │concerning Austrian situation. │ VII │ 1097
- │ │ │
-    *L-292 │Telegram of American Consul General in │ │
- │Vienna to Secretary of State, 12 March │ │
- │1938, concerning propaganda dropped over│ │
- │Vienna. (USA 78) │ VII │ 1098
- │ │ │
-     L-293 │Telegram from American Legation in │ │
- │Vienna to Secretary of State, 12 March │ │
- │1938. │ VII │ 1098
- │ │ │
-   *TC-22 │Agreement between Austria and German │ │
- │Government and Government of Federal │ │
- │State of Austria, 11 July 1936. (GB 20) │ VIII │ 369
- │ │ │
-   *TC-26 │German assurance to Austria, 21 May │ │
- │1935, from Documents of German Politics,│ │
- │Part III, p. 94. (GB 19) │ VIII │ 376
- │ │ │
-    TC-47 │Hitler’s Proclamation of Invasion of │ │
- │Austria, 12 March 1938. │ VIII │ 398
- │ │ │
-  Affidavit H │Affidavit of Franz Halder, 22 November │ │
- │1945. │ VIII │ 643
- │ │ │
-**Chart No. 11 │Aggressive Action 1938-39. (Enlargement │ │
- │displayed to Tribunal.) │ VIII │ 780
- │ │ │
-**Chart No. 12 │German Aggression. (Enlargement │ │
- │displayed to Tribunal.) │ VIII │ 781
- │ │ │
-**Chart No. 13 │Violations of Treaties, Agreements and │ │
- │Assurances. (Enlargement displayed to │ │
- │Tribunal.) │ VIII │ 782
-
-
- 4. THE EXECUTION OF THE PLAN TO INVADE CZECHOSLOVAKIA
-
-A. _Development of the Nazi Program of Aggression._
-
-In the period 1933-1936 the conspirators had initiated a program of
-rearmament designed to give the Third Reich military strength and
-political bargaining power to be used against other nations.
-Furthermore, 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 program was intended to shorten Germany’s
-frontiers, to increase its industrial and food-reserves, and to place it
-in a position, both industrially and strategically, from which the Nazis
-could launch a more ambitious and more devastating campaign of
-aggression. At the moment, in the early spring of 1938, when the Nazi
-conspirators first began to lay concrete plans for the conquest of
-Czechoslovakia they had reached approximately the halfway point in this
-preliminary program.
-
-The preceding autumn, at the conference in the Reichs Chancellery on 5
-November 1937, Hitler had set forth the program which Germany was to
-follow. The events of this conference are contained in the so-called
-Hossbach minutes. The question for Germany, as the Fuehrer had informed
-his military commanders at this meeting, is where the greatest possible
-conquest can be made at the lowest cost (_386-PS_). At the top of his
-agenda stood two countries: Austria and Czechoslovakia. On 12 March 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 toward Czechoslovakia.
-
-A little more than a month later Hitler and Keitel met to discuss plans
-for the envelopment and conquest of the Czechoslovak State. On 21 April
-1938, Hitler and Keitel discussed the pretexts 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 the 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 was given to the assassination of the
-German Ambassador 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 four days, thus presenting the world with
-a fait accompli and forestalling outside intervention. (_388-PS, Item
-2_)
-
-Thus in mid-April 1938 the designs of the Nazi conspirators to conquer
-Czechoslovakia had already reached the stage of practical planning.
-
-B. _The Background of Friendly Diplomatic Relations._
-
-This conspiracy must be viewed against a background of amicable
-German-Czech diplomatic relations. 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 by assurances
-freely given to observe the sovereignty of Czechoslovakia. By a formal
-treaty signed at Locarno on 16 October 1925, Germany and Czechoslovakia
-agreed, with certain exceptions, to refer to an arbitral tribunal or to
-the Permanent Court of International Justice,
-
- “* * * 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. * * *”
- (_TC-14_)
-
-The preamble of this treaty stated:
-
- “The President of the German Empire 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 division between States; have decided to embody in a treaty
- their common intentions in this respect. * * *” (_TC-14_)
-
-Formal and categoric assurances of their good will toward Czechoslovakia
-were forthcoming from the Nazi conspirators as late as March 1938. On 11
-and 12 March 1938, at the time of the annexation of Austria, Germany had
-a considerable interest in inducing Czechoslovakia not to mobilize. At
-this time Goering assured M. Mastny, the Czechoslovak Minister in
-Berlin, on behalf of the German Government that German-Czech relations
-were not adversely affected by the developments in Austria and that
-Germany had no hostile intentions toward Czechoslovakia. As a token of
-his sincerity Goering accompanied his assurance with the statement:
-“_Ich gebe Ihnen mein Ehrenwort_” (“I give you my word of honor”)
-(_TC-27_). At the same time von Neurath, who was handling German foreign
-affairs during Ribbentrop’s stay in London, assured M. Mastny on behalf
-of Hitler and the German government that Germany still considered
-herself bound by the Arbitration Convention of 1925 (_TC-27_).
-
-C. _Planning for Aggression._
-
-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 of Austria and Czechoslovakia. In both
-countries the Nazi 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 _Wehrmacht_ planning was devoted
-to Case Green (_Fall Gruen_), the designation given to the operation
-against Czechoslovakia.
-
-The military plans for Case Green had been drafted in outline form 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 24
-June 1937 and promulgated to the Army, Navy, and Luftwaffe for the year
-beginning 1 July 1937, included as a probable warlike eventuality, for
-which a concentration plan was to be drafted, Case Green (“War on two
-fronts with the main struggle in the southeast”) (_C-175_). The original
-section of this directive dealing with the “probable war” against
-Czechoslovakia—it was later revised—opens with this supposition:
-
- “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.” (_C-175_)
-
-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 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.”
- (_C-175_)
-
-The introduction to this directive sets forth as one of its guiding
-principles the following statement:
-
- “The politically fluid world situation, which does not preclude
- surprising incidents, demands constant preparedness for war on
- the part of the German Armed Forces * * * to make possible the
- military exploitation of politically favorable opportunities
- should they occur.” (_C-175_)
-
-It ordered further work on the plan for mobilization without public
-announcement “in order to put the Armed Forces in a position to be able
-to begin a war suddenly which will take the enemy by surprise both as
-regards strength and time of attack.” (_C-175_). This directive 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 1937-1938. 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-in-chief on 5 November 1937 (_386-PS_). In early March 1938,
-before the march into Austria, Ribbentrop and Keitel were 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 Keitel’s confidential cognizance the minutes of a
-conference with Sztojay, the Hungarian ambassador to Germany, who had
-suggested an interchange of views (_2786-PS_). An acknowledgment of the
-receipt of this letter was signed by Keitel on 5 March. 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.”
- (_2786-PS_)
-
-D. _Development of Specific Plans._
-
-At the 21 April meeting between Hitler and Keitel, specific plans for
-the attack on Czechoslovakia were discussed for the first time (_388-PS,
-Item 2_). This meeting was followed in the late spring and summer of
-1938 by a series of memoranda and telegrams advancing Case Green. These
-notes and communications were carefully filed at Hitler’s headquarters
-by Major Schmundt, the Fuehrer’s military adjutant, and were captured by
-American troops in a cellar at Obersalzberg, Hitler’s headquarters, near
-Berchtesgaden. This file, preserved intact, is document (_388-PS_).
-
-The individual items in this file tell more graphically than any
-narrative the progress of the Nazi conspirators’ planning to launch an
-unprovoked war against Czechoslovakia. From the start the Nazi leaders
-displayed a lively interest in intelligence data concerning Czechoslovak
-armament and defense. This interest is reflected in _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; _Item 12_, Short survey
-of Armament of the Czech Army, dated Berlin 9 June 1938 and initialed
-“Z” for Zeitzler; and _Item 13_, Questions of the Fuehrer, dated Berlin,
-9 June 1938 and classified “Most Secret”. The following are four of the
-questions on which Hitler wanted authoritative information:
-
- “Question 1: Armament of the Czech Army?
-
- “Question 2: How many battalions, etc., 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?” (_388-PS, Item
- 13_)
-
-These 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 of
-Germany. A telegram, presumably sent from Schmundt in Berchtesgaden to
-Berlin, read in part as follows:
-
- “Inform Colonel General von Brauchitsch and General Keitel: * *
- * The Fuehrer repeatedly emphasized the necessity of pressing
- forward greatly the fortification work in the west.” (_388-PS,
- Item 8_)
-
-In May, June, July, and August of 1938 conferences between Hitler and
-his political and military advisers resulted in the issuance of a series
-of constantly revised directives for the attack. It was decided that
-preparations for X-day, the day of the attack, should be completed no
-later than 1 October.
-
-On the afternoon of 28 May 1938 Hitler called a conference of his
-principal military and political advisers in the winter garden of the
-Reichs Chancellery in Berlin. This conference was the occasion on which
-Hitler made known to the inner circle of the Nazi conspirators the
-outlines of his plan to attack Czechoslovakia and issued the necessary
-instructions. The meeting is described in an affidavit of Fritz
-Wiedemann, who at that time was Hitler’s adjutant:
-
- “FRITZ WIEDEMANN, being first duly sworn, deposes and says as
- follows:
-
- “From the month of January 1935 to January 1939 I served as
- adjutant to Hitler. In this time my duties were to handle
- correspondence and complaints addressed to the Fuehrer’s office.
- Occasionally I attended conferences held by the Fuehrer.
-
- “I recall that on the afternoon of 28 May 1938 Hitler called a
- conference in the winter garden of the Reichs Chancellery of all
- the people who were important, from the Foreign Office, the
- Army, and the Command Staffs. Those present at this conference,
- as I recall, included Goering, Ribbentrop, von Neurath, General
- Beck, Admiral Raeder, General Keitel, and General von
- Brauchitsch. On this occasion Hitler made the following
- statement: ‘It is my unshakable will that Czechoslovakia shall
- be wiped off the map.’ Hitler then revealed the outlines of the
- plan to attack Czechoslovakia. Hitler addressed himself to the
- Generals, saying: ‘So, we will first tackle the situation in the
- East. Then I will give you three to four years’ time, and then
- we will settle the situation in the West.’ The situation in the
- West was meant to be the war against England and France.
-
- “I was considerably shaken by these statements, and on leaving
- the Reichs Chancellery I said to Herr von Neurath: ‘Well, what
- do you say to these revelations?’ Neurath thought that the
- situation was not so serious as it appeared and that nothing
- would happen before the spring of 1939.
-
- “/s/ Fr. Wiedemann.”
- (_3037-PS_)
-
-In the months after the occupation of the Sudetenland Hitler made no
-secret of this meeting. In a speech before the Reichstag on 30 January
-1939, 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 had resolved to solve once and for all, and
- this time radically, the Sudeten-German question. On May 28 I
- ordered (1) that preparations should be made for military action
- against this state by October 2. I ordered (2) the immense and
- accelerated expansion of our defensive front in the West.”
- (_2360-PS_)
-
-Hitler also referred to this conference in his meeting with President
-Hacha on 15 March 1939. (_2798-PS_)
-
-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 Schmundt file (_388-PS_). Entitled “Two front war with main
-effort in the Southeast,” this directive replaced the corresponding
-section, Part 2, Section II, of the “Directive for Unified Preparation
-for War” promulgated by von Blomberg on 24 June 1937 (_C-175_). This
-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 a rough draft submitted by Keitel to
-Hitler on 20 May, which may be found as _Item 5_ in the Schmundt file
-(_388-PS_). It was signed by Hitler. Only five copies were made. Three
-copies were forwarded with a covering letter from Keitel to General von
-Brauchitsch for the Army, to Raeder for the Navy, and to Goering for the
-Luftwaffe. In his covering memorandum Keitel noted that its execution
-must be assured “as from 1 October 1938 at the latest”. (_388-PS, Item
-11_)
-
-This document, which is the basic directive under which the _Wehrmacht_
-carried out its planning for Case Green, reads as follows:
-
- “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 to 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 Gruen”._
-
- _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
- peace-time and by an unexpectedly rapid course of the action.
- Thus it is essential to create a situation within the first four
- 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 soften 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 by the inevitable time
- required for transporting the bulk of the field forces by rail
- nor the initiative of the Air Force be wasted. 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
- breakthrough or to break them down from the rear. For the
- success of this operation, cooperation 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 into Slovakia,
- of forcing a battle, of beating the Czechoslovakian army and of
- occupying Bohemia and Moravia speedily. To this end a thrust
- into the heart of Czechoslovakia must be made with the strongest
- possible motorized and armored units using to the full the first
- successes of the assault columns and the effects of the Air
- Force operations. The rear cover provided for the _West_ must be
- limited in numbers and quality to the extent which suits the
- present state of fortifications. Whether the units assigned this
- will be transported to the Western frontier immediately or held
- back for the time being will be decided in my special order.
- Preparations must however, be made to enable security
- detachments to be brought up to the Western frontier even during
- the strategic concentration ‘Gruen’. Independent of this, a
- first security garrison must be improvised from the engineers at
- present employed in constructing fortifications and from
- formations of the Labor Corps. The _remaining frontiers_ as well
- as East Prussia, are to be only weakly protected. But, always
- depending on the political situation, the transfers by sea, of a
- part or even the bulk of the active forces of East Prussia, into
- the Reich must be taken into account.
-
- “_b._ _Air Force._ While leaving a minimum of defensive forces
- in the West, the Air Force is to be employed in bulk in a
- surprise attack against Czechoslovakia. The frontier is to be
- flown over at the same time as it is crossed by the first
- section of the Army * * *.” (_388-PS, Item 11_)
-
-After detailed instructions for action by the Luftwaffe and by the Navy
-the directive continues as follows:
-
- “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 works installations—insofar as
- military operations permit.—can be of decisive importance to
- us.” (_388-PS, Item 11_)
-
-In other words, the Nazi conspirators, four months before the date of
-their planned attack, were already looking forward to the contribution
-which the Czech industrial plant would make to the Nazi war economy. The
-last paragraph of this directive reads as follows:
-
- “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.
-
- “(Signed) ADOLF HITLER
- “Certified copy
- “(Signed) Zeitzler
- “Oberstleutnant on the General Staff.”
- (_388-PS, Item 11_)
-
-Three weeks later, on 18 June 1938, a draft for a new directive was
-prepared and initialed by Keitel. It does not supersede the 30 May
-directive. It reads, in part:
-
- “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 to use to the full every favorable
- political opportunity to realize this aim.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “The directives necessary for the prosecution of the war itself
- will be issued by me from time to time.”
-
- “K [Initialed by Keitel]
- Z [Initialed by Zeitzler]”
- (_388-PS, Item 14_)
-
-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 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 (_388-PS_), 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 three
-entries in General Jodl’s diary written in the spring of 1938
-(_1780-PS_). Although the first entry is not dated, it appears to have
-been written several months after the annexation of Austria:
-
- “After annexation of Austria, the Fuehrer mentions that there is
- no hurry to solve the Czech question because Austria has 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 preparations (see
- memorandum L I a of 19 April) reported to the Fuehrer on 21
- April.
-
- “The intention of the Fuehrer not to touch the Czech problem as
- yet is 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, its consequences lead to a
- loss of prestige of the Fuehrer, which he is not willing to take
- once more. Therefore, the new order is issued for ‘green’ on 30
- May.
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “_23 May_:
-
- “Major Schmundt reports ideas of the Fuehrer. Further
- conferences, which gradually reveal the exact intentions of the
- Fuehrer take place with the Chief of the Armed Forces High
- Command (OKW) on 28 May, 3 and 9 June, see enclosures. (War
- Diary L).”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “_30 May_:
-
- “The Fuehrer 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 breakthrough 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 Fuehrer’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.” (_1780-PS_)
-
-E. _Luftwaffe Participation in Early Planning for Case Green._
-
-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. A Top Secret Document, dated 2 June 1938, was
-issued by Air Group Command 3 and entitled “Plan Study 1938: Instruction
-for Deployment and Combat: Case Red.” (_R-150_). 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, at this date, in planning for the attack on Czechoslovakia.
-Various possibilities under which war with France may occur are noted:
-all of them are predicated on the assumption of a German-Czech conflict:
-
- “France will
-
- “_a_ either 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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.”
- (_R-150_)
-
-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 Attache in Prague reconnoitered
-the Freudenthal area of Czechoslovakia, south of Upper Silesia, for
-suitable landing grounds. This action is disclosed by a report of the
-Luftwaffe General Staff, Intelligence Division, dated 12 August 1938
-(_1536-PS_). 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 air attache in Prague, dated 4
-August 1938. The first four paragraphs of the enclosure read:
-
- “I was ordered by the General Staff of the Air Force to
- reconnoitre the land in the region Freudenthal/Freihermersdorf
- 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 M, particularly about my official position.
-
- “I used my official car (_Dienst Pkw_) for the journey to
- Freudenthal, taking precautions against being observed.”
- (_1536-PS_)
-
-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,” which consisted of an estimate of possible action
-by the Western Powers during the attack on Czechoslovakia (_375-PS_).
-This Top Secret memorandum of the Intelligence Section of the Luftwaffe
-General Staff is dated at Berlin, 25 August 1938. Based on the
-assumption that Great Britain and France will 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. The first two sentences read as follows:
-
- “The basic assumption is that France will declare war during the
- Case Green. It is presumed that France will only decide upon war
- if active military assistance by Great Britain is definitely
- assured.” (_375-PS_)
-
-F. _Negotiations with Italy and Hungary about Case Green._
-
-Knowledge of pending action against Czechoslovakia was not confined to a
-close circle of high officials of the Reich. During the summer Germany’s
-allies, Italy and Hungary, were apprised by one means or another of the
-plans of the Nazi conspirators. A captured document from German Foreign
-Office files contains a confidential memorandum of a conversation with
-the Italian ambassador, Attolico, in Berlin on 18 July 1938 (_2800-PS_).
-At the bottom is a handwritten note, headed “For the Reichsminister
-[Ribbentrop] only.” This note reads:
-
- “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 two months’ holiday now which he could not do later
- on.
-
- “Giving an idea of the attitude of other governments Attolico
- mentioned that the Roumanian government had refused to grant
- application for leave to its Berlin Minister.” (_2800-PS_)
-
-A month later Mussolini sent a message to Berlin, asking that he be told
-the date on which Case Green would take place. The German response is
-outlined in a German Foreign Office note on a conversation with
-Ambassador Attolico, signed “R” (for Ribbentrop) and dated 23 August
-1938:
-
- “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 six
- 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 Fuehrer 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.
-
- “23 Aug 1938
- “R (initial).”
- (_2791-PS_)
-
-Four days later Attolico again asked to be notified of the date of the
-pending attack. The conversation is recorded in another German Foreign
-Office Memorandum:
-
- “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
-
- “N. B. I replied to Ambassador Attolico, just as on his former
- demarche, 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.”
- (_2792-PS_)
-
-Hungary, which borders Czechoslovakia to the southeast, was from the
-first considered to be a possible participant in Case Green. It will be
-recalled that in early March 1938 Keitel and Ribbentrop had exchanged
-letters on the question of bringing Hungary into the Nazi planning
-(_2786-PS_). 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 21st to 26th Admiral Horthy and some of his ministers
-visited Germany. Admiral Horthy witnessed the launching of the _Prince
-Eugen_ and conferred with Hitler. There were discussions of the
-Czechoslovak question. A captured German Foreign Office document, signed
-by von Weizsäcker, records 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 (_2796-PS_). 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:
-
- “Whoever wanted to join the meal would have to participate in
- the cooking as well.” (_2796-PS_)
-
-Von Weizsäcker’s memorandum reads as follows:
-
- “Von Ribbentrop inquired what Hungary’s attitude would be if the
- Fuehrer 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 1
- or 2 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. Rumania 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, 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 conference—the time of
- Hungarian intervention—was not obtained.
-
- “In the meantime, more positive language was used by von Horthy
- in his talk with the Fuehrer. He wished not to hide his doubts
- with regard to the English attitude, but he wished to put
- Hungary’s intention to participate on record. 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 Fuehrer in the
- afternoon, he was very relieved _when the Fuehrer 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.” (_2796-PS_)
-
-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. Another captured German Foreign Office
-Memorandum reports a conversation between Ribbentrop and Kanya on 25
-August 1938. The last paragraph of this memorandum states:
-
- “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 1st of this year.” (_2797-PS_)
-
-The signature to this document is not clear, but it appears to be that
-of von Weizsäcker.
-
-These accounts of the German-Hungarian conference are corroborated by
-General Jodl’s diary. The entry for 21-26 August reads as follows:
-
- “_21-26 August_:
-
- “Visit to Germany of the Hungarian Regent (_Reichsverweser_).
- Accompanied by the Prime Minister, the Minister of Foreign
- Affairs and the Honved Minister v. Raatz.
-
- “They arrive 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 reestablished. They leave with the
- understanding that we have neither demands from, 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.”
- (_1780-PS_)
-
-The upshot of the talks with the Hungarians proved to be a staff
-conference on 6 September. Jodl’s diary entry for that day states:
-
- “_6 September_:
-
- “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 Fuehrer—especially his order not to give any hint on the
- exact moment. The same with OQI, General v. Stuelpnagel.”
- (_1780-PS_)
-
-G. _Final Preparations for the Attack._
-
-The setting in which these events took place was that of the Munich Pact
-and the international crisis which led to it. As this crisis was
-developing in August and September 1938, frantic efforts were being made
-by the statesmen of the world to preserve the peace of the world. These
-statesmen, unfortunately, were unaware of the plans and designs of the
-Nazi conspirators.
-
-The documents captured by Allied troops reveal the hitherto-unknown
-story underlying the Pact of Munich. These papers reveal the fraud and
-deceit practiced by the Nazi conspirators in negotiating the Pact of
-Munich as a stepping-stone toward further aggression. The hope for peace
-which came with the Munich Pact, which later turned out to be a snare
-and a deceit, was a trap carefully set by the Nazi conspirators. The
-nature of the trap is indicated by the events of the weeks just
-preceding the Munich agreement.
-
-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 were devoted to
-technical details: the timing of X-day, questions of mobilization,
-questions of transport and supply.
-
-On 26 August Jodl initialed a memorandum entitled “Timing of the X-Order
-and the Question of Advance Measures” (_388-PS, Item 17_). This
-memorandum demonstrates clearly the complicity of the OKW and of Keitel
-and Jodl, in the fabrication of an incident as an excuse for war. It
-reveals the character of the attack that Germany was preparing to
-launch. The memorandum reads as follows:
-
- “_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 peace-time airports justifiably leads them to
- oppose measures taken in advance of the X-order and to the
- 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 OKW _also
- demands_ that the X order be given _not later than 1400 on X
- minus 1_.
-
- “To this the following must be said:
-
- “Operation (Aktion) Green 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.
-
- “It must come at a time when weather conditions are favorable
- for our superior air forces to go into action and at an hour
- which will enable authentic news of it 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 _Fuehrer_ 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 the 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 the 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 (e.g., 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 Fuehrer’s intentions in good time—insofar as
- the _Abwehr_ Section is not also charged with the organization
- of the incident.
-
- “I request that the Fuehrer’s decision be obtained on these
- points.
-
- “J [Jodl] 26/8.”
- (_388-PS, Item 17_)
-
-In handwriting at the bottom of the page are the notes of Schmundt,
-Hitler’s adjutant. These reveal that the memorandum was submitted to
-Hitler on 30 August; that Hitler agreed to act along these lines; and
-that Jodl was so notified on 31 August.
-
-On 3 September Keitel and von Brauchitsch met with Hitler at the
-Berghof. Again Schmundt kept notes of the conference (_388-PS, Item
-18_). The first three paragraphs of these minutes state:
-
- “_Gen. Ob. v. Brauchitsch_: Reports on the exact time of the
- transfer of the troops to ‘exercise areas’ for ‘_Gruen_’. Field
- units to be transferred on 28 Sept. From here will then be ready
- for action. When X Day becomes known, field units carry out
- exercises in opposite directions.
-
- “_Fuehrer_: Has objection. Troops assemble field units a 2-day
- march away. Carry out camouflage exercises everywhere.
-
- “?: OKH must know when X-day is by 1200 noon, 27
- September.” (_388-PS, Item 18_)
-
-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 of “drawing
-in the Henlein people.” The situation in the West still troubled him.
-Schmundt noted:
-
- “The Fuehrer gives orders for the development of the Western
- fortifications; improvement of advance positions around Aachen
- and Saarbrucken. Construction of 300 to 400 battery positions
- (1600 artillery pieces.)” (_388-PS, Item 18_)
-
-Five days later General Stulpnagel asked Jodl for written assurance that
-the OKH would be informed five days in advance about the pending action.
-In the evening Jodl conferred with Luftwaffe generals about the
-coordination of ground and air operations at the start of the attack.
-The 8 September entry in General Jodl’s diary states:
-
- “_8 September_:
-
- “General Stulpnagel OQI asks for written assurance that the Army
- High Command will be informed five days in advance if the plan
- is to take place. I agree and add that the overall
- meteorological situation can be estimated to some extent only
- for two days in advance, and that therefore the plans may be
- changed up to this moment (D-day-2) (X-2 TAGE).
-
- “General Stulpnagel 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 Fuehrer 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.
-
- “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, 5 Nov 37, 7 Dec 37, 30 May
- 38, 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 to 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 Army High
- Command and Chief of General Staff of the Air Force (present
- were Jeschonnek, Kammhuber, Sternburg and myself).
-
- “We agree about the promulgation of the D-Day order (X-Befehl),
- (X-1, 4 o’clock) and preannouncement to the Air Force (D-Day-1,
- X-1 day, 7 o’clock). The ‘Y time’ has yet to be examined; some
- formations have an approach flight of one hour.” (_1780-PS_)
-
-Late on the evening of the following day, 9 September, Hitler met with
-Keitel and Generals von Brauchitsch and Halder at Nurnberg. Dr. Todt,
-the construction engineer, later joined the conference, which lasted
-from 10 in the evening until 3:30 the following morning. Schmundt’s
-minutes are _Item 19_ in his file (_388-PS_). In this meeting General
-Halder reviewed the missions assigned to four of the German armies being
-committed to the attack: the 2d, 10th, 12th, and 14th. 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. The discussions proceeded as follows:
-
- “_General Oberst v. Brauchitsch_: Employment of motorized
- divisions was based on the difficult rail situation in Austria
- and the difficulties in getting other divisions (ready to march)
- into the area at the right time. In the West vehicles will have
- to leave on the 20th of Sept, if X-Day remains as planned.
- Workers leave on the 23d, by relays. Specialist workers remain
- according to decision by Army Command 2.
-
- “_The Fuehrer_: Doesn’t 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 RR cars, they will stand around
- unnecessarily later on.
-
- “_General Keitel_: Workers are not under the jurisdiction of
- district commands (Bezirks Kdos.) in the West. Trains must be
- assembled.
-
- “_v. Brauchitsch_: 235,000 men RAD (Labour Service) will be
- drafted. 96 Construction Bns will be distributed (also in the
- east). 40,000 trained laborers stay in the West.” (_388-PS, Item
- 19_)
-
-From this date forward the Nazi conspirators were occupied with the
-intricate planning required before the attack. On 11 September Jodl
-conferred with a representative of the Propaganda Ministry about methods
-of refuting German violations of International Law and exploiting those
-of the Czechs. The 11 September entry in the Jodl diary reads as
-follows:
-
- “_11 September_:
-
- “In the afternoon conference with Secretary of State Jahnke from
- the Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda on imminent
- common tasks.
-
- “The joint preparations for refutation (_Wiederlegung_) of our
- own violations of international law, and the exploitation of its
- violations by the enemy, were considered particularly
- important.” (_1780-PS_)
-
-This discussion developed into a detailed study compiled by Section L,
-Jodl’s section of the OKW (_C-2_). Seven copies of this captured
-document were prepared and distributed on 1 October 1938 to the OKH, the
-OKM, the Luftwaffe, and the Foreign Office. In this study anticipated
-violations of International Law in the invasion of Czechoslovakia are
-listed and counter-propaganda suggested for the use of the propaganda
-agencies. This document is presented in a tabular form, in which
-possible incidents are listed in the left-hand column. In the second
-column are given specific examples of the incidents; in the third and
-fourth columns the position to be taken toward these incidents under
-International Law and under the laws of warfare is set forth; the fifth
-column, which is blank, is reserved for the explanation to be offered by
-the Propaganda Minister. The first 10 hypothetical incidents, for which
-justification must be found, and which are listed in column b of the
-table are as follows:
-
- “1_a_. In an air-raid on Prague the British Embassy is
- destroyed.
-
- “2. Englishmen or Frenchmen are injured or killed;
-
- “3. The Hradschin is destroyed in an air raid on Prague.
-
- “4. On account of a report that the Czechs have used gas, the
- firing of gas projectiles is ordered.
-
- “5. Czech civilians, not recognizable as soldiers, are caught in
- the act of sabotage (destruction of important bridges,
- destruction of foodstuffs and fodder) are discovered looting
- wounded or dead soldiers and thereupon shot.
-
- “6. Captured Czech soldiers or Czech civilians are detailed to
- do road work or to load munitions.
-
- “7. For military reasons it is necessary to requisition billets,
- foodstuffs and fodder from the Czech population. As a result the
- latter suffer from want.
-
- “8. Czech population is, for military reasons, compulsorily
- evacuated to the rear area.
-
- “9. Churches are used for military accommodation.
-
- “10. In the course of their duty, German aircraft fly over
- Polish territory where they are involved in an air battle with
- Czech aircraft.” (_C-2_)
-
-From Nurnberg, on 10 September, Hitler issued an order bringing the
-_Reichsarbeitsdienst_, the German labor service, under the OKW. This top
-secret order, of which 25 copies were made, provides as follows:
-
- “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 Reichs Labor Leader
- (_Reichsarbeitsfuehrer_) 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.”
- (_388-PS, Item 20_)
-
-Four days later, on 14 September, Keitel issued detailed instructions
-for the employment of specific RAD units. This order is _Item 21_ in the
-Schmundt file. A further order issued by Jodl on 16 September specified
-RAD units which would receive military training. This is _Item 24_ in
-the Schmundt file. (_388-PS_)
-
-Two entries in Jodl’s diary give further indications of the problems of
-the OKW in this period of mid-September, just two weeks before the
-anticipated X-day. The entries for 15 and 16 September read as follows:
-
- “_15 September_:
-
- “In the morning conference with Chief of Army High Command and
- Chief of General Staffs of Army and Air Forces; the question was
- discussed what could be done if the Fuehrer 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 Fuehrer. The next conference will take place
- on the 21st or 22nd in Godesberg.
-
- “With consent of the Fuehrer, 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 VGAD along the Czech
- border.
-
- “In the same way, an order is issued to the railways to have the
- empty rolling stock kept in readiness clandestinely for the
- strategic concentrations of the Army, so that it can be
- transported starting 28 September.” (_1780-PS_)
-
-The order to the railroads to make rolling stock available which General
-Jodl referred to appears as _Item 22_ in the Schmundt file. In this
-order 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. The first and fourth paragraphs of this
-order provide:
-
- “The Reichsbahn 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “However, in accordance with the Fuehrer’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 of the Lines.” (_388-PS, Item 22_)
-
-The penultimate stage of the aggression began on 18 September. From that
-day until the 28th a series of orders were issued advancing preparations
-for the attack. These orders are included in the Schmundt file
-(_388-PS_). On the 18th the commitment schedule for the five
-participating armies—the 2d, 8th, 10th, 12th, and 14th—was set forth
-(_388-PS, Item 26_). Hitler approved the secret mobilization of five
-divisions in the west to protect the German rear during Case Green
-(_388-PS, Item 31_). Further discussions were held between the Army and
-the Luftwaffe about the time of day for the attack. Conference notes
-initialed by Jodl and dated 27 September reveal the difference in views.
-These notes are _Item 54_ in the Schmundt file. The first three
-paragraphs read:
-
- “_COORDINATED TIME OF ATTACK BY ARMY AND AIR FORCES ON X DAY._
-
- “As a matter of principle, every effort should be made for a
- coordinated attack by Army and Air Forces on X Day.
-
- “The Army wishes to attack at dawn, i.e., 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.” (_388-PS, Item 54_)
-
-A satisfactory solution appears to have been arrived at. The last two
-paragraphs read:
-
- “_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.
-
- (J)” (_388-PS, Item 54_)
-
-On the same day, 27 September, Keitel sent a most secret memorandum to
-Hess and the Reichsfuehrer SS, Himmler, for the guidance of Nazi Party
-officials. This memorandum is _Item 32_ in the Schmundt file. It directs
-the Party officials and organizations to comply with the demands of the
-Army during the secret mobilization in such matters as turning over
-equipment and facilities. The first four paragraphs of this message
-read:
-
- “As a result of the political situation the Fuehrer 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 authorities.
-
- “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.” (_388-PS,
- Item 32_)
-
-Two additional entries from Jodl’s diary reveal the extent to which the
-Nazi conspirators carried forward their preparations for attack even
-during the period of the negotiations which culminated in the Munich
-Agreement. The entries for 26 and 27 September read:
-
- “_26 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 Fuehrer 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.
-
- “In the evening of the 26th, fixed radio stations of Breslau,
- Dresden and Vienna are put at the disposal of the Reich Ministry
- for Public Enlightenment and Propaganda for interference with
- possible Czech propaganda transmissions. “Question by Foreign
- office 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 Fuehrer’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 replied.
-
- “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
- fogs.
-
- “The Fuehrer has to make a decision for the commander in chief
- who is to have priority.
-
- “The opinion of Stumpf is also that the attack of the Army has
- to proceed. The Fuehrer has not made any decision as yet about
- commitment against Prague.
-
- “2000 hours: The Fuehrer addresses the people and the world in
- an important speech at the Sportspalast.
-
- “_27 September_:
-
- “1320 hours: The Fuehrer consents to the first wave of attack
- being advanced to a line from where they can arrive in the
- assembly area by 30 September.” (_1780-PS_)
-
-The order referred to by General Jodl in the last entry was also
-recorded by the faithful Schmundt. It appears as _Item 33_ of the file.
-It is the order which brought the Nazi armies to the jumping-off point
-for unprovoked aggression:
-
- “MOST SECRET
- “_MEMORANDUM_
-
- “At 1300 September 27 the Fuehrer 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 7
- divisions,) must be ready to begin the action against ‘_Gruen_’
- on September 30, the decision having been made one day
- previously by 1200 noon.” (_388-PS, Item 33_)
-
-There follows a pencil note by Schmundt:
-
- “This order was conveyed to General Keitel at 1320 through Major
- Schmundt.” (_388-PS, Item 33_)
-
-H. _The Campaign Within Czechoslovakia._
-
-The military preparations for aggression against Czechoslovakia had not
-been carried out in vacuo. They had been preceded by a skillfully
-conceived campaign designed to promote civil disobedience to the
-Czechoslovak State. Using the techniques they had already developed in
-other ventures, the Nazi conspirators over a period of years used money,
-propaganda, and force to undermine Czechoslovakia. In this program the
-Nazis focussed their attention on the persons of German descent living
-in the Sudetenland, a mountainous area bounding Bohemia and Moravia on
-the north, west, and south.
-
-The Czechoslovak government’s official report for the prosecution and
-trial of German major war criminals, entitled “German Crimes Against
-Czechoslovakia,” shows the background of the subsequent Nazi intrigue.
-(_998-PS_; _3061-PS_)
-
-Nazi agitation in Czechoslovakia dated from the earliest days of the
-NSDAP. In the years following the First World War a German National
-Socialist Workers Party (DNSAP), which maintained close contact with
-Hitler’s NSDAP, was active in the Sudetenland. In 1932, ring-leaders of
-the _Sudeten Volksport_, an organization corresponding to the Nazi SA,
-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 frontier. For a year thereafter Nazi activity in
-Czechoslovakia continued underground. (_998-PS_; _3061-PS_)
-
-On 1 October 1934, with the approval and at the urging of the Nazi
-conspirators, Konrad Henlein, an instructor of gymnastics, established
-the “German Home Front” (_Deutsche Heimatfront_), which the following
-spring became the Sudeten German Party (_Sudeten-deutsche Partei—SDP_).
-Profiting from the experience 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,
-none-the-less, was built on the basis of the Nazi _Fuehrerprinzip_, and
-he became its Fuehrer. By 1937, when the power 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. (_998-PS_;
-_3061-PS_)
-
-After the annexation of Austria in March 1938 the Henleinists, who were
-now openly organized after the Nazi model, intensified their activity.
-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 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. (_998-PS_; _3061-PS_)
-
-As the summer of 1938 wore on, the Henleinists used every technique of
-the Nazi Fifth Column. As summarized in the Czech official report, these
-included:
-
-(1) _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.
-
-(2) _Nazification of German Organizations in Czechoslovakia._ The
-Henleinists systematically penetrated the whole life of the German
-population of Czechoslovakia. Associations and social and cultural
-centers gradually underwent “_Gleichschaltung_”, i.e., “purification”,
-by the SDP. Among the organizations conquered by the Henleinists were
-sport 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 in 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 institution.
-
-(3) _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 _Saenger Feste_ (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.
-
-(4) _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 to the German
-population.
-
-(5) _Murder and Terrorism._ The 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 border districts to carry Czechoslovak citizens
-across the border to Germany. In several cases political foes of the
-Nazis were murdered on Czech soil. Nazi agents murdered Professor
-Theodor Lessing in 1933 and the 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. (_998-PS_; _3061-PS_)
-
-Some time 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. This statement was
-made in a lecture by Konrad Henlein quoted on page 29 of “Four Fighting
-Years”, a publication of the Czechoslovak Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
-In this lecture, delivered by Henlein on 4 March 1941 in the Auditorium
-of the University of Vienna under the auspices of the _Wiener
-Verwaltungsakadamie_, he discussed the “fight for the liberation of the
-Sudetens” in the following terms:
-
- “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 Fuehrer,
- whatever their outward appearance. Fate sought me out to be the
- leader of the national group in its final struggle. When * * *
- in autumn, 1933, the leaders 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.” (_2863-PS_)
-
-I. _Evidence Implicating Nazi Conspirators in Czechoslovak Agitation._
-
-The foregoing account of Nazi intrigue in Czechoslovakia is the outline
-of this conspiracy as it had been pieced together by the Czechoslovak
-government early in the summer of 1945. Since then captured documents
-and other information made available since the defeat of Germany have
-clearly and conclusively demonstrated the implication, which hitherto
-could only be deduced, of the Nazi conspirators in the Sudetenland
-agitation.
-
-A telegram sent from the German Legation in Prague on 16 March 1938 to
-the Foreign Office in Berlin, presumably written by the German Minister,
-Eisenlohr, proves conclusively that the Henlein movement was an
-instrument of the Nazi conspirators (_3060-PS_). The Henlein party, it
-appears from this telegram, 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 coordinated with the German
-authorities. This telegram reads as follows:
-
- “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 coordinated 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
- Mission.
-
- “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.” (_3060-PS_)
-
-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 (_2789-PS_). This letter, dated 17 March 1938, and captured
-in the German Foreign Office files, states:
-
- “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
- Fuehrer.
-
- “I beg you, most honored Minister, to accept accordingly the
- sincere thanks of the Sudeten-Germans herewith.
-
- “We shall show our appreciation to the Fuehrer by doubled
- efforts in the service of the Greater German policy.
-
- “The new situation requires a reexamination of the Sudeten
- German policy. For this purpose I beg to ask you for the
- opportunity for 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 if the Minister, Dr. Eisenlohr, and one of
- my closest associates would be allowed to participate in the
- requested talks.
-
- “Heil Hitler,
- “Loyally yours,
- “/s/ Konrad Henlein.”
- (_2789-PS_)
-
-This letter makes it clear that Henlein was quite aware that the seizure
-of Austria made possible the adoption of a new policy toward
-Czechoslovakia. It also reveals 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 29 March 1938. The previous day Henlein had conferred with
-Hitler himself. The captured German Foreign Office notes of the
-conference on 29 March read as follows:
-
- “The Reichsminister 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 Fuehrer
- 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 * * *”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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
- (_Reichsregierung_). The Reich Cabinet itself must refuse to
- appear toward the Government in Prague or toward London and
- Paris as the advocate or peacemaker of the Sudeten German
- demands. It is a self-evident prerequisite that during the
- impending discussion with the Czechoslovak Government the
- Sudeten-Germans would be firmly controlled by Konrad Henlein,
- would maintain quiet and discipline, and would avoid
- indiscretions. The assurances already given by Konrad Henlein in
- this connection were satisfactory.
-
- “Following these general explanations of the Reich Minister the
- demands of the Sudeten German Party from the Czechoslovak
- Government as contained in the enclosure were discussed and
- approved in principle. For further cooperation, Konrad Henlein
- was instructed to keep in the closest possible touch with the
- Reichminister and the Head of the Central Office for Racial
- Germans (_mit dem Leiter der Volksdeutschen Mittelstelle_), 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 demands 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 cooperate 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 [Initial]”
- (_2788-PS_)
-
-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 and SS Obergruppenfuehrer 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, Weiszacker, and Minister Eisenlohr from the
-German Legation at Prague. (_2788-PS_)
-
-In May Henlein came to Berlin for more conversations with the Nazi
-conspirators. At this time the plans for Case Green, the attack on
-Czechoslovakia, were already on paper, and it may be assumed that
-Henlein was briefed on the role he was to play during the summer months.
-The entry for 22 May 1938 in General Jodl’s diary reads as follows:
-
- “22 May: Fundamental conference between the Fuehrer and K.
- Henlein” (see enclosure). (_1780-PS_)
-
-The enclosure, unfortunately, is missing.
-
-It will be recalled 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
-(_2863-PS_). The foregoing documents show conclusively the nature of
-Henlein’s mission. They demonstrate that Henlein’s policy, his
-propaganda, even his speeches were controlled by Berlin. Furthermore,
-from the year 1935 the Sudeten German Party had been secretly subsidized
-by the German Foreign Office. A secret memorandum, captured in the
-German Foreign Office files, signed by Woermann and dated Berlin, 19
-August 1938, was occasioned by the request of the Henlein Party for
-additional funds. This memorandum reads:
-
- “MEMORANDUM
-
- “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 3000
- Marks are paid out to the Berlin representation of the party
- (Bureau Buerger). In the course of the last few months the tasks
- assigned to the Bureau Buerger 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 Buerger is no longer able to get along with the monthly
- allowance of 3000 Marks if it is to do everything required.
- Therefore, Mr. Buerger has applied to this office for an
- increase of this amount, from 3000 Marks to 5500 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 cooperation with the Foreign Office,
- this desire deserves the strongest support.
-
- “Herewith submitted to the Dep: Pers(onnel) with a request for
- approval. It is requested to increase the payments with
- retroactive effect from 1 August.^{*}
-
- “Berlin, 19 August 1938
- /s/ Woermann
-
- ^{*} “_Volksdeutsche Mittelstelle_ (Central Office for Racial
- Germans) will be informed by the Political Dept. [handwritten
- marginal note].” (_3059-PS_; _also 3061-PS_)
-
-As the military preparations to attack Czechoslovakia moved forward in
-the late summer and early fall of 1938, the Nazi command made good use
-of Henlein and his followers. About the first of August the Air Attache
-at 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, the attache noted, served as excellent
-camouflage.
-
-The Air Attache’s report reads in part as follows:
-
- “The manufacturer M. is head of the Sudeten-German Glider Pilots
- in Freudenthal and said to be absolutely reliable by my trusted
- men. 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 and that
- I had the intention of looking over the country from that point
- of view.” (_1536-PS_)
-
-In the latter part of the Air Attache’s report reference is made to the
-presence of reliable agents and informers (_V-Leute_) apparently drawn
-from the ranks of the Henlein Party in this area. It was indicated that
-these agents were in touch with the _Abwehrstelle_, the intelligence
-office in Breslau. (_1536-PS_)
-
-In September, when the 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 19 September the
-Foreign Office in Berlin sent the following telegram to the German
-Legation in Prague:
-
- “Please inform deputy Kundt, at Konrad Henlein’s request, to get
- into touch with the Slovaks at once and induce them to start
- their demands for autonomy tomorrow.
-
- “(signed) ALTENBURG”
- (_2858-PS_)
-
-Kundt was Henlein’s representative in Prague.
-
-As the harassed Czech government sought to stem the disorder in the
-Sudetenland, the German Foreign Office turned to threatening diplomatic
-tactics in a deliberate effort to increase the tension between the two
-countries. Four telegrams from the Foreign Office in Berlin to the
-Legation in Prague, dispatched between the 16th and 24th of September
-1938, are self-explanatory. The first telegram 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 Fuehrer’s speech of 12 September. I
- request you to ascertain the number of Sudeten-Germans arrested
- since 12 September as extensively as possible. The number of
- those arrested there is estimated conservatively at 400 by the
- Gestapo. Cable report.
-
- “Woermann.”
- (_2855-PS_)
-
-The second telegram is dated 17 September. The first two paragraphs
-read:
-
- “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.” (_2854-PS_)
-
-The third telegram was sent on 24 September:
-
- “According to information received here Czechs have arrested 2
- German frontier-policemen, seven customs-officials and 30
- railway-officials. As countermeasure 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.
-
- “(signed) WOERMANN”
- (_2853-PS_)
-
-On the same day the fourth telegram was dispatched. The last paragraph
-read:
-
- “Confidential:
-
- “Yielding of the 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.
-
- “WOERMANN”
- (_2856-PS_)
-
-In the latter half of September Henlein devoted himself and his
-followers wholeheartedly to preparation for the coming German attack.
-About 15 September, after Hitler’s provocative Nurnberg speech in which
-he accused “this Benes” 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
-_Reichssender_ radio station his determination to lead the
-Sudeten-Germans “home to the Reich” and denounced “the Hussite Bolshevik
-criminals of Prague”. From his headquarters in a castle at Dondorf,
-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. These events are set forth in the
-Czechoslovak official report. (_998-PS_; _3061-PS_)
-
-Henlein’s activities were carried on with the advice and assistance of
-the Nazi leaders. Lt. Col. Koechling 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 17 September Koechling received
-far-reaching military powers. At this conference the purpose of the Free
-Corps was frankly stated: the “maintenance of disorder and clashes”.
-_Item 25_, of the Schmundt file (388-PS), a telegram labeled Most Secret
-reads as follows:
-
- “Last night conference took place between Fuehrer and
- Oberstleutnant Koechling. Duration of conference 7 minutes. Lt.
- Col. Koechling 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 Fuehrer. 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.”
- (_388-PS, Item 25_)
-
-General Jodl’s diary 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. Jodl’s entries for 19 and 20 September 1938
-state:
-
- “_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 Lt.
- Col. Koechling, I attempt to lead these activities into normal
- channels.
-
- “Toward the evening the Fuehrer also takes a hand and gives
- permission to act only with groups up to 12 men each, after the
- approval of the Corps HQ.” (_1780-PS_)
-
-A report from Henlein’s staff, which was filed in Hitler’s headquarters,
-boasted of the offensive operations of the Free Corps in the following
-terms:
-
- “Since 19 Sept.—in more than 300 missions—the Free Corps has
- executed its task with an amazing spirit of _attack_ 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 and a large amount of other
- weapons and equipment, aside from serious losses in dead and
- wounded suffered by the _enemy_.” (_388-PS, Item 30_)
-
-In this document the word “attack” was subsequently crossed out, and the
-word “defense” substituted. Similarly “the enemy” was changed to read
-“the Czech terrorists”.
-
-In his headquarters in the castle at Dondorf, Henlein was in close touch
-with Admiral Canaris of the Intelligence Division of the OKW and with
-the SS and SA. The liaison officer between the SS and Henlein was
-Oberfuehrer Gottlob Berger, who in later years became prominent in the
-SS command. An affidavit executed by Berger reads as follows:
-
- “I, GOTTLOB BERGER, under oath and being previously sworn, make
- the following statement:
-
- “1. In the fall of 1938 I held the rank and title of Oberfuehrer
- in the SS. In mid-September I was assigned as SS Liaison Officer
- with Konrad Henlein’s Sudeten German Free Corps at their
- headquarters in the castle of Dondorf outside Bayreuth. In this
- position I was responsible for all liaison between the
- Reichsfuehrer SS Himmler and Henlein and, in particular, I was
- delegated to select from the Sudeten-Germans those who appeared
- to be eligible for membership in the SS or VT (_Verfuegungs
- Truppe_). In addition to myself, Liaison Officers stationed with
- Henlein included an Obergruppenfuehrer from the NSKK, whose name
- I have forgotten, and Obergruppenfuehrer Max Juettner, from the
- SA. In addition, Admiral Canaris, who was head of the OKW
- _Abwehr_, appeared at Dondorf nearly every two days and
- conferred with Henlein.
-
- “2. In the course of my official duties at Henlein’s
- headquarters I became familiar with the composition and
- activities of the Free Corps. Three groups were being formed
- under Henlein’s direction: One in the Eisenstein area, Bavaria;
- one in the Bayreuth area; one in the Dresden area; and possibly
- a fourth group in Silesia. These groups were supposedly composed
- of refugees from the Sudetenland who had crossed the border into
- Germany, but they actually contained Germans with previous
- service in the SA and NSKK (Nazi Motor Corps) as well. These
- Germans formed the skeleton of the Free Corps. On paper the Free
- Corps had a strength of 40,000 men. I do not know its actual
- strength, but I believe it to be considerably smaller than the
- paper figure. The Corps was armed with Manlicher-Schoenauer
- rifles from Army depots in Austria. It was my understanding that
- about 18,000 rifles were issued to men under Henlein’s command.
- In addition, small numbers of machine guns[1], hand grenades,
- and 2 captured antitank guns were placed at Henlein’s disposal.
- Part of the equipment furnished to Henlein, mostly haversacks,
- cooking utensils, and blankets, were supplied by the SA.
-
- “3. In the days preceding the conclusion of the four-power pact
- at Munich I heard of numerous occasions on which the Henlein
- Free Corps was engaged in skirmishes with Czech patrols along
- the border of the Sudetenland. These operations were under the
- direction of Henlein, who went forward from his Headquarters
- repeatedly in order to take direct command of his men.
-
- “The facts stated above are true; this declaration is made by me
- voluntarily and without compulsion; after reading over this
- statement I have signed and executed the same.
-
- “(Signed) Gottlob Berger”
- (_3036-PS_)
-
------
-
-[1] “(Rifles and machine guns were of doubtful serviceability due to
-inferior ammunition).”
-
-Henlein and his Free Corps were also acting in collaboration with the
-SD, (_Sicherheitsdienst_) Himmler’s intelligence organization. An
-affidavit executed by Alfred Helmut Naujocks, a member of the SD, reads
-as follows:
-
- “I, ALFRED HELMUT NAUJOCKS, being first duly sworn, depose and
- state as follows:
-
- “1. In September 1938 I was working in Amt III of the SD. (The
- department which was then called Amt III later became Amt VI).
- In the course of my work I traveled between Berlin, Hof and
- Munich.
-
- “2. While in Hof, which is on the Czech border, I paid repeated
- visits to the SD Service Department, that is, Intelligence
- Office, which has been established there. This Service
- Department had the task of collecting all political intelligence
- emanating from the Czechoslovak border districts and passing it
- on to Berlin. Continuous day and night teleprinter
- communications had been established from Hof direct to Amt III
- of the SD in Berlin. To the best of my recollection the head of
- the Hof office was Daufeldt. The head of Amt III in Berlin at
- this time was Jost and his assistant was Filbert.
-
- “3. The bulk of the intelligence we collected came from Henlein
- Free Corps, which had its headquarters in a castle at Dondorf,
- outside Bayreuth; the distance between Hof and Bayreuth is not
- very great, and we had daily access to all intelligence received
- by the Free Corps. There was a continuous liaison maintained
- with Czech territory by runners. Exploitation of this
- Intelligence was carried out every day in Berlin and was placed
- before Heydrich and Himmler.
-
- “4. I remember that the Free Corps made continuous complaints
- that they had not received sufficient supply of arms.
- Negotiations by letter and teleprint message went on for a
- number of days with Berlin until it became quite a nuisance.
- After that arms were supplied from the army, but I believe it
- was only a small quantity.
-
- “5. Hof was the center for all intelligence collected by the SD
- on the Czechoslovak question. The SD had agents all along the
- border in every town. The names of these agents were reported to
- Hof, and two motor cars toured the border every day to collect
- the intelligence which had been unearthed. In addition, I
- remember that two or three companies of the SS-Totenkopf units
- were stationed in the neighborhood of Asch.
-
- “The facts stated above are true: this declaration is made by me
- voluntarily and without compulsion; after reading over this
- statement I have signed and executed the same at Nurnberg,
- Germany this 20th day of November 1945.
-
- “(signed) Alfred Helmut Naujocks.”
- (_3029-PS_)
-
-Offensive operations along the Czechoslovak border were not confined to
-skirmishes carried out by the Free Corps. Two SS _Totenkopf_ battalions
-were operating across the border in Czech territory near Asch. _Item 36_
-in the Schmundt file (_388-PS_), an OKW most secret order signed by Jodl
-and dated 28 September, states:
-
- “Those SS-Totenkopf units now operating in the Asch Promontory
- (I and II Bn of Oberbayern Regiment) will come under the C in C
- Army only when they return to German Reich territory, or when
- the Army crosses the German-Czech frontier.” (_388-PS, Item 36_)
-
-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. (_1780-PS_)
-
-As the time for 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 Reichsfuehrer SS in the event of
-German invasion of Czechoslovakia (_388-PS, Item 37_). On 28 September
-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:
-
- “For the Henlein Free Corps and units subordinate to this the
- principle remains valid, that they receive instructions direct
- from the Fuehrer and that they carry out their operations only
- in conjunction with the competent general staff corps. 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 Czech 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.” (_388-PS, Item
- 34_)
-
-On 30 September, when it became clear that the Munich settlement would
-result in a peaceful occupation of the Sudetenland, Keitel ordered that
-the Free Corps Henlein in its present composition be placed under
-command of Himmler:
-
- “1. _Attachment of 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 Reichsfuehrer-SS and Chief of German Police.
-
- “It is therefore 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
- Reichsfuehrer SS.” (_388-PS, Item 38_)
-
-J. _Occupation of the Sudetenland under the Terms of the Munich
-Agreement._
-
-Under the threat of war by the Nazi conspirators, and with war in fact
-about to be launched, the United Kingdom and France concluded a pact
-with Germany and Italy at Munich on the night of 29 September 1938. This
-treaty provided for the cession of the Sudetenland by Czechoslovakia to
-Germany. Czechoslovakia was required to acquiesce. (_TC-23_)
-
-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 attack, awaiting only the word of Hitler to begin the
-assault. With the cession of the Sudetenland new orders were issued. On
-30 September Keitel promulgated Directive #1 on “Occupation of territory
-separated from Czechoslovakia” (_388-PS, Item 39_). 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. The fourth and fifth paragraphs provided:
-
- “2. The Armed Forces will have the following tasks:
-
- “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 ‘_Gruen_’.” (_388-PS, Item 39_)
-
-It contained one further provision about the Henlein forces:
-
- “Henlein Free Corps. All combat action on the part of the
- Volunteer Corps must cease as from 1st October.” (_388-PS, Item
- 39_)
-
-The Schmundt file contains a number of additional secret OKW directives
-giving instructions for the occupation of the Sudetenland and showing
-the scope of the preparations of the OKW. Directives specifying the
-occupational area of the army and the units under its command; arranging
-for communications facilities, exchange facilities, supply, and
-propaganda; and giving instructions to the civil departments of the
-government were issued over Keitel’s signature on 30 September (_388-PS,
-Items 40, 41, 42_). 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. (_388-PS, Items 46, 47, 49_)
-
-On 18 October, in a formal letter to the Commander-in-Chief of the Army,
-Col. Gen. von Brauchitsch, Hitler announced that the civil authorities
-would take over responsibility for the Sudeten-German territory on 21
-October and that the OKH would be relieved of executive powers as of
-that date (_388-PS, Item 51_). On the same date additional
-demobilization of the forces in the Sudetenland was ordered by Hitler
-and Keitel. Three days later the OKW requested Hitler’s consent to the
-reversion of the RAD from the control of the armed forces. (_388-PS,
-Items 52, 53_)
-
-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-Sozialistische Deutsche Arbeiter-Partei in der
-Tschechoslovakei_ (NSDAP in Czechoslovakia) under the direction of
-Kundt, another of Henlein’s deputies. These events are set forth in the
-Czechoslovak official report. (_998-PS_; _3061-PS_)
-
-The stage was now prepared for the next move of the Nazi conspirators.
-
-K. _Planning for the Conquest of the Remainder of Czechoslovakia._
-
-With the occupation of the Sudetenland and the inclusion of the
-German-speaking Czechs within the Greater Reich it might have been
-expected that the Nazi conspirators would be satisfied. Thus far in the
-Nazi program of aggression the conspirators had used as a pretext for
-their conquests the union of the _Volksdeutsche_, the people of German
-descent, with the Reich. Now, after Munich, substantially all the
-_Volksdeutsche_ in Czechoslovakia had been returned to German rule. On
-26 September, at the Sportspalast in Berlin, Hitler spoke these words:
-
- “And now we are confronted with the last problem which must be
- solved and which will be solved. 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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.
-
- “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. We don’t want any Czechs at all.”
- (_2358-PS_)
-
-Yet no more than two weeks later Hitler and Keitel were preparing
-estimates of the military forces required to break Czechoslovak
-resistance in Bohemia and Moravia. _Item 48_ of the Schmundt file 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. These were the questions:
-
- “Question 1: What reinforcements are necessary in the present
- situation to break all Czech resistance in Bohemia and Moravia?
-
- “Question 2: How much time is required 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 October 1st?” (_388-PS, Item 48_)
-
-Whereupon, in the same telegram, Keitel reported to Hitler the
-considered answers of the OKH and the Luftwaffe.
-
-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 Keitel. In this Top Secret Order, of
-which 10 copies were made, the Nazi conspirators, only three weeks after
-the winning of the Sudetenland, were already looking forward to new
-conquests:
-
- “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 Memelland.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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 ‘_Gruen_’; 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 peace-time 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 an
- early elimination of the Czech Air Force.
-
- “For this purpose the commitment in a surprise attack from
- peace-time bases has to be prepared. Whether for this purpose
- still stronger forces may be required can only be determined
- from the development of the military situation in
- Czechoslovakia. At the same time a simultaneous assembly of the
- remainder of the offensive forces against the West must be
- prepared.” (_C-136_)
-
-This order was signed by Hitler and authenticated by Keitel. It was
-distributed to the OKH, to Goering’s Luftwaffe, and to Raeder at Navy
-headquarters.
-
-Two months later, on 17 December 1938, Keitel issued an appendix to the
-original order stating that by command of the Fuehrer preparations for
-the liquidation of Czechoslovakia are to continue. Distribution of this
-Top Secret order was the same as for the 21 October order. The order
-provides:
-
- “2. _COROLLARY TO DIRECTIVE OF 21.10.38._
-
- “Reference ‘Liquidation of the Rest of Czechoslovakia’ the
- Fuehrer 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 peace time
- 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 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 Fuehrer.
-
- “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.
-
- “Chief of the Supreme Command
- of the Armed Forces.
- “KEITEL”
- (_C-138_)
-
-This particular copy of the 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 Operational Division of the
-Naval War Staff, of Schniewind, Chief of Staff of the Naval War Staff,
-and of 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
-Czechoslovak Foreign Minister, Chvalkovsky, in Berlin on 21 January
-1939, Ribbentrop urged upon the Czech government a “quick reduction” in
-the size of the Czech army. The captured German Foreign Office notes of
-this discussion bear the following footnote, in Ribbentrop’s
-handwriting:
-
- “I mentioned to Chvalkovsky especially that a quick reduction in
- the Czech army would be decisive in our judgment.” (_2795-PS_)
-
-L. _Extension of Fifth Column Activity_
-
-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 sizeable minority, the Slovaks, remained
-within the Czechoslovak State. 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. Nonetheless, despite
-these concessions, it was in Slovakia that the Nazi conspirators found
-men ready to take their money and do their bidding. The following
-picture of Nazi operations in Slovakia is based on the Czechoslovak
-official report. (_998-PS_; _3061-PS_)
-
-Nazi propaganda and “research” groups had long been interested in
-maintaining close connections 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
-Slovak traitors living in exile and were attempting to establish more
-profitable contacts in the semi-fascist Slovak Catholic Peoples Party of
-Monsignor Andrew Hlinka. Out of sympathy with the predominantly
-anti-clerical government in Prague, some Catholic elements in Slovakia
-proved willing to cooperate with the Nazis. 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. (See _2858-PS_.)
-
-By this time, mid-summer 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. Franz Karmasin, later to
-become _Volksgruppenfuehrer_, had been appointed Nazi leader in Slovakia
-and professed to be serving the cause of Slovak autonomy while on the
-Nazi pay roll. On 22 November the Nazis indiscreetly wired Karmasin to
-collect his money at the German Legation in person. The telegram, sent
-from the German Legation at Prague to Bratislava (Pressburg), reads as
-follows:
-
- “Delegate Kundt asks to notify State Secretary Karmasin that he
- would appreciate it if he could personally draw the sum which is
- being kept for him at the treasury of the embassy.
-
- “HENCKE” (_2859-PS_)
-
-Karmasin proved to be extremely useful to the Nazi cause. A captured
-memorandum of the German Foreign Office, dated Berlin, 29 November
-1939—eight months after the conquest of Czechoslovakia—throws a
-revealing light both on Karmasin and on the German Foreign Office:
-
- “_On the question of payments to KARMASIN_
-
- “Karmasin receives 30,000 Marks for 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 will continue.
-
- “Therefore it appears that Karmasin has been provided with
- sufficient money; thus one could await whether he would put up
- new demands himself.
-
- “Herewith presented to the Reich Foreign Minister.
-
- “/s/ WOERMANN” (_2794-PS_)
-
-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
-under-cover representatives in Pressburg with substantial funds even
-after the declaration of the so-called independent State of Slovakia.
-
-Some time in the winter of 1938-1939 Goering conferred with Durcansky
-and Mach, two leaders in the Slovak extremist group, who were
-accompanied by Karmasin. The Slovaks told Goering 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 in Germany and that the Communist Party would be
-prohibited. The notes of the meeting report that Goering considered that
-the Slovak efforts towards independence were to be supported, although
-his motives were scarcely altruistic. The undated minutes of this
-conversation between Goering and Durcansky, captured among the files of
-the German Foreign Office, are jotted down in somewhat telegraphic
-style:
-
- “To begin with DURKANSKY (Deputy Prime Minister) reads out
- declaration. Contents: Friendship for the Fuehrer; gratitude,
- that through the Fuehrer 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 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 favour 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 Fieldmarshall 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.” (_2801-PS_)
-
-In mid-February 1939 a Slovak delegation journeyed to Berlin. It
-consisted of Tuca, 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 Ribbentrop in the Reichs
-Chancellery in Berlin on Sunday, 12 February 1939. The captured German
-Foreign Office minutes of that meeting read as follows:
-
- “After a brief welcome Tuca thanks the Fuehrer for granting this
- meeting. He addresses the Fuehrer with ‘My Fuehrer’ 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 Fuehrer 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 Fuehrer 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 economic point of view.”
- (_2790-PS_)
-
-It is noteworthy that Tuca addressed Hitler as “My Fuehrer”. During this
-meeting the Nazi conspirators apparently were successful in planting the
-idea of insurrection with the Slovak delegation. The final sentence of
-this document, spoken by Tuca, is conclusive:
-
- “I entrust the fate of my people to your care.” (_2790-PS_)
-
-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 Ribbentrop, and subsidized by German
-representatives, these Slovaks proved willing tools in the hands of the
-Nazi conspirators.
-
-In addition to the Slovaks, the Nazi conspirators made use of the few
-Germans still remaining within the mutilated Czech 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 Naziism. 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 cooperation with 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
-trespasses on its sovereignty. (_998-PS_; _3061-PS_)
-
-In early March, with the date for the invasion of 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
-for the events of 14 and 15 March. An article by SS-Gruppenfuehrer Karl
-Hermann Frank, published in _Boehmen und Maehren_, the official
-periodical of the Reichs Protector of Bohemia and Moravia, March 1941,
-page 79, reveals with considerable frankness the functions which the FS
-and SS served and the pride the Nazi conspirators took in the activities
-of these organizations:
-
- “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 (_Freiwilliger
- Selbstschutz_), called ‘FS’ for short. This troop was trained
- essentially 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 Brunn, 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 FS. 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 March 15, after the announcement
- of the planned entry of German troops in various localities,
- 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 Brunn, or by corresponding
- instruction of the police president, etc. 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
- Reichsfuehrer 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. * * *”
- (_2826-PS_)
-
-The background of the German intrigue in Slovakia is outlined in two
-British diplomatic despatches (_D-571_, _D-572_) and excerpts from
-despatches sent by M. Coulondre, the French Ambassador in Berlin to the
-French Foreign Office between 13 and 18 March 1939, and published in the
-French Yellow Book. (_2943-PS_)
-
-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
-Prime Minister Tiso and Durcansky. Within 24 hours the Nazis seized upon
-this act of the Czech government as an excuse for intervention. On the
-following day, 11 March, a strange scene was enacted in Bratislava, the
-Slovak capital. It is related in the report of the British Minister in
-Prague to the British government:
-
- “Herr Buerckel, Herr Seyss-Inquart and five German generals came
- at about 10 P. M. on the evening of Saturday, the 11th March,
- into a Cabinet meeting in progress at Bratislava, and told the
- Slovak Government that they should proclaim the independence of
- Slovakia. When M. Sidor (the Prime Minister) showed hesitation,
- Herr Buerckel took him on one side and explained that Herr
- Hitler had decided to settle the question of Czecho-Slovakia
- definitely. Slovakia ought, therefore, to proclaim her
- independence because Herr Hitler would otherwise disinterest
- himself in her fate. M. Sidor thanked Herr Buerckel for this
- information, but said that he must discuss the situation with
- the Government at Prague.” (_D-571_)
-
-Events were now moving rapidly. 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
-Guard to create incidents and disorder of the type required by the Nazis
-as an excuse for military action. The situation at Engerau is described
-in an affidavit of Alfred Helmut Naujocks:
-
- “I, ALFRED HELMUT NAUJOCKS, being first duly sworn, depose and
- state as follows—
-
- “1. From 1934 to 1941 I was a member of the SD. In the winter of
- 1939 I was stationed in Berlin, working in Amt VI, Chief Sector
- South East. Early in March, four or five days before Slovakia
- declared its independence, Heydrich, who was chief of the SD,
- ordered me to report to Nebe, the chief of the Reich Criminal
- Police. Nebe had been told by Heydrich to accelerate the
- production of explosives which his department was manufacturing
- for the use of certain Slovak groups. These explosives were
- small tins weighing approximately 500 grams.
-
- “2. As soon as forty or fifty of these explosives had been
- finished, I carried them by automobile to a small village called
- Engerau, just across the border from Pressburg in Slovakia. The
- Security Police had a Service Department in this village for the
- handling of SD activities. I turned over the explosives to this
- office and found there a group of Slovaks, including Karmasin,
- Mach, Tuka and Durcansky. In fact, three of these people then
- present later became ministers in the new Slovak government. I
- was informed that the explosives were to be turned over to the
- Hlinka Guards across the border in Slovakia and were to be used
- in incidents designed to create the proper atmosphere for a
- revolution.
-
- “3. I stayed in Engerau for a day and a half and then returned
- to Berlin.
-
- “4. One or two weeks later I met in Berlin the same Slovak
- delegation, including Mach, Tuka, Durcansky and Karmasin, which
- I had seen in Engerau. They had flown to Berlin for a conference
- with Goering. Heydrich asked me to look after them and to report
- to him what developed during the conference with Goering. I
- reported this conference in detail to Heydrich. It dealt
- principally with the organization of the new Slovak state. My
- principal recollection of the conference is that the Slovaks
- hardly got a word in because Goering was talking all the time.
-
- “The facts stated above are true; this declaration is made by me
- voluntarily and without compulsion; after reading over the
- statement I have signed and executed the same at NURNBERG,
- Germany this 20th day of November 1945.
-
- “(Signed) Alfred Helmut Naujocks
- “ALFRED HELMUT NAUJOCKS”
- (_3030-PS_)
-
-At this time 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. (_998-PS_; _3061-PS_; _2943-PS_)
-
-M. _Occupation of Czechoslovakia Under Threat of Military Force._
-
-At this point, in the second week of March 1939, preparations for what
-the Nazi leaders liked to call the “liquidation” of Czechoslovakia were
-progressing with a gratifying smoothness. The military, diplomatic, and
-propaganda machinery of the Nazi conspirators was moving in close
-coordination. As during Case Green of the preceding summer, the Nazi
-conspirators had invited Hungary to participate in the attack. It
-appears from a letter Admiral Horthy, the Hungarian Regent, wrote to
-Hitler on 13 March 1939, which was captured in the German Foreign Office
-files, that Horthy was flattered by the invitation:
-
- “Your Excellency,
-
- “My sincere thanks.
-
- “I can hardly tell you how happy I am because this Head Water
- Region—I dislike using big words—is of vital importance to the
- life of Hungary.
-
- “In spite of the fact that our recruits have only been serving
- for 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.
-
- “I shall never forget this proof of friendship and your
- Excellency may rely on my unshakeable gratitude at all times.
-
- “Your devoted friend.
- “(Signed) HORTHY”
-
- “Budapest. 13.3.1939.” (_2816-PS_)
-
-From this letter it may be inferred that the Nazi conspirators had
-already informed the Hungarian government of their plans for military
-action against Czechoslovakia. As it turned out, the timetable was
-advanced somewhat.
-
-On the diplomatic level Ribbentrop was 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:
-
- “_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
- Embassy to make a point of not being available if the Czech
- government wants to communicate with you during the next few
- days.
-
- “(Signed) RIBBENTROP”. (_2815-PS_)
-
-On the afternoon of 13 March, Monsignor Tiso, accompanied by Durcansky
-and by Karmasin, the local Nazi leader, arrived in Berlin in response to
-the summons from Hitler. Late that afternoon Tiso was received by Hitler
-in his study in the Reichs Chancellery and was presented with an
-ultimatum. Two alternatives were given him: either to declare the
-independence of Slovakia or to be left, without German assistance, to
-the mercies of Poland and Hungary. This decision, Hitler said, was not a
-question of days, but of hours. The captured German Foreign Office
-minutes of this meeting between Hitler and Tiso on 13 March show that in
-the inducements Hitler held out to the Slovaks Hitler displayed his
-customary disregard for truth:
-
- “* * * Now he [Hitler] had permitted Minister Tiso to come here
- in order to make this question clear in a very short time.
- Germany had no interests 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 Fuehrer asked the Reich Foreign Minister 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 Fuehrer a message
- he had just received which reported Hungarian troop movements on
- the Slovak frontiers. The Fuehrer read this report, mentioned it
- to Tiso, and expressed the hope that Slovakia would soon decide
- clearly for herself.” (_2802-PS_)
-
-Those present at this meeting included Ribbentrop, Keitel, State
-Secretary Dietrich, State Secretary Keppler, and Minister of State
-Meissner.
-
-While in Berlin, the Slovaks also conferred separately with Ribbentrop
-and with other high Nazi officials. Ribbentrop solicitously handed Tiso
-a copy, already drafted in Slovak, of the law proclaiming the
-independence of Slovakia. On the night of 13 March a German plane was
-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 extremists, acting at 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 14 March, at the suggestion of
-the German Legation in Prague M. Hacha, the president of the
-Czechoslovak republic, and M. Chvalkovsky, his foreign minister, arrived
-in Berlin. The atmosphere in which they found themselves was hostile.
-Since the preceding weekend the Nazi press had accused the Czechs of
-using violence against the Slovaks and especially against members of the
-German minority and citizens of the Reich. Both press and radio
-proclaimed that the lives of Germans were in danger, that the situation
-was intolerable and that it was necessary to smother as quickly as
-possible the focus of trouble which Prague had become in the heart of
-Europe.
-
-After midnight on the 15 March, at 1:15 in the morning, Hacha and
-Chvalkovsky were ushered into the Reichs Chancellery. They found there
-Hitler, von Ribbentrop, Goering, Keitel, and other high Nazi officials.
-The captured German Foreign Office account of this meeting furnishes a
-revealing picture of Nazi behaviour and tactics. It must be remembered
-that this account of the conference of the night of March 14-15 comes
-from German sources, and must be read as an account biased by its
-source.
-
-Hacha opened the conference. He was conciliatory, even humble. He
-thanked Hitler for receiving him and said he knew that the fate of
-Czechoslovakia rested in the Fuehrer’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
-in his seventies.) But this journey, Hitler told the President, could be
-of great advantage to his country, because “it was only a matter of
-hours until Germany would intervene.” The conference proceeded as
-follows, with Hitler speaking:
-
- “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
- Lower Carpathian Mts. Last autumn he had not wanted to draw the
- final consequences because he had believed that it was possible
- to live together. But even at that time, and also later in his
- conversations with Chvalkovsky, he made it clear that he would
- ruthlessly smash this state if Benes’ tendencies were not
- completely revised. Chvalkovsky understood this and asked the
- Fuehrer to have patience. The Fuehrer 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 whole situation. At first he had not understood
- this but when it became clear to him he drew his conclusions
- because, had the development continued in this way, the
- relations with Czechoslovakia would in a few years have become
- the same as six 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 enumerates several examples
- which proved to him that the spirit in the army had not changed.
- This symptom convinced him that the army would be a severe
- political burden in the future. Added to this were the
- inevitable development of economic necessities and, further, the
- protests from national groups which could no longer endure life
- as it was.
-
- “Last Sunday, therefore, for me the die was cast. I summoned the
- Hungarian envoy and notified him that I was withdrawing my
- [restraining] hands from that 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 ever
- had 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 straight forwardness of Hacha and Chvalkovsky 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 Fuehrer to give Czechoslovakia at
- 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 de-nationalize 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, 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 would
- break out tomorrow, the pressure would result in
- counter-pressure. One would annihilate one another and it would
- then not be possible any more for him to give the promised
- alleviations. Within two 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 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 read the foreign press. It gave him the impression expressed
- in a German proverb: ‘The Moor has done his duty, the Moor may
- go.’
-
- “That was the state of affairs. There were two courses open to
- Germany, a harder one which did not want any concessions and
- wished in memory of the past that Czechoslovakia would be
- conquered with blood, and another one, the attitude of which
- corresponded with his proposals stated above.
-
- “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 would 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 much more far-reaching for
- Czechoslovakia than she could ever have hoped for in 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 now to retire
- with Chvalkovsky in order to discuss what should be done.”
- (_2798-PS_)
-
-In 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 four 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, that might be arranged. Hitler replied that his decision
-was final, that it was well known what a decision of the Fuehrer meant.
-He turned to the circle of Nazi conspirators surrounding him, which
-included Goering, Ribbentrop, and Keitel, for their support. The only
-possibility of disarming the Czech Army, Hitler said, was by the
-intervention of the German Army. At this point Hacha and Chvalkovsky
-retired from the room. (_2798-PS_)
-
-A dispatch from the British Ambassador, Sir Neville Henderson, published
-in the British Blue Book, describes a conversation with Goering in which
-the events of this early morning meeting are set forth (_2861-PS_).
-Dispatch No. 77 in the French Yellow Book from M. Coulondre, the French
-Ambassador, gives another well-informed version of this same midnight
-meeting (_2943-PS_). The following account of the remainder of this
-meeting is drawn from these two sources, as well as from the captured
-German minutes (_2787-PS_). (Cf. also _3061-PS_.)
-
-When President Hacha left the conference room in the Reichs Chancellery,
-he was in such a state of exhaustion that he needed medical attention
-from a physician who was on hand for that purpose. It appears that he
-was given an injection to sustain him during the ordeal. When the two
-Czechs returned to the room the Nazi conspirators again told them of the
-power and invincibility of the _Wehrmacht_. They reminded him that in
-three hours, at 6 in the morning, the German Army would cross the
-border. Goering boasted of what the German _Wehrmacht_ would do if Czech
-forces resisted the invading Germans. If German lives were lost, Goering
-said, his Luftwaffe would blast half Prague into ruins in two hours. And
-that, Goering said, would be only the beginning. Under this threat of
-imminent and merciless attack by land and air, the President of
-Czechoslovakia at 4:30 in the morning signed the document with which the
-Nazi conspirators confronted him. This Declaration of 15 March 1939
-reads:
-
- “the President of the Czechoslovak State * * * entrusts with
- entire confidence the destiny of the Czech people and the Czech
- country to the hands of the Fuehrer of the German Reich.”
- (_TC-49_)
-
-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. The Czech industrial centres of
-Maehrisch-Ostrau and Witkowitz, close to the Silesian and Polish
-borders, were occupied by German troops and SS units during the early
-evening of 14 March. An article in the German military magazine, the
-_Wehrmacht_, of 29 March 1939 describes the movement of German troops
-during the occupation:
-
- “From Silesia, Saxony and Northern Bavaria and the Ostmark,
- seven Army Corps moved on the morning of March 15 past the
- former Czech border. On the evening of March 14 parts of the
- VIII Army Corps and the SS Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler, under the
- command of the Commanding General of the VIII Army Corps, had
- already occupied the industrial centers of Witkowitz and
- Maehrisch Ostrau.
-
- “The troops of Army Group 3 under the command of General of
- Infantry Blaskowitz were to take Bohemia under their protection,
- while the troops of Army Group 5 under General of Inf. List were
- given the same mission for Moravia.
-
- “For this purpose parts of the Air Force (particularly
- reconnaissance planes and antiaircraft artillery) as well as
- parts of the _SS Verfuegungstruppen_ were placed at the disposal
- of the two army groups.
-
- “On the evening of March 14, the march order was received by the
- troops. On March 15 at 6 A. M. the columns moved past the border
- and then moved on with utmost precision. * * *” (_3571-PS_)
-
-(Other descriptions of the military movements of 14 and 15 March are
-contained in documents _2860-PS_, _3618-PS_, and _3619-PS_.)
-
-At dawn on 15 March 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 succinctly,
-“Czechoslovakia has ceased to exist.” (_TC-50_)
-
-On the following day, in direct 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.” This decree, signed in Prague on 16 March 1939 by Hitler,
-Lammers, Frick, and Ribbentrop, commenced with this declaration:
-
- “The Bohemian-Moravian countries belonged for a millennium to
- the living space of the German people.” (_TC-51_)
-
-The remainder of the decree sets forth in bleak detail the extent to
-which Czechoslovakia henceforth was to be subjugated to Germany. A
-German Protector was to be appointed by the Fuehrer for the so-called
-Protectorate. The German Government assumed charge of their foreign
-affairs and of their customs and their excise. It was specified that
-German garrisons and military establishments would be maintained in the
-Protectorate. (_TC-51_)
-
-At the same time the extremist leaders in Slovakia, who at German
-insistence had done so much to undermine the Czech State, found that the
-independence of their week-old state was in fact qualified. A Treaty of
-Protection between Slovakia and the Reich was signed in Vienna on 18
-March and by Ribbentrop in Berlin on 23 March (_1439-PS_). A secret
-protocol to this treaty was also signed in Berlin on 23 March by
-Ribbentrop for Germany, and by Tuka and Durcansky for Slovakia
-(_2793-PS_). The first four articles of this treaty provide:
-
- “The German Government and the Slovak Government have agreed,
- after the Slovak 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 the 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.
-
- “The Government of Slovakia will take the necessary steps to
- assure that the land required for these installations shall be
- conveyed to the German armed forces. Furthermore the Government
- of Slovakia will agree to grant exemption from custom duties for
- imports from the Reich for the maintenance of the German troops
- and the supply of military installations.
-
- “Military sovereignty will be assumed by the German armed forces
- in the zone described in the first paragraph of this Article.
-
- “German citizens who, on the basis of private employment
- contracts, are engaged in the construction of military
- installations in the designated zone shall be subject to German
- jurisdiction.
-
- “ARTICLE 3. The Government of Slovakia will organize its
- military forces in close agreement with the German armed forces.
-
- “ARTICLE 4. In accordance with the relationship of protection
- agreed upon, the Government of Slovakia will at all times
- conduct its foreign affairs in close agreement with the German
- Government.” (_1439-PS_)
-
-The secret protocol 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.
-Article I, Paragraph 3, provided:
-
- “(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_) will be
- placed under the Reich agency for soil-research (_Reichsstelle
- fuer 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.” (_2793-PS_)
-
-In their private conversations the Nazi conspirators gave abundant
-evidence that they considered Slovakia a puppet State, in effect a
-German possession. A memorandum of information given by Hitler to von
-Brauchitsch on 25 March 1939 deals in the main with problems arising
-from recently occupied Bohemia and Moravia and Slovakia. It states in
-part:
-
- “Col. Gen. 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.
-
- “Slovak 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 these millions
- should be used which we will pour anyhow into Slovakia.
-
- “_Czech Protectorate._
-
- “H. Gr. [translator’s note: probably Army groups] 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-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.” (_R-100_)
-
-The German conquest of Czechoslovakia in direct contravention of the
-Munich agreement was the occasion for formal protests from the British
-(_TC-52_) and French (_TC-53_) governments, both dated 17 March 1939. On
-the same day, 17 March 1939, the Acting Secretary of State of the United
-States issued a statement which read in part as follows:
-
- “* * * 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.” (_2862-PS_)
-
-N. _The Importance of Czechoslovakia in Future Aggressions._
-
-With Czechoslovakia in German hands, the Nazi conspirators had
-accomplished the program they had set for themselves in the meeting in
-Berlin on 5 November 1937 (_386-PS_). This program of conquest had been
-intended to shorten Germany’s frontiers, to increase its industrial and
-food reserves, and to place it in a position, both industrially and
-strategically, from which the Nazis 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.
-
-Of all the Nazi conspirators perhaps Goering was the most aware of the
-economic and strategic advantages which would accrue from the possession
-of Czechoslovakia. The Top Secret minutes of a conference with Goering
-in the Air Ministry, held on 14 October 1938—just two weeks after the
-occupation of the Sudetenland—reports a discussion of economic
-problems. At this date Goering’s remarks were somewhat prophetic:
-
- “The Sudetenland has to be exploited with all the means. General
- Field Marshal Goering counts upon a complete industrial
- assimilation of the Slovakia. Czechia 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.” (_1301-PS, Item 10_)
-
-In the summer of 1939, after the incorporation of Bohemia and Moravia
-into the Reich, Goering again revealed the great interest of the Nazi
-leaders in the Czechoslovak economic potential. The minutes dated
-Berlin, 27 July 1939, and signed Mueller, of a conference two days
-earlier between Goering and a group of officials from the OKW and from
-other agencies of the German government concerned with war production,
-read as follows:
-
- “1. 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. Letters, such
- as the decree of the Reich Minister for Economics—S 10 402/39
- of 10 July 39—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,
- 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. * * *” (_R-133_)
-
-In addition to strengthening the Nazi economic potential for war, the
-conquest of Czechoslovakia provided the Nazis with new bases from which
-to wage their next war of aggression, the attack on Poland. It will be
-recalled that the minutes of the conference between Goering and a
-pro-Nazi Slovak delegation in the winter of 1938-39 state Goering’s
-conclusions as follows:
-
- “Air bases in Slovakia are of great importance for the German
- Air Force for use against the East.” (_2801-PS_)
-
-In a conference between Goering, Mussolini, and Ciano on 15 April 1939,
-one month after the conquest of Czechoslovakia, Goering 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. He mentioned the German occupation of Czechoslovakia in these
-words:
-
- “However, the heavy armament of Czechoslovakia shows, in any
- case, how dangerous this country could have been, even after
- Munich, in the event of a serious conflict. Because of Germany’s
- action the situation of both Axis countries was ameliorated,
- among other reasons because of the economic possibilities which
- result from the transfer to Germany of the great production
- capacity (armament potential) 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 a bigger conflict. This, too, is an advantage by
- which both axis countries will, in the last analysis, benefit.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “* * * 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 2 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.” (_1874-PS_)
-
-The absorption of the Sudetenland, effected on 1 October 1938, in
-practical effect destroyed Czechoslovakia as a military power. The final
-conquest of Czechoslovakia came on 15 March 1939. This conquest had been
-the intention and aim of the Nazi leaders during the preparations for
-Case Green in the summer of 1938, and had been forestalled only by the
-Munich agreement. With Czechoslovakia, less than six months after the
-Munich agreement, securely in German hands, the Nazi conspirators had
-achieved their objective. Bohemia and Moravia were incorporated into the
-Reich, shortening German frontiers and adding the Czech manufacturing
-plant to the German war potential. The puppet state of Slovakia,
-conceived in Berlin and independent only in name, had been set up to the
-east of Moravia. In this state, which outflanked Poland to the south,
-the Nazi army, under the terms of the treaty drafted by Ribbentrop, took
-upon itself the establishment of bases and extensive military
-installations. From this state in September 1939 units of the German
-Army did, in fact, carry out the attack on Poland.
-
-Logic and premeditation are patent in each step of the German
-aggression. Each conquest of the Nazi conspirators was deliberately
-planned as a stepping-stone to new and more ambitious aggression. The
-words of Hitler in the conference in the Reichs Chancellery on 23 May
-1939, when he was planning the Polish campaign, are significant,
-
- “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.” (_L-79_)
-
-It is appropriate to refer to two other speeches of the Nazi leaders. In
-his lecture at Munich on 7 November 1943 Jodl spoke as follows:
-
- “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 favourable strategic premises.” (_L-172_)
-
-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:
-
- “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.” (_789-PS_)
-
- * * * * *
-
-LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO THE EXECUTION OF THE
- PLAN TO INVADE CZECHOSLOVAKIA
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6 (a). │ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Sections IV (F) 3│ │
- │ (a, c); V. │ I │ 22, 29
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document was referred to during the │ │
- │trial but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
-  *375-PS │Case Green with wider implications, │ │
- │report of Intelligence Division, │ │
- │Luftwaffe General Staff, 25 August 1938.│ │
- │(USA 84) │ III │ 280
- │ │ │
-  *386-PS │Notes on a conference with Hitler in the│ │
- │Reich Chancellery, Berlin, 5 November │ │
- │1937, signed by Hitler’s adjutant, │ │
- │Hossbach, and dated 10 November 1937. │ │
- │(USA 25) │ III │ 295
- │ │ │
-  *388-PS │File of papers on Case Green (the plan │ │
- │for the attack on Czechoslovakia), kept │ │
- │by Schmundt, Hitler’s adjutant, │ │
- │April-October 1938. (USA 26) │ III │ 305
- │ │ │
-  *789-PS │Speech of the Fuehrer at a conference, │ │
- │23 November 1939, to which all Supreme │ │
- │Commanders were ordered. (USA 23) │ III │ 572
- │ │ │
-  *998-PS │“German Crimes Against Czechoslovakia”. │ │
- │Excerpts from Czechoslovak Official │ │
- │Report for the prosecution and trial of │ │
- │the German Major War Criminals by the │ │
- │International Military Tribunal │ │
- │established according to Agreement of │ │
- │four Great Powers of 8 August 1945. (USA│ │
- │91) │ III │ 656
- │ │ │
- *1301-PS │File relating to financing of armament │ │
- │including minutes of conference with │ │
- │Goering at the Air Ministry, 14 October │ │
- │1938, concerning acceleration of │ │
- │rearmament. (USA 123) │ III │ 868
- │ │ │
- *1439-PS │Treaty of Protection between Slovakia │ │
- │and the Reich, signed in Vienna 18 March│ │
- │and in Berlin 23 March 1939. 1939 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 606. (GB │ │
- │135) │ IV │ 18
- │ │ │
- *1536-PS │Report of Luftwaffe General Staff, │ │
- │Intelligence Division, 12 August 1938, │ │
- │on reconnaissance by German Air Attache │ │
- │at Prague for airfields in │ │
- │Czechoslovakia, enclosing report of the │ │
- │Air Attache, Major Moericke, 4 August │ │
- │1938. (USA 83) │ IV │ 96
- │ │ │
- *1780-PS │Excerpts from diary kept by General │ │
- │Jodl, January 1937 to August 1939. (USA │ │
- │72) │ IV │ 360
- │ │ │
- *1874-PS │Notes on conference between Goering, │ │
- │Mussolini and Ciano, 15 April 1939. (USA│ │
- │125) │ IV │ 518
- │ │ │
-  2358-PS │Speech by Hitler in Sportspalast, │ │
- │Berlin, 26 September 1938, from │ │
- │Voelkischer Beobachter, Munich Edition, │ │
- │27 September 1938. │ IV │ 1100
- │ │ │
- *2360-PS │Speech by Hitler before Reichstag, 30 │ │
- │January 1939, from Voelkischer │ │
- │Beobachter, Munich Edition, 31 January │ │
- │1939. (GB 134) │ IV │ 1101
- │ │ │
- *2786-PS │Letter from Ribbentrop to Keitel, 4 │ │
- │March 1938. (USA 81) │ V │ 419
- │ │ │
- *2788-PS │Notes of conference in the Foreign │ │
- │Office between Ribbentrop, Konrad │ │
- │Henlein, K. H. Frank and others on │ │
- │program for Sudeten agitation, 29 March │ │
- │1938. (USA 95) │ V │ 422
- │ │ │
- *2789-PS │Letter from Konrad Henlein to │ │
- │Ribbentrop, 17 March 1938. (USA 94) │ V │ 424
- │ │ │
- *2790-PS │German Foreign Office minutes of │ │
- │conference between Hitler, Ribbentrop, │ │
- │Tuca and Karmasin, 12 February 1939. │ │
- │(USA 110) │ V │ 425
- │ │ │
- *2791-PS │German Foreign Office minutes of │ │
- │conversation between Ribbentrop and │ │
- │Attolico, the Italian Ambassador, 23 │ │
- │August 1938. (USA 86) │ V │ 426
- │ │ │
- *2792-PS │German Foreign Office minutes of │ │
- │conversations between Ribbentrop and │ │
- │Attolico, 27 August 1938 and 2 September│ │
- │1938. (USA 87) │ V │ 426
- │ │ │
- *2793-PS │Confidential protocol concerning │ │
- │economic and financial collaboration │ │
- │between the German Reich and State of │ │
- │Slovakia. (USA 120) │ V │ 427
- │ │ │
- *2794-PS │German Foreign Office memorandum on │ │
- │payments to Karmasin, 29 November 1939. │ │
- │(USA 108) │ V │ 429
- │ │ │
- *2795-PS │Handwritten postscript by Ribbentrop to │ │
- │German Foreign Office notes of │ │
- │Ribbentrop-Chvalkovsky conversation, 21 │ │
- │January 1939. (USA 106) │ V │ 430
- │ │ │
- *2796-PS │German Foreign Office notes on │ │
- │conversations between Hitler, Ribbentrop│ │
- │and von Weizsäcker and the Hungarian │ │
- │Ministers Imredy and von Kanya, 23 │ │
- │August 1938. (USA 88) │ V │ 430
- │ │ │
- *2797-PS │German Foreign Office memorandum of │ │
- │conversation between Ribbentrop and von │ │
- │Kanya, 25 August 1938. (USA 89) │ V │ 432
- │ │ │
- *2798-PS │German Foreign Office minutes of the │ │
- │meeting between Hitler and President │ │
- │Hacha of Czechoslovakia, 15 March 1939. │ │
- │(USA 118; GB 5) │ V │ 433
- │ │ │
-*2800-PS │German Foreign Office notes of a │ │
- │conversation with Attolico, the Italian │ │
- │Ambassador, 18 July 1938. (USA 85) │ V │ 442
- │ │ │
- *2801-PS │Minutes of conversation between Goering │ │
- │and Slovak Minister Durkansky (probably │ │
- │late fall or early winter 1938-39). (USA│ │
- │109) │ V │ 442
- │ │ │
- *2802-PS │German Foreign Office notes of │ │
- │conference on 13 March 1939 between │ │
- │Hitler and Monsignor Tiso, Prime │ │
- │Minister of Slovakia. (USA 117) │ V │ 443
- │ │ │
- *2815-PS │Telegram from Ribbentrop to the German │ │
- │Minister in Prague, 13 March 1939. (USA │ │
- │116) │ V │ 451
- │ │ │
- *2816-PS │Letter from Horthy, the Hungarian │ │
- │Regent, to Hitler, dated Budapest, 13 │ │
- │March 1939. (USA 115) │ V │ 451
- │ │ │
- *2826-PS │The SS on March 15, 1939, an article by │ │
- │SS-Gruppenfuehrer K. H. Frank, in │ │
- │magazine Bohemia and Moravia, May 1941, │ │
- │p. 179. (USA 111) │ V │ 472
- │ │ │
-*2853-PS │Telegram from German Foreign Office to │ │
- │German Legation in Prague, 24 September │ │
- │1938. (USA 100) │ V │ 521
- │ │ │
- *2854-PS │Telegram from German Foreign Office to │ │
- │German Legation in Prague, 17 September │ │
- │1938. (USA 99) │ V │ 521
- │ │ │
- *2855-PS │Telegram from German Foreign Office to │ │
- │German Legation in Prague, 16 September │ │
- │1938. (USA 98) │ V │ 522
- │ │ │
- *2856-PS │Telegram from German Foreign Office to │ │
- │German Legation in Prague, 24 September │ │
- │1938. (USA 101) │ V │ 522
- │ │ │
- *2858-PS │Telegram from German Foreign Office to │ │
- │German Legation in Prague, 19 September │ │
- │1938. (USA 97) │ V │ 523
- │ │ │
- *2859-PS │Telegram from German Legation, Prague, │ │
- │to Consulate at Bratislava, 22 November │ │
- │1938. (USA 107) │ V │ 523
- │ │ │
- *2860-PS │Document No. 10 in the British Blue │ │
- │Book. Speech by Lord Halifax in the │ │
- │House of Lords, 20 March 1939. (USA 119)│ V │ 523
- │ │ │
- *2861-PS │Document No. 12 in the British Blue │ │
- │Book. Dispatch from Sir Nevile Henderson│ │
- │to British Foreign Office, 28 May 1939, │ │
- │relating details of conversation with │ │
- │Goering. (USA 119) │ V │ 524
- │ │ │
- *2862-PS │Document No. 126 in Peace and War. │ │
- │Statement by Acting Secretary of State │ │
- │Sumner Welles, 17 March 1939. (USA 122) │ V │ 525
- │ │ │
-**2863-PS │Lecture by Konrad Henlein, delivered in │ │
- │Vienna, 4 March 1941. Quoted in “Four │ │
- │Fighting Years”, Czechoslovak Ministry │ │
- │of Foreign Affairs, London, 1943, pp. │ │
- │29-30. (Referred to but not offered in │ │
- │evidence.) (USA 92) │ V │ 525
- │ │ │
-  2906-PS │German Foreign Office minutes of meeting│ │
- │between Hitler and Chvalkovsky, the │ │
- │Czechoslovak Foreign Minister, 21 │ │
- │January 1939. │ V │ 571
- │ │ │
- *2943-PS │Documents Numbers 55, 57, 62, 65, 66, │ │
- │73, 77 and 79 in the French Yellow Book.│ │
- │Excerpts from eight dispatches from M. │ │
- │Coulondre, the French Ambassador in │ │
- │Berlin, to the French Foreign Office, │ │
- │between 13 and 18 March 1939. (USA 114) │ V │ 608
- │ │ │
-**3029-PS │Affidavit of Alfred Naujocks, 20 │ │
- │November 1945, on activities of the SD │ │
- │along the Czechoslovak border during │ │
- │September 1938. (USA 103) (Objection to │ │
- │admission in evidence upheld.) │ V │ 738
- │ │ │
-  3030-PS │Affidavit of Alfred Naujocks, 20 │ │
- │November 1945, on relationship between │ │
- │the SD and pro-Nazi Slovak groups in │ │
- │March 1939. │ V │ 739
- │ │ │
-**3036-PS │Affidavit of Gottlob Berger on the │ │
- │composition and activity of the Henlein │ │
- │Free Corps in September 1938. (Objection│ │
- │to admission in evidence upheld.) (USA │ │
- │102) │ V │ 742
- │ │ │
-  3037-PS │Affidavit of Fritz Wiedemann, 21 │ │
- │November 1945, on the meeting between │ │
- │Hitler and his principal advisers in │ │
- │Reichs Chancellery on 28 May 1938. │ V │ 743
- │ │ │
- *3054-PS │“The Nazi Plan”, script of a motion │ │
- │picture composed of captured German │ │
- │film. (USA 167) │ V │ 801
- │ │ │
- *3059-PS │German Foreign Office memorandum, 19 │ │
- │August 1938, on payments to Henlein’s │ │
- │Sudeten-German Party between 1935 and │ │
- │1938. (USA 96) │ V │ 855
- │ │ │
- *3060-PS │Dispatch from German Minister in Prague │ │
- │to Foreign Office in Berlin about policy│ │
- │arrangements with Henlein, 16 March │ │
- │1938. (USA 93) │ V │ 856
- │ │ │
- *3061-PS │Supplement No. 2 to the Official │ │
- │Czechoslovak Report entitled German │ │
- │Crimes Against Czechoslovakia” (document│ │
- │998-PS). (USA 126) │ V │ 857
- │ │ │
-  3571-PS │Report of U. S. Military Attache, │ │
- │Berlin, including an article in magazine│ │
- │Wehrmacht, 29 March 1939, describing │ │
- │occupation of Bohemia and Moravia by │ │
- │German troops. │ VI │ 264
- │ │ │
-  3618-PS │Report of U. S. Military Attache in │ │
- │Berlin, 20 March 1939, concerning │ │
- │occupation of Czechoslovakia. │ VI │ 389
- │ │ │
-  3619-PS │Report of U. S. Military Attache in │ │
- │Berlin, 19 April 1939, concerning │ │
- │occupation of Czechoslovakia. │ VI │ 398
- │ │ │
-  3638-PS │Memorandum of Ribbentrop, 1 October │ │
- │1938, concerning his conversation with │ │
- │Ciano about the Polish demands made on │ │
- │Czechoslovakia. │ VI │ 400
- │ │ │
- *3842-PS │Statement of Fritz Mundhenke, 7 March │ │
- │1946, concerning the activities of │ │
- │Kaltenbrunner and SS in preparation for │ │
- │occupation of Czechoslovakia. (USA 805) │ VI │ 778
- │ │ │
- *C-2 │Examples of violations of International │ │
- │Law and proposed counter-propaganda, │ │
- │issued by OKW, 1 October 1938. (USA 90) │ VI │ 799
- │ │ │
- *C-136 │OKW Order on preparations for war, 21 │ │
- │October 1938, signed by Hitler and │ │
- │initialled by Keitel. (USA 104) │ VI │ 947
- │ │ │
- *C-138 │Supplement of 17 December 1938, signed │ │
- │by Keitel, to 21 October Order of the │ │
- │OKW. (USA 105) │ VI │ 950
- │ │ │
- *C-175 │OKW Directive for Unified Preparation │ │
- │for War 1937-1938, with covering letter │ │
- │from von Blomberg, 24 June 1937. (USA │ │
- │69) │ VI │ 1006
- │ │ │
- *D-571 │Official report of British Minister in │ │
- │Prague to Viscount Halifax, 21 March │ │
- │1939. (USA 112) │ VII │ 88
- │ │ │
- *D-572 │Dispatch from Mr. Pares, British Consul │ │
- │in Bratislava to Mr. Newton, 20 March │ │
- │1939, describing German support of │ │
- │Slovak separatists. (USA 113) │ VII │ 90
- │ │ │
- *L-79 │Minutes of conference, 23 May 1939, │ │
- │“Indoctrination on the political │ │
- │situation and future aims”. (USA 27) │ VII │ 847
- │ │ │
- *L-172 │“The Strategic Position at the Beginning│ │
- │of the 5th Year of War”, a lecture │ │
- │delivered by Jodl on 7 November 1943 at │ │
- │Munich to Reich and Gauleiters. (USA 34)│ VII │ 920
- │ │ │
- *R-100 │Minutes of instructions given by Hitler │ │
- │to General von Brauchitsch on 25 March │ │
- │1939. (USA 121) │ VIII │ 83
- │ │ │
- *R-133 │Notes on conference with Goering in │ │
- │Westerland on 25 July 1939, signed │ │
- │Mueller, dated Berlin 27 July 1939. (USA│ │
- │124) │ VIII │ 202
- │ │ │
- *R-150 │Extracts from Luftwaffe Group Command │ │
- │Three Study on Instruction for │ │
- │Deployment and Combat “Case Red”, 2 June│ │
- │1938. (USA 82) │ VIII │ 268
- │ │ │
- *TC-14 │Arbitration Treaty between Germany and │ │
- │Czechoslovakia, signed at Locarno, 16 │ │
- │October 1925. (GB 14) │ VIII │ 325
- │ │ │
- *TC-23 │Agreement between Germany, the United │ │
- │Kingdom, France and Italy, 29 September │ │
- │1938. (GB 23) │ VIII │ 370
- │ │ │
- *TC-27 │German assurances to Czechoslovakia, 11 │ │
- │and 12 March 1938, as reported by M. │ │
- │Masaryk, the Czechoslovak Minister to │ │
- │London to Viscount Halifax. (GB 21) │ VIII │ 377
- │ │ │
- *TC-49 │Agreement with Czechoslovakia, 15 March │ │
- │1939, signed by Hitler, von Ribbentrop, │ │
- │Hacha and Chvalkovsky, from Documents of│ │
- │German Politics, Part VII, pp. 498-499. │ │
- │(GB 6) │ VIII │ 402
- │ │ │
- *TC-50 │Proclamation of the Fuehrer to the │ │
- │German people and Order of the Fuehrer │ │
- │to the Wehrmacht, 15 March 1939, from │ │
- │Documents of German Politics, Part VII, │ │
- │pp. 499-501. (GB 7) │ VIII │ 402
- │ │ │
- *TC-51 │Decree establishing the Protectorate of │ │
- │Bohemia and Moravia, 16 March 1939. (GB │ │
- │8) │ VIII │ 404
- │ │ │
- *TC-52 │Formal British protest against the │ │
- │annexation of Czechoslovakia in │ │
- │violation of the Munich Agreement, 17 │ │
- │March 1939. (GB 9) │ VIII │ 407
- │ │ │
- *TC-53 │Formal French protest against the │ │
- │annexation of Bohemia and Moravia in │ │
- │violation of the Munich Agreement, 17 │ │
- │March 1939. (GB 10) │ VIII │ 407
- │ │ │
-Affidavit H │Affidavit of Franz Halder, 22 November │ │
- │1945. │ VIII │ 643
- │ │ │
-**Chart No. 11 │Aggressive Action 1938-39. (Enlargement │ │
- │displayed to Tribunal.) │ VIII │ 780
- │ │ │
-**Chart No. 12 │German Aggression. (Enlargement │ │
- │displayed to Tribunal.) │ VIII │ 781
- │ │ │
-**Chart No. 13 │Violations of Treaties, Agreements and │ │
- │Assurances. (Enlargement displayed to │ │
- │Tribunal.) │ VIII │ 782
-
-
- 5. OPENING ADDRESS FOR THE UNITED KINGDOM
-
-_The following address, opening the British presentation of the case
-under Count II of the Indictment, was delivered by Sir Hartley
-Shawcross, K.C., M.P., British Attorney General and Chief Prosecutor for
-the United Kingdom, before the Tribunal on 4 December 1945._
-
- PART I
-
-On an occasion to which reference has already been made Hitler, the
-Leader of the Nazi Conspirators who are now on trial before you, 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 we tell the truth or not. In starting and
- making a war not the right is what matters but victory—the
- strongest has the right.” (_1014-PS_)
-
-The British Empire has twice been victorious in wars which have been
-forced upon it within the space of one generation 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 achieved 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 personal power for evil broken, they
-should be swept aside into oblivion without this elaborate and careful
-investigation as to the part they played in plunging the world in war.
-_Vae Victis._ Let them pay the penalty of defeat. But that is not the
-view of the British Empire or of the British Government. Not so would
-the Rule of Law be raised and strengthened on the international as well
-as 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 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 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 which may be handed down; the latter,
-misled by fanatical and dishonest propagandists, come to believe that it
-was not they but their opponents who were guilty of what 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 all generations shall know not only what our
-generation suffered but also that our suffering was the result of crimes
-against the laws of peoples which the peoples of the world enforced and
-will continue in the future to uphold by international cooperation, not
-based merely on military alliances but 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
-themselves to be, the Nations of the world had, as it will be my purpose
-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 lead their states.
-Again, individual war crimes have long been regarded 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 indeed 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. So also in regard to crimes against humanity. The
-right of humanitarian intervention on behalf of the rights of man
-trampled upon by the State in a manner shocking the sense of mankind has
-long been considered to form part of the law of Nations. Here, too, the
-Charter merely develops a pre-existing principle. If murder, raping and
-robbery are indictable under the ordinary municipal laws of our
-countries shall those who differ only from the common criminal 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 the Tribunal will apply 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 on this
-Prosecution to present the case on Count 2 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, had sought to make such wars impossible.
-
-That task falls into two parts. The first is to demonstrate the nature
-and the basis of the Crime against Peace which, under the Charter of
-this Tribunal, is constituted by waging wars of aggression and in
-violation of Treaties. The second is to establish beyond doubt that such
-wars were waged by these Defendants.
-
-As to the first, it would no doubt be sufficient 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 fully
-discharging our task in the abiding interest alike of international
-justice and morality unless we showed the position of that provision of
-the Charter against the whole perspective of International Law. For just
-as some old English Statutes were substantially declaratory of the
-Common Law, so this Charter substantially declares and creates a
-jurisdiction in respect of what was already the Laws of Nations.
-
-Nor is it unimportant to emphasize that aspect of the matter lest there
-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 phrases 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; that the 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 conviction, which we affirm before this
-Tribunal and the world that fundamentally the provision of the Charter
-which constitutes such wars as these Defendants joined in waging and in
-planning a crime is not in any way an innovation. That provision 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 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 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 fifty 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
-
-have sought to create an operative system of rules based on 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 such treaty was of course the Hague Convention of 1899 for the
-Pacific Settlement of International Disputes. This was, indeed, of
-little more than precatory effect and we attach no weight to it for the
-purpose of this case, but it did establish agreement that in the event
-of serious disputes arising between the signatory powers, they would so
-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 you to say any crime was committed
-by disregarding them. 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 the Indictment I do not rely
-on them save to show the historical development of the law. It is
-unnecessary, therefore, to argue about their effect, for their place has
-been taken by more effective instruments. They were the first steps.
-
-There were, of course, other individual agreements between particular
-States which sought to preserve the neutrality of individual countries
-as, for instance, that of Belgium, but those agreements were, in the
-absence of any real will to comply with them, entirely inadequate 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.
-
-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, and they were made the subject of much warlike
-propaganda in Germany. But it is unnecessary to enquire into the merits
-of the matter, for however unjust one might for this purpose assume the
-Treaty to be, it contained no kind of excuse for the waging of war to
-secure an alteration in its terms. For not only was it 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 they
-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 ventilation of all international questions by frank and open
-discussion. At the time the hopes of the world stood high. Millions of
-men in all countries—perhaps even in Germany—had laid down their lives
-in what they believed and hoped to be a war to end war. Germany herself
-entered the League and was given a permanent seat on the Council, on
-which, as in the Assembly, German Governments which preceded that of the
-Defendant Von Papen in 1932 played their full part. In the years from
-1919 to 1932 despite some 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 good
-ground for hope that at long last the rule of law would replace that of
-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 prominently in
-numerous treaties, in governmental pronouncements and in 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 (1 October 1927), France (2 May 1935), China (21
-August 1937)—the Contracting Parties undertook to refrain from any act
-of aggression whatsoever against the other Party. In 1933 the Soviet
-Union became a party to a large number of treaties containing a detailed
-definition of aggression. 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 the
-Limitation of Armaments. But States went beyond commitments to refrain
-from wars of aggression and to assist States victims of aggression. They
-_condemned_ wars of aggression. Thus in the Anti-War Treaty of
-Non-Aggression and Conciliation of 10 October 1933, a number of American
-States—subsequently joined by practically all the States of the
-American Continent and a number of European countries—the Contracting
-Parties solemnly declared that “they condemned wars of aggression in
-their mutual relations or in those of other States.” That Treaty was
-fully incorporated into the Buenos Aires Convention of December 1936
-signed and ratified by a large number of American countries, including
-the United States of America. Previously, in February 1928, the Sixth
-Pan-American Conference 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.” In 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 declaring that “all wars of aggression are,
-and shall always be, prohibited.” The first Article of the Draft Treaty
-for Mutual Assistance of 1923 reads: “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 remained unratified, for
-various reasons, but they are not without significance or instruction.
-
-These repeated condemnations of wars of aggression testified to the fact
-that, with the establishment of the League of Nations and 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 did not
-totally abolish the right of war. It left certain gaps which probably
-were larger in theory than in practice. In effect it surrounded the
-right of war by procedural and substantive checks and delays which, if
-the Covenant had been observed, would have amounted to an elimination of
-war not only between Members of the League, but also, by virtue of
-certain provisions of the Covenant, in the relations of non-Members.
-Thus the Covenant restored the position as it existed at the dawn of
-International Law, at the time when Grotius was laying the foundations
-of the modern law of nations and established the distinction,
-accompanied by profound legal consequences in the sphere of neutrality,
-between just and unjust wars.
-
-Neither was that development arrested with the adoption of the Covenant.
-The right of war was further circumscribed by a series of
-treaties—numbering nearly one 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 which conferred upon the Court compulsory
-jurisdiction with regard to most comprehensive categories of disputes
-and which constituted in effect the most important compulsory treaty of
-arbitration in the post-war period, was widely signed and ratified.
-Germany herself signed it in 1927; her signature was renewed and
-renewed, for a period of five years, by the National-Socialist
-Government in July 1933. (Significantly, that ratification was not
-renewed on the expiration of its validity in March 1938.) 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 the existing treaties of
-arbitration and conciliation.
-
-All this vast network of instruments of pacific settlement testified to
-the growing conviction that war was ceasing to be the normal and
-legitimate means of settling international disputes. The express
-condemnation of wars of aggression, which has already been mentioned,
-supplied the same testimony. But there was more direct evidence pointing
-in that direction. The Treaty of Locarno of 16th October 1925, to which
-I will refer later 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
-that 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 agreed that “they will in no case
-attack or invade each other or resort to war against each other”. This
-constituted a general renunciation of war and was so considered to be in
-the eyes of jurists and of the public opinion of the world. For the
-Locarno Treaty was not just one of the great number of arbitration
-treaties concluded at that time. It was regarded as the cornerstone of
-the European settlement and of the new legal order in Europe in partial,
-voluntary and generous substitution for the just rigours of the Treaty
-of Versailles. With it the term “outlawry of war” left the province of
-mere pacifist propaganda. It became current in the writings on
-international law and in official pronouncements of governments. No
-jurist of authority and no statesman of responsibility would have
-associated himself, subsequent to the Locarno Treaty, with the plausible
-assertion that, at least as between the parties, war had remained an
-unrestricted right of sovereign States.
-
-But although the effect of the Locarno Treaty was limited to the parties
-to it, it had a wider influence in paving the way towards that most
-fundamental and truly revolutionary enactment in modern international
-law, namely, the General Treaty for the Renunciation of War of 27 August
-1928, known also as the Pact of Paris, or the Kellogg-Briand Pact, or
-the Kellogg Pact. That Treaty—a most deliberate and carefully prepared
-piece of international legislation—was binding in 1939 upon more than
-sixty nations, including Germany. It was—and has remained—the most
-widely signed and ratified international instrument. It contained no
-provision for its termination, and was conceived as the cornerstone of
-any future international order worthy of that name. It is fully part of
-international law as it stands today, and 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—and remains—a source of hope and faith for mankind, to set
-out in detail its two operative Articles and its Preamble:
-
- “The Preamble
-
- “The President of the German Reich, * * *
-
- “Deeply sensible 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 national 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 endeavour 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;
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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.
-
- “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 General Treaty for the Renunciation of War practically the
-entire civilized world abolished war as a legally permissible means of
-enforcing the law and of changing it. The right of war was no longer of
-the essence of sovereignty. Whatever the position may have been in 1914
-or 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 could doubt that with the Pact of Paris on
-the Statute Book a war of aggression was contrary to positive
-International Law. Nor have the repeated violations of the Pact of the
-Axis Powers in any way affected its validity. Let this be firmly and
-clearly stated. Those very breaches, except to the cynic and the
-malevolent, have added to its strength; they provoked the sustained
-wrath of people angered by the contemptuous disregard of the great
-Statute and determined to vindicate its provisions. The Pact of Paris is
-the Law of Nations. This Tribunal will enforce it.
-
-Let this also be said. The Pact of Paris was not a clumsy enactment
-likely to become a 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 provisions of
-the Pact of Paris. For that Pact laid down expressly in its Preamble
-that no State guilty of a violation of its provisions may invoke its
-benefits. When on the outbreak of the Second World War Great Britain and
-France communicated to the League of Nations the fact that a state of
-war existed between them and Germany as from 3 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 other signatories of the Pact of Paris. A violation of the Pact
-in relation to one signatory was an attack upon all the other
-signatories and they were fully entitled to treat it as such. This point
-is to be emphasized lest any of the defendants should seize upon the
-letter of the Particulars of Count Two of the Indictment and maintain
-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 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, the 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
-to quote some of these statements and declarations. 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:
-
- “* * * 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.
-
- “* * * 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. 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
- the Pact. * * *” (Memorandum on the Signature of His Majesty’s
- Government in the United Kingdom of the Optional Clause of the
- Statute, Misc. No. 12 (1929), Cmd. 3452, p. 9).
-
-Chief of Counsel for the United States referred in his opening speech
-before this Tribunal to the weighty pronouncement of Mr. Stimson, the
-Secretary of State, in which, in 1932, he gave expression to the drastic
-change brought about in International Law by the Pact of Paris. It is
-convenient to quote the relevant passage in full:
-
- “War between nations was renounced by the signatories of the
- Briand-Kellogg Treaty. 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.”
-
-Nearly ten 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 weighty expression to the change which had been
-effected in the law as the result of the General Treaty for the
-Renunciation of War. He said on 27 March 1941:
-
- “* * * 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 their 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.
- 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 organization for our policy. * * *”
-
-There is thus no doubt that by the time the National-Socialist State 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, in virtue of the Pact of Paris and of other
-treaties, become illegal beyond all uncertainty and doubt. It is on that
-Universal Treaty that Count 2 is principally based.
-
-The Prosecution has deemed it necessary—indeed imperative—to establish
-beyond all possibility of doubt, at what may appear to be excessive
-length, that only superficial learning or culpable sentimentality can
-assert that there is any significant element of retroactive law in the
-determination of the authors of the Charter to treat aggressive war as
-conduct which International Law has prohibited and stigmatized as
-criminal. We have traced the progressive limitation of the right of war,
-the renunciation and condemnation of wars of aggression, and, above all,
-the total prohibition and condemnation of all war conceived as an
-instrument of national policy. What statesman or politician in charge of
-the affairs of a nation could doubt, from 1928 onwards, that aggressive
-war, that all war—except in self-defense, or for the collective
-enforcement of the law, or against a State which has itself violated the
-Pact of Paris—was unlawful and outlawed? What statesman or politician
-embarking upon such war could reasonably and justifiably count upon an
-immunity other than that by 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 here?
-
-There are, it is true, some small town lawyers who deny the existence of
-any International Law. 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 consent which 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. 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—that as M.
-Litvinoff 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”.
-
-Yet it may be argued that although war had been outlawed and forbidden
-it was not criminally outlawed and forbidden. International Law, it may
-be said, does not attribute criminality to states, 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
-peoples to their deaths, 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 that such a war is only an offense, only an
-illegality, only a matter of condemnation and not a crime justiciable by
-any Tribunal? No Law worthy of the name can permit itself to be reduced
-to an absurdity. Certainly the Great Powers responsible for this Charter
-have refused to allow it. They drew the inescapable consequences from
-the renunciation, prohibition, and condemnation of war which had become
-part of the law of Nations. They refused to reduce justice to impotence
-by subscribing to the outworn doctrines that the sovereign state can
-commit no crime and that no crime can be committed by individuals on its
-behalf. Their refusal so to stultify themselves has decisively shaped
-the law of this Tribunal.
-
-If this be an innovation, it is innovation long overdue—a desirable and
-beneficent innovation fully consistent with justice, with common sense
-and with the abiding purposes of the law of Nations. But is it indeed so
-clear 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 a State was, because of its sovereignty,
-limited to 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 a nuisance, of
-negligence. They have gone further. They have held that a State may be
-bound to pay what are in effect penal damages for failing to provide
-proper conditions of security to aliens residing within their territory.
-In a recent case decided in 1935 between the United States and Canada an
-arbitral commission, 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. 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. There
-is thus nothing startlingly new in the adoption of the principle that
-the State as such is responsible for its criminal acts. In fact, save
-for the 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. In a case decided nearly one hundred years ago
-Dr. Lushington, a great English Admiralty judge, refused to admit that a
-State cannot be a pirate. History, very recent history, does not warrant
-the view that a State cannot be a criminal. On the contrary, the
-immeasurable potentialities for evil inherent in the State in this age
-of science and organization would seem to demand imperatively means of
-repression of criminal conduct even more drastic and more effective than
-in the case of individuals. In so far therefore as the 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.
-
-Admittedly, the conscience shrinks from the rigours of collective
-punishment, which fall upon the guilty and the innocent alike—although,
-it may be noted, most of those 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 of
-collective punishment. Above all, much hardship can be obviated by
-making the punishment fall upon the individuals directly responsible for
-the criminal conduct of the State. It is here that the Powers who framed
-the 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 crime 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 salutory principle of the
-law that politicians who embark upon a war of aggression should not be
-able to seek immunity behind the intangible personality of the State. It
-is a salutory legal rule that persons who, in violation of the law,
-plunge their own and other countries into an aggressive war, do so with
-a halter round 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
-jurisprudence. 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 distinguished from the crime of war—is based on that
-principle. The future of International Law and, indeed, of the world,
-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.
-Of these none is more vital or more fundamental than the duty not to vex
-the peace of nations in violation of the clearest legal prohibitions and
-undertakings. If this is an innovation, then it is one which we are
-prepared to defend and to justify. 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 therefore in this respect no substantial retroactivity in the
-provisions of the Charter. It merely fixes the responsibility for a
-crime, 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 an act which was not a crime at the time you committed it”, and
-telling him: “You will now pay the penalty for conduct which was
-contrary to law and a crime when you executed it though, owing to the
-imperfection of international machinery, there was at that time no court
-competent to pronounce judgment against you.” 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 as in other matters an
-_ex parte_ fiat of the victor. 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 War, were to remain unpunished. In thus
-interpreting, declaring and supplementing the existing law they are
-content to be judged by the verdict of history. _Securus judicat orbis
-terrarum._ In so far 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. 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 it will not be necessary to
-detain the Tribunal for long, whether these wars launched by Germany and
-her leaders in violation of treaties, agreements or assurances, were
-also wars of aggression. A war of aggression is one 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, when it 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 indeed,
-in the period between the two World Wars, a divergence of view 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 urged 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
-thought so, that an automatic definition of aggression might become “a
-trap for the innocent and sign-post 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 any particular case a definition of aggression
-which might lead to obstruction or to an absurdity. In May 1933 the
-Committee on Security Questions of the Disarmament Conference proposed a
-definition of aggression on the following 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 in the
-United Kingdom 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 a war of aggression. There is no definition of
-aggression, general or particular, which does not cover abundantly and
-irresistibly and in every material detail the premeditated onslaught by
-Germany upon the territorial integrity and the political independence of
-so many States.
-
-This then being the law—that the peoples of the world by the Pact of
-Paris had finally outlawed war and made it criminal—let us turn to the
-facts and see how these Defendants under their Leader and with their
-associates destroyed the high hopes of mankind and sought to revert to
-international anarchy. And first in general terms let this be said, for
-it will be established beyond doubt by the documents. From the moment
-Hitler became Chancellor in 1933, with the Defendant Von Papen as
-Vice-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”. And on the 21st October 1933 she 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 all international
-obligations and certainly not least of those solemnly concluded by
-themselves. As Hitler had expressly avowed, “Agreements are kept only so
-long as they serve a certain purpose” (_789-PS_). He might have added
-that often the 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 into a nonaggression
-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 made expedient. These Defendants are charged,
-too, with breaches of the less formal assurances which, in accordance
-with diplomatic usage Germany gave to neighboring states. Today with the
-advance of science the world has been afforded means of communication
-and intercourse hitherto unknown, and as Hitler himself expressly
-recognized, International relations no longer depend upon treaties
-alone. The methods of diplomacy change. The Leader of one Nation can
-speak to the Government and peoples of another. But though the methods
-change the principles of good faith and honesty, established as the
-fundamentals of civilized society, both in the national and the
-International spheres, remain. 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 ever before is there that need of good faith
-between them.
-
-Let us see further how these Defendants, Ministers and High Officers of
-the Nazi Government individually and collectively comported themselves
-in these matters.
-
- PART II
-
-In the early hours of the 1st September 1939 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
-upon the world the war which was to bring down so many of the pillars of
-our civilization. It was a breach of the Hague Conventions (_TC-2_). 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 stated that he would respect its
-territorial provisions—she was certainly not free to break it by
-unilateral action. It was a breach of the Arbitration Treaty between
-Germany and Poland concluded at Locarno on 16th October 1925 (_TC-15_).
-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. But that is not all. It was also a breach of a
-more recent and, in view of the repeated emphasis laid on it by Hitler
-himself, a more important engagement into which Nazi Germany had
-entered. On the 26th January 1934 the German and Polish Governments had
-signed a ten-year Pact of Non-aggression (_TC-21_). It was, as the
-signatories stated, to introduce “a new era in the political relations
-between Poland and Germany”. It was stated 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 of 1928. They
-declared that
-
- “In no circumstances * * * will they proceed to the application
- of force for the purpose of reaching a decision in such
- disputes”. (_TC-21_)
-
-That declaration and agreement was to remain in force for at least ten
-years and thereafter would remain valid unless it was denounced by
-either Government six months before the expiration of the ten years, or
-subsequently a denunciation, with six months notice took place.
-
-Both at the time of its signature and during the following four 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 an independent Poland had cost Germany much territory and had
-separated East Prussia from the Reich. 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’s 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 convincing proof
-that Hitler had no “revisionist” aims which would threaten the peace of
-Europe, and 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 genuine his policy excluded a renewal of the _Drang nach Osten_ and
-thereby would contribute to the stability of Europe. We shall have
-occasion enough to see how little truth these pacific professions
-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 now presented to the
-Tribunal that these five years fall into two distinct phases in the
-realization of 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 the
-other necessary preparatory measures for future aggression with which my
-United States colleagues have already so admirably dealt. During that
-time they lulled Poland into a false sense of security. Not only Hitler,
-but also the Defendant Goering and the Defendant Ribbentrop made
-statements approbating the Pact. In 1935 Goering was saying that “the
-pact was not planned for a period of ten 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 secure that Hitler could refer openly to his strong
-Army, he took pains also to say at the time 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. * * *” (_2368-PS_). And so it went on—abroad
-protestations of pacific intentions—at home “guns before butter”.
-
-In 1937, however, 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. Two
-documents in particular mark this change.
-
-The first of these was an important “Directive for unified preparation
-for War” issued on June 29, 1937, by the Reich-Minister for War (von
-Blomberg) and C-in-C of the Armed Forces (_C-175_). This document is
-important, not only for its military directions, but for the
-appreciation it contained of the European situation and for the
-revelation it provides of the Nazi attitude towards it.
-
- “The general political position”, von Blomberg stated,
- “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”. (_C-175_)
-
-He added, it is true, “The intention of unleashing an European War is
-held just as little by Germany”. And it may be that that phrase was
-carefully chosen, for Germany hoped to conquer the world in detail: to
-fight on one front at a time, not to unleash a general European
-conflict. But, he 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_) 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 explicitly condemned by the Kellogg Pact, to which Germany had
-adhered. The document goes on to set out the general preparations
-necessary for a possible war in the mobilization period 1937/1938. The
-document 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
-Reichs Chancellery on November 5, 1937, at which von Blomberg, Reich
-Minister for War, von Fritsch, C-in-C of the Army, Goering, C-in-C of
-the Luftwaffe, Raeder, C-in-C of the Navy and von Neurath, then the
-Reich Minister for Foreign Affairs, were present. The minutes of that
-conference have already been put in evidence (_386-PS_). I refer to them
-now to emphasize those passages which make apparent the ultimate
-intention to wage an aggressive war. As will be remembered, 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 these two
-countries might well bring into operation the treaty obligations of
-Great Britain and France. He was prepared to take the risk.
-
- “The history of all times: Roman Empire, British Empire, has
- proved that every space expansion can only be effected 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 his address to 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 Germany. When, therefore, on
-that very day Hitler assured the Polish Ambassador of the value of the
-1934 Pact 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 would no longer be a
-danger to her.
-
-That view is confirmed by the events which followed. At the beginning of
-February 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 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 (_Fall Gruen_) for the
-destruction of Czechoslovakia was steadily developed—the plan partially
-foiled, or of which the final consummation was at least delayed, by the
-Munich Agreement.
-
-With these developments of Nazi aggression my United States colleagues
-have already dealt. But it is obvious that the acquisition of these two
-countries, and of their resources in manpower and in the production of
-munitions of war, immensely strengthened the position of Germany as
-against Poland. It is, therefore, not surprising that, just as the
-defendant Goering 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—“I give you my word of
-honor” said Goering—so also continued assurances should be 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 February 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 so a way to a friendly understanding has been
- successfully paved, an understanding which beginning with Danzig
- has today succeeded in finally taking the poison out of the
- relations between Germany and Poland and transforming them into
- a sincere friendly cooperation. 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”.
- (_2357-PS_)
-
-Still more striking are the cordial references to Poland in Hitler’s
-speech in the Sportpalast at Berlin on the 26 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
- twelve months, in coming to an agreement which, for ten years in
- the first instance, entirely removed 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 ever further extended. Certainly things were hard in this
- area. * * * But the main fact is that the two Governments, and
- all reasonable and clear-sighted persons among the two peoples
- and in 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”.
-
-Thus 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 goodwill are clearly
-revealed in the documents relating to _Fall Gruen_, which are already
-before the Tribunal. They show Hitler as fully aware that there was risk
-of Poland, England and France being involved in war to prevent the
-German annexation of Czechoslovakia, and that this risk though realized
-was also accepted. On the 25th August 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 case of
-“unprovoked” attack, it would take a day or two for France and England
-to decide whether legally the attack was unprovoked or not. A blitzkrieg
-accomplishing its aims before effective intervention became possible was
-the object to be aimed at.
-
-On the same day an Air Force memorandum on future organization was
-issued to which was attached a map on which the Baltic States, Hungary,
-Czechoslovakia and Poland are all shown as part of Germany and
-preparations for expanding the Air Force “as the Reich grows in area”,
-as well as dispositions for a two-front war against France and Russia
-are discussed (_L-43_; _Chart No. 10_). And on the following day von
-Ribbentrop is being minuted about the reaction of Poland towards the
-Czechoslovak problem:
-
- “The fact that after the liquidation of the Czech question it
- will be generally assumed that Poland will be next in turn” is
- recognized but, it is stated, “the later this assumption sinks
- in, the better”. (_TC-76_)
-
-I will pause at the date of the Munich Agreement for a moment and ask
-the Tribunal to consider what the evidence of documents and historical
-facts shows up to that time. It has made undeniable the fact both of
-Nazi aggressiveness and of active aggression. Not only does the
-Conference of 1937 reveal Hitler and his associates deliberately
-considering the acquisition of Austria and Czechoslovakia, if necessary
-by war, but the first of those operations had been carried through in
-March 1938 and a large part of the second, under threat of war, though
-without actual need for its initiation, in September of the same year.
-More ominous still, Hitler had revealed his adherence to his old
-doctrines of _Mein Kampf_, those essentially aggressive to the
-exposition of which in _Mein Kampf_ long regarded as the Bible of the
-Nazi Party we shall draw attention. He is in pursuit of _Lebensraum_ and
-he means to secure it by threats of force or, if they fail, by force, by
-aggressive war.
-
-So far actual warfare has been avoided because of the love of peace, the
-lack of preparedness, the patience or the cowardice—which you will—of
-the democratic Powers. But, after Munich, the questions which filled the
-minds of all thinking people with acute anxiety was, “Where will this
-end? Is Hitler now satisfied, as he declares he is? Or will his pursuit
-of _Lebensraum_ lead to further aggressions, even if he has to make an
-openly 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 no direct and
-immediate threat to Poland had been made. The two documents from which I
-have just quoted (_L-43_; _TC-76_) show that high officers of the
-defendant Goering’s Air Staff already regarded the extension of the
-Reich and, it would appear, the destruction and absorption of Poland as
-a foregone conclusion. They were already anticipating, indeed, the last
-stage of Hitler’s policy stated 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. More impressive than these two documents is
-the fact that, as I have said, the record of the Conference of November
-5, 1937, shows that war with Poland, if she should dare to attempt to
-prevent German aggression against Czechoslovakia, had been coolly
-contemplated and that 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. Such a war would, of course,
-have been an aggressive war on Nazi Germany’s part. For to force one
-State to take up arms to defend another against aggression in order to
-fulfill treaty obligations is to initiate aggressive war against the
-first State.
-
-Yet 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 an 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 eleven months from October 1, 1938 to the actual attack on
-Poland on September 1, 1939.
-
-Within six 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 March
-14th, 1939, the aged and infirm President of the “Rump” of
-Czechoslovakia, Hacha, and his Foreign Minister, Chvalkowsky, were
-summoned to Berlin. At a meeting held between 1.15 and 2.15 a. m. in the
-small hours of the 15th March in the presence of Hitler and the
-defendants Ribbentrop, Goering, and Keitel, they were bullied and
-threatened and informed bluntly that Hitler “had issued the order for
-the German troops to march into Czechoslovakia, and for the
-incorporation of this country 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”. 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 own solemn assurances to the contrary, non-German
-territory had been seized. This acquisition of the whole of
-Czechoslovakia, together with the equally illegal occupation of Memel on
-the 22d March, resulted in an immense strengthening of the German
-position, both politically and strategically, as Hitler had anticipated
-it would when he discussed the matter at his conference on November 5th,
-1937. (_386-PS_)
-
-Long before the consummation by the Nazi Leaders of their aggression
-against Czechoslovakia, however, they had already begun to make demands
-upon Poland. On October 25th, 1938, that is to say within less than a
-month of Hitler’s reassuring speech about Poland already quoted and of
-the Munich Agreement itself, M. Lipski, the Polish Ambassador in Berlin,
-reported to M. Beck, the Polish Foreign Minister, that at a luncheon at
-Berchtesgaden the day before (October 24th) 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, that is, the province which the Germans called the Corridor.
-From that moment onwards until the Polish Government had made it plain,
-during a visit of the defendant Ribbentrop to Warsaw which ended on
-January 27th, 1939, that they would not consent to hand over Danzig to
-German Sovereignty negotiations on these German demands continued. Even
-after Ribbentrop’s return Hitler thought it worth while in his Reichstag
-Speech on January 30th, 1939 to say—
-
- “We have just celebrated the fifth anniversary of the conclusion
- of our nonaggression 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 five 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”.
-
-That utterance, however, was the last friendly word from Germany to
-Poland and the last occasion upon which the Nazi Leader mentioned the
-German-Polish Agreement with approbation. During February 1939 silence
-fell upon German demands. But as soon as the final absorption of
-Czechoslovakia had taken place, and Germany had also absorbed Memel,
-Nazi pressure upon Poland was at once renewed. In two conversations
-between himself and the defendant Ribbentrop, held on March 21st and
-March 26th respectively (Polish White Book Number 61 and Number 63),
-German demands upon Poland were renewed and further pressed. In view of
-the fate which had overtaken Czechoslovakia and of the grave
-deterioration in her strategical position towards Germany it is not
-surprising that the Polish Government took alarm at these developments.
-Nor were they alone in this. The events of March 1939 had at last
-convinced both the English and French Governments that the Nazi designs
-of aggression were not limited to men of German race and that the
-spectre of European war resulting from further aggressions by Nazi
-Germany had not been exorcised by the Munich Agreement.
-
-As a result, therefore, of the concern of Poland, England, and 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 31st 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 (_TC-72, No. 17_). On 6th
-April 1939 an Anglo-Polish communique 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. (_TC-72, No. 18_)
-
-The justification for such concern 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 was to say himself 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 of Danzig were
-merely a cover 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 plans. On the 26th September 1938 he had said:
-
- “We have given guarantees to the States in the West. We have
- assured all our immediate neighbours 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.”
-
-The world was entitled to rely upon these assurances. International
-cooperation is impossible unless one can assume good faith in the
-leaders of the various States. But within two months of that solemn and
-considered undertaking, Hitler and his confederates were preparing for
-the seizure of Danzig. To recognize these assurances, these pledges,
-these diplomatic moves as the empty frauds they were, one must go back
-to enquire 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 (_C-23_). Under the heading “Opinion
-on the Draft Study of Naval Warfare against England” it is stated:
-
- “1. If, according to the Fuehrer’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 only be fulfilled 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 half to
- one-third of the world.
-
- “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.” (_C-23_)
-
-Here 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 at least to be defensive measures
-to ward off attacks which might result from the intervention of those
-powers in the preparatory aggression of Germany in Central Europe.
-Hitherto aggressive war against Poland, England, and France has been
-contemplated only as a distant objective. Now, 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 the 24th November 1938 an Appendix was issued by Keitel to a previous
-order of the Fuehrer. In this Appendix there are 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 Fuehrer has ordered 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—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 Memelland,
- so that both operations can take place simultaneously should
- such necessity arise.” (_C-137_)
-
-Thereafter, as the evidence which has already been produced has shown,
-final preparations for the invasion of Poland were taking place. On the
-3d April 1939, three days before the issue of the Anglo-Polish
-communique, 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 the part concerning Danzig would be issued in the middle of
-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. Preparations for that
-invasion were to be made in such a way that the operation could be
-carried out at any time from the 1st September 1939 onwards. (_C-120_)
-
-On the 11th April Hitler issued his Directive for the uniform
-preparations of war by the armed forces 1939-40. In it he says:
-
- “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.”
-
-In an Annex to that document headed “Political Hypotheses and Aims” it
-is stated that quarrels with Poland should be avoided. Should Poland,
-however, change her present policy and adopt a threatening attitude
-towards Germany, a final settlement would be necessary, notwithstanding
-the pact with Poland. The Free City of Danzig was to be incorporated
-into Germany at the outbreak of the conflict at the latest. The policy
-aims to limit the war to Poland and this is considered possible with the
-internal crisis in France and resulting British restraint.
-
-The wording of this document 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 inadequate armaments, threatening Germany is ludicrous enough
-and the real aim emerges in the sentence “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. Even now the evidence does not suffice
-to prove that the actual decision to attack Poland has been taken. But
-all preparations are being set in train in case that decision is
-reached.
-
-It was within three weeks of the date of this last document that Hitler
-addressed the Reichstag (April 28th, 1939). In his speech he repeated
-the German demands already made to 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 train
-behind the scenes, I will ask the Tribunal to consider the nature of the
-denunciation of an Agreement to which, in the past, Hitler had professed
-to attach so high an importance.
-
-In the first place Hitler’s denunciation was _per se_ ineffectual, since
-the text of the Agreement made no provision for its denunciation by
-either Party until six months before the expiration of the ten years for
-which it was concluded. No denunciation could be legally affective,
-therefore, until June or July 1943, and Hitler was speaking on April
-28th 1939—more than five years too soon!
-
-In the second place Hitler’s actual attack on Poland when it came on
-September 1st, 1939, was made before the expiration of the six months
-period after denunciation required by the Agreement before such a
-denunciation became operative. In the third place the grounds for his
-denunciation of the Agreement stated by Hitler in his speech to the
-Reichstag are entirely specious. However one reads its terms it is
-impossible to accept the view that the Anglo-Polish guarantee of mutual
-assistance against aggression could render the Pact null and void. If
-that were so then certainly the Pacts already entered into by Hitler
-with Italy and Japan had already invalidated it, and Hitler might have
-spared his breath. But the truth is that the text of the German-Polish
-Agreement contains nothing whatever to support Hitler’s contention.
-
-Why then did Hitler make this trebly invalid attempt to denounce his own
-pet diplomatic child? Is there any other possible answer but that, the
-Agreement having served its purpose, the grounds which he put forward
-were chosen merely in an effort to provide Germany with some
-justification for the aggression on which she was intent.
-
-For Hitler sorely needed some kind of justification, some apparently
-decent excuse, since nothing had happened, or was likely to happen, from
-the Polish side to provide him with it. 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 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”—a
-reference, it can only be supposed, to the German-Polish Arbitration
-Treaty signed at Locarno in 1925.
-
-The very fact, therefore, that as soon as the Nazi leader cannot get
-what he wants, but is not entitled to, from Poland by merely asking for
-it, and that, on his side, he made no further effort 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 itself creates a strong presumption of aggressive intentions
-against Hitler and his associates. That presumption becomes a certainty
-when the documents to which I shall now refer are studied.
-
-On 10th May Hitler issued an order for the capture of economic
-installations in Poland and on 16th May the Defendant Raeder, as
-Commander in Chief of the Navy, issued a memorandum setting out the
-Fuehrer’s instructions to prepare for the operation “Fall Weiss” at any
-time from the 1st September 1939. (_C-120_)
-
-But the decisive document is the record of the Conference held by Hitler
-on May 23d, 1939 with various high-ranking officers, including the
-defendants Goering, Raeder, and Keitel. Hitler then stated that the
-solution of the economic problems could not be found without invasion of
-foreign States and attacks on foreign property.
-
- “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
- war. Our task is to isolate Poland. The success of this
- isolation will be decisive. The isolation of Poland is a matter
- of skillful politics.” (_L-79_)
-
-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 as the most dangerous enemy. “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. All the same, he concluded,
-“We shall not be forced into war but we shall not be able to avoid one.”
-
-On the 14th June, 1939, General Blaskowitz, then Commander in Chief of
-the 3d Army Group, issued a detailed battle plan for the “_Fall Weiss_”
-(_2327-PS_). The following day Von Brauchitsch issued a memorandum in
-which it was stated that the object of the impending operating was to
-destroy the Polish Armed Forces. “High Policy demands”—he said—“that
-the war should be begun by heavy surprise blows in order to achieve
-quick results (_C-126_). The preparations proceeded apace. On the 22d
-June Keitel submitted a preliminary timetable for the operation which
-Hitler seems to have approved and suggested that the scheduled manouevre
-must be camouflaged “in order not to disquiet the population”. On the 3d
-July Brauchitsch wrote to 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 August Hitler and Ribbentrop had a
-conference with Ciano, the Italian Foreign Minister.
-
-At the beginning of the conversation Hitler emphasized the strength of
-the German position, of its western and eastern fortifications and of
-the strategic and other advantages that they held in comparison with
-those of England, France, and Poland.
-
- “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 eleven 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.
- Generally speaking, the best thing to happen would be for the
- neutrals to be liquidated 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.”
-
-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 two or
-three years ahead. But the Fuehrer said that the Danzig question must be
-settled one way or the other by the end of August. “He had, therefore,
-decided to use the occasion of the next Polish provocation in the form
-of an ultimatum.” On the 22d August Hitler called his Supreme Commanders
-together at Obersalzburg 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 (_1014-PS_; _L-3_). At that time the
-attack was timed for the early hours of the 26th August. On the day
-before 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 for mutual assistance
-with Poland, embodying the previous assurances. 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 aid in
-case of aggression. For a moment Hitler hesitated. Goering and
-Ribbentrop agree that it was this Anglo-Polish Treaty which led him to
-call off, or rather postpone the attack. Perhaps he hoped that there was
-still some chance of repeating, after all, what he had called the Czech
-affair. If so, his hopes were short-lived.
-
-On the 27th August Hitler accepted Mussolini’s decision not at once to
-come into the war, but asked for propaganda support and a display of
-military activities to create uncertainty in the minds of the Allies.
-Ribbentrop on the same day said that the Armies were marching.
-
-In the meantime, of course, and particularly in the last month,
-desperate attempts had been 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 Mr. Chamberlain 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. This and all the other efforts of honest men to avoid the
-horror of a European war were predestined to failure. The Germans were
-determined that the day for war had come. On the 31st August Hitler
-issued a top secret order for the attack to commence in the early hours
-of the 1st September. The necessary frontier incidents duly
-occurred—was it for these that Keitel had been instructed by Hitler to
-supply Heydrich with Polish uniforms?—and thus, without a declaration
-of war, without even giving the Polish Government an opportunity of
-seeing Germany’s final demands the Nazi troops invaded Poland. On the 3d
-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
-(_1831-PS_). 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 23d November 1939 Hitler reviewed the situation to his military
-Commanders and in the course of his speech he said this:
-
- “One year later Austria came; this step was also considered
- doubtful. It brought about a tremendous reinforcement of the
- Reich. 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 * * *. Then
- followed the creation of the Protectorate and with that the
- basis of action against Poland was laid. But I wasn’t quite
- clear at that time whether I should start first against the East
- and then in the West or vice versa. The decision came to fight
- with Poland first. One might accuse me of wanting to fight again
- and again. In struggle, I see the fate of all human beings.”
- (_789-PS_)
-
-He was not sure when to attack first. But that sooner or later he would
-attack 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 considered the opportune moment—and he struck.
-
-In 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 was to tear down many of
-the pillars 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
-invaded after the attack on Poland were Denmark and Norway.
-
-On the 9th April 1940 the German Armed Forces invaded Norway and Denmark
-without 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 between Germany and Denmark dated 2d June,
-1926. It was, of course, a breach of the Briand-Kellogg Pact of 1928. It
-was a violation of the Nonaggression Treaty between Germany and Denmark
-made on the 31st 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 April, 1939, he affirmed that he had
-never made any request to them which was incompatible with their
-sovereignty and independence. On the 31st May, 1939, he signed a
-nonaggression Pact with Denmark.
-
-On the 2d September, the day after he had invaded Poland and seized
-Danzig, he again expressed his determination to observe the
-inviolability and integrity of Norway in an aide memoire which was
-handed to the Norwegian Foreign Minister by the German Minister in Oslo
-on that day. (_TC-31_)
-
-A month later, on the 6th October 1939, he said in a public speech:
-
- “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 nonaggression
- pacts by Germany and have both refused them solely because they
- do not feel themselves threatened in any way.”
-
-When the invasion of Norway and Denmark had already begun in the early
-morning of the 9th April, 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 making plans themselves to invade and occupy Norway and that
-the Government of that country was prepared to acquiesce in such an
-event.
-
-I do not propose to argue the question whether or not those allegations
-were true or false. That question is irrelevant to the issue 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 and 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 may 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 failed and force is actually being exercised against the
-State concerned.
-
-In actual fact, with the evidence which we now possess it is clear that
-the invasion of these countries was undertaken for quite different
-purposes, that it had been planned long before any question of breach of
-neutrality or occupation of Norway by England could ever have occurred.
-It is clear also that the assurances repeated again and again throughout
-the year 1939 were made for no other purpose than to lull suspicion in
-those countries and to prevent them taking steps to resist the attack
-against them which was under active preparation.
-
-For some years, Rosenberg, in his capacity of Chief of the Foreign
-Affairs Bureau (APA) of the NSDAP, had interested himself in the
-promotion of fifth column activities in Norway, and close relationship
-was established with the “Nasjonal Samling”, a political group headed by
-the now notorious traitor, Vidkun Quisling (_007-PS_). During the winter
-of 1938/39, APA was in contact with Quisling and later Quisling
-conferred with Hitler, 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 were to be 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 Germany was making military preparations. On
-the 2d September, 1939; Hitler had assured Norway of his intention to
-respect her neutrality, and on 6th October he said that the Scandinavian
-States were not menaced in any way, yet on 3d October 1939 Raeder was
-pointing out that the occupation of bases, if necessary by force, would
-greatly improve the strategic and economic position (_1546-PS_). On the
-9th October Doenitz was recommending Trondheim as the main base with
-Narvik as an alternative base for fuel supplies. 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
-December 1939 Raeder advised Hitler, in the presence of Keitel and Jodl,
-that if Hitler was favourably impressed by Quisling, 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 Scandinavia
-first. Weather conditions delayed the march against the Low Countries.
-In January instructions were given to the Germany Navy for the attack on
-Norway, and on March 1st, 1940, a Directive for the occupation was
-issued by Hitler. The general objective 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 give our Navy and Air Force a wider start line
-against Britain.” But the Directive went on:
-
- “* * * 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 leader 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 April 7 cruisers, 14 destroyers, and several torpedo boats
-and other small craft carried advance elements of 6 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
-number of troops were also landed at Arendal and Egersund on the
-southern coast. In addition airborne troops were landed on aerodromes
-near Oslo and Stavanger. The German attack came as a surprise and all
-the invaded towns along the coast were captured according to plan with
-only slight losses. Only the plan to capture the King and members of the
-Government and the Parliament failed. Brave as the resistance was that
-was hurriedly organized throughout the country, nothing could be done in
-the face of the long-planned surprise attack and on 10 June military
-resistance ceased. So was another act of aggression brought to
-completion.
-
-Almost exactly a month after the attack on Norway, on the 10th May 1940
-the German Armed Forces, repeating what had been done 25 years before,
-streamed into Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg according to
-plan—the plan that is, of invading without warning and without
-declaration of War.
-
-What was done was of course a breach of the Hague Convention of 1907,
-and is so charged. It was a violation of the Locarno Agreement and
-Arbitration Convention with Belgium of 1925 which the Nazi Government
-affirmed in 1935, only illegally to repudiate it two years later. By
-that agreement all questions incapable of settlement by ordinary
-diplomatic means were to be settled by arbitration. You will see the
-comprehensive terms of these agreements. It was a breach of the Treaty
-of Arbitration and Conciliation signed between Germany and the
-Netherlands on the 20th May 1926; it was a violation of the similar
-Treaty with Luxembourg on the 11th September 1929. It was a breach of
-the Briand-Kellogg Pact. But those Treaties had not perhaps 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 consider the specific assurances and undertakings which the Nazi
-Rulers themselves gave to the States which lay in the way of their plans
-against France and England and which they always intended to attack. Not
-once, not twice, but eleven times the clearest assurances were given to
-Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg. On those assurances solemnly
-and formally expressed, those countries were entitled to rely. In
-respect of their breach these Defendants are charged. On the 30th
-January, 1937 Hitler 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 neighbours. 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 reestablish the position of
-security for Belgium which Hitler’s action had threatened. They,
-therefore, themselves gave to Belgium on the 24th April 1937, a specific
-guarantee that they would maintain in respect of Belgium, undertakings
-of assistance which they had entered into with her both under the
-Locarno Pact and the Covenant of the League of Nations. On the 13th
-October 1937 the German Government also made a declaration assuring
-Belgium of its intention to recognize the inviolability and 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 invasion of Belgium
-on the 10th 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 1938 steps were being made to utilize the Low
-Countries as defense bases for decisive action in the West in the event
-of France and England opposing Germany in its aggression upon
-Czechoslovakia.
-
-In an air force letter dated 25th 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
- prevention of the war in Western Europe than during the world
- war. This mainly is an advance base for the air war.” (_375-PS_)
-
-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.” (_375-PS_)
-
-That was in August 1938. Eight months later (on the 28th 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 23d May, 1939, Hitler held the conference in the
-Reich Chancellery, to which we have already referred. The Minutes of
-that meeting report Hitler as saying:
-
- “The Dutch and Belgian air bases must be occupied by armed
- force. Declarations of neutrality must be ignored. If England
- and France enter the war between Germany and Poland they will
- support Holland and Belgium in their neutrality. * * *
- Therefore, if England intends to intervene in the Polish war, we
- must occupy Holland with lightning speed. We must aim at
- securing new defense lines on Dutch soil up to the Zuyder Zee”.
- (_L-79_)
-
-Even after that he was to give his solemn declarations that he would
-observe Belgian neutrality. On the 26th August 1939 when the crisis in
-regard to Danzig and Poland was reaching its climax, 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—“If
-Holland and Belgium are successfully occupied and held”—it was said—“a
-successful war against England will be secured.”
-
-On the 1st September Poland was invaded, and two days later England and
-France came into the War against Germany in pursuance of the treaty
-obligation already referred to. On the 6th October Hitler renewed his
-assurances of friendship to Belgium and Holland. But on the 9th October,
-before any kind of accusation had been made by the German Government of
-breaches of neutrality by Belgium, the Netherlands, or Luxembourg,
-Hitler issued a directive for the conduct of the war.
-
-In that directive he stated:
-
- “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 the
- advantage to the Western Powers, of Belgium and perhaps also of
- Dutch neutrality, but also strengthens the military power of our
- enemies to an increasing degree, causes confidence of the
- neutrals in German final 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 countries than that document.
-
-On the 15th October 1939 Keitel wrote a most secret letter concerning
-_Fall Gelb_, which was the code name for the operation against the Low
-Countries. In it he stated:
-
- “The protection of the Ruhr area by moving A/C 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-Marse line. It will
- depend on the military and political attitude of the Dutch as
- well as on the effectiveness of their flooding, whether objects
- can and must be further extended.” (_C-62_)
-
-The operation had apparently been planned to take place at the beginning
-of November. 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 been made. (_C-72_)
-
-On the 10th January 1940 a German aeroplane force landed in Belgium. In
-it was found the remains of a half-burnt operation order setting out
-considerable details of the Belgian landing grounds that were to be
-captured (_TC-58_). 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 Governments and its
-armed forces.
-
-On the 10th May 1940 at about 0500 hours in the morning the German
-invasion of Belgium, Holland, and Luxembourg began.
-
-Once more the forces of aggression marched 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 unhappy countries was
-that they stood in the path of the German invader. But that was enough.
-
-On the 6th 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 of 1899. It was
-a breach of the Pact of Paris of 1928. It was a breach of a specific
-assurance given by Hitler on the 6th October 1939.
-
-“Immediately after the completion of the Anschluss”, he said, “I
-informed Yugoslavia that, from now on, the frontier with this country
-will also be an unalterable one and that we only desire to live in Peace
-and Friendship with her”. (_TC-43_)
-
-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.
-
-The history of events leading up to the invasion of Yugoslavia by
-Germany is well known. At 3 o’clock on the morning of the 28th October
-1940 a 3-hour ultimatum had been presented by the Italian Government to
-the Greek Government and the presentation of this ultimatum was followed
-by the aerial bombardment of Greek provincial towns and the advance of
-Italian troops into Greek territory. The Greeks, not prepared for such
-an assault, were at first forced to withdraw. Later the Italian advance
-was 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 German intentions there is the evidence of what occurred when, on
-12th August 1939, Hitler held his meeting with Ciano.
-
-You will remember Hitler said:
-
- “Generally speaking, the best thing to happen would be for the
- neutrals to be liquidated 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.” (_TC-77_)
-
-Later again on the second day of the conversation, 13th August, he said:
-
- “In general, however, from 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.”
-
-Once again we see the same procedure being followed. That meeting had
-taken place on the 12/13th August, 1939. Less than two months later, on
-6 October 1939 Hitler was giving his assurance to Yugoslavia that
-Germany only desired to live in peace and friendship with the Yugoslav
-State, the liquidation of which by his Axis partner he had himself
-suggested.
-
-On the 28th October 1940 the Italians presented a 3 hour ultimatum to
-Greece and commenced war against her. Eventually the advance was
-checked, then driven back, and the Italians suffered considerable
-reverses at Greek hands.
-
-We have an undated letter from Hitler to Mussolini which must have been
-written about the time of the Italian aggression against Greece.
-(_2762-PS_)
-
- “Permit me 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 only received general
- information. First, I wanted to request you to postpone the
- action, if possible until a more favorable time of year, at all
- events, however, 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
- cooperating 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 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. Here Yugoslavia must, if at all
- possible, be won over by other means and other ways.”
-
-On the 12th November in his Top Secret Order No. 18 Hitler ordered the
-OKH to make preparations to occupy Greece and Bulgaria if necessary.
-Approximately 10 divisions were to be used in order to prevent Turkish
-intervention. To shorten the time the German divisions in Rumania were
-to be increased.
-
-On the 13th December 1940 Hitler issued an order to OKW, OKL, OKH, OKM
-and General Staff on the operation Marita, which was the invasion of
-Greece. In that order it is stated that the invasion of Greece is
-planned and is to commence as soon as the weather becomes advantageous.
-Further orders were issued on the 13th December and 11th January.
-(_448-PS_; _1541-PS_)
-
-On the 28th January Hitler saw Mussolini. Jodl, Keitel, and Ribbentrop
-were present at the meeting and it is from Jodl’s notes of what took
-place that we know that Hitler stated that one of the purposes of German
-troop concentrations in Rumania was for use in his plan for the
-operation against Greece.
-
-On the 1st 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 forces were landed in Greece on
-the 3d March in accordance with the declaration which had been given by
-the British Government on the 13th April 1939 that Great Britain would
-feel bound to give Greece and Rumania respectively all the support in
-her power in the event of either country becoming the victim of
-aggression and resisting such aggression. Already the Italian aggression
-had made this pledge operative.
-
-On the 25th March 1941 Yugoslavia joined the 3-Power Pact which had
-already been signed by Germany, Italy, and Japan. The preamble of the
-Pact stated that the 3 Powers would stand side by side and work
-together.
-
-On the same day 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 yet
-another example of the treachery employed by German diplomacy. We have
-seen already the preparations that had been made. We have seen Hitler’s
-efforts to tempt the Italians into an aggression against Yugoslavia. We
-have seen in January his orders for his own preparation to invade
-Yugoslavia and Greece and now on the 25th 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. Thereupon the decision was taken to invade immediately and
-on the 27th March, two days after the 3-Power Pact had been signed by
-Yugoslavia, Hitler issued instructions that Yugoslavia was to be invaded
-and used as a base for the continuance of the combined German and
-Italian offensive against Greece. (_C-127_)
-
-Following this, further deployment and other instructions for the action
-Marita were issued by Von Brauchitsch on the 30th March 1941. (_R-95_)
-
-It is stated that “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” (_R-95_). As we now know, the
-invasion actually commenced in the early hours of the 6th 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 with which these Nazi
-conspirators are charged—the attack upon Russia. In August 1939 Germany
-although undoubtedly intending to attack Russia at some convenient
-opportunity, sufficiently deceived the Russian Government to secure a
-pact of nonaggression between them. It followed, therefore, that when
-Belgium and the Low Countries were occupied and France collapsed in June
-1940, England—although with the inestimably valuable moral and economic
-support of the United States of America—was left alone as the sole
-representative of Democracy in the face of the forces of aggression.
-Only the British Empire stood between Germany and the achievement of her
-aim to dominate the Western world. Only the British Empire—only 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 July 1940 Hitler issued to Keitel and Jodl a
-Directive for the invasion of England. It started off by stating—and
-Englishmen will be forever proud of it—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. The
- preparations for the entire operation must be completed by
- mid-August.” (_442-PS_)
-
-But the first essential condition for that plan was “that the English
-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.” (_442-PS_)
-
-The German Air Force 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
-achieved.
-
-On the 22d June 1941, German Armed Forces invaded Russia—without
-warning, without declaration of war. It was a breach of the Hague
-Conventions; it was a violation of the Pact of Paris of 1928: it was in
-flagrant contradiction of the Treaty of nonaggression which Germany and
-Russia had signed on the 23d August 1939.
-
-But that Treaty, perhaps more blatantly than any other, was made without
-any intention of being observed and only for the purpose of assisting
-the German Government to carry out their aggressive plans against the
-Western democracies before eventually turning east in their own good
-time.
-
-Hitler himself in referring to the Agreement said agreements were only
-to be kept as long as they served a purpose. Ribbentrop was more
-explicit. In an interview with the Japanese Ambassador in Berlin on 23d
-February 1941 he made it clear that the object of the Agreement had
-merely been to avoid a two-front war. (_1834-PS_)
-
-In contrast to what Hitler and Ribbentrop were planning within the
-councils of Germany, we know what they were saying to the rest of the
-world.
-
-On the 19th July Hitler spoke in the Reichstag:
-
- “In these circumstances I consider it proper to negotiate as a
- first priority a sober definition of interests 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 the clear delineation of the sphere of interest on either
- side, there followed the new regulation of Russo-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, in so far as it is
- concerned with Russo-German relations, an illusion.
-
- “British statesmen perceive everything somewhat slowly, but they
- too will learn to understand this in course of time.”
-
-Yet it was not many months after that that the arrangements for
-attacking Russia were put in hand. Raeder gives us the probable reasons
-for this sudden decision in a note 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
- Fuehrer 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 Fuehrer, as far back
- as August and September, 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 Fuehrer did not openly express this fear,
- however, until well into September.”
-
-He may not have told the Navy of his intentions until later in
-September, but by the beginning of that month he had undoubtedly spoken
-of them to Jodl.
-
-Dated 6th September 1940 we have a directive of the OKW signed by Jodl:
-“Directions are given for the occupation forces in the east to be
-increased in the following weeks. For security reasons 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. “The total strength of the German troops in the East to be
-camouflaged by frequent changes in this area. The impression is to be
-created that the bulk of the troops in the south have moved whilst the
-occupation in the north is only very small.” (_1229-PS_)
-
-Thus we see the beginning of the operations.
-
-On the 12th November 1940 Hitler issued a directive signed by Jodl in
-which he stated that the political task to determine the attitude of
-Russia had begun, but without reference to the result of preparations
-against the East, which had been ordered orally before it could be
-carried out.
-
-On the same day Molotov visited Berlin. At the conclusion of
-conversations between himself and the German Government a communique was
-issued in the following terms:
-
- “The exchange of ideas took place in an atmosphere of mutual
- trust and led to a mutual understanding on all important
- questions interesting Germany and the Soviet Union.”
-
-It is not to be supposed that the USSR would have taken part in those
-conversations or agreed to that communique 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 “Barbarossa”
-was in preparation. Four days later that order was issued—“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” (_446-PS_).
-And later in the same instruction,
-
- “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.”
- (_446-PS_)
-
-Keeping up the pretense of friendliness, on the 10th January,
-1941—after the Plan Barbarossa for the invasion of Russia had been
-decided upon—the German-Russo frontier treaty was signed. On the 3d
-February 1941 Hitler held a conference, attended by Keitel and Jodl, at
-which it was provided that the whole operation was to be camouflaged as
-if it was part of the preparations for the “Seelowe” as the plan for
-invasion of England was called. By March 1941 the plans were
-sufficiently advanced to include provision for dividing the Russian
-territory into 9 separate States to be administered under Reich
-Commissars under the general control of Rosenberg. At the same time
-detailed plans for the economic exploitation of the country were made
-under the supervision of Goering, to whom the responsibility was
-delegated by Hitler. You will hear something of the details of these
-plans. It is significant that on the 2d May 1941 a conference of the
-State Secretaries on the Plan Barbarossa noted:
-
- “1. The war can only be continued 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 this apparently created no concern. The plan Oldenberg, as the
-scheme for economic organization was called, went on. By the 1st May the
-D date of the operation was fixed. By the 1st June preparations were
-virtually complete and an elaborate time table 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 June at 3.30 in the morning the German Armies marched again.
-As Hitler said in his Proclamation:
-
- “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 June that the step was taken because of the threatening of the
-German frontiers by the Red Army. It was untrue and Ribbentrop knew it
-was untrue. On the 7th June his Ambassador in Moscow was reporting to
-him 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 was, of course, that the elimination of Russia
-as a political opponent and the incorporation of the Russian territory
-in the German _Lebensraum_ had long been one of the cardinal features of
-Nazi policy, subordinated latterly for what Jodl called diplomatic
-reasons.
-
-And so, on the 22d June, the Nazi armies were flung against the Power
-with which Hitler had so recently sworn friendship and Germany embarked
-on that last act of aggression which, after long and bitter fighting,
-was eventually to result in Germany’s own collapse.
-
- PART III
-
-This then is the case against these Defendants, as amongst the rulers of
-Germany, under Count 2 of this Indictment. It may be said that many of
-the documents which have been referred to were in Hitler’s name, that
-the orders were Hitler’s orders, 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: they are the men whose initiative and
-planning perhaps conceived and certainly made possible the acts of
-aggression made in Hitler’s name, and they are the men who enabled
-Hitler to build up the Army, Navy and Air Force by which these
-treacherous attacks were carried out, and 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 the assistance of 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 upon himself alone either in acquiring power or in
-maintaining it. He depends upon the support and 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, where men are put upon 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”. These men are in no different position for all that it was
-nations they sought to rob, whole peoples 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 labour 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 their belief. If the 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 sum total of the crime these men have committed—so awful in its
-comprehension—has many aspects. Their lust and sadism, their deliberate
-slaughter and the degradation of so many millions of their fellow
-creatures that the imagination reels incomprehensively, are but one side
-only 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. This is the other aspect of their guilt. The story of their
-“diplomacy”, founded upon cunning, hypocrisy and bad faith, is a story
-less gruesome but no less evil and deliberate. And should it be taken as
-a precedent of behaviour 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 what is undertaken will be
-observed, all hope of peace and of security is dead. The Governments of
-the United Kingdom and the British Commonwealth, of the USA, of the
-USSR, 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 that these Defendants may be punished for their crimes. They
-do so also that their conduct may be exposed in 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.
-
-
- 6. AGGRESSION AS A BASIC NAZI IDEA: MEIN KAMPF
-
-Hitler’s _Mein Kampf_, which became the Nazi statement of faith, gave to
-the conspirators adequate foreknowledge of the unlawful aims of the Nazi
-leadership. It was not only Hitler’s political testament; by adoption it
-became theirs.
-
-_Mein Kampf_ may be described as the blueprint of the Nazi aggression.
-Its whole tenor and content demonstrate that the Nazi pursuit of
-aggressive designs was no mere accident arising out of an immediate
-political situation in Europe and the world. _Mein Kampf_ establishes
-unequivocally that the use of aggressive war to serve German aims in
-foreign policy was part of the very creed of the Nazi party.
-
-A great German philosopher once said that ideas have hands and feet. It
-became the deliberate aim of the conspirators to see to it that the
-idea, doctrines, and policies of _Mein Kampf_ should become the active
-faith and guide for action of the German nation, and particularly of its
-malleable youth. From 1933 to 1939 an extensive indoctrination in the
-ideas of _Mein Kampf_ was pursued in the schools and universities of
-Germany, as well as in the Hitler Youth, under the direction of Baldur
-von Schirach, and in the SA and SS, and amongst the German population as
-a whole, by the agency of Rosenberg.
-
-A copy of _Mein Kampf_ was officially presented by the Nazis to all
-newly married couples in Germany. [A copy of _Mein Kampf_ (_D-660_)
-submitted by the prosecution to the tribunal contains the following
-dedication on the fly-leaf:
-
- “To the newly married couple, Friedrich Rosebrock and Else
- Geborene Zum Beck, with best wishes for a happy and blessed
- marriage. Presented by the Communal Administration on the
- occasion of their marriage on the 14th of November, 1940. For
- the Mayor, the Registrar.”
-
-This copy of _Mein Kampf_, which was the 1945 edition, contains the
-information that the number of copies published to date amount to
-6,250,000.]
-
-As a result of the efforts of the conspirators, this book, blasphemously
-called “The Bible of the German people,” poisoned a generation and
-distorted the outlook of a whole people. For as the SS General von dem
-Bach-Zelewski testified before the Tribunal, [on 7 January 1946] if it
-is preached for years, as long as ten years, that the Slav peoples are
-inferior races and that the Jews are subhuman, then it must logically
-follow that the killing of millions of these human beings is accepted as
-a natural phenomenon. From _Mein Kampf_ the way leads directly to the
-furnaces of Auschwitz and the gas chambers of Maidanek.
-
-What the commandments of _Mein Kampf_ were may be indicated by
-quotations from the book which fall into two main categories. The first
-category is that of general expression of Hitler’s belief in the
-necessity of force as the means of solving international problems. The
-second category is that of Hitler’s more explicit declarations on the
-policy which Germany should pursue.
-
-Most of the quotations in the second category come from the last three
-chapters—13, 14, and 15—of Part II of _Mein Kampf_, in which Hitler’s
-views on foreign policy were expounded. The significance of this may be
-grasped from the fact that Part II of _Mein Kampf_ was first published
-in 1927, less than two years after the Locarno Pact and within a few
-months of Germany’s entry into the League of Nations. The date of the
-publication of these passages, therefore, brands them as a repudiation
-of the policy of international cooperation embarked upon by Stresseman,
-and as a deliberate defiance of the attempt to establish, through the
-League of Nations, the rule of law in international affairs.
-
-The following are quotations showing the general view held by Hitler and
-accepted and propagated by the conspirators concerning war and
-aggression generally. On page 556 of _Mein Kampf_, Hitler wrote:
-
- “The soil on which we now live was not a gift bestowed by Heaven
- on our forefathers. But they had to conquer it by risking their
- lives. So also in the future our people will not obtain
- territory, and therewith the means of existence, as a favour
- from any other people, but will have to win it by the power of a
- triumphant sword.”
-
-On page 145, Hitler revealed his own personal attitude toward war. Of
-the years of peace before 1914 he wrote:
-
- “Thus I used to think it an ill-deserved stroke of bad luck that
- I had arrived too late on this terrestrial globe, and I felt
- chagrined at the idea that my life would have to run its course
- along peaceful and orderly lines. As a boy I was anything but a
- pacifist and all attempts to make me so turned out futile.”
-
-On page 162 Hitler wrote of war in these words:
-
- “In regard to the part played by humane feeling, Moltke stated
- that in time of war the essential thing is to get a decision as
- quickly as possible and that the most ruthless methods of
- fighting are at the same time the most humane. When people
- attempt to answer this reasoning by highfalutin talk about
- aesthetics, etc., only one answer can be given. It is that the
- vital questions involved in the struggle of a nation for its
- existence must not be subordinated to any aesthetic
- considerations.”
-
-Hitler’s assumption of an inevitable law of struggle for survival is
-linked up in Chapter II of Book I of _Mein Kampf_, with the doctrine of
-Aryan superiority over other races and the right of Germans in virtue of
-this superiority to dominate and use other peoples for their own ends.
-The whole of Chapter II of _Mein Kampf_ is dedicated to this “master
-race” theory and, indeed, many of the later speeches of Hitler were
-mainly repetitive of Chapter II.
-
-On page 256, the following sentiments appear:
-
- “Had it not been possible for them to employ members of the
- inferior race which they conquered, the Aryans would never have
- been in a position to take the first steps on the road which led
- them to a later type of culture; just as, without the help of
- certain suitable animals which they were able to tame, they
- would never have come to the invention of mechanical power,
- which has subsequently enabled them to do without these beasts.
- For the establishment of superior types of civilization the
- members of inferior races formed one of the most essential
- prerequisites.”
-
-In a later passage in _Mein Kampf_, at page 344, Hitler applies these
-general ideas to Germany:
-
- “If in its historical development the German people had
- possessed the unity of herd instinct by which other people have
- so much benefited, then the German Reich would probably be
- mistress of the globe today. World history would have taken
- another course, and in this case no man can tell if what many
- blinded pacifists hope to attain by petitioning, whining and
- crying may not have been reached in this way; namely, a peace
- which would not be based upon the waving of olive branches and
- tearful misery-mongering of pacifist old women, but a peace that
- would be guaranteed by the triumphant sword of a people endowed
- with the power to master the world and administer it in the
- service of a higher civilization.”
-
-These passages emphasize clearly Hitler’s love of war and scorn of those
-whom he described as pacifists. The underlying message of this book,
-which appears again and again, is, firstly, that the struggle for
-existence requires the organization and use of force; secondly, that the
-Aryan-German is superior to other races and has the right to conquer and
-rule them; thirdly, that all doctrines which preach peaceable solutions
-of international problems represent a disastrous weakness in a nation
-that adopts them. Implicit in the whole of the argument is a fundamental
-and arrogant denial of the possibility of any rule of law in
-international affairs.
-
-It is in the light of these general doctrines of _Mein Kampf_ that the
-more definite passages should be considered, in which Hitler deals with
-specific problems of German foreign policy. The very first page of the
-book contains a remarkable forecast of Nazi policy:
-
- “German-Austria must be restored to the great German Motherland.
- And not, indeed on any grounds of economic calculation
- whatsoever. No, no. Even if the union were a matter of economic
- indifference, and even if it were to be disadvantageous from the
- economic standpoint, still it ought to take place. People of the
- same blood should be in the same Reich. The German people will
- have no right to engage in a colonial policy until they shall
- have brought all their children together in one State. When the
- territory of the Reich embraces all the Germans and finds itself
- unable to assure them a livelihood, only then can the moral
- right arise, from the need of the people, to acquire foreign
- territory. The plough is then the sword; and the tears of war
- will produce the daily bread for the generations to come.”
-
-Hitler, at page 553, declares that the mere restoration of Germany’s
-frontiers as they were in 1914 would be wholly insufficient for his
-purposes:
-
- “In regard to this point I should like to make the following
- statement: To demand that the 1914 frontiers should be restored
- is a glaring political absurdity that is fraught with such
- consequences as to make the claim itself appear criminal. The
- confines of the Reich as they existed in 1914 were thoroughly
- illogical; because they were not really complete, in the sense
- of including all the members of the German nation. Nor were they
- reasonable, in view of the geographical exigencies of military
- defense. They were not the consequence of a political plan which
- had been well considered and carried out, but they were
- temporary frontiers established in virtue of a political
- struggle that had not been brought to a finish; and indeed, they
- were partly the chance result of circumstances.”
-
-In further elaboration of Nazi policy, Hitler does not merely denounce
-the Treaty of Versailles; he desires to see a Germany which is a world
-power with territory sufficient for a future German people of a
-magnitude which he does not define. On page 554 he declares:
-
- “For the future of the German nation the 1914 frontiers are of
- no significance * * *”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “We National Socialists must stick firmly to the aim that we
- have set for our foreign policy, namely, that the German people
- must be assured the territorial area which is necessary for it
- to exist on this earth. And only for such action as is
- undertaken to secure those ends can it be lawful in the eyes of
- God and our German posterity to allow the blood of our people to
- be shed once again. Before God, because we are sent into this
- world with the commission to struggle for our daily bread, as
- creatures to whom nothing is donated and who must be able to win
- and hold their position as lord of the earth only through their
- own intelligence and courage. “And this justification must be
- established also before our German posterity, on the grounds
- that for each one who has shed his blood the life of a thousand
- others will be guaranteed to posterity. The territory on which
- one day our German peasants will be able to bring forth and
- nourish their sturdy sons will justify the blood of the sons of
- the peasants that has to be shed today. And the statesmen who
- will have decreed this sacrifice may be persecuted by their
- contemporaries, but posterity will absolve them from all guilt
- for having demanded this offering from their people.”
-
-At page 557 Hitler writes:
-
- “Germany will either become a world power or will not continue
- to exist at all. But in order to become a world power, it needs
- that territorial magnitude which gives it the necessary
- importance today and assures the existence of its citizens.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “We must take our stand on the principles already mentioned in
- regard to foreign policy, namely, the necessity of bringing our
- territorial area into just proportion with the number of our
- population. From the past we can learn only one lesson, and that
- is that the aim which is to be pursued in our political conduct
- must be twofold, namely: (1) the acquisition of territory as the
- objective of our foreign policy and (2) the establishment of a
- new and uniform foundation as the objective of our political
- activities at home, in accordance with our doctrine of
- nationhood.”
-
-Now, these passages from _Mein Kampf_ raise the question, where did
-Hitler expect to find the increased territory beyond the 1914 boundaries
-of Germany? To this Hitler’s answer is sufficiently explicit. Reviewing
-the history of the German Empire from 1871 to 1918, he wrote, on page
-132:
-
- “Therefore, the only possibility which Germany had of carrying a
- sound territorial policy into effect was that of acquiring new
- territory in Europe itself. Colonies cannot serve this purpose
- so long as they are not suited for settlement by Europeans on a
- large scale. In the nineteenth century it was no longer possible
- to acquire such colonies by peaceful means. Therefore, any
- attempt at such colonial expansion would have meant an enormous
- military struggle. Consequently it would have been more
- practical to undertake that military struggle for new territory
- in Europe, rather than to wage war for the acquisition of
- possessions abroad.
-
- “Such a decision naturally demanded that the nation’s undivided
- energies should be devoted to it. A policy of that kind, which
- requires for its fulfillment every ounce of available energy on
- the part of everybody concerned, cannot be carried into effect
- by half measures or in a hesitant manner. The political
- leadership of the German Empire should then have been directed
- exclusively to this goal. No political step should have been
- taken in response to other considerations than this task and the
- means of accomplishing it. Germany should have been alive to the
- fact that such a goal could have been reached only by war, and
- the prospect of war should have been faced with calm and
- collected determination. The whole system of alliances should
- have been envisaged and valued from that standpoint.
-
- “If new territory were to be acquired in Europe it must have
- been mainly at Russia’s cost, and once again the new German
- Empire should have set out on its march along the same road as
- was formerly trodden by the Teutonic Knights, this time to
- acquire soil for the German plough by means of the German sword
- and thus provide the nation with its daily bread.”
-
-To this program of expansion in the East Hitler returns again, at the
-end of _Mein Kampf_. After discussing the insufficiency of Germany’s
-pre-war frontiers, he again points the path to the East and declares
-that the _Drang nach Osten_, the drive to the East, must be resumed:
-
- “Therefore we National Socialists have purposely drawn a line
- through the line of conduct followed by pre-war Germany in
- foreign policy. We put an end to the perpetual Germanic march
- towards the South and West of Europe and turn our eyes towards
- the lands of the East. We finally put a stop to the colonial and
- trade policy of pre-war times and pass over to the territorial
- policy of the future. But when we speak of new territory in
- Europe today we must principally think of Russia and the border
- states subject to her.”
-
-Hitler was shrewd enough to see that his aggressive designs in the East
-might be endangered by a defensive alliance between Russia, France, and
-perhaps England. His foreign policy, as outlined in _Mein Kampf_, was to
-detach England and Italy from France and Russia and to change the
-attitude of Germany towards France from the defensive to the offensive.
-
-On page 570 of _Mein Kampf_ he wrote:
-
- “As long as the eternal conflict between France and Germany is
- waged only in the form of a German defense against the French
- attack, that conflict can never be decided, and from century to
- century Germany will lose one position after another. If we
- study the changes that have taken place, from the twelfth
- century up to our day, in the frontiers within which the German
- language is spoken, we can hardly hope for a successful issue to
- result from the acceptance and development of a line of conduct
- which has hitherto been so detrimental for us.
-
- “Only when the Germans have taken all this fully into account
- will they cease from allowing the national will-to-live to wear
- itself out in merely passive defense; but they will rally
- together for a last decisive contest with France. And in this
- contest the essential objective of the German nation will be
- fought for. Only then will it be possible to put an end to the
- eternal Franco-German conflict which has hitherto proved so
- sterile.
-
- “Of course it is here presumed that Germany sees in the
- suppression of France nothing more than a means which will make
- it possible for our people finally to expand in another quarter.
- Today there are eighty million Germans in Europe. And our
- foreign policy will be recognized as rightly conducted only
- when, after barely a hundred years, there will be 250 million
- Germans living on this Continent, not packed together as the
- coolies in the factories of another Continent but as tillers of
- the soil and workers whose labour will be a mutual assurance for
- their existence.”
-
-_Mein Kampf_, taken in conjunction with the facts of Nazi Germany’s
-subsequent behavior towards other countries, shows that from the very
-first moment that they attained power, and indeed long before that time,
-Hitler and his confederates were engaged in planning and fomenting
-aggressive war.
-
-Events have proved that _Mein Kampf_ was no mere literary exercise to be
-treated with easy indifference, as unfortunately it was treated for so
-long. It was the expression of a fanatical faith in force and fraud as
-the means to Nazi dominance in Europe, if not in the whole world. In
-accepting and propagating the jungle philosophy of _Mein Kampf_, the
-Nazi conspirators deliberately set about to push civilization over the
-precipice of war.
-
-
- 7. TREATY VIOLATIONS
-
-It might be thought, from the melancholy story of broken treaties and
-violated assurances, that Hitler and the Nazi Government did not even
-profess that it is necessary or desirable to keep the pledged word.
-Outwardly, however, the professions were very different. With regard to
-treaties, on the 18 October 1933, Hitler said, “Whatever we have signed
-we will fulfill to the best of our ability.”
-
-The reservation is significant—“Whatever we have signed.”
-
-But, on 21 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 of 21 May 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
- assurance in any case. It is sometimes much easier to sign
- treaties with the mental reservations that one will consider
- 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 proceeded with the illustration of his assurance to France.
-
-In this connection the position of a treaty in German law should not be
-forgotten. The appearance of a treaty in the _Reichsgesetzblatt_ makes
-it part of the statute law of Germany, so that a breach thereof is also
-a violation of German domestic law.
-
-(This section deals with fifteen only of the treaties which Hitler and
-the Nazis broke. The remainder of the 69 treaties which the German Reich
-violated between 1933 and 1941 are dealt with in other sections of this
-chapter.)
-
-A. _Convention for the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes,
-signed at the Hague on the 29th of July, 1899._
-
-The Hague Conventions are of course 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
-more severe agreements.
-
-On 29 July, 1899, Germany, Greece, Serbia, and 25 other nations signed a
-convention (_TC-1_). Germany ratified the convention on 4 September
-1900, Serbia on the 11 May 1901, Greece on the 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 changed its name to Yugoslavia.
-
-The first two articles of this Hague Convention read:
-
- “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.” (_TC-1_)
-
-B. _Convention for the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes,
-signed at the Hague on 18 October 1907._
-
-This Convention (_TC-2_) was signed at the Hague by 44 nations, and it
-is in effect as to 31 nations, 28 signatories, and three adherents. For
-present 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.
-
-The first article of this treaty reads:
-
- “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.” (_TC-2_)
-
-C. _Convention Relative to the Opening of Hostilities, signed at the
-Hague on 18 October 1907._
-
-This Convention (_TC-3_) 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 of 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.
-
-The first article of this treaty reads:
-
- “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.” (_TC-3_)
-
-D. _Convention 5, Respecting the Rights and Duties of Neutral Powers and
-Persons in Case of War on Land, signed at the Hague on 18 October 1907._
-
-Germany was an original signatory to this Convention (_TC-4_), and the
-treaty is in force as a result of ratification or adherence between
-Germany and Norway, Denmark, Belgium, Luxembourg, The Netherlands, the
-USSR, and the United States.
-
-Article 1 reads:
-
- “The territory of neutral powers is inviolable.” (_TC-4_)
-
-A point arises on this Convention. 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 two 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.
-
-Since there are many more important treaties to be considered, the
-charge will not be pressed that this treaty was likewise breached. The
-terms of Article 1 are cited merely as showing the state of
-International opinion at the time, and as an element in the aggressive
-character of the war.
-
-E. _Treaty of Peace between the Allies and the Associated Powers of
-Germany, signed at Versailles on 28 June 1919._
-
-Part I of this treaty (_TC-5 thru TC-10_) contains the Covenant of the
-League of Nations, and Part II sets the boundaries of Germany in Europe.
-These boundaries are described in detail. Part II makes no provision for
-guaranteeing these boundaries. Part III, Articles 31 to 117, contains
-the political clauses for Europe. In it, Germany guarantees certain
-territorial boundaries in Belgium, Luxembourg, Austria, Czechoslovakia,
-France, Poland, Memel, Danzig, etc.
-
-This treaty is interwoven with the next, which is the Treaty of
-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. This case is concerned with Part V, which are the
-military, naval, and air clauses. Parts VII and XIII are not included in
-the United States Treaty.
-
-(1) _Territorial Guarantees._
-
-(_a_) _The Rhineland._ The first part with which this case is concerned
-is Articles 42 to 44 dealing with the Rhineland (_TC-5_). These are
-repeated in the Locarno Treaty. They read as follows:
-
- “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.”
-
-(The speech by Hitler on 7 March 1936, giving his account of the breach
-of this treaty (_2289-PS_), is discussed in Section 2, _supra_.)
-
-(_b_) _Austria._ The next part of the Treaty deals 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.” (_TC-6_)
-
-(The proclamation of Hitler dealing with Austria (_TC-47_), is discussed
-in Section 3 _supra_.)
-
-(_c_) _Memel._ Germany also gave guarantee with respect to 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 principal Allied and Associated powers in regard to
- these territories, particularly insofar as concerns the
- nationality of inhabitants.” (_TC-8_)
-
-The formal document by which Germany incorporated Memel into the Reich,
-reads as follows:
-
- “The transfer Commissioner for the Memel territory, _Gauleiter
- und Oberpraesident_ Erich Koch, effected on 3 April 1939, during
- a conference at Memel, the final incorporation of the late Memel
- territory into the National Socialist Party Gau of East Prussia
- and into the state administration of the East Prussian
- _Regierungsbezirk_ of Grunbinnen.” (_TC-53-A_)
-
-(_d_) _Danzig._ Article 100 of the treaty relates to Danzig:
-
- “Germany renounces, in favor of the principal Allied and
- Associated Powers, all rights and title over the territory
- comprised within the following limits * * * (The limits are set
- out and are described in a German map attached to the Treaty.)
- (_TC-9_)
-
-(_e_) _Czechoslovakia._ In Article 81, Germany made pledges regarding
-Czechoslovakia:
-
- “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.” (_TC-7_)
-
-Captured minutes of the German Foreign Office record in detail the
-conference between Hitler and President Hacha, and Foreign Minister
-Chvalkowsky of Czechoslovakia, at which Goering and Keitel were present
-(_2798-PS_). The agreement subsequently signed by Hitler and Ribbentrop
-for Germany, and by Dr. Hacha and Dr. Chvalkowsky for Czechoslovakia,
-reads as follows:
-
- “Text of the Agreement between the Fuehrer and Reichs Chancellor
- Adolf Hitler and the President of the Czechoslovak State, Dr.
- Hacha.
-
- “The Fuehrer and Reichs 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 Fuehrer of the German Reich. The Fuehrer 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.” (_TC-49_)
-
-Hitler’s proclamation to the German people, dated 15 March 1939, reads
-as follows:
-
- “Proclamation of the Fuehrer 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 one
- thousand 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 reordering 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”.
- (_TC-50_)
-
-A footnote contains an order of the Fuehrer to the German armed forces
-of the same date, in which 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. (_TC-50_)
-
-Next came the decree establishing the Protectorate of Bohemia and
-Moravia. (_TC-51_)
-
-In a communication from Foreign Minister Halifax to Sir Neville
-Henderson, British Ambassador in Berlin, the British Government
-protested against these actions:
-
- “Foreign Office, March 17, 1939:
-
- “Please inform 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 cooperate 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.” (_TC-52_)
-
-The French Government also made a protest on the same date:
-
- “* * * 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 Welzeck 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 9, 1938.
-
- “The circumstances in which the agreements of March 15 have 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 can not recognize under these
- conditions the legality of the new situation created in
- Czechoslovakia by the action of the German Reich.” (_TC-53_)
-
-(2) _Armament Limitations._ Part V of the Treaty, containing Military,
-Naval and Air Clauses reads as follows:
-
- “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. Effectives and Cadres of the
- German Army * * *”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Article 159. The German military forces shall be demobilized
- and reduced as prescribed hereinafter.
-
- “Article 160. 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 frontier.
-
- “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 units of infantry,
- artillery, engineers, technical services and troops laid down in
- the aforesaid table constitute maxima which must not be
- exceeded.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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.”
- (_TC-10_)
-
-Article 163 provides the steps by which the reduction will take place.
-Chapter 2 which deals with armament, provides that up till the time at
-which Germany is admitted as a member of the League of Nations, the
-armaments shall not be greater than the amount fixed in Table Number 11.
-In other words, 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 of Nations.
-Furthermore, she hereby agrees strictly to observe the decisions of the
-Council of the League on this subject. (_TC-10_)
-
-Article 168 reads:
-
- “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. * * *” (_TC-10_)
-
-Article 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 reconstituted and recruited
- by means of voluntary enlistment.” (_TC-10_)
-
-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.
-
-Article 180 provides:
-
- “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. * * *”
- (_TC-10_)
-
-Article 181 contains naval limitations:
-
- “After a period of two 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
-
- Twelve destroyers
-
- Twelve 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.” (_TC-10_)
-
-Article 183 limits naval personnel to fifteen thousand, including
-officers and men of all grades and corps.
-
-Article 191 provides:
-
- “The construction or acquisition of any submarines, even for
- commercial purposes, shall be forbidden in Germany.” (_TC-10_)
-
-Article 198, the first of the Air Clauses, commences:
-
- “The armed forces of Germany must not include any military or
- naval air forces.” (_TC-10_)
-
-The formal statement made at the German Air Ministry about the
-reinauguration of the Air Corps is reproduced in _TC-44_. The public
-proclamation of compulsory military service is contained in _TC-45_.
-
-F. _Treaty between the United States and Germany Restoring Friendly
-Relations._
-
-The purpose of this treaty (_TC-11_) was to complete the official
-cessation of hostilities between the United States of America and
-Germany; it also incorporated certain parts of the Treaty of Versailles.
-The relevant portion is Part 5, which repeats the clauses of the Treaty
-of Versailles which have been discussed immediately above.
-
-G. _Treaty of Mutual Guarantee between Germany, Belgium, France, Great
-Britain, and Italy, done at Locarno, 16 October 1925._
-
-Several treaties were negotiated at Locarno; they 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 (_TC-12_); (_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 (_TC-12_) 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
-14 September 1926, and Germany became a member of the League of Nations.
-
-The two arbitration conventions and the two arbitration treaties
-provided that they shall enter into force under the same conditions as
-the Treaty of Mutual Guarantee. (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 (_TC-12_). One of the 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 one 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. (_TC-12_)
-
-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 reoccupation of the
-Rhineland and the purported repudiation of the treaty. On 12 March,
-after a protest from the British Secretary for Foreign Affairs, Belgium,
-France, Great Britain, and Italy recognized unanimously that the
-reoccupation was a violation of this treaty. On 14 March, the League
-Council duly and properly decided that reoccupation 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. The relevant articles are 1, 2,
-and 3, already mentioned; 4, which provides for the bringing of
-violations before the Council of the League, as was done; and 5, which
-deals with the clauses of the Versailles Treaty already mentioned. It
-provides:
-
- “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 Article 42 or 43 of the Treaty of
- Versailles, the provisions of Article 4 of the present Treaty
- shall apply.” (_TC-12_)
-
-That is the procedure requiring reference to the League in the case of a
-flagrant breach or of more stringent action.
-
-It may be recalled that Hitler had promised that the German Government
-would scrupulously maintain their treaties voluntarily signed, even
-though they were concluded before Hitler’s accession to power. No one
-has ever argued that Stresemann was in any way acting involuntarily when
-he signed this Locarno Pact on behalf of Germany, along with the other
-representatives. (The signature is not in Stresemann’s name, but by Herr
-Hans Luther.) This treaty, which repeats the violated provisions of the
-Versailles Treaty, was freely entered into and binds Germany in that
-regard. Article 8 deals with the preliminary enforcement of the Treaty
-by the League:
-
- “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 of one or other
- of the High Contracting Parties notified to the other signatory
- Powers three 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 one year from such decision.” (_TC-12_)
-
-Thus, in signing this Treaty, the German representative clearly placed
-the question of repudiation or violation of the Treaty in the hands of
-others. Germany was at the time a member of the League, and a member in
-the Council of the League. Germany left the question of repudiation or
-violations to the decision of the League.
-
-H. _Arbitration Treaty between Germany and Czechoslovakia, signed at
-Locarno in October 1925._
-
-Article I is the governing clause of this treaty (_TC-14_). It provides:
-
- “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 or prior to the present Treaty and belonging to
- the past. Disputes for the settlement of which a special
- procedure is laid down on other conventions in force between the
- High Contracting Parties, shall be settled in conformity with
- the provisions of those Conventions.”
-
-This treaty was registered with the Secretariat of the League in
-accordance with Article 22, the second sentence of which shows that the
-Treaty was entered into and its terms in force under the same conditions
-as the Treaty of Mutual Guarantee. (_TC-12_)
-
-This is the Treaty to which President Benes unsuccessfully appealed
-during the crisis in the Autumn of 1938.
-
-I. _Arbitration Convention Between Germany and Belgium, signed at
-Locarno, October 1925._
-
-(This treaty, _TC-13_, is discussed in Section 10 of this chapter
-dealing with the invasion of Belgium, Netherlands and Luxembourg.)
-
-J. _Arbitration Treaty Between Germany and Poland, signed at Locarno, 16
-October 1925._
-
-(This treaty, _TC-15_, is discussed in Section 8 of this chapter dealing
-with the invasion of Poland.)
-
-K. _Declaration of the Assembly of the League of Nations of 24 September
-1927._
-
-Germany had become a member of the League of Nations on 10 September
-1926, a year before this Declaration was made.
-
-The importance of this Declaration is not only its effect on
-International Law, but to the fact that it was unanimously adopted by
-the Assembly of the League of Nations, of which Germany was a free and
-active member at the time. Referring to the unanimous adoption of the
-Declaration, M. Sokal, the Polish Rapporteur, had this to say:
-
- “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.” (_TC-18_)
-
-M. Sokal then asked the Assembly to adopt the draft resolution, the
-terms of which show what so many nations, including Germany, had in mind
-at that time. The resolution recited that 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
- in consequence an international crime; considering that the
- 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.
-
- “That the Assembly declares that the States Members of the
- League are under an obligation to conform to these principles.”
- (_TC-18_)
-
-The fact of the solemn renunciation of war was taken in the form of a
-roll call, and the President announced that:
-
- “All the delegations having pronounced in favour of the
- declaration submitted by the Third Committee, I declare it
- unanimously adopted.” (_TC-18_)
-
-L. _The Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928._
-
-(This treaty, _TC-19_, is discussed in Sir Hartley Shawcross’s opening
-address for Great Britain, to be found in Section 5, _supra_.)
-
-M. _Assurances._
-
-(1) _Austria._ On 21 May 1935 Hitler made a speech containing this
-assurance:
-
- “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.” (_TC-26_)
-
-Similarly, in the Agreement between the German Government and the
-Government of the Federal State of Austria, on July 11, 1936, paragraph
-one stated as follows:
-
- “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 May, 1935.”
- (_TC-22_)
-
-(2) _Czechoslovakia._ The German Assurance to Czechoslovakia is
-contained in the letter from M. Jan Masaryk to Viscount Halifax on the
-date of 12 March 1938 (_TC-27_). The first paragraph shows that Field
-Marshall Goering used the expression “_Ich gebe Ihnen Mein Ehrenwort_.”
-That means, “I give my word of honor.” The third paragraph shows that
-Goering had asked that there would not be a mobilization of the
-Czechoslovak Army. The fourth paragraph reads:
-
- “M. Mastny was in a position to give him definite and binding
- assurances on this subject, and today he spoke with Baron 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.” (_TC-27_)
-
-So that in 1935 Baron von Neurath was speaking on behalf of Germany on
-an agreement voluntarily concluded. Had there been the slightest doubt
-of that question, von Neurath gave the assurance on behalf of Hitler
-that Germany still considered itself bound by the German-Czechoslovakia
-Arbitration Convention on the 12 March 1938, six months before Dr. Benes
-made a hopeless appeal to it before the crisis in the Army in 1938.
-
-Czechoslovakia’s difficult position is set out in the pregnant last
-paragraph:
-
- “They can not however fail to view with great apprehension the
- sequel of events in Austria between the date of the bi-lateral
- agreement between Germany and Austria, 11 July 1936, and
- yesterday, 11 March 1938.” (_TC-27_)
-
-On 26 September 1938, Hitler made an assurance to Czechoslovakia which
-contains important points as to the alleged German policy of getting
-Germans together in the Reich, for which the Nazi conspirators had
-purported to request a considerable time:
-
- “I have a 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
- can not go back beyond the limits of our patience.” (_TC-28_)
-
-(This occurred between the Godesberg Treaty 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 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. 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 Benes which was no more than the realization of
- what he had already promised. He now has peace or war in his
- hands. Either he will accept this offer and at length give the
- Germans their freedom, or we will get this freedom for
- ourselves.” (_TC-28_)
-
-The Munich Agreement of 29 September 1938 (_TC-23_) was signed by
-Hitler, later by Mr. Chamberlain, Mr. Daladier, and Mussolini. It is
-largely a procedural agreement by which the entry of German troops into
-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.” (_TC-23_)
-
-Article 4 states that “The occupation by stages of the predominantly
-German territory by German troops will begin on 1 October.” The four
-territories are marked on the attached map. Article 6 provides that “The
-final determination of the frontiers will be carried out by the
-international commission.” (_TC-23_)
-
-The agreement provides also for various rights of option and release
-from the Czech forces of Sudeten-Germans (TC-23). That was what Hitler
-was asking for in the somewhat rhetorical passage previously referred to
-(_TC-28_).
-
-There is an annex to the Munich 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 Proposal 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.” (_TC-23_)
-
-The provision concerns “the Polish and Hungarian minorities,” not the
-question of Slovakia. That is why that the German action of the 15th of
-March was a flagrant violation of the letter and spirit of that
-Agreement. (For fuller discussion see Section 4 of this Chapter relating
-to aggression against Czechoslovakia.)
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO TREATY VIOLATIONS
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6 (a). │ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Sections V; VI; │ │ 29, 30,
- │ Appendix C. │ I │ 73
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document was referred to during the │ │
- │trial but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
-*2289-PS │Hitler’s speech in the Reichstag, 7 │ │
- │March 1936, published in Voelkischer │ │
- │Beobachter, Berlin Edition, No. 68, 8 │ │
- │March 1936. (USA 56) │ IV │ 994
- │ │ │
-*2798-PS │German Foreign Office minutes of the │ │
- │meeting between Hitler and President │ │
- │Hacha of Czechoslovakia, 15 March 1939. │ │
- │(USA 118; GB 5) │ V │ 433
- │ │ │
-*TC-1 │Hague Convention for Pacific Settlement │ │
- │of International Disputes signed at The │ │
- │Hague, 29 July 1899. (GB 1) │ VIII │ 273
- │ │ │
-*TC-2 │Hague Convention (1) for Pacific │ │
- │Settlement of International │ │
- │Disputes—1907. (GB 2) │ VIII │ 276
- │ │ │
-*TC-3 │Hague Convention (3) Relative to opening│ │
- │of Hostilities. (GB 2) │ VIII │ 279
- │ │ │
-*TC-4 │Hague Convention (5) Respecting Rights │ │
- │and Duties of Neutral Powers and Persons│ │
- │in War on Land. (GB 2) │ VIII │ 282
- │ │ │
-*TC-5 │Versailles Treaty, Article 42-44. (GB 3)│ VIII │ 288
- │ │ │
-*TC-6 │Versailles Treaty, Section VI, Article │ │
- │80, Austria. (GB 3) │ VIII │ 289
- │ │ │
-*TC-7 │Versailles Treaty, Section VII, Article │ │
- │81, Czecho-Slovak State. (GB 3) │ VIII │ 289
- │ │ │
-*TC-8 │Versailles Treaty, Section X, Article │ │
- │99, Memel. (GB 3) │ VIII │ 289
- │ │ │
-*TC-9 │Versailles Treaty, Section XI, Article │ │
- │100, Free City of Danzig. (GB 3) │ VIII │ 290
- │ │ │
-*TC-10 │Versailles Treaty, Part V, Military, │ │
- │Naval and Air Clauses. (GB 3) │ VIII │ 291
- │ │ │
-*TC-11 │Treaty between the United States and │ │
- │Germany restoring friendly relations, 25│ │
- │August 1921. (USA 12) │ VIII │ 308
- │ │ │
-*TC-12 │Treaty of Mutual Guarantee between │ │
- │Germany, Belgium, France, Great Britain │ │
- │and Italy, done at Locarno, 16 October │ │
- │1925. (GB 13) │ VIII │ 313
- │ │ │
-*TC-13 │Arbitration Convention between Germany │ │
- │and Belgium at Locarno, 16 October 1925.│ │
- │(GB 15) │ VIII │ 320
- │ │ │
-*TC-14 │Arbitration Treaty between Germany and │ │
- │Czechoslovakia, signed at Locarno, 16 │ │
- │October 1925. (GB 14) │ VIII │ 325
- │ │ │
-*TC-15 │Arbitration. Treaty between Germany and │ │
- │Poland at Locarno, 16 October 1925. (GB │ │
- │16) │ VIII │ 331
- │ │ │
-*TC-18 │Declaration concerning wars of │ │
- │aggression; resolution of 3rd Committee │ │
- │of League of Nations, 24 September 1927.│ │
- │(GB 17) │ VIII │ 357
- │ │ │
-*TC-19 │Kellogg-Briand Pact at Paris. 1929 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part II, No. 9, pp. │ │
- │97-101. (GB 18) │ VIII │ 359
- │ │ │
-*TC-21 │German-Polish Declaration, 26 January │ │
- │1934. (GB 24) │ VIII │ 368
- │ │ │
-*TC-22 │Agreement between Austria and German │ │
- │Government and Government of Federal │ │
- │State of Austria, 11 July 1936. (GB 20) │ VIII │ 369
- │ │ │
-*TC-23 │Agreement between Germany, the United │ │
- │Kingdom, France and Italy, 29 September │ │
- │1938. (GB 23) │ VIII │ 370
- │ │ │
-*TC-25 │Non-aggression Treaty between Germany │ │
- │and USSR and announcement of 25 │ │
- │September 1939 relating to it. (GB 145) │ VIII │ 375
- │ │ │
-*TC-26 │German assurance to Austria, 21 May │ │
- │1935, from Documents of German Politics,│ │
- │Part III, p. 94. (GB 19) │ VIII │ 376
- │ │ │
-*TC-27 │German assurances to Czechoslovakia, 11 │ │
- │and 12 March 1938, as reported by M. │ │
- │Masaryk, the Czechoslovak Minister to │ │
- │London to Viscount Halifax. (GB 21) │ VIII │ 377
- │ │ │
-*TC-28 │German assurance to Czechoslovakia, 26 │ │
- │September 1938, from Documents of German│ │
- │Politics, Part VI, pp. 345-346. (GB 22) │ VIII │ 378
- │ │ │
-*TC-44 │Notice by German government of existence│ │
- │of German Air Force, 9 March 1935. (GB │ │
- │11) │ VIII │ 386
- │ │ │
- TC-45 │Proclamation to German People of 16 │ │
- │March 1935. │ VIII │ 388
- │ │ │
- TC-46 │German memorandum to Signatories of │ │
- │Locarno Pact reasserting full German │ │
- │sovereignty over Rhineland, 7 March │ │
- │1936. │ VIII │ 394
- │ │ │
- TC-47 │Hitler’s Proclamation of Invasion of │ │
- │Austria, 12 March 1938. │ VIII │ 398
- │ │ │
-*TC-49 │Agreement with Czechoslovakia, 15 March │ │
- │1939, signed by Hitler, von Ribbentrop, │ │
- │Hacha and Chvalkovsky, from Documents of│ │
- │German Politics, Part VII, pp. 498-499. │ │
- │(GB 6) │ VIII │ 402
- │ │ │
-*TC-50 │Proclamation of the Fuehrer to the │ │
- │German people and Order of the Fuehrer │ │
- │to the Wehrmacht, 15 March 1939, from │ │
- │Documents of German Politics, Part VII, │ │
- │pp. 499-501. (GB 7) │ VIII │ 402
- │ │ │
-*TC-51 │Decree establishing the Protectorate of │ │
- │Bohemia and Moravia, 16 March 1939. (GB │ │
- │8) │ VIII │ 404
- │ │ │
-*TC-52 │Formal British protest against the │ │
- │annexation of Czechoslovakia in │ │
- │violation of the Munich Agreement, 17 │ │
- │March 1939. (GB 9) │ VIII │ 407
- │ │ │
-*TC-53 │Formal French protest against the │ │
- │annexation of Bohemia and Moravia in │ │
- │violation of the Munich Agreement, 17 │ │
- │March 1939. (GB 10) │ VIII │ 407
- │ │ │
-*TC-53-A │Marginal note to decree of final │ │
- │incorporation of Memel with German │ │
- │Reich, 23 March 1939, from Documents of │ │
- │German Politics, Part VII, p. 552. (GB │ │
- │4) │ VIII │ 408
- │ │ │
-*TC-54 │Proclamation of the Fuehrer to German │ │
- │Armed Forces, 1 September 1939. (GB 73) │ VIII │ 408
- │ │ │
-*TC-54-A │“Danzig’s return to the Reich”, from │ │
- │Documents of German Politics, Part VII, │ │
- │p. 575. (GB 73) │ VIII │ 409
- │ │ │
- TC-62 │German declaration of war on U.S.A., 11 │ │
- │December 1941, from Documents of German │ │
- │Politics, Part IV, p. 497. │ VIII │ 432
- │ │ │
-**Chart No. 13 │Violations of Treaties, Agreements and │ │
- │Assurances. (Enlargement displayed to │ │
- │Tribunal.) │ VIII │ 782
-
-
- 8. AGGRESSION AGAINST POLAND, DANZIG, ENGLAND
- AND FRANCE
-
-A. _Treaties Breached._
-
-In addition to the general treaties involved—The Hague Convention in
-respect of the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes (_TC-2_);
-other Hague Conventions of 1907 (_TC-3_; _TC-4_); the Versailles Treaty
-(_TC-9_) in respect of the Free City of Danzig; and the Kellogg-Briand
-Pact (_TC-19_)—two specific agreements were violated by the German
-attack on Poland. These were the Arbitration Treaty between Germany and
-Poland, signed at Locarno on 16 October 1925, and the Declaration of
-Non-Aggression which was entered into between Germany and Poland on 26
-January 1934.
-
-The German-Polish Arbitration Treaty (_TC-15_) declares in the preamble
-and Articles 1 and 2:
-
- “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 . . .”
-
- “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.”
-
- “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.” (_TC-15_)
-
-Thereafter the treaty goes on to lay down the procedure for arbitration
-and for conciliation. Germany, however, in September 1939 attacked and
-invaded Poland without having first attempted to settle its disputes
-with Poland by peaceful means.
-
-The second specific treaty, the German-Polish Declaration of 26 January
-1934, reads in part:
-
- “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 declaration shall remain in effect for a period of ten
- years counting from the day of exchange of instruments of
- ratification. In case it is not denounced by one of the two
- governments six months before the expiration of that period of
- time, it shall continue in effect but can then be denounced by
- either government at a time of six months and at any time in
- advance.” (TC-21)
-
-B. _German Intentions Before March 1939._
-
-It has been previously shown that the actions against Austria and
-Czechoslovakia were in themselves part of the preparation for further
-aggression. 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 aims. They
-appreciated the whole time that they might well have to do so.
-Furthermore, although not until after March 1939, did they commence upon
-their immediate and specific preparations for a specific 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—as afterwards, while they were making their
-preparations and carrying out their plans, they were giving to the
-outside world assurance after assurance so as to lull them out of any
-suspicion of their real object.
-
-When the agreement with Poland was signed in January 1934, Hitler had
-this to say:
-
- “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 crystalize into a state of hostility which, if
- persisted, might too easily acquire the character of a dangerous
- traditional enmity.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “In the spirit of this Treaty the German Government is willing
- and prepared to cultivate economic relations with Poland in such
- a way that here, too, the state of unprofitable suspicion can be
- succeeded by a period of useful cooperation. 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.” (_TC-70_)
-
-That was in 1934. Three years later, again on 30 January, speaking in
-the Reichstag, Hitler said:
-
- “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 reality 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.” (_2868-PS_)
-
-That was on 30 January 1937.
-
-On 24 June 1937, a “Top Secret Order (_C-175_) was issued by the Reich
-Minister for War and Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces, signed “Von
-Blomberg”. There is the notation at the top, “Written by an Officer.
-Outgoing documents in connection with this matter and dealing with it in
-principle are to be written by an officer.” With it is enclosed a
-Directive for the Unified Preparation for War of the Armed Forces, to
-come into force on 1 August 1937. The enclosed directive is divided into
-Part 1, “General Guiding Principle”; Part 2, “Likely Warlike
-Eventualities”; Part 3, “Special Preparations”. The substance of the
-document justifies the supposition that Germany need not consider an
-attack from any side.
-
-The second paragraph states:
-
- “* * * 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.” (_C-175_)
-
-The preparations which are to be made are then set forth:
-
- “* * * 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Special preparations are to be made for the following
- eventualities: Armed intervention against Austria; warlike
- entanglement with Red Spain.” (_C-175_)
-
-Another passage shows clearly how they appreciated at that time that
-their actions against Austria and Czechoslovakia might well involve them
-in war.
-
- “* * * England, Poland, Lithuania take part in a war against
- us.” (_C-175_)
-
-Part 2 of this directive, dealing with “Probable warlike
-eventualities—Concentrations,” states:
-
- “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.” (_C-175_)
-
-Part 3, which deals in part with “Special Case—Extension Red-Green,”
-declares:
-
- “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 on the side of our opponents.
- Thereupon our military position would be worsened to an
- unbearable, even hopeless, extent. The political leaders will
- therefore do everything to keep these countries neutral, above
- all England and Poland.” (_C-175_)
-
-The date of this order is June 1937, and it seems clear that at that
-date, anyway, the Nazi Government appreciated the likelihood, if not the
-probability, of fighting England and Poland and France, and were
-prepared to do so. On 5 November 1937, Hitler held his conference in the
-Reichschancellery, the minutes of which, referred to as the Hossbach
-notes, contain the remarks made by Hitler in respect of England, Poland,
-and France:
-
- “The Fuehrer 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’.” (_386-PS_)
-
-Hitler then went on to discuss what he described as “participation in
-world economy”, and declared:
-
- “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.” (_386-PS_)
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “The history of all times, Roman Empire, British Empire, has
- proved that every space expansion can only be effected 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.” (_386-PS_)
-
-On the same day as this Hossbach meeting in the Reichschancellery was
-taking place, a communique was being issued as a result of the Polish
-ambassador’s audience with Hitler (_TC-73 No. 33_). In the course of
-this conversation, the communique stated:
-
- “It was confirmed that Polish-German relations should not meet
- with difficulty because of the Danzig question.” (_TC-73 No.
- 33_)
-
-On 2 January 1938, some unknown person wrote a memorandum for the
-Fuehrer. This document is headed, “Very Confidential—Personal Only”,
-and is entitled “Deduction on the report, German Embassy, London,
-regarding the future form of Anglo-German relations.” It states in part:
-
- “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 against each other one day? To answer
- this question, one must realize the following:
-
- “Change of the status quo in the east in the German sense can
- only be carried out by force. So 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
- attend 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-France
- 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, e.g., 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 writer goes on to discuss the possibility of a strong partnership
-between Italy and Japan, and then reaches a summary:
-
- “Paragraph five: 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 cooperation 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, astute opponent in this game of diplomacy.
-
- “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.” (_TC-75_)
-
-Whoever it was who wrote that document, appears to have been on a fairly
-high level, because he concludes by saying, “I should like to give the
-Fuehrer some of these viewpoints verbally.” (_TC-75_)
-
-On 20 February 1938, Hitler spoke in the Reichstag. 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 difference, not only has
- there been a ‘detente,’ but in the course of the 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,
- this most dangerous spot from the 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 an 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
- cooperation.
-
- “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.” (_2357-PS_)
-
-A memorandum dated 2 May 1938, and entitled, “Organizational Study
-1950,” originated in the office of the Chief of the Organizational Staff
-of the General Staff of the Air Force. Its purpose was 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.” (_L-43_). The result gained is termed, “Distant Objective.” From
-this is deduced the goal to be reached in the second phase of the
-process, which is 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 Gaus, Air Divisions,
-etc. (_L-43_)
-
-The Table of Contents is divided into various sections. Section I is
-entitled, “Assumptions.” In connection with the heading “Assumption I,
-frontier of Germany”, a map is enclosed (_Chart No. 10_). The map shows
-that on 2 May 1938 the Air Force was in Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania,
-Poland, Czechoslovakia, Austria, and Hungary, all of which are shown as
-within the boundaries of the Reich.
-
-The following is a pertinent extract from the memorandum:
-
- “Consideration of the principles of organization on the basis of
- the assumptions for war and peace made in Section 1:
-
- “1. Attack Forces: Principal adversaries: England, France, and
- Russia.” (_L-43_)
-
-The study then goes on to show all the one hundred forty-four
-_Geschwader_ employed against England, very much 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. Under the paragraph “Assumption”
-double heading 2, the “Organization of Air Force in peacetime” is shown
-and seven group commands are indicated: (1) Berlin; (2) Brunswick; (3)
-Munich; (4) Vienna; (5) Budapest; (6) Warsaw; and (7) Koenigsberg.
-(_L-43_)
-
-Finally, the study declares:
-
- “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 * * *” (_L-43_)
-
-The original of this document is signed by an officer who is not at the
-top rank in the German Air Force, and the inferences that can be drawn
-from it should therefore not be over-emphasized. At least, however, it
-shows the lines upon which the General Staff of the Air Force were
-thinking at that time.
-
-On the 26 August 1938, when Ribbentrop had become Foreign Minister
-succeeding von Neurath, a document was addressed to him as “The Reich
-Minister, via the State Secretary.” The document reads as follows:
-
- “The most pressing problem of German policy, the Czech problem,
- might easily, but must not lead to a conflict with the Entente.
- Neither France nor England are 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 and this fruit could be
- plucked without too great a risk. She can only prepare the
- desired developments.
-
- “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 was
- 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 the 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] 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 create the resistance to our
- plan by the Entente at an earlier date and more energetically,
- than our forces could stand up to.” (_TC-76_)
-
-That was on 26 August 1938, just as the Czech crisis was leading up to
-the Munich settlement. While at Munich, a day or two before the Munich
-agreement was signed, Herr Hitler made a speech. On 26 September he
-said:
-
- “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.” (_TC-29_)
-
-A letter from Admiral Carl, dated some time in September, with no
-precise date, and entitled “Opinion on the ‘Draft Study of Naval Warfare
-against England’,” stated as follows:
-
- “There is full agreement with the main theme of the study.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “If according to the Fuehrer’s decision Germany is to acquire a
- position as a world power who needs not only sufficient colonial
- possessions but also secure naval communications and secure
- access to the ocean.” (_C-23_)
-
-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 intended. As a result, the conspirators
-were not prepared straight away to start any further aggressive action
-against Poland or elsewhere. But with the advantages that were gained by
-the seizure of Czechoslovakia, it is obvious now that they intended and
-had taken the decision to proceed against Poland so soon as
-Czechoslovakia had been entirely occupied. As Jodl and Hitler said on
-subsequent occasions, Czechoslovakia was only setting the stage for the
-attack on Poland.
-
-It is known now from what Hitler said in talking to his military
-commanders at a later date, that, in his own words, 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 the whole of
-Czechoslovakia had been taken in March. Immediately after the
-Sudetenland had been occupied, preliminary steps were taken to stir up
-trouble with Poland, which would and was to eventually lead to the Nazi
-excuse or justification for their attack on that country.
-
-The earlier discussions between the German and Polish governments on the
-question of Danzig, which commenced almost immediately after the Munich
-crisis in September 1938, began as cautious and friendly discussions,
-until the remainder of Czechoslovakia had finally been seized in March
-of the following year. A document taken from the Official Polish White
-Book, gives an account of a luncheon which took place at the Grand
-Hotel, Berchtesgaden, on 25 October, where Ribbentrop had discussions
-with M. Lipski, the Polish ambassador to Germany. The report states:
-
- “In a conversation on 24 October, over a luncheon at the Grand
- Hotel, Berchtesgaden, at which M. Hewel was present, M. von
- Ribbentrop put forward a proposal for a general settlement of
- issues (_Gesamtloesung_) 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 railway line across Pomorze. In
- exchange M. von Ribbentrop mentioned the possibility of an
- extension of the Polish-German Agreement by twenty-five years
- and a guarantee of Polish-German frontiers.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Finally, I said that I wished to warn M. 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.” (_TC-73
- No. 44_)
-
-It seems clear that the whole question of Danzig, as indeed Hitler
-himself said, was no question at all. Danzig was raised simply as an
-excuse, a justification, not for the seizure of Danzig but for the
-invasion and seizure of the whole of Poland. As the story unfolds it
-will become ever more apparent that that is what the Nazi conspirators
-were really aiming at, only providing themselves with some kind of
-crisis which would afford some kind of justification for attacking
-Poland.
-
-Another document taken from the Polish White Book (_TC-73 No. 45_) 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 suggestions
-put forward by Ribbentrop at Berchtesgaden on 24 October. The first part
-reviews the history of Polish-German relationship and emphasizes the
-needs of Poland in respect to Danzig. Paragraph 6 of the document
-states:
-
- “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.” (_TC-73 No. 45_)
-
-The document then sets out the guarantees to Poland under the statute,
-and continues as follows:
-
- “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 bi-lateral
- 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.
-
- “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.” (_TC-73 No. 45_)
-
-The first stage in those negotiations had been entirely successful from
-the German point of view. The Nazis 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. The Poles
-had offered to enter into negotiations, but they had not agreed, which
-is exactly what the German government had hoped for. They had not agreed
-to the return of Danzig to the Reich. The first stage in producing the
-crisis had been accomplished.
-
-Shortly afterwards, within a week or so, and after the Polish government
-had offered to enter into discussions with the German government,
-another top secret order was issued by the Supreme Command of the Armed
-Forces, signed by Keitel (_C-137_). Copies went to the OKH, OKM, and
-OKW. The order is headed “First Supplement to Instruction dated 21
-October 1938,” and reads:
-
- “The Fuehrer has ordered: Apart from the three contingencies
- mentioned in the instructions 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 _quasi-revolutionary_ occupation of Danzig, exploiting a
- politically favorable situation, _not a war against Poland_.”
- (_C-137_)
-
-The remainder of Czechoslovakia had not yet been seized, and therefore
-the Nazis were not yet ready to go to war with Poland. But Keitel’s
-order shows how the German government answered the Polish proposal to
-enter into discussions.
-
-On 5 January 1939 Mr. Beck had a conversation with Hitler. (_TC-73 No.
-48_). Ribbentrop was also present. In the first part of that
-conversation, of which that document is an account, Hitler offered to
-answer any questions. He said he had always followed the policy laid
-down by the 1934 agreement. He discussed the question of Danzig and
-emphasized that in the German view it must sooner or later return to
-Germany. The conversation continued:
-
- “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 ‘_Korperschaft_,’
- 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.” (_TC-73 No. 48_)
-
-It will be recalled that in the previous document discussed (_C-137_)
-orders had already been issued for preparations to be made for the
-occupation of Danzig by surprise. Yet some six weeks later Hitler
-assured the Polish Foreign Minister that there would be no fait accompli
-and that he should be quite at his ease.
-
-On the day after the conversation between Beck and Hitler, Beck and
-Ribbentrop conferred, as follows:
-
- “Mr. Beck asked M. Von 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “In answer M. Von 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.” (_TC-73 No. 49_)
-
-Ribbentrop apparently was not satisfied with that one expression of good
-faith. On the 25th of the same month, January 1939, he was in Warsaw and
-made another speech, of which the following is a pertinent extract:
-
- “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.” (_2530-PS_)
-
-Hitler spoke in the Reichstag on 30 January 1939, and gave further
-assurances of the good faith of the German Government. (_TC-73 No. 57_)
-
-In March 1939 the remainder of Czechoslovakia was seized and the
-Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia was set up. That seizure, as was
-recognized by Hitler and Jodl, had immensely strengthened the German
-position against Poland. Within a week of the completion of the
-occupation of Czechoslovakia heat was beginning to be applied on Poland.
-
-On 21 March M. Lipski, the Polish ambassador, saw Ribbentrop. The nature
-of the conversation was generally very much sharper than that of the
-discussion between Ribbentrop and Beck a little time back at the Grand
-Hotel, Berchtesgaden:
-
- “I saw M. Von Ribbentrop today. He began by saying he had asked
- me to call on him 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Further, M. von 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 in the
- Reich. 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. M. von Ribbentrop had had a talk with 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. M. von 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 [Lipski] 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 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 over this matter.
- 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 they had discussed the Memel
- question, which called for a solution.” (_TC-73 No. 61_)
-
-That conversation took place on 21 March. The world soon learned what
-the solution to Memel was. On the next day German armed forces marched
-in.
-
-As a result of these events, considerable anxiety was growing both in
-the government of Great Britain and the Polish government, and the two
-governments therefore had been undertaking conversations between each
-other. On 31 March, the Prime Minister, Mr. Chamberlain, spoke in the
-House of Commons. He explained the results of the conversations that had
-been taking place between the British and Polish Governments:
-
- “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.” (_TC-72 No. 17_)
-
-On 6 April, a week later, a formal communique 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 Great Britain be attacked. (_TC-72 No.
-18_)
-
-The anxiety and concern that the governments of Poland and Great Britain
-were feeling at that time appears to have been justified. During the
-same week, on 3 April, an order, signed by Keitel, emanated from the
-High Command of the Armed Forces. It is dated Berlin, 3 April 1939. The
-subject is “Directive for the Armed Forces 1939/40.” The order reads:
-
- “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 ‘_Fall Weiss_’ [the code name for the operation against
- Poland] is attached herewith. The signature of the Fuehrer will
- be appended later.
-
- “The Fuehrer has added the following Directives to ‘_Fall
- Weiss_’:
-
- “1. Preparations must be made in such a way that the operations
- can be carried out at any time from 1st September 1939 onwards.
-
- “2. The High Command of the Armed Forces has been directed to
- draw up a precise timetable for ‘_Fall Weiss_’ and to arrange by
- conferences the synchronized timings between the three branches
- of the armed forces.
-
- “3. The plan of the branches of the Armed Forces and the details
- for the timetable must be submitted to the OKW by the 1st of
- May, 1939.” (C-120)
-
-This order was distributed to the OKH, OKM, and OKW.
-
-Another document, dated 11 April, and signed by Hitler, is annexed. It
-reads:
-
- “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.
-
- “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. ‘_Fall Weiss_’.
-
- “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.” (_C-120_)
-
-Again, copies of that document went to the OKH, OKM, and OKW. Annex I to
-this order, which concerns the safeguarding of the frontiers of the
-German Reich, declares:
-
- “* * * Legal Basis: It should be anticipated that a state of
- Defense or State of War, as defined in the Reichdefense 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.” (_C-120_)
-
-The statement of the Prime Minister in the House of Commons, followed by
-the Anglo-Polish communique of 6 April, was seized upon by the Nazi
-government to urge on the crisis which they were developing in Danzig
-between themselves and Poland.
-
-On 28 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. The following are pertinent
-passages from that memorandum:
-
- “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 had been concluded between the Polish
- government and the British government a temporary understanding
- to be released 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.” (_TC-72 No.
- 14_)
-
-The memorandum goes on to set out in the next three paragraphs the
-history of German friendship towards Poland. It continues:
-
- “* * * 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 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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.” (_TC-72 No.
- 14_)
-
-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 memorandum 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 for the return of Danzig, the autobahn, and the
-railway. It mentions the promise by Germany of the twenty-five year
-guarantee, and continues:
-
- “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, neighbourly 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 26 of January, 1934. Thereby,
- the Polish government arbitrarily and unilaterally rendered this
- declaration null and void.” (_TC-72 No. 14_)
-
-In the last paragraph the German government says, that nevertheless,
-they are prepared to continue friendly relations with Poland.
-
-On the same day that memorandum was issued, 28 April, Hitler made a
-speech in the Reichstag, in which he repeated, in effect, the terms of
-the memorandum. He repeated the demands and offers that Germany made in
-March, and went on to say that the Polish government have rejected his
-offer. He expressed his disappointment:
-
- “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. * *
- *” (_TC-72 No. 13_)
-
-The speech demonstrates how completely dishonest was everything that the
-German government was saying at that time. Hitler, who may very well
-have had a copy of the orders for “_Fall Weiss_” in his pocket as he
-spoke, announced publicly, 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 5 May. It sets out the objectives 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 states its
-awareness of the difficulties about Danzig and declares that it has long
-been ready to carry out discussions. The Polish government sets out
-again its part of the recent discussions. The Polish government states
-that it communicated its views to the German government on 26 March, and
-that it 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. The Poles stated their
-preparedness to examine the possibilities of a motor road and railway
-facilities. They received no reply to those proposals. The Polish
-position is summarized in one sentence:
-
- “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” (_TC-72 No. 16_).
-
-The Polish government proceeds to reject the German accusation that the
-Anglo-Polish agreement is incompatible with the 1934 German-Polish
-agreement. It states that Germany herself has entered into similar
-agreements with other nations, and lastly it announces that it is still
-willing to entertain a new pact with Germany, should Germany wish to do
-so. (_TC-72 No. 16_)
-
-The German answer was contained in a letter from the Supreme Commander
-of the Armed Forces, is signed by Hitler, and dated 10 May (_C-120_).
-Copies went to the various branches of the OKW, and with them apparently
-were enclosed “Instructions for the economic war and the protection of
-our own economy.” Not only were 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.
-
-This period of preparation, up to May 1939, concluded with the
-conference in the Reichschancellery on 23 May. The report of this
-meeting is known as the Schmundt Minutes (_L-79_). In his address to the
-conference Hitler cried out for _lebensraum_ and said that Danzig was
-not the dispute at all. It was a question of expanding their living room
-in the east, and he said that the decision had been taken to attack
-Poland.
-
-Goering, Raeder and Keitel, among many others, were present. The
-following is a significant paragraph:
-
- “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 Fuehrer
- doubts the possibility of a peaceful settlement with England.”
- (_L-79_)
-
-So that, not only has the decision been taken definitely to attack
-Poland, but almost equally definitely to attack England and France.
-
-C. _Final Preparations: June-September 1939_
-
-(1) _Final Preparations of the Armed Forces._ A precise timetable for
-the attack had been called for. On 22 June 1939 it was ready. It
-provided as follows:
-
- “The Supreme Command of the Armed Forces has submitted to the
- Fuehrer and Supreme Commander a ‘preliminary timetable’ for
- ‘_Fall Weiss_’ 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 Fuehrer and the 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 enquiries 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.” (_C-126_)
-
-All this became relevant later, when the German government made
-allegations of mobilization on the part of the Poles. This order shows
-that in June the Germans were mobilizing, only doing so secretly. The
-order continues:
-
- “For reasons of security the clearing of hospitals in the area
- of the frontier which the Supreme Command of the Army proposed
- should take place from the middle of July, must not be carried
- out.” (_C-126_)
-
-The order is signed by Keitel.
-
-A short letter, dated 2 August, which is attached to that order, reads
-in part:
-
- “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 ‘_Fall
- Weiss_’ remaining unchanged. F.O. U-Boats [Doenitz] is handing
- in his Operation Orders by 12 August.” (_C-126_)
-
-Another letter, dated 27 July, contains orders for the Air and Sea
-Forces for the occupation of the German Free City of Danzig. It
-provides:
-
- “The Fuehrer 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 the 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.” (_C-30_)
-
-The letter then sets out how the occupation is to be effected. All this
-again becomes more relevant in the subsequent discussion of the
-diplomatic action of the last few days before the war, when Germany was
-making specious offers for the settlement of the question by peaceful
-means. This letter is evidence that the decision had been taken, and
-that nothing would change that decision. 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.
-
-The reports which were coming back almost daily during this period from
-Mr. Shepherd, British Consul-General in Danzig, to the British Foreign
-Minister, and published in the British Blue Book, show the kind of thing
-that was happening. The report dated 1 July 1939 reads as follows:
-
- “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 fort, which constitute a
- popular public promenade on 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’ whilst he
- was roving Koenigsberg from 28th June to 30th June, observed
- considerable military activity, including extensive shipment of
- camouflaged covered lorries and similar material by small
- coasting vessels. On 28th June four medium-sized steamers,
- loaded with troops, lorries, field kitchens, etc., left
- Koenigsberg, ostensibly returning to Hamburg after maneuvers,
- but actually proceeding to Stettin.” (_TC-71_).
-
-And again, as another example, the report dated 10 July states:
-
- “The same informant, whom I believe to be reliable, advises me
- that on 8th July he personally saw about thirty 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 anti-aircraft guns in position, which he
- estimated as being of over 3-inch caliber, and three
- six-barreled light anti-aircraft machine guns. There were about
- 500 men drilling with rifles, and the whole place is extensively
- fortified with barbed wire.” (_TC-71_).
-
-On 12 and 13 August, when preparations were practically complete, Hitler
-and Ribbentrop at last disclosed their intentions to their allies, the
-Italians. It will be recalled that one of the passages in Hitler’s
-speech on 23 May, in regard to the proposed attack on Poland, had said,
-“Our object must be kept secret even from the Italians and the
-Japanese.” (_L-79_). Now, when the preparations were complete, Hitler
-disclosed his intentions to his Italian comrades in the hope that they
-would join him. Ciano was surprised at Hitler’s attempt to persuade the
-Italians to come into the war with him. He had no idea, as he said, of
-the urgency of the matter, and they are not prepared. He therefore tried
-to dissuade Hitler from starting off until the Duce could have a little
-more time to prepare himself. (_TC-77_)
-
-The minutes of that meeting show quite clearly the German intention to
-attack England and France ultimately, if not at the same time as Poland.
-In trying to show the strength of Germany and its certainty of winning
-the war as a means of persuading the Italians to come in, Hitler
-declared:
-
- “At sea, England had for the moment no immediate reinforcements
- in prospect. 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. 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 Fuehrer 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 hundreds of 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 Fuehrer 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. 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
- anti-tank and anti-aircraft defense and at the moment neither
- France nor England could help her in this respect.
-
- “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 Cracow, the population of their areas
- was different. 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 nine million Ukrainians, so that genuine Poles were much
- less in number than the total population and, as already said,
- their striking power was not to be valued highly. 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 eleven 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Coming back to the Danzig question, the Fuehrer said that it
- was impossible for him now to go back. 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 an appropriate sphere for Italy.
- For economic reasons also, Germany needed the foodstuffs and
- timber from these eastern regions.” (_TC-77_)
-
-Now the truth of this matter appears. It is not the persecution of
-German minorities on the Polish frontiers, but economic reasons—the
-need for foodstuffs and timber from Poland. The minutes of the
-Italo-German meeting continue:
-
- “In the case of Danzig, German interests were not only material,
- although the city had the greatest harbour in the Baltic. Danzig
- was a Nurnberg of the North, an ancient German city awakening
- sentimental feelings for every German, and the Fuehrer 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 Fuehrer’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, Ribbentrop 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 two or three years. If immediate conflict were
- 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.
-
- “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.” (_TC-77_)
-
-Thereafter, Ciano tried to dissuade Hitler from any immediate action. He
-argued further:
-
- “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.” (_TC-77_)
-
-The Fuehrer’s answer was clear:
-
- “The Fuehrer 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
- condition 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 September and Germany
- would not be able to do anything about it since they obviously
- could not bombard or destroy the place.” (_TC-77_)
-
-The Germans could not possibly bombard or destroy any place such as
-Danzig where there happened to be Germans living. The discussion
-continued:
-
- “Ciano asked how soon, according to the Fuehrer’s view, the
- Danzig question must be settled. The Fuehrer answered that this
- settlement must be made one way or another by the end of August.
- To the question of Ciano’s as to what solution the Fuehrer
- 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 Fuehrer
- 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.” (_TC-77_)
-
-The meeting was held over that night, and it continued on the following
-day:
-
- “The Fuehrer 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “As matters now stand, Germany and Italy would simply not exist
- further in the world through 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 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 already
- was the dominant power in the Mediterranean. On the other hand,
- the Fuehrer 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.
-
- “Ribbentrop 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 Fuehrer
- said that Poland must be struck down so that for 50 years she
- would be incapable of fighting. In such a case, matters in the
- West could be settled.
-
- “Ciano thanked the Fuehrer 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 Fuehrer believed that the conflict with
- Poland could be localized on the basis of long experience.
- He—Ciano—quite saw that so far the Fuehrer 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 Fuehrer 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 depended on the decision of the
- Fuehrer, and German reaction could follow it 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 Fuehrer 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 four 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
- dates on which he could begin to take action was the end of
- August.
-
- “Finally, the Fuehrer assured Ciano that since his youth he had
- favored German-Italian cooperation, and that no other view was
- expressed in his books. 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.”
- (_TC-77_)
-
-(2) _Economic Preparations._ If the military preparations were
-throughout this period nearing their completion, at the same time the
-economists had not been idle. A letter dated 25 August 1939, from Funk
-to the Feuhrer, reads:
-
- “My Fuehrer!
-
- “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 Goering, that you,
- my Fuehrer, 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
- Reichsbank 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 Reichsbank and of the whole of German economy abroad which
- it was possible to lay hands on. 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 Fuehrer.
-
- “Heil my Fuehrer /signed/ Walter Funk.” (_699-PS_)
-
-It is difficult in view of that letter to see how Funk can claim that he
-did not know of the preparations and of the intentions of the German
-government to wage war.
-
-(3) _The Obersalzburg Speech._ On 22 August 1939, Hitler addressed his
-commanders in chief at Obersalzburg. (_1014-PS_). At this date
-preparations were complete. In the course of his speech Hitler declared:
-
- “Everybody shall have to make a point of it that we were
- determined from the beginning to fight the Western powers.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Destruction of Poland in the foreground. The aim is 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “I shall give a propagandistic cause for starting the war—never
- mind whether it be plausible or not. The victor shall not be
- asked later on whether we told the truth or not. In starting and
- making a war, not the Right is what matters but Victory.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “It was clear to me that a conflict with Poland had to come
- sooner or later. I had already made this decision in spring, but
- I thought that I would first turn against the West in a few
- years, and only afterwards against the East.” (_1014-PS_)
-
-These passages 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.
-
-In another significant passage, Hitler stated:
-
- “We need not be afraid of a blockade. The East will supply us
- with grain, cattle, coal, lead and zinc. It is a big arm, which
- demands great efforts. I am only afraid that at the last minute
- some _Schweinehund_ will make a proposal for mediation.
-
- “The political arm 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Goering answers with thanks to the Fuehrer and the assurance
- that the armed forces will do their duty.” (_798-PS_)
-
-(4) _Diplomatic Preparations: Provoking the Crisis._ On 23 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. (_TC-72 No. 62_). That event was, of course, aimed at stirring up
-feeling in the Free City at that time.
-
-At the same time, frontier incidents were being manufactured by the Nazi
-Government with the aid of the SS. The affidavit of General Lahousen
-(_Affidavit A_) refers to the provision of Polish uniforms to the SS
-Forces for these purposes, so that dead Poles could be found lying about
-on the German side of the frontier. Three short reports found in the
-British Blue Book corroborate this affidavit. They are reports from the
-British ambassador in Warsaw.
-
-The first of them is dated 26 August, and reads:
-
- “Series of incidents again occurred yesterday on German
- frontier.
-
- “Polish patrol met party Germans one kilometre from 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 inspired leader, 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 defence. Facts spoke for themselves and acts of
- aggression came from German side. This was best answer to
- ravings of German press.
-
- “Ministry for Foreign Affairs state uniformed German detachment
- has since shot Pole across frontier and wounded another.”
- (_TC-72 No. 53_)
-
-The next report is dated the same date, 26 August and reads:
-
- “Ministry for Foreign Affairs categorically deny story recounted
- by Herr Hitler to French Ambassador that twenty-four Germans
- were recently killed at Lodz and eight at Bielsko. Story is
- without any foundation whatever.” (_TC-72 No. 54_)
-
-The report of the next day, 27 August, reads as follows:
-
- “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
- [when the rest of Czechoslovakia was seized] exacerbated feeling
- between the two nationalities. I suppose this has been done with
- 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 population in any commune.
-
- “8. In 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 Herr Hitler’s allegations regarding German minority are
- false.” (_TC-72 No. 55_)
-
-Further corroboration of General Lahousen’s affidavit is contained in a
-memorandum of a conversation between the writer and Keitel. That
-conversation with Keitel took place on 17 August, and went as follows:
-
- “I reported my conference with Jost to Keitel. He said that he
- would not pay any attention to this action, as the Fuehrer 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 that 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 Fuehrer, that he could not ask
- the Fuehrer 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.” (_795-PS_)
-
-That was the position at the end of the third week in August 1939. On 22
-August the Russian-German Non-aggression Pact was signed in Moscow. 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 25 of
-August.
-
-(5) _Pleas for peace._ On the same date, 22 August, news reached England
-that the German-Russian agreement was being signed. The significance of
-that pact from a military point of view as to Germany was obvious, and
-the British government immediately made their position clear in one last
-hope, that the German government might possibly think better. The Prime
-Minister wrote to Hitler as follows:
-
- “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 can
- not 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 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 illusion 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.” (_TC-72 No. 56_).
-
-The Prime Minister therefore urged the German government to try to solve
-the difficulty without recourse to the use of force. He suggested that a
-truce should be declared while direct discussions between the two
-governments, Polish and German, might take place. Prime Minister
-Chamberlain concluded:
-
- “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.” (_TC-72 No. 56_).
-
-On the following day, 23 August, Hitler replied to Prime Minister
-Chamberlain. He started off by saying that Germany has always sought
-England’s friendship, and went on to say that Germany, “like every other
-State, possesses certain definite interests which it is impossible to
-renounce.” The letter continued as follows:
-
- “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 allegations
- disseminated by England regarding a German mobilization against
- Poland, the assertion of aggressive designs towards Roumania,
- Hungary, etc., 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.
-
- “The atrocities which 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 legal obligations
- towards the Free City of Danzig, has made demands in the
- character of ultimata, and has initiated a process of economic
- strangulation.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Germany will not tolerate a continuance of the persecution of
- the Germans.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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 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.” (_TC-72 No. 60_).
-
-On 25 August the formal Anglo-Polish Agreement of Mutual Assistance was
-signed in London. Each government undertook to give assistance to the
-other in the event of aggression against either by any third power.
-(_TC-73 No. 91_)
-
-A few days later the French Prime Minister Daladier addressed a letter
-to Hitler, which reads as follows:
-
- “The French ambassador in Berlin has informed me of your
- personal communication * * *.
-
- “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.
-
- “You cannot doubt 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 cooperation 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 the German Nation with; you cannot doubt that France
- loyally fulfills her obligations towards 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, the 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 was
- 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 peoples; 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, towards 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.” (_TC-78_)
-
-On 27 August Hitler replied to M. Daladier’s letter of 26 August. The
-sense of it was very much the same as that which he wrote to the British
-Prime Minister in answer to the letter which he had received from him
-earlier in the week. (_TC-79_)
-
-After the letters from Chamberlain and Daladier, the German Government
-could no longer be in any doubt as to the position of both the British
-and French Governments in the event of German aggression against Poland.
-But the pleas for peace did not end there. On 24 August President
-Roosevelt wrote to both Hitler and to the President of the Polish
-Republic (_TC-72 No. 124_). His letter stated in part:
-
- “In the message which I sent to you on the 14th April, I stated
- that it appeared to me 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
- good will 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 Government 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; or
-
- “Third, that they agree to the solution of these controversies
- through the procedure of conciliation.” (_TC-72 No. 124_).
-
-Hitler’s answer to that letter was the order to his armed forces to
-invade Poland on the following morning. The reply to Mr. Roosevelt’s
-letter from the President of the Polish Republic, however, was an
-acceptance of the offer to settle the differences by any of the peaceful
-methods suggested. (_TC-72 No. 126_)
-
-On 25 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 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 is 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.” (_TC-72 No. 127_)
-
-But Germany would not accept those proposals, nor would it pay heed to
-the Pope’s appeal on the same date, 24 August (_TC-72 No. 139_). It is
-an appeal in similar terms. There was yet a further appeal from the Pope
-on 31 August:
-
- “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.” (_TC-72 No. 141_).
-
-Those negotiations, on the last days of August, to which the Pope
-referred as “pending negotiations”, were unhappily, completely bogus
-negotiations insofar as Germany was concerned. They were put forward
-simply as an endeavor to dissuade England, either by threat or by bribe,
-from meeting her obligations to Poland. The final German “offers” were
-no offers in the accepted sense of the word. There was never any
-intention behind them of entering into discussions, negotiation,
-arbitration, or any other form of peaceful settlement with Poland. They
-were merely an attempt to make it easier to seize and conquer Poland
-than it would likely be if England and France were to observe the
-obligations they had undertaken.
-
-(6) _Events of the Last Week in August, 1939._ This was the progress of
-those last negotiations: On 22 August the German-Soviet Pact was signed.
-On 24 August, orders were given to the German 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 signed a formal pact of nonaggression and of mutual
-assistance. Up until that time, the position was that the British Prime
-Minister had made a statement in the House of Commons and a joint
-communique had been issued, on 6 April, that the two nations would in
-fact assist one another if either were attacked; but no formal agreement
-had been signed.
-
-Now, on 24 August, after the orders to march had been given by Hitler,
-the news came that such a formal document had been signed. The invasion
-was thereupon postponed for the sole purpose of making one last effort
-to keep England and France out of the war—not to cancel the war, but
-solely to keep England and France out of it. On 25 August, having
-postponed the invasion, Hitler issued a verbal communique to Sir Neville
-Henderson, the British ambassador in Berlin, which was a mixture of
-bribe and threat, and with which he hoped to persuade England to keep
-out.
-
-On 28 August, Sir Neville Henderson handed the British Government’s
-reply to that communique to Hitler. That reply stressed that the
-differences ought to be settled by agreement. The British Government put
-forward the view that Danzig should be guaranteed, and that any
-agreement reached should be guaranteed by other powers. Whether or not
-these proposals would have been acceptable or unacceptable to Germany
-are of no great matter. For once it had been made clear—as it was in
-the British Government’s reply of 28 August—that England would not be
-put off assisting Poland in the event of German aggression, the German
-Government had no concern with further negotiation but was concerned
-only to afford itself some kind of justification and to prevent itself
-from appearing too blatantly to turn down all the appeals to reason that
-were being put forward.
-
-On 29 August, at 7:15 p. m. in the evening, Hitler handed to Sir Neville
-Henderson the German Government’s answer to the British Government’s
-reply of the 28th. It seems quite clear that the whole object of this
-letter was to put forward something which was quite unacceptable. Hitler
-agreed to enter into direct conversations as suggested by the British
-Government, but he demanded that those conversations must be based upon
-the return to the Reich, of Danzig and also of the whole of the
-Corridor.
-
-It will be recalled that hitherto, even when he had alleged that Poland
-had renounced the 1934 agreement, Hitler had put forward as his demands
-the return of Danzig alone, plus the arrangement for an
-extra-territorial Autobahn and railroad running through the Corridor to
-East Prussia. That demand was unacceptable at that time. To make quite
-certain of refusal, Hitler now demanded the whole of the Corridor. There
-was no question of an Autobahn or railway. The whole territory must
-become German.
-
-Even so, to make doubly certain that the offer would not be accepted,
-Hitler stated: “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 midnight
-tomorrow night, the 30th of August.”
-
-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, if
-indeed it were possible, to get authority to the Polish Ambassador in
-Berlin by midnight the following night. It allowed Poland no opportunity
-for discussing the matters at all. As Sir Neville Henderson described
-it, the offer amounted to an ultimatum.
-
-At midnight on 30 August, at the time by which the Polish
-Plenipotentiary was expected to arrive, Sir Neville Henderson handed a
-further message to Ribbentrop in reply to the message that had been
-handed to him the previous evening. 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, 31 August, Mr. Lipski, the Polish Ambassador, saw
-Ribbentrop, and could get no further than to be asked whether he came
-with full powers. When he replied that he did not, Ribbentrop said that
-he would put the position before the Fuehrer. But, in actual fact, it
-was much too late to put any position to the Fuehrer by that time,
-because on 31 August Hitler had already issued his Directive No. 1 for
-the conduct of war, in which he laid down H-Hour as being a quarter to
-five the following morning, 1 September. And on the evening of 31
-August, at 9 o’clock, the German radio broadcast the proposals which
-Ribbentrop had read out to Sir Neville 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 31 August was the first that the Poles had
-ever heard of the proposal, and it was the first that the British
-Government or its 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 while the broadcast was still in
-its course—a copy of those proposals was handed to Sir Neville
-Henderson for the first time.
-
-This summary of events during that last week of August 1939 is based
-upon the contents of several documents which will now be alluded to.
-
-In a pre-trial interrogation on 29 August 1945, Goering was asked 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, was it not fairly obvious that a peaceful
- solution was impossible?” (_TC-90_)
-
-This was Goering’s answer:
-
- “Yes, it seemed impossible according to my conviction, but not
- according to the convictions of the Fuehrer. When it was
- mentioned to the Fuehrer that England had given her guarantee to
- Poland, he said that England was also guaranteeing Rumania, 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 Fuehrer 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 four or five days?’ At this same time—I don’t know
- whether you know about that, Colonel—I was in connection 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.” (_TC-90_)
-
-The interrogation of Goering proceeded as follows:
-
- “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 some time between the 15th and 20th
- of August 1939 after the signing of the treaty with Soviet
- Russia.’ [The dates obviously are wrong].
-
- “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.’” (_TC-90_)
-
-In this interrogation Goering purported not to have wanted war with
-England. It will be recalled, however, that after the speech of Hitler
-on 22 August to his commanders-in-chief, Goering got up and thanked the
-Fuehrer for his exhortation and assured him that the armed forces would
-play their part. (_798-PS_)
-
-Hitler’s verbal communique, as it is called in the British Blue Book,
-which he handed to Sir Neville Henderson on 25 August, after he had
-heard of the signing of the Anglo-Polish agreement, in an endeavor to
-keep England from aiding Poland, commences by stating Hitler’s desire to
-make one more effort to prevent war. In the second paragraph he asserts
-again that Poland’s provocations were unbearable:
-
- “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, but 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.
- 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
- period of war.” (_TC-72 No. 68_)
-
-Then comes the bribe.
-
- “The Fuehrer 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. * * *” (_TC-72
- No. 68_)
-
-Again Hitler stressed irrevocable determination never to enter into war
-with Russia. He concluded as follows:
-
- “If the British Government would consider these ideas a blessing
- for Germany and also for the British empire, a peace might
- result. If it rejects these ideas there will be war. In no case
- will Great Britain emerge stronger; the last war proved it. The
- Fuehrer repeats that he himself is a man of ad infinitum
- decisions by which he is bound, and that this is his last
- offer.” (_TC-72 No. 68_)
-
-The British Government was not of course aware of the real object that
-lay behind that message, and, taking it at its face value, wrote back oh
-28 August saying that they were prepared to enter into discussions. They
-agreed with Hitler that the differences must be settled, as follows:
-
- “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 22nd 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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.” (_TC-72
- No. 74_)
-
-That reply knocked the German hopes on the head. The Nazis had failed
-despite 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 face as much as
-possible.
-
-In his interview with Hitler, Sir Neville Henderson emphasized the
-British attitude that they were determined in any event to meet their
-obligations to Poland. The interview concluded as follows:
-
- “In the end I asked him two straight questions: Was he willing
- to negotiate direct with the Poles? and Was he ready to discuss
- the question of any exchange of population? He replied in the
- affirmative as regards the latter. There I have no doubt that he
- was thinking at the same time of a rectification of frontiers.
- As regards to 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 Goering to discuss it with him.’” (_TC-72
- No. 75_)
-
-The German reply, as outlined before, was handed to Sir Neville
-Henderson at 7.15 P. M. on 29 August. The reply sets out the suggestion
-submitted by the British Government in a previous note, and goes on to
-say that the German Government is prepared to enter into discussion on
-the basis that the whole of the Corridor as well as Danzig shall be
-returned to the Reich. The reply continues:
-
- “The demands of the German Government are in conformity with the
- revision of the Versailles Treaty in regard to this territory
- which has always been recognized as being necessary; viz.,
- return of Danzig and the Corridor to Germany, the safeguarding
- of the existence of the German national group in the territories
- remaining to Poland.” (_TC-72 No. 78_)
-
-It is only just now, as I emphasized before, that the right to the
-Corridor has been “recognized” for so long. On 28 April, Hitler demands
-consisted only of Danzig, the Autobahn, and the railway. But now
-Hitler’s aim was to manufacture justification and to put forth proposals
-which under no circumstances could either Poland or Great Britain
-accept. The note states:
-
- “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 makes 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 discussions. 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “For the rest, in making these proposals the German Government
- have never had any intention of touching Poland’s vital
- interests of questioning the existence of an independent Polish
- State. The German Government, accordingly, in these
- circumstances agree to accept the British Government’s offer of
- their good offices in securing the despatch 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 negotiators.” (_TC-72 No. 78_)
-
-That was at 7:15 in the evening of 29 August. As previously explained,
-insufficient time was allowed for the Polish Emissary to reach Berlin by
-midnight the following night.
-
-Sir Neville Henderson’s account of his interview on the evening of 29
-August summarizes what took place then:
-
- “I remarked that this phrase 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
- urgency of the moment when the two fully mobilized armies were
- standing face to face.” (_TC-72 No. 79_)
-
-Again the British Government replied and Sir Neville Henderson handed
-this reply to Ribbentrop at the famous meeting on midnight of 30 August,
-at the time the Polish Emissary had been expected. The reply stated that
-the British Government reciprocated the desire for improved relations.
-It stressed again that it cannot sacrifice its interest to other friends
-in order to obtain an improvement in the situation. It understood that
-the German Government accepts the condition that the settlement should
-be subject to international guarantee. The British Government makes a
-reservation as to the demands that the Germans put forward in their last
-letter, and is informing the Polish Government immediately. Lastly, the
-British understand that the German Government is drawing up the
-proposals. (_TC-72 No. 89_)
-
-Sir Neville Henderson gave this account of that interview at midnight on
-30 August:
-
- “I told Herr von Ribbentrop this evening that His Majesty’s
- Government found it difficult to advise Polish Government to
- accept procedure adumbrated in German reply, and suggested that
- he should adopt normal contact, i.e., that when German proposals
- were ready to invite 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 basis
- afforded prospect of settlement His Majesty’s Government could
- be counted upon to do their best in Warsaw to temporize
- negotiations.
-
- “Herr von 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 sixteen or more articles which it contained.
- Though I cannot therefore guarantee accuracy the main points
- were: * * *”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “When I asked Herr von Ribbentrop for text of these proposals in
- accordance with undertaking 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 matter in this way meant that request
- for Polish representative to arrive in Berlin on 30th August
- constituted in fact, an ultimatum in spite of what he and Herr
- Hitler had assured me yesterday. This he denied, saying that
- idea of an ultimatum was figment of my imagination. Why then I
- asked could he not adopt normal procedure and give me copy of
- proposals and ask Polish Ambassador to call on him, just as Herr
- Hitler had summoned me a few days ago, and hand them to him for
- communication to Polish Government. In the most violent terms
- Herr von Ribbentrop said that he would never ask the Ambassador
- to visit him. He hinted that if 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
- Herr Hitler’s notice. It was for Chancellor to decide.
-
- “We parted on that note, but I must tell you that Herr von
- Ribbentrop’s demeanor during an unpleasant interview was aping
- Herr Hitler at his worst. He inveighed incidentally against
- Polish mobilization, but I retorted that it was hardly
- surprising since Germany had also mobilized as Herr Hitler
- himself had admitted to me yesterday.” (_TC-72 No. 92_)
-
-Henderson of course did not know at that time that Germany had also
-given the orders to attack Poland some days before. On the following
-day, 31 August, at 6:30 in the evening, M. Lipski, the Polish
-Ambassador, had an interview with Ribbentrop. This is M. Lipski’s
-account of the conversation:
-
- “I carried out my instructions. M. von 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, August 30. I replied that I had no
- direct information on the subject. In conclusion M. von
- Ribbentrop repeated that he had thought I would be empowered to
- negotiate. He would communicate my demarche to the Chancellor.”
- (_TC-73 No. 112_)
-
-But it was too late. The orders had already been given on that day to
-the German Army to invade. A “Most Secret order” signed by Hitler,
-described as his “Direction No. 1 for the conduct of the war,” dated 31
-August 1939, reads in part:
-
- “Now that all the political possibilities of disposing by
- peaceful means of a situation of the Eastern Frontier which is
- intolerable for Germany are exhausted, I have determined on a
- solution by force.
-
- “The attack on Poland is to be carried out in accordance with
- the preparations made for ‘_Fall Weiss_’, 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.
-
- “Date of attack—1 September 1939
-
- “Time of attack—04:45 [inserted in red pencil]
-
- “This time also applies to the operation at Gdynia, Bay of
- Danzig and the Dirschau Bridge.
-
- “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.” (_C-126_)
-
-That evening, 31 August, at nine o’clock, the German radio broadcast the
-terms of the German proposals about which they were willing to enter
-into discussions with the Polish Government. The proposals were set out
-at length. By this time, neither Sir Neville Henderson nor the Polish
-Government nor their Ambassador had yet been given their written copy of
-them. This is a document which seems difficult to explain other than as
-an exhibition or an example of hypocrisy. The second paragraph states:
-
- “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.”
-
-The manner in which they did that has been shown. The German Broadcast
-continued, that instead of the arrival of an authorized Polish
-personage, the first answer the Government of the Reich received to
-their readiness for an understanding was the news of the Polish
-mobilization; and that only toward 12 o’clock on the night of 30 August
-1939 did they receive a somewhat general assurance of British readiness
-to help towards the commencement of negotiations. The fact that the
-Polish negotiator expected by the Reich did not arrive, removed the
-necessary conditions for informing His Majesty’s Government of the views
-of the German Government as regards the 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 for
-negotiation in the event of the arrival of the Polish Plenipotentiary.
-The Broadcast thereafter went on to set out the Nazi version of the
-story of the negotiations over the last few days. (_TC-73 No. 113_)
-
-On 1 September, when his armies were already crossing the Polish
-frontier, Hitler issued this proclamation to his Armed Forces:
-
- “The Polish Government, unwilling to establish good neighborly
- relations as aimed at by me, wants 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 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.” (_TC-54_)
-
-So 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 view shall not appear, asked later on, whether we told the
- truth or not. Might is what counts—or victory is what counts
- and not right.” (_1014-PS_)
-
-On that day, 1 September, when news came of this invasion of Polish
-ground, the British Government, in accordance with their treaty
-obligations, sent an ultimatum to the German Government, in which it
-stated:
-
- “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 fulfill their obligations to Poland.” (_TC-72 No.
- 110_)
-
-At 9 o’clock on 3 September the British Government handed a final
-ultimatum to the German Minister of Foreign Affairs. It read in part:
-
- “* * * Although this communication was made more than
- twenty-four 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
- eleven o’clock, British Summer Time, today 3d 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.” (_TC-72 No. 118_)
-
-And so it was that at 11 o’clock on 3 September a state of war existed
-between Germany and England and between Germany and France. The plans,
-preparations, intentions, and determination to carry out this assault
-upon Poland which had been going on for months, for years before, had
-come to fruition despite all appeals to peace, all appeals to reason. It
-mattered not what anybody but the German Government had in mind or
-whatever rights anybody else but the German nation thought they had. If
-there is any doubt left about this matter, two more documents remain for
-consideration. Even now, on 3 September, Mussolini offered some chance
-of peace. At 6:30 hours on 3 September Mussolini sent a telegram to
-Hitler:
-
- “The Italian Ambassador handed to the State Secretary at the
- Duce’s order following copy for the Fuehrer and Reich Chancellor
- and for the Reich Minister for Foreign Affairs:
-
- “Italy sends the information, leaving, of course, every decision
- to the Fuehrer, that it still has a chance to call a conference
- with France, England and Poland on following basis: 1. Armistice
- which would leave the Army Corps where they are at present. 2.
- Calling the conference within two or three days. 3. Solution of
- the Polish-German controversy which 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 its ‘moral satisfaction.’ If it 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.” (_1831-PS_)
-
-Perhaps even Mussolini did not appreciate what all Germany’s aims were,
-for his offer was turned down in the illuminating letter which Hitler
-was to write in reply:
-
- “Duce:
-
- “I first want to thank you for your last attempt at 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 two
- 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 year or one 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 fields that the
- Polish Army will collapse in a very short time. I doubt whether
- this fast success could be achieved in one or two 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 anymore. 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 the 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 Socialist 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 in unimportant
- tasks, but direct all on acts in the light of great operational
- considerations. The Northern Polish Army which is 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.” (_1831-PS_)
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO AGGRESSION AGAINST
- POLAND, DANZIG, ENGLAND AND FRANCE
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6 (a). │ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Sections IV (F) │ │
- │ 4; V. │ I │ 26, 29
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document was referred to during the │ │
- │trial but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
-  *386-PS │Notes on a conference with Hitler in the│ │
- │Reich Chancellery, Berlin, 5 November │ │
- │1937, signed by Hitler’s adjutant, │ │
- │Hossbach, and dated 10 November 1937. │ │
- │(USA 25) │ III │ 295
- │ │ │
-  *388-PS │File of papers on Case Green (the plan │ │
- │for the attack on Czechoslovakia), kept │ │
- │by Schmundt, Hitler’s adjutant, │ │
- │April-October 1938. (USA 26) │ III │ 305
- │ │ │
-  *699-PS │Letter from Funk to Hitler, 25 August │ │
- │1939, reporting on economic affairs. (GB│ │
- │49) │ III │ 509
- │ │ │
-  *789-PS │Speech of the Fuehrer at a conference, │ │
- │23 November 1939, to which all Supreme │ │
- │Commanders were ordered. (USA 23) │ III │ 572
- │ │ │
-  *795-PS │Keitel’s conference, 17 August 1939, │ │
- │concerning giving Polish uniforms to │ │
- │Heydrich. (GB 54) │ III │ 580
- │ │ │
-  *798-PS │Hitler’s speech to Commanders-in-Chief, │ │
- │at Obersalzberg, 22 August 1939. (USA │ │
- │29) │ III │ 581
- │ │ │
- *1014-PS │Hitler’s speech to Commanders-in-Chief, │ │
- │22 August 1939. (USA 30) │ III │ 665
- │ │ │
- *1639-A-PS │Mobilization book for the Civil │ │
- │Administration, 1939 Edition, issued │ │
- │over signature of Keitel. (USA 777) │ IV │ 143
- │ │ │
- *1780-PS │Excerpts from diary kept by General │ │
- │Jodl, January 1937 to August 1939. (USA │ │
- │72) │ IV │ 360
- │ │ │
-  1796-PS │Notes to the War Diary from March 1939 │ │
- │to January 1940. │ IV │ 370
- │ │ │
-  1822-PS │Telegram from Minister of Foreign │ │
- │Affairs in Rome to Minister of Foreign │ │
- │Affairs in Berlin, 25 August 1939, │ │
- │concerning conference with Mussolini and│ │
- │Ciano. │ IV │ 459
- │ │ │
-  1823-PS │Hitler reply to Mussolini, 27 August │ │
- │1939, concerning attitude of Italy in │ │
- │conference of 25 August 1939. │ IV │ 462
- │ │ │
-  1828-PS │Memorandum handed to German Foreign │ │
- │Office by Count Magistrate in Rome, 7 │ │
- │August 1939. │ IV │ 463
- │ │ │
- *1831-PS │Correspondence between Hitler and │ │
- │Mussolini, September 1939. (GB 75) │ IV │ 463
- │ │ │
-  1832-PS │Telephone report of Reich Minister for │ │
- │Foreign Affairs in Rome, 27 August 1939.│ IV │ 468
- │ │ │
-  1889-PS │Account of conference of Fuehrer and │ │
- │Italian Ambassador Attolico, 31 August │ │
- │1939. │ IV │ 528
- │ │ │
- *2327-PS │Two top secret memoranda, 14 June 1939, │ │
- │concerning operation “Fall Weiss”. (USA │ │
- │539) │ IV │ 1035
- │ │ │
- *2357-PS │Speech by Hitler before Reichstag, 20 │ │
- │February 1938, published in Documents of│ │
- │German Politics, Part VI, 1, pp. 50-52. │ │
- │(GB 30) │ IV │ 1099
- │ │ │
- *2368-PS │Hitler’s speech before Reichstag, 30 │ │
- │January 1937, published in Documents of │ │
- │German Politics, Part VI, 2, p. 42. (GB │ │
- │26) │ IV │ 1102
- │ │ │
- *2530-PS │Ribbentrop’s speech in Warsaw, 25 │ │
- │January 1939, published in Voelkischer │ │
- │Beobachter, 1 February 1939. (GB 36) │ V │ 267
- │ │ │
- *2751-PS │Affidavit of Alfred Naujocks, 20 │ │
- │November 1945. (USA 482) │ V │ 390
- │ │ │
-  2817-PS │Telegram from German Embassy, Rome, to │ │
- │Ribbentrop, concerning answer of Duce to│ │
- │Hitler’s second letter, 27 August 1939. │ V │ 452
- │ │ │
- *2818-PS │Secret additional protocol to the │ │
- │Friendship and Alliance Pact between │ │
- │Germany and Italy. (GB 292) │ V │ 453
- │ │ │
-  2834-PS │Letter from Mussolini to Fuehrer, 25 │ │
- │August 1939. │ V │ 502
- │ │ │
- *2835-PS │German Foreign Office memorandum on │ │
- │conversation between Ribbentrop and the │ │
- │Duce, 10 March 1940. (GB 291) │ V │ 502
- │ │ │
- *2846-PS │Affidavit of Edwin Lahousen, 13 November│ │
- │1945. │ V │ 507
- │ │ │
- *2897-PS │Telegram from German Ambassador in │ │
- │Tokyo, Ott, to Ribbentrop, 13 July 1941.│ │
- │(USA 156) │ V │ 566
- │ │ │
- *3054-PS │“The Nazi Plan”, script of a motion │ │
- │picture composed of captured German │ │
- │film. (USA 167) │ V │ 801
- │ │ │
- *C-23 │Unsigned documents found in official │ │
- │Navy files containing notes year by year│ │
- │from 1927 to 1940 on reconstruction of │ │
- │the German Navy, and dated 18 February │ │
- │1938, 8 March 1938, September 1938. (USA│ │
- │49) │ VI │ 827
- │ │ │
- *C-30 │Air-Sea Forces Orders for Occupation │ │
- │Danzig, 27 July 1939. (GB 46) │ VI │ 831
- │ │ │
- *C-120 │Directives for Armed Forces 1939-40 for │ │
- │“Fall Weiss”, operation against Poland. │ │
- │(GB 41) │ VI │ 916
- │ │ │
- *C-126 │Preliminary Time Table for “Fall Weiss” │ │
- │and directions for secret mobilization. │ │
- │(GB 45) │ VI │ 932
- │ │ │
- *C-137 │Keitel’s appendix of 24 November 1938 to│ │
- │Hitler Order of 21 October 1938. (GB 33)│ VI │ 949
- │ │ │
- *C-142 │Intention of the Army High Command and │ │
- │Orders, signed by Brauchitsch. (USA 538)│ VI │ 956
- │ │ │
- *C-172 │Order No. 1 for “Fall Weiss” signed by │ │
- │Doenitz. (GB 189) │ VI │ 1002
- │ │ │
- *C-175 │OKW Directive for Unified Preparation │ │
- │for War 1937-1938, with covering letter │ │
- │from von Blomberg, 24 June 1937. (USA │ │
- │69) │ VI │ 1006
- │ │ │
- *D-738 │Memorandum on second conference between │ │
- │German Foreign Minister with Hungarian │ │
- │Prime and Foreign Minister on 1 May │ │
- │1939. (GB 290) │ VII │ 193
- │ │ │
- *L-43 │Air Force “Organizational Study 1950”, 2│ │
- │May 1938. (GB 29) (See Chart No. 10.) │ VII │ 788
- │ │ │
- *L-79 │Minutes of conference, 23 May 1939, │ │
- │“Indoctrination on the political │ │
- │situation and future aims”. (USA 27) │ VII │ 847
- │ │ │
- *L-172 │“The Strategic Position at the Beginning│ │
- │of the 5th Year of War”, a lecture │ │
- │delivered by Jodl on 7 November 1943 at │ │
- │Munich to Reich and Gauleiters. (USA 34)│ VIII │ 920
- │ │ │
- *R-100 │Minutes of instructions given by Hitler │ │
- │to General von Brauchitsch on 25 March │ │
- │1939. (USA 121) │ VIII │ 83
- │ │ │
- *TC-2 │Hague Convention (1) for Pacific │ │
- │Settlement of International │ │
- │Disputes—1907. (GB 2) │ VIII │ 276
- │ │ │
- *TC-3 │Hague Convention (3) Relative to opening│ │
- │of Hostilities. (GB 2) │ VIII │ 279
- │ │ │
- *TC-9 │Versailles Treaty, Section XI, Article │ │
- │100, Free City of Danzig. (GB 3) │ VIII │ 290
- │ │ │
- *TC-15 │Arbitration Treaty between Germany and │ │
- │Poland at Locarno, 16 October 1925. (GB │ │
- │16) │ VIII │ 331
- │ │ │
- *TC-18 │Declaration concerning wars of │ │
- │aggression; resolution of 3rd Committee │ │
- │of League of Nations, 24 September 1927.│ │
- │(GB 17) │ VIII │ 357
- │ │ │
- *TC-19 │Kellogg-Briand Pact at Paris. 1929 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part II, No. 9, pp. │ │
- │97-101. (GB 18) │ VIII │ 359
- │ │ │
- *TC-21 │German-Polish Declaration, 26 January │ │
- │1934. (GB 24) │ VIII │ 368
- │ │ │
- *TC-28 │German assurance to Czechoslovakia, 26 │ │
- │September 1938, from Documents of German│ │
- │Politics, Part VI, pp. 345-346. (GB 22) │ VIII │ 378
- │ │ │
- *TC-29 │German assurances to Poland, 26 │ │
- │September 1938, from Documents of German│ │
- │Politics, Part VI, p. 336. (GB 32) │ VIII │ 378
- │ │ │
- *TC-53-A │Marginal note to decree of final │ │
- │incorporation of Memel with German │ │
- │Reich, 23 March 1939, from Documents of │ │
- │German Politics, Part VII, p. 552. (GB │ │
- │4) │ VIII │ 408
- │ │ │
- *TC-54 │Proclamation of the Fuehrer to German │ │
- │Armed Forces, 1 September 1939. (GB 73) │ VIII │ 408
- │ │ │
- *TC-70 │Hitler’s Reichstag speech concerning │ │
- │agreement with Poland, 30 January 1934, │ │
- │from Voelkischer Beobachter, 31 January │ │
- │1934. (GB 25) │ VIII │ 433
- │ │ │
- *TC-71 │Reports of British Consul in Danzig, │ │
- │July 1939. (GB 47) │ VIII │ 434
- │ │ │
- *TC-72 No. 13 │British Blue Book. Hitler’s Reichstag │ │
- │speech, 28 April 1939. (GB 43) │ VIII │ 438
- │ │ │
- *TC-72 No. 14 │British Blue Book. German memorandum │ │
- │renouncing 1934 agreement, 28 April │ │
- │1939. (GB 42) │ VIII │ 441
- │ │ │
- *TC-72 No. 16 │British Blue Book. Polish Government’s │ │
- │reply, 5 May 1939, to 28 April memo. (GB│ │
- │44) │ VIII │ 445
- │ │ │
- *TC-72 No. 17 │British Blue Book. British Prime │ │
- │Minister’s statement in House of │ │
- │Commons, 31 March 1939. (GB 39) │ VIII │ 450
- │ │ │
- *TC-72 No. 18 │British Blue Book. Anglo-Polish │ │
- │communique issued 6 April 1939. (GB 40) │ VIII │ 450
- │ │ │
- *TC-72 No. 53 │British Blue Book. Report of British │ │
- │Ambassador, Warsaw, 26 August 1939. (GB │ │
- │51) │ VIII │ 451
- │ │ │
- *TC-72 No. 54 │British Blue Book. Report of British │ │
- │Ambassador, Warsaw, 26 August 1939. (GB │ │
- │52) │ VIII │ 452
- │ │ │
- *TC-72 No. 55 │British Blue Book. Report of British │ │
- │Ambassador, Warsaw, 27 August 1939. (GB │ │
- │53) │ VIII │ 452
- │ │ │
- *TC-72 No. 56 │British Blue Book. British Prime │ │
- │Minister’s letter to Hitler, 22 August │ │
- │1939. (GB 55) │ VIII │ 453
- │ │ │
- *TC-72 No. 60 │British Blue Book. Hitler’s reply to │ │
- │British Prime Minister, 23 August 1939. │ │
- │(GB 56) │ VIII │ 455
- │ │ │
- *TC-72 No. 62 │British Blue Book. Danzig Senate Decree │ │
- │appointing Forster Head of State, 23 │ │
- │August 1939. (GB 50) │ VIII │ 457
- │ │ │
- *TC-72 No. 68 │British Blue Book. Hitler’s verbal │ │
- │communique to Sir Neville Henderson, 25 │ │
- │August 1939. (GB 65) │ VIII │ 458
- │ │ │
- *TC-72 No. 74 │British Blue Book. British Government’s │ │
- │reply, 28 August 1939, to Hitler’s │ │
- │message of 25 August. (GB 66) │ VIII │ 460
- │ │ │
- *TC-72 No. 75 │British Blue Book. Hitler and Sir N. │ │
- │Henderson conversation, 28 August 1939. │ │
- │(GB 67) │ VIII │ 463
- │ │ │
- *TC-72 No. 78 │British Blue Book. Hitler’s reply to │ │
- │British Government, 29 August 1939. (GB │ │
- │68) │ VIII │ 466
- │ │ │
- *TC-72 No. 79 │British Blue Book. Hitler and Sir N. │ │
- │Henderson conversation, 29 August 1939. │ │
- │(GB 69) │ VIII │ 469
- │ │ │
- *TC-72 No. 89 │British Blue Book. British Government’s │ │
- │reply, 30 August 1939, to German │ │
- │communication of 29 August. (GB 70) │ VIII │ 470
- │ │ │
- *TC-72 No. 92 │British Blue Book. Ribbentrop and Sir N.│ │
- │Henderson conversation, midnight 30 │ │
- │August 1939. (GB 71) │ VIII │ 472
- │ │ │
- *TC-72 No. 110 │British Blue Book. British Government’s │ │
- │ultimatum, 1 September 1939. (GB 74) │ VIII │ 473
- │ │ │
-  TC-72 No. 113 │British Blue Book. Copy German proposals│ │
- │handed to Sir N. Henderson 9:15 P.M., 31│ │
- │August 1939. │ VIII │ 474
- │ │ │
-  TC-72 No. 118 │British Blue Book. British Government’s │ │
- │final ultimatum, 3 September 1939. │ VIII │ 474
- │ │ │
- *TC-72 No. 124 │British Blue Book. President Roosevelt’s│ │
- │appeal to Hitler, 24 August 1939. (GB │ │
- │59) │ VIII │ 475
- │ │ │
- *TC-72 No. 126 │British Blue Book. President Moscicki’s │ │
- │reply to President Roosevelt, │ │
- │25 August 1939. (GB 60) │ VIII │ 476
- │ │ │
- *TC-72 No. 127 │British Blue Book. President Roosevelt’s│ │
- │second appeal to Hitler, 25 August 1939.│ │
- │(GB 61) │ VIII │ 477
- │ │ │
- *TC-72 No. 139 │British Blue Book. The Pope’s appeal, 24│ │
- │August 1939. (GB 62) │ VIII │ 477
- │ │ │
- *TC-72 No. 141 │British Blue Book. The Pope’s appeal, 31│ │
- │August 1939. (GB 63) │ VIII │ 480
- │ │ │
- *TC-73 No. 33 │Polish White Book. German-Polish │ │
- │communique, 5 November 1937. (GB 27) │ VIII │ 480
- │ │ │
- *TC-73 No. 44 │Polish White Book. Lipski, Ribbentrop │ │
- │luncheon, conversation, 24 October 1938.│ │
- │(GB 27-A) │ VIII │ 483
- │ │ │
- *TC-73 No. 45 │Polish White Book. Beck’s instructions │ │
- │to Lipski, 31 October 1938. (GB 27-B) │ VIII │ 484
- │ │ │
- *TC-73 No. 48 │Polish White Book. Beck and Hitler │ │
- │conversation, 5 January 1939. (GB 34) │ VIII │ 486
- │ │ │
- *TC-73 No. 49 │Polish White Book. Beck and Ribbentrop │ │
- │conversation, 6 January 1939. (GB 35) │ VIII │ 488
- │ │ │
- *TC-73 No. 57 │Polish White Book. Hitler’s Reichstag │ │
- │speech, 30 January 1939. (GB 37) │ VIII │ 488
- │ │ │
- *TC-73 No. 61 │Polish White Book. Ribbentrop and Lipski│ │
- │conversation, 21 March 1939. (GB 38) │ VIII │ 489
- │ │ │
- *TC-73 No. 91 │Polish White Book. Anglo-Polish │ │
- │Agreement, 25 August 1939. (GB 57) │ VIII │ 492
- │ │ │
- *TC-73 No. 112 │Polish White Book. Ribbentrop-Lipski │ │
- │conversation, 31 August 1939. (GB 72) │ VIII │ 494
- │ │ │
-  TC-73 No. 113 │Polish White Book. German broadcast 9 │ │
- │P.M. 31 August 1939. │ VIII │ 495
- │ │ │
- *TC-75 │Memo for the Fuehrer, 2 January 1938, │ │
- │concerning Anglo-German relations. (GB │ │
- │28) │ VIII │ 513
- │ │ │
- *TC-76 │Note for Reichsminister, 26 August 1938.│ │
- │(GB 31) │ VIII │ 515
- │ │ │
- *TC-77 │Memorandum of conversation between │ │
- │Hitler, Ribbentrop and Ciano, 12 August │ │
- │1939. (GB 48) │ VIII │ 516
- │ │ │
- *TC-78 │French Prime Minister’s letter to │ │
- │Hitler, 26 August 1939. (GB 58) │ VIII │ 529
- │ │ │
- *TC-79 │Hitler’s reply to French Prime Minister,│ │
- │27 August 1939. (GB 58) │ VIII │ 531
- │ │ │
- *TC-90 │Goering’s interrogation, 29 August 1945.│ │
- │(GB 64) │ VIII │ 534
- │ │ │
- *TC-91 │Ribbentrop’s interrogation, 29 August │ │
- │1945. (GB 276) │ VIII │ 535
- │ │ │
- Affidavit A │Affidavit of Erwin Lahousen, 21 January │ │
- │1946, substantially the same as his │ │
- │testimony on direct examination before │ │
- │the International Military Tribunal at │ │
- │Nurnberg 30 November and 1 December │ │
- │1945. │ VIII │ 587
- │ │ │
- *Chart No. 10 │1938 Proposals for Luftwaffe Expansion │ │
- │1938-1950. (L-43; GB 29) │ VIII │ 779
- │ │ │
-**Chart No. 12 │German Aggression. (Enlargement │ │
- │displayed to Tribunal.) │ VIII │ 781
- │ │ │
-**Chart No. 13 │Violations of Treaties, Agreements and │ │
- │Assurances. (Enlargement displayed to │ │
- │Tribunal.) │ VIII │ 782
-
-
- 9. AGGRESSION AGAINST NORWAY AND DENMARK
-
-In the early hours of the morning of 9 April 1940 Nazi Germany invaded
-Norway and Denmark. Those invasions constituted wars of aggression, and
-also wars in violation of international treaties, agreements, and
-assurances.
-
-A. _Treaties and Assurances Violated._
-
-The invasions constituted violations of the Hague Convention and of the
-Kellogg-Briand Pact. In addition there were specific agreements between
-Germany and Norway and Denmark. There was the Treaty of Arbitration and
-Conciliation between Germany and Denmark, which was signed at Berlin on
-2 June, 1926 (_TC-17_). The first Article of that Treaty 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.” (_TC-17_)
-
-The remaining Articles deal with the machinery for arbitration.
-
-There was also the treaty of nonaggression between Germany and Denmark
-which was signed by Ribbentrop on 31 May 1939, ten weeks after the Nazi
-seizure of Czechoslovakia (_TC-24_). The preamble and Articles 1 and 2
-read as follows:
-
- “His Majesty the King of Denmark and Iceland and the Chancellor
- of the German Reich,
-
- “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: His Majesty the King of Denmark and Iceland
- and the Chancellor of the German Reich.
-
- “Article I: The Kingdom of Denmark and the German Reich 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.
-
- “Article II: The Treaty shall come into force on the exchange of
- the instruments of ratification and shall remain in force for a
- period of ten years from that date.” (_TC-24_)
-
-The Treaty is dated 31 May 1939. At the bottom of the page there appears
-the signature of Ribbentrop. The invasion of Denmark by the Nazi forces
-less than a year after the signature of this treaty showed the utter
-worthlessness of treaties to which Ribbentrop put his signature.
-
-With regard to Norway, Ribbentrop and the Nazi conspirators were party
-to a similar perfidy. Hitler gave an assurance to Denmark, Norway, and
-the Netherlands on 28 April 1939 (_TC-30_). That, of course, was after
-the annexation of Czechoslovakia had shaken the confidence of the world,
-and was presumably an attempt to try to reassure the Scandinavian
-States. Hitler said:
-
- “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
- the 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 Holland, Belgium, Switzerland, Denmark, etc.”
- (_TC-30_)
-
-A further assurance was given by the Nazi Government on 2 September
-1939, the day after the Nazi invasion of Poland. On that day an aide
-memoire was handed to the Norwegian Foreign Minister by the German
-Minister in Oslo. It reads:
-
- “The German Reich Government is 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
- expects, on its side, that Norway will observe an unimpeachable
- neutrality towards the Reich and will not tolerate any breaches
- of Norwegian neutrality by any third party which might occur.
- Should the attitude of the Royal Norwegian Government differ
- from this so that any such breach of neutrality by a third party
- recurs, the Reich Government would then obviously be compelled
- to safeguard the interests of the Reich in such a way as the
- resulting situation might dictate.” (_TC-31_)
-
-There followed a further German assurance to Norway in a speech by
-Hitler on 6 October 1939 in which 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 nonaggression
- pacts by Germany and have both refused them solely because they
- do not feel themselves threatened in any way.” (_TC-32_)
-
-These treaties and assurances were the diplomatic background to the Nazi
-aggression on Norway and Denmark. 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 it is now known that as early as
-October 1939 the conspirators were plotting the invasion of Norway, and
-that the most active conspirators in that plot were Raeder and
-Rosenberg.
-
-B. _Early Planning for Invasion._
-
-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. And in the Norwegian, Vidkun Quisling,
-Rosenberg found a very model of the Fifth Column agent.
-
-The early stages of the Nazi conspiracy to invade Norway are disclosed
-in a letter which Raeder wrote on 10 January 1944 to Admiral Assmann,
-the official German Naval historian (_C-66_). It is headed “Memorandum
-for Admiral Assmann for his own information; not to be used for
-publications.” The first part deals with “Barbarossa” (the plan to
-invade Russia). The next part is headed “(b) _Weseruebung_,” which was
-the code name for the invasion of Norway and Denmark. The following is a
-pertinent passage from the letter:
-
- “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 (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 Fuehrer, which I made on the 10th of
- October 1939, since my opinion was identical with that of
- Admiral Carls, while at that time the 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 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 year 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
- Fuehrer 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.” (_C-66_)
-
-This report of Raeder shows that the 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.
-
-Before this report of October 1939 was made to the Fuehrer, Raeder
-sought a second opinion on the Norwegian invasion. On 3 October 1939, he
-made out a questionnaire headed, “Gaining of Bases in Norway (extract
-from War Diary)” (_C-122_). It reads:
-
- “The Chief of the Naval War Staff considers it necessary that
- the Fuehrer be informed as soon as possible of the opinions of
- the Naval War 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 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 advantages suitable for supply
- position?”
-
- “F.O.U.-boats” [a reference to Doenitz] “already considers such
- harbors extremely useful as equipment and supply bases for
- Atlantic U-boats to call at temporarily.”)
-
- “(_e_) What decisive advantages would exist for the conduct of
- the war at sea in gaining bases in North Denmark, e.g. Skagen?”
- (_C-122_)
-
-A memorandum written by Doenitz on Norwegian bases presumably relates to
-the questionnaire of Raeder, which was in circulation about that time.
-Doenitz’s document is headed, “Flag Officer Submarines, Operations
-Division,” and is marked “Most Secret.” The subject is “Base in Norway.”
-Then there are set out “suppositions”, “advantages and disadvantages”,
-and then “conclusions”. The last paragraph (III) reads:
-
- “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 overhaul work after an encounter.
-
- “_c._ Good opportunities for accommodating U-boat crews.
-
- “_d._ Flak protection, L.A. armament, petrol and M/S units.
-
- “Secondly, establishment of the possibility of supplying fuel in
- Narvik as an alternative.” (_C-5_)
-
-In October 1939 Hitler was merely considering the Norwegian aggression
-and had not yet committed himself to it. Raeder persevered in pressing
-his point of view with regard to Norway, and at this stage he found a
-powerful ally in Rosenberg.
-
-C. _Use of the Fifth Column: Quisling._
-
-The Nazi employment of traitors and the stimulation of treachery as a
-political weapon are now proven historical facts. Should further proof
-be required, it is found in a “Brief Report on Activities of the Foreign
-Affairs Bureau of the Party (_Aussenpolitisches Amt der NSDAP_) from
-1933 to 1943” (_007-PS_). This was Rosenberg’s Bureau. The report reads:
-
- “When the Foreign Affairs Bureau (_Aussenpolitische Amt_) was
- established on the 1st of April 1933, the Fuehrer 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 attention 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, the Bureau was
- compelled to use the most varying methods, taking into
- consideration the completely different living conditions, the
- ties of blood, intellect and history of the movements observed
- by the Bureau in those countries.
-
- “In Scandinavia an outspokenly pro-Anglo-Saxon attitude, based
- on economic consideration, had become progressively 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 Luebeck 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 cooperation in Sweden and Denmark, an association
- based on Greater Germanic ideology was found in Norway. Very
- close relations were established with its founder, which led to
- further consequences.” (_007-PS_)
-
-There follows an account of the activity of Rosenberg’s Bureau in
-various parts of the world. The last paragraph of the main body of the
-report reads in part:
-
- “With the outbreak of war, the Bureau 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.” (_007-PS_)
-
-The Annex to the report shows what the “exploitation of personal
-connections” involved. Annex One to the document is headed, “To Brief
-Report on Activities of the Foreign Affairs Bureau of the Nazi Party
-from 1933 to 1943.” The subheading is “The Political Preparation of the
-Military Occupation of Norway During the War Years 1939-1940”. The annex
-reads:
-
- “As previously mentioned, of all political groupings in
- Scandinavia, only ‘_Nasjonal Samling_’ led in Norway by the
- former Minister of War and Major of the Reserve, 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 liaison 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 1938-1939, 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 Luebeck 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 statement would be of special interest to the
- Marshal of the Reich Goering for aero-strategical reasons,
- Quisling was referred to State Secretary Koerner by the Bureau.
- The Staff Director of the Bureau handed the Chief of the Reich
- Chancellery a memorandum for transmission to the Fuehrer.”
- (_007-PS_)
-
-This document is another illustration of the close interweaving between
-the political and military leadership of the Nazi State. Raeder, in his
-report to Admiral Assmann, admitted his collaboration with Rosenberg
-(_C-66_). The second paragraph of the Raeder report, headed
-“_Weseruebung_,” reads as follows:
-
- “In the further developments, I was supported by Commander
- Schreiber, Naval Attache 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 at the
- beginning of December and were taken to the Fuehrer by me—with
- the approval of Reichsleiter Rosenberg.” (_C-66_)
-
-The details of the manner in which Raeder made contact personally with
-Quisling are not clear. In a report from Rosenberg to Raeder, however,
-the full extent of Quisling’s preparedness for treachery and his
-potential usefulness to the Nazi aggressors was reported and disclosed
-to Raeder. The second paragraph of this report reads as follows:
-
- “The reasons for a coup, on which Quisling made a report, would
- be provided by the fact that the Storthing (the Norwegian
- Parliament) had, in defense 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.”
- (_C-65_)
-
-Then came the details of a plot to overthrow the government of Norway by
-the traitor Quisling, in collaboration with Rosenberg:
-
- “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 immediately, 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. * * *
-
- “Quisling gives figures of the number of German troops required
- which accord with German calculations.” (_C-65_)
-
-Subsequent developments are indicated in a report by Raeder of his
-meeting with Hitler on 12 December 1939 at 1200 hours, in the presence
-of Keitel, Jodl and Puttkammer, who at this time was adjutant to Hitler.
-The report is headed “Norwegian Question”, and the first sentence reads:
-
- “C-in-C Navy” (Raeder) “has received Quisling and Hagelin.
- Quisling creates the impression of being reliable.” (_C-64_)
-
-There then follows, in the next, two paragraphs, a statement of
-Quisling’s views. The fourth paragraph reads:
-
- “The Fuehrer 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. C-in-C Navy” [Raeder] “suggests that if the Fuehrer
- 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, or
-
- “(_b_) To agree to do so by force.” (_C-64_)
-
-It was at a meeting on 12 December that Raeder made the above report to
-Hitler.
-
-Raeder’s record of these transactions reports the next event:
-
- “Thus, we got in touch with Quisling and Hagelin, who came to
- Berlin at the beginning of December and were taken to the
- Fuehrer by me, with the approval of Reichsleiter Rosenberg.”
- (_C-66_)
-
-A note at the bottom of the page states:
-
- “At the crucial moment, R” (presumably Rosenberg) “hurt his
- foot, so that I visited him in his house on the morning of the
- 14th of December.” (_C-66_)
-
-That is Raeder’s note, and it indicates the extent of his contact in
-this conspiracy.
-
-The report continues:
-
- “On the grounds of the Fuehrer’s discussion with Quisling and
- Hagelin on the afternoon of the 14th of December, the Fuehrer
- gave the order that the preparations for the Norwegian operation
- were to be made by the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces.
-
- “Until that moment, the Naval War 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 Kranke in the Supreme Command of the Armed
- Forces, were founded, however, on a memorandum of the Naval War
- Staff.” (_C-66_)
-
-Raeder’s note referring to the “crucial” moment was an appropriate one,
-for on the same day that it was written, 14 December, Hitler gave the
-order that preparations for the Norwegian operation were to be begun by
-the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces.
-
-Rosenberg’s report on the activities of his organization deals with
-further meetings between Quisling and the Nazi chiefs in December. The
-extract reads:
-
- “Quisling was granted a personal audience with the Fuehrer on 16
- December, and once more on 18 December. In the course of this
- audience the Fuehrer 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
- theatre of war and to draw still other nations into the
- conflict. * * *”
-
- “Should the enemy attempt 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, he promised Quisling
- financial support of his movement, which is based on Greater
- German 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 [Ribbentrop’s
- organization], the Minister for Foreign Affairs [Ribbentrop]
- being kept continuously informed by the Foreign Affairs Bureau
- [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 Attache in Oslo. Orders were given that
- the whole matter be handled with strictest secrecy.” (_007-PS_)
-
-Here again is a further indication of the close link between the Nazi
-politicians and the Nazi service chiefs.
-
-D. _Operational Planning_
-
-The information available on the events of January 1940 is not full, but
-it is clear that the agitation of Raeder and Rosenberg bore fruit. An
-order signed by Keitel, dated 27 January 1940, marked “Most Secret, five
-copies; reference, Study ‘N’”, (an earlier code name for the
-_Weseruebung_ preparations) and classified "Access only through an
-officer,” stated:
-
- “C-in-C of the Navy [Raeder] has a report on this * * *
-
- “The Fuehrer 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 Fuehrer 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “All further plans will be made under the cover name
- ‘_Weseruebung_.’” (_C-63_)
-
-The importance of that document, to the signature of Keitel upon it, and
-to the date of this important decision, is this: Prior to this date, 27
-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 the
-operation. The issuance of this directive of Keitel’s on 27 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 the Norwegian adventure, and had turned the combined
-resources of the German military machine to the task of producing
-practical and coordinated plans for the Norwegian operation. From
-January onward the operational planning for the invasion of Norway and
-Denmark was started through the normal channels.
-
-Certain entries in the diary of Jodl reveal how the preparations
-progressed (_1809-PS_). The entry for 6 February commences:
-
- “New idea: Carry out ‘H’ [_Hartmundt_, another code word for the
- Norwegian and Danish invasion] and Weser Exercise only and
- guarantee Belgium’s neutrality for the duration of the war.”
- (_1809-PS_)
-
-The entry for 21 February reads:
-
- “Fuehrer 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.” (_1809-PS_)
-
-The entry for 28 February reads:
-
- “I propose, first to the Chief of OKW and then to the Fuehrer,
- that Case Yellow [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 Fuehrer completely agrees, if this is in any way
- possible.” (_1809-PS_)
-
-It will be observed that the new idea of 6 February, that the neutrality
-of Belgium might be preserved, had been abandoned by 28 February.
-
-The entry for 29 February reads:
-
- “Fuehrer 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, _Chef
- Landesverteidigung_, instructed to make out immediately the
- order of the Army, Navy, and Air Force, and Director of Armed
- Forces to make out a similar order regarding the strengthening
- of the staff.” (_1809-PS_)
-
-Then came Hitler’s order to complete the preparations for the invasion
-of Norway and Denmark (_C-174_). It bears the date of 1 March 1940, and
-reads as follows:
-
- “The Fuehrer and Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, Most
- Secret.
-
- “Directive for _Fall Weseruebung_.
-
- “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—_Fall Weseruebung_.
- 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.
-
- “In view of our military and political power in comparison with
- that of the Scandinavian States, the force to be employed in the
- _Fall Weseruebung_ 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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. * * *”
-
- “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.” (_C-174_)
-
-The section on “The Occupation of Denmark” which is given the code name
-of “_Weseruebung Sued_”, provides:
-
- “The task of Group XXI: Occupation by surprise of Jutland and of
- Fuenen immediately after occupation of Seeland.
-
- “Added to this, having secured the most important places, the
- Group will break through as quickly as possible from Fuenen to
- Skagen and to the east coast.” (_C-174_)
-
-There then follow other instructions with regard to the operation.
-
-The section on “The Occupation of Norway”, given the code name of
-“_Weseruebung Nord_”, provides:
-
- “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. * * * 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.” (_C-174_)
-
-Whilst these preparations were being made, and just prior to the final
-decision of Hitler, reports were coming in through Rosenberg’s
-organization from Quisling. The third paragraph in Annex I, the section
-dealing with Norway, has this information:
-
- “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 views of the German Legation in Oslo,
- which relied on the desire for neutrality of the then Norwegian
- Nygardszvold 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 to him; he therefore succeeded in
- gaining a foothold within governmental circles of the
- Nygardszvold cabinet and in listening to the cabinet members’
- views. Hagelin transmitted what he had heard to the Bureau
- [Rosenberg’s bureau], which conveyed the news to the Fuehrer
- through Reichsleiter Rosenberg. During the night of the 16th to
- 17th of February, English destroyers attacked the German steamer
- ‘Altmark’ in Jessingjord.* * *” (_007-PS_)
-
-(That is a reference to the action by the British destroyer _Cossack_
-against the German naval auxiliary vessel _Altmark_, which was carrying
-three hundred 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 that the action
-taken by H.M.S. _Cossack_, which was restricted to rescuing the three
-hundred British prisoners on board, no attempt being made to destroy the
-_Altmark_ or to capture the armed guards on board her, was fully
-justified under international law.)
-
-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 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.” (_007-PS_)
-
-And so 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. The entry
-for 3 March relates:
-
- “The Fuehrer expressed himself very sharply on the necessity of
- a swift entry into N [Norway] with strong forces.
-
- “No delay by any branch of the armed forces. Very rapid
- acceleration of the attack necessary.” (_1809-PS_)
-
-The last entry for 3 March reads:
-
- “Fuehrer decides to carry out ‘Weser Exercise’ before case
- ‘Yellow’ with a few days interval.” (_1809-PS_)
-
-Thus, 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 Country.
-It will be observed from those entries of 3 March that by that date
-Hitler had become an enthusiastic convert to the idea of aggression
-against Norway.
-
-The entry in Jodl’s diary for 5 March reads:
-
- “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 Luetzow 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.”
- (_1809-PS_)
-
-The entry for 13 March is one of the most remarkable in the
-documentation of this case.
-
- “Fuehrer does not give order yet for ‘W’ [Weser Exercise]. He is
- still looking for an excuse.” (_1809-PS_)
-
-The entry of the next day, 14 March, shows a similar preoccupation on
-the part of Hitler with the search for an excuse for this aggression. It
-reads:
-
- “English keep vigil in the North Sea with fifteen to sixteen
- submarines; doubtful whether reason to safeguard own operations
- or prevent operations by Germans. Fuehrer has not yet decided
- what reason to give for ‘Weser Exercise.’” (_1809-PS_)
-
-The entry for 21 March reads:
-
- “Misgivings of Task Force 21 [Falkenhorst’s Force, detailed to
- conduct the invasion] about the long interval between taking up
- readiness positions at 05.30 hours and close of diplomatic
- negotiations. Fuehrer 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.” (_1809-PS_)
-
-The entry of 28 March reads:
-
- “Individual naval officers seem to be lukewarm concerning the
- Weser Exercise and need a stimulus. Also Falkenhorst and the
- other two commanders are worrying about matters which are none
- of their business. Franke sees more disadvantages than
- advantages.
-
- “In the evening the Fuehrer 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.” (_1809-PS_)
-
-The entry for 2 April reads:
-
- “Commander-in-Chief of the Air Force, Commander-in-Chief of the
- Navy, and General von Falkenhorst with the Fuehrer. All confirm
- preparations completed. Fuehrer orders carrying out of the Weser
- Exercise for April 9th.” (_1809-PS_)
-
-The entry for 4 April reads:
-
- “Fuehrer drafts the proclamation. Piepenbrock, Chief of Military
- Intelligence 1, returns with good results from the talks with
- Quisling in Copenhagen.” (_1809-PS_)
-
-From the large number of operation orders that were issued in connection
-with the aggression against Norway and Denmark, two may be cited to
-illustrate the extent of the secrecy and deception that was used by the
-conspirators in the course of that aggression. The first dated 4 April
-1940, reads in part:
-
- “* * * The barrage-breaking vessels (_Sperrbrechers_) will
- penetrate inconspicuously, and with lights on, into Oslo Fjord,
- disguised as merchant steamers.
-
- “Challenge from coastal signal stations and lookouts 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.” (_C-115_)
-
-An order for reconnaissance forces, dated 24 March 1940, entitled
-“Behavior during entrance into the harbor,” reads in part:
-
- “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:
-
- “Koeln H.M.S. Cairo
- “Koenigsberg H.M.S. Calcutta
- “Bromso H.M.S. Faulkner
- “Karl Peters H.M.S. Halcyon
- “Leopard British destroyer
- “Wolf British destroyer
- “E-boats British motor torpedo boats
-
- “Arrangements are to be made enabling British war flags to be
- illuminated. Continual readiness for making smoke.” (_C-115_)
-
-An order dated 24 March 1940, classified “Most Secret,” provides:
-
- “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 ‘Koeln’ 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.” (_C-115_)
-
-Doenitz’s order in connection with this operation is headed “Top Secret,
-Operation Order ‘_Hartmut_.’”
-
- “Occupation of Denmark and Norway. This order comes into force
- on the codeword ‘_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
- ‘_Weseruebung_’.
-
- “The operation ordered by the codeword has its objective the
- rapid surprise landing of troops in Norway. Simultaneously
- Denmark will be occupied from the Baltic and from the land side.
- * * * The naval force will as they enter the harbor fly the
- British flag until the troops have landed, except presumably at
- Narvik.” (_C-151_)
-
-E. _Nazi Justification of Invasion._
-
-On 9 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 (_TC-55_).
-That memorandum alleges that England and France were guilty in their
-maritime warfare of breaches of international law; that Britain and
-France are making plans themselves to invade and occupy Norway; and that
-the government of Norway was prepared to acquiesce in such a situation.
-The memorandum further states:
-
- “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, so 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.” (_TC-55_)
-
-In connection with that statement it may be recalled that in his
-operation order on 1 March Hitler had given orders to the Air Force to
-make use of Norwegian bases for air warfare against Britain. That was on
-1 March. And this is the memorandum which was produced as an excuse on 9
-April. The last two paragraphs of the German memorandum to Norway and
-Denmark are a classic Nazi combination of diplomatic hypocrisy and
-military threat:
-
- “The Reich Government thus expects that the Royal Norwegian
- Government and the Norwegian people will respond with
- understanding to the German measures and offer no resistance to
- it. 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 is 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 declares 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.” (_TC-55_)
-
-What the Nazis meant by “protection of the kingdom of Norway” was shown
-by their conduct on 9 April.
-
-A report by the Commander in Chief of the Royal Norwegian Forces states:
-
- “* * * 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 the head.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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 ‘Blucher’,
- 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.” (_TC-56_)
-
-What happened in Denmark is described in a memorandum prepared by the
-Royal Danish Government (_D-628_). An extract from it reads:
-
- “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 4.20 hours the German Minister
- appeared at the private residence of the Danish Minister for
- Foreign Affairs accompanied by the Air Attache 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 4.00 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’s 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 already took place. In reply the German
- Minister expressed that the matter was very urgent, not least to
- avoid air bombardment.” (_D-628_)
-
-What happened thereafter is described in a dispatch from the British
-Minister in Copenhagen to the British Foreign Secretary (_D-627_). 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, whilst 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 cooperate 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 a 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 two 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 altitudes.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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 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 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.”
- (_D-627_)
-
-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. Two documents indicate the
-kind of territorial integrity and political independence the Nazi
-conspirators contemplated for the victims of their aggression. An entry
-in Jodl’s diary for 19 April reads:
-
- “Renewed crisis. Envoy Braver is recalled: since Norway is at
- war with us, the task of the Foreign Office is finished. In the
- Fuehrer’s opinion, force has to be used. It is said that
- Gauleiter Terboven will be given a post. Field Marshal
- [presumably a reference to Goering] is moving in the same
- direction. He criticizes as defects that we didn’t take
- sufficiently energetic measures against the civilian population,
- that we could have seized electrical plant, that the Navy didn’t
- supply enough troops. The Air Force can’t do everything.”
- (_1809-PS_)
-
-It will be seen from that entry and the reference to Gauleiter Terboven
-that already by 19 April, rule by Gauleiters had replaced rule by
-Norwegians.
-
-A memorandum dated 3 June 1940, signed by Fricke, at that date the head
-of the Operations Division of the German Naval War Staff, which was a
-key appointment in the very nerve center of German naval operations,
-relates to questions of territorial expansion and bases (_C-41_). It
-reads:
-
- “These problems are preeminently 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 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 Hango, remain permanently as an enclave in the
- hostile State. Such areas might be considered possibly around
- Brest and Trondjem.
-
- “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 politically, economically and
- militarily to be 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.” (_C-41_)
-
-Then Fricke recommends:
-
- “The solution given in 3, therefore, appears to be the proper
- one, that is, to crush France, to occupy Belgium, part of North
- and East France, to allow the Netherlands, Denmark and Norway to
- exist on the basis indicated above.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Time will show how far the outcome of the war with England will
- make an extension of these demands possible.” (_C-41_)
-
-The submission of the prosecution is that that and other documents which
-have been submitted tear apart the veil of Nazi pretense. These
-documents reveal the menace behind the good-will of Goering; 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.
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO AGGRESSION AGAINST
- NORWAY AND DENMARK
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6 (a). │ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Sections IV (F) │ │
- │ 5; V. │ I │ 27, 29
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document was referred to during the │ │
- │trial but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
-  *004-PS │Report submitted by Rosenberg to Deputy │ │
- │of the Fuehrer, 15 June 1940, on the │ │
- │Political Preparation of the Norway │ │
- │Action. (GB 140) │ III │ 19
- │ │ │
-  *007-PS │Report on activities of the Foreign │ │
- │Affairs Bureau from 1933 to 1943 signed │ │
- │Rosenberg. (GB 84) │ III │ 27
- │ │ │
-  *957-PS │Rosenberg’s letter to Ribbentrop, 24 │ │
- │February 1940. (GB 139) │ III │ 641
- │ │ │
-  1546-PS │Raeder memorandum, 9 April 1940, │ │
- │concerning occupation of Norway. │ IV │ 104
- │ │ │
- *1809-PS │Entries from Jodl’s diary, February 1940│ │
- │to May 1940. (GB 88) │ IV │ 377
- │ │ │
- *3054-PS │“The Nazi Plan”, script of a motion │ │
- │picture composed of captured German │ │
- │film. (USA 167) │ V │ 801
- │ │ │
-  3596-PS │Covering memorandum and notes of │ │
- │conversation on 8 August 1940, between │ │
- │Chief Custodian of Army Archives GOES │ │
- │and Major-General Himmler. │ VI │ 299
- │ │ │
- *C-5 │Memorandum to Supreme Command of the │ │
- │Navy by Doenitz, 9 October 1939, │ │
- │concerning base in Norway. (GB 83) │ VI │ 815
- │ │ │
- *C-41 │Memorandum by Fricke, 3 June 1940, on │ │
- │questions of territorial expansion and │ │
- │bases. (GB 96) │ VI │ 868
- │ │ │
- *C-63 │Keitel order on preparation for │ │
- │“Weseruebung”, 27 January 1940. (GB 87) │ VI │ 883
- │ │ │
- *C-64 │Raeder’s report, 12 December 1939, on │ │
- │meeting of Naval Staff with Fuehrer. (GB│ │
- │86) │ VI │ 884
- │ │ │
- *C-65 │Notes of Rosenberg to Raeder concerning │ │
- │visit of Quisling. (GB 85) │ VI │ 885
- │ │ │
- *C-66 │Memorandum from Raeder to Assmann, 10 │ │
- │January 1944, concerning “Barbarossa” │ │
- │and “Weseruebung”. (GB 81) │ VI │ 887
- │ │ │
- *C-115 │Naval deception and camouflage in │ │
- │invasion of Norway taken from file of │ │
- │naval operation orders for operation │ │
- │“Weseruebung”. (GB 90) │ VI │ 914
- │ │ │
- *C-122 │Extract from Naval War Diary. │ │
- │Questionnaire on Norway bases, 3 October│ │
- │1939. (GB 82) │ VI │ 928
- │ │ │
- *C-151 │Details for execution of operation │ │
- │“Weseruebung”, 3 March 1940, signed by │ │
- │Doenitz. (GB 91) │ VI │ 965
- │ │ │
- *C-174 │Hitler Order for operation │ │
- │“Weseruebung”, 1 March 1940. (GB 89) │ VI │ 1003
- │ │ │
- *D-627 │Dispatch from British Minister in │ │
- │Copenhagen to Foreign Secretary, 25 │ │
- │April 1940. (GB 95) │ VII │ 97
- │ │ │
- *D-628 │Memorandum concerning Germany’s attitude│ │
- │towards Denmark before and during │ │
- │occupation. (GB 94) │ VII │ 98
- │ │ │
- *D-629 │Letter from Keitel to Ribbentrop, 3 │ │
- │April 1940. (GB 141) │ VII │ 99
- │ │ │
- *L-323 │Entry in Naval War Diary concerning │ │
- │operation “Weseruebung”. (USA 541) │ VII │ 1106
- │ │ │
- *M-156 │Year Book of the Ausland (Foreign) │ │
- │Organization of the NSDAP for 1942. (GB │ │
- │284) │ VIII │ 49
- │ │ │
- *TC-17 │Treaty of Arbitration and Conciliation │ │
- │between Germany and Denmark, signed at │ │
- │Berlin, 2 June 1926. (GB 76) │ VIII │ 346
- │ │ │
- *TC-24 │Treaty of nonaggression between German │ │
- │Reich and Kingdom of Denmark, 31 May │ │
- │1939. (GB 77) │ VIII │ 373
- │ │ │
- *TC-30 │German assurance to Denmark, Norway, │ │
- │Belgium, and the Netherlands, 28 April │ │
- │1939, from Documents of German Politics,│ │
- │Part VII, I, pp. 139, 172-175. (GB 78) │ VIII │ 379
- │ │ │
- *TC-31 │German assurance to Norway, 2 September │ │
- │1939. (GB 79) │ VIII │ 380
- │ │ │
- *TC-32 │German assurance to Norway, 6 October │ │
- │1939, from Documents of German Politics,│ │
- │Vol. VII, p. 350. (GB 80) │ VIII │ 381
- │ │ │
- *TC-55 │German ultimatum to Norway and Denmark, │ │
- │9 April 1940, from Documents of German │ │
- │Politics, Part VIII, pp. 21-31. (GB 92) │ VIII │ 410
- │ │ │
- *TC-56 │German Plans for Invasion of Norway, 1 │ │
- │October 1945. (GB 93) │ VIII │ 414
- │ │ │
-**Chart No. 12 │German Aggression. (Enlargement │ │
- │displayed to Tribunal.) │ VIII │ 781
- │ │ │
-**Chart No. 13 │Violations of Treaties, Agreements and │ │
- │Assurances. (Enlargement displayed to │ │
- │Tribunal.) │ VIII │ 782
-
-
- 10. AGGRESSION AGAINST BELGIUM, THE NETHERLANDS,
- AND LUXEMBOURG
-
-The independence of Belgium, which for so many centuries was the cockpit
-of Europe, was guaranteed by the great European powers in 1839. That
-guarantee was observed for 75 years, until it was broken by the Germans
-in 1914, who brought all the horrors of war, and the even greater
-horrors of German occupation, to Belgium. History was to repeat itself
-in a still more catastrophic fashion some 25 years after, in 1940.
-
-Among the applicable treaties are the Hague Convention of 1907 (_TC-3_;
-_TC-4_), the Locarno Arbitration and Conciliation Convention of 1925, in
-which Belgium’s independence and neutrality were guaranteed by Germany;
-the Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928, by which all the Powers renounced
-recourse to war; and the Hague Convention of Arbitration and
-Conciliation May 1926 between Germany and the Netherlands (_TC-16_).
-Article I of the latter treaty provides:
-
- “The contracting parties” (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.” (_TC-16_)
-
-Subsequent clauses deal with the machinery of conciliation. The last
-article, Article 21, provides that the Convention shall be valid for ten
-years, and then shall remain in force for successive periods of five
-years until denounced by either party. And this treaty never was
-denounced by Germany at all.
-
-The last of the applicable treaties, all of which belong to the days of
-the Weimar Republic, is the Treaty of Arbitration and Conciliation
-between Germany and Luxembourg, executed at Geneva in 1929 (_TC-20_).
-The first few words of Article 1 are familiar:
-
- “The contracting parties undertake to settle by peaceful means
- all disputes of any nature whatever which may arise between them
- and which it may not be possible to settle by
-
-Then follow clauses dealing with the machinery for peaceful settlement
-of disputes, which are in the common form.
-
-Those were the treaty obligations between Germany and Belgium at the
-time when the Nazi Party came into power in 1933. Hitler adopted and
-ratified the obligations of Germany under the Weimar Republic with
-regard to the treaties which had been entered into. Nothing more
-occurred to alter the position of Belgium until March 1936. Germany
-reoccupied the Rhineland and announced the resumption of conscription.
-And Hitler, on 7 March 1936 purported in a speech to repudiate the
-obligations of the German Government under the Locarno Pact, the reason
-being given as the execution of the Franco-Soviet Pact of 1935. There
-was no legal foundation for this claim that Germany was entitled to
-renounce obligations under the Locarno Pact. But Belgium was left in the
-air, in the sense that it had itself entered 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 on 30 January 1937, perhaps because Hitler realized the position
-of Belgium and of the Netherlands, Hitler gave solemn assurance—he used
-the word “solemn”—which amounted to a full guarantee (_TC-33_). In
-April 1937, France and England released Belgium from her obligations
-under the Locarno Pact. Belgium gave guarantees of strict independence
-and neutrality, and France and England gave guarantees of assistance
-should Belgium be attacked. It was because of those facts that Germany,
-on 13 October 1937, gave a clear and unconditional guarantee to Belgium:
-
- “I have the honor on behalf of the German Government to make the
- following communication to Your Excellency: The German
- Government has taken cognizance with particular interest of the
- public declaration in which the Belgium Government defines the
- international position of Belgium. For its part, it has
- repeatedly given expressions, especially through the declaration
- of the Chancellor of the German Reich in his speech of January
- 30th, 1937, to its own point of view. The German Government has
- also taken cognizance of the declaration made by the British and
- French Governments on the 24th of April 1937 * * *
-
- “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 regards it as appropriate to define now its
- own attitude towards Belgium. To this end, it makes the
- following declaration: First, the German Government has taken
- note of the views which the Belgian Government has thought fit
- to express. That is to say, (_a_) of the policy of independence
- which it intends to exercise in full sovereignty; (_b_) of its
- determination to defend the frontiers of Belgium with all its
- 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. Two: The German Government
- considers that the inviolability and integrity of Belgium are
- common interests of the Western Powers. It confirms its
- determination that in no circumstances will it impair this
- inviolability and integrity and that it 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. The
- German Government, like the British and French Governments, is
- prepared to assist Belgium should she be subjected to an attack
- or to invasion. * * *” (_TC-34_)
-
-The following reply was made:
-
- “The Belgian Government has taken note with great satisfaction
- of the declaration communicated to it this day by the German
- Government. It thanks the German Government warmly for this
- communication.” (_TC-34_)
-
-Thus, in October 1937, Germany gave 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. Yet eighteen months afterwards
-Germany had violated that assurance.
-
-That this declaration of October 1937 meant very little to the leaders
-and to the high command of Germany can be seen from a document which
-came into existence on 24 August 1938, at the time when the
-Czechoslovakia drama was unfolding, and when it was uncertain whether
-there would be war with the Western Powers. This Top Secret document is
-addressed to the General Staff of the 5th Section of the German Air
-Force, and deals with the subject, “Extended Case Green—Appreciation of
-the Situation with Special Consideration of the Enemy.” Apparently some
-staff officer had been asked to prepare this appreciation. The last
-paragraph (No. H) reads:
-
- “Requests to Armed Forces Supreme Command, Army and Navy. * * *
-
- “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.” (_375-PS_)
-
-It was apparently assumed by the staff officer who prepared this
-document, 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.
-It was recommended as a militarily advantageous thing to do, with the
-knowledge that, if the commanders and the Fuehrer agreed with that view,
-treaties would be completely ignored. Such was the honor of the German
-Government and of its leaders.
-
-In March of 1939, the remainder of Czechoslovakia had been peacefully
-annexed, and the time had come for further guarantees. Assurances which
-were accordingly given to Belgium and the Netherlands on the 28th of
-April 1939 (_TC-30_). A guarantee was also made to Luxembourg in a
-speech by Hitler in the Reichstag, in which he dealt with a
-communication from Mr. Roosevelt, who was feeling a little uneasy as to
-Hitler’s intentions (_TC-42-A_). In “The Nazi Plan,” a motion picture
-shown to the Tribunal by the American prosecution (_3054-PS_), the
-delivery by Hitler of this part of this speech was shown. Hitler
-appeared in one of his jocular moods, as his words were greeted and
-delivered in a jocular vein. The film shows that Goering, who sits above
-Hitler in the Reichstag, appreciated 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.
-
-In this speech Hitler declared:
-
- “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, Esthonia, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Holland,
- Belgium, Great Britain, Ireland, France, Portugal, Spain,
- Switzerland, Lichtenstein, Luxembourg, Poland, Hungary, Rumania,
- 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 demarche 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.” (_TC-42-A_)
-
-Although that is sneering at Mr. Roosevelt, it is suggesting in the
-presence, among others, of Goering, as being quite absurd that Germany
-should nurture any warlike feeling against its neighbors. The hollow
-falsity of that declaration and of the preceding guarantee is shown by
-the minutes of Hitler’s conference of the 23rd of May (_L-79_). The
-first page shows that those present included the Fuehrer, Goering,
-Raeder, von Brauchitsch, Keitel, Warlimont (Jodl’s deputy), and various
-others. The purpose of the conference was an analysis of the situation,
-which proceeded in this fashion:
-
- “What will this struggle be like?”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “The Dutch and Belgian air bases must be occupied by armed
- force. Declarations of neutrality must be ignored.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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 Zuider Zee.”
- (_L-79_)
-
-In Hitler’s speech on 22 August, the following passage occurred:
-
- “Attack from the West from the Maginot Line: I consider this
- impossible.
-
- “Another possibility is the violation of Dutch, Belgium, and
- Swiss neutrality. I have no doubts that all these states as well
- as Scandinavia will defend their neutrality by all available
- means. England and France will not violate the neutrality of
- these countries.” (_798-PS_)
-
-Nevertheless, a further assurance was given 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 is at present doing everything in
- its power to arrive at a peaceful solution of the questions at
- issue between the Reich and Poland, it nevertheless desires to
- define clearly, here and now, the attitude which it proposes to
- adopt towards Belgium should a conflict in Europe become
- inevitable.
-
- “The German Government is 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 of Belgium and will at
- all times respect Belgium territory. The German Government
- renews this undertaking; however, in, the expectation that the
- Belgium Government, for its 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 Belgium Government were to adopt a
- different attitude, the German Government would naturally be
- compelled to defend its interests in conformity with the new
- situation thus created.” (_TC-36_)
-
-It seems likely that the decision having been made to violate Belgian
-neutrality, those last words were put in to afford some excuse in the
-future.
-
-A similar document assurance was communicated to Her Majesty the Queen
-of the Netherlands on the same day, 26 August 1939 (_TC-40_). Likewise
-assurances were given to Luxembourg at the same time. It is in the same
-terms as the other two assurances, and amounts to a complete guarantee
-with the sting in the tail (_TC-42_). Poland was occupied by means of a
-lightning victory, and in October 1939 German armed forces were free for
-other tasks. The first step that was taken, so far as the Netherlands
-and Belgium are concerned, was a German assurance on 6 October 1939, as
-follows:
-
- “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.” (_TC-32_)
-
-A similar assurance was made to the Netherlands on the same day:
-
- “The new Reich has endeavored to continue the traditional
- friendship with Holland. It has not taken over any existing
- differences between the two countries and has not created any
- new ones.” (_TC-32_)
-
-The value of these pledges of Germany’s good faith is shown by an order
-issued on the very next day, 7 October. This order was from the
-Commander-in-Chief of the Army, Von Brauchitsch, and was addressed to
-various Army Groups. The third paragraph provided:
-
- “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.”
- (_2329-PS_)
-
-Two days later, on 9 October, Hitler directed that:
-
- “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. * * *”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “The object of this attack is to acquire as great an area of
- Holland, Belgium and Northern France as possible.” (_C-62_)
-
-That document is signed by Hitler himself. It is addressed to the
-Supreme Commander of the Army, Keitel; Navy, Raeder; and Air Minister
-and Commander in Chief of the Air Force, Goering. On 15 October 1939, a
-supplementary order was issued from the Supreme Command of the Armed
-Forces. It was signed by Keitel in his familiar red pencil signature,
-and was addressed to Raeder, Goering, and the General Staff of the Army.
-It declared, in part:
-
- “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 as far as the Grebbe-Maas line.” (_C-62_)
-
-The second paragraph deals with the taking possession of the
-West-Frisian islands.
-
-It is clear 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 with themselves and their neighbors.
-
-Another Keitel directive, again sent to the Supreme Commanders of the
-Army, Navy, and Air Forces, gives details of how the attack is to be
-carried out. The following are pertinent passages:
-
- “Contrary to previously issued instructions, all action intended
- against Holland may be carried out without a special order which
- the general attack will start.
-
- “The attitude of the Dutch armed forces cannot be anticipated
- ahead of time.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Wherever there is no resistance, the entry should carry the
- character of a peaceful occupation.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “At first the Dutch area, including the West-Frisian islands
- situated just off the coast, for the present without Texel, is
- to be occupied up to the Grebbe-Maas line.”
-
- “The 7th Airborne Division will be committed for the airborne
- operation only after the possession of bridges across the Albert
- Canal” (in Belgium) “has been assured.” (_440-PS_)
-
-In addition to Belgium and Holland, the document, in paragraph (5) and
-(6)(b) mentions Luxembourg. The signature of Keitel is typed. It is
-authenticated by a staff officer.
-
-A later order of 28 November 1939, over the signature of Keitel, in the
-usual red pencil, is addressed to the Army, Navy, and Airforce. It
-states that if a quick breakthrough should fail north of Liege, other
-machinery for carrying out the attack will be used. Paragraph 2 shows
-clearly that the Netherlands is to be violated. It speaks of “The
-occupation of Walcheren Island and thereby Flushing harbor, or of some
-other southern Dutch island especially valuable for our sea and air
-warfare,” and “_b_ Taking of one or more Maas crossings between Namur
-and Dinant * * *.” (_C-10_)
-
-From November until March of 1940 the High Command and the Fuehrer were
-waiting for favorable weather before A-Day, as they called it. That
-referred to the attack on Luxembourg, Belgium and the Netherlands. The
-successive postponements are shown in a series of orders which range in
-date from 7 November 1939 until 9 May 1940, and which are all signed
-either by Keitel or by Jodl. (_C-72_)
-
-On 10 January 1940, 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. Among the papers
-which were captured is an order to the Commander of the Second Army
-Group, Air Force Group—Luftflotte—the Second Air Force Fleet, clearly
-for offensive action against France, Holland, and Belgium. It deals with
-the disposition of the Belgian Army. The Belgian Army covers the
-Liege-Antwerp Line. Then it deals with the disposition of the Dutch
-Army. The German Western Army is accordingly directing its attack
-between the North Sea and the Moselle, with the strongest possible
-air-force support, through the Belgo-Luxembourg region. The rest
-consists of operational details as to the bombing of the various targets
-in Belgium and in Holland. (_TC-58_)
-
-The nature of the Army’s planning is shown in the 1 February 1940 entry
-in Jodl’s diary, which reads in part as follows:
-
- “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.” (_1809-PS_)
-
-The entry for 2 February 1940 states that “landings can be made in the
-centre of The Hague.” On 26 February Jodl wrote: “Fuehrer raises the
-question whether it is better to undertake the Weser Exercise before or
-after case ‘Yellow.’” On 3 March, he recorded the answer: “Fuehrer
-decides to carry out Weser Exercise before case ‘Yellow’, with a few
-days’ interval.” And on May 8, two days before the invasion, Jodl made
-this entry:
-
- “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.”
- (_1809-PS_)
-
-In other words, the Germans objected because the Dutch were actually
-making some preparation to resist their endeavor. Furthermore, the Dutch
-armies, according to the Germans’ own intelligence reports, were still
-adhering properly to their neutrality.
-
-At 4:30 a. m. on 10 May, the months of planning bore fruit, and Holland,
-Belgium, and Luxembourg were violently invaded with all the fury of
-modern warfare. No warning was given by Germany and no complaint was
-made by Germany of any breaches of neutrality before this action was
-taken.
-
-After the invasion of each of the three countries was a fait accompli,
-the German Ambassador called upon representatives of the three
-Governments some hours later and handed them documents which were
-similar in each case, and which are described as memoranda or
-ultimatums. An account of what happened in Belgium is contained in an
-official Belgian report:
-
- “From 4:30 information was received which left no shadow of
- doubt: the hour had struck. Aircraft were first reported in the
- east. At five o’clock came news of the bombing of two
- Netherlands aerodromes, the violation of the Belgian frontier,
- the landing of German soldiers at the Eben-Emael Fort, the
- bombing of the Jemelle station.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “At 8:30 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” [Belgian Foreign 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 twenty-five
- 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’.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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 is 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 guarantees
- 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 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “In the middle of this communication, M. Spaak, who had by his
- side the Secretary-General of the Department, 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. * * *” (_TC-58_)
-
-The so-called ultimatum, which was delivered some hours after the
-invasion had started, read in part as follows:
-
- “The Reich Government has for a long time had no doubts as to
- what was the chief aim of the 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 the 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 in flight of the British troops 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 manoeuvre in grand
- style, to deceive Germany as to the direction of the next
- English-French attack. For, as the Reich Government has 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.”
- (_TC-57_)
-
-The so-called ultimatum goes on to complain of the hostile expressions
-in the Belgian and the Netherlands Press, and to allege attempts by the
-British Intelligence to bring a revolution into Germany with the
-assistance of Belgium and the Netherlands. Reference is made to military
-preparation of the two countries, and it is pointed out that Belgium has
-fortified the Belgian frontier. A complaint was made in regard to
-Holland, that British aircraft had flown over the Netherlands country.
-Other charges were made against the neutrality of these two countries,
-although no instances were given (_TC-57_). The document continued:
-
- “In this struggle for existence forced upon the German people by
- England and France, the Reich Government is not disposed to
- await submissively the attack by England and France and to allow
- them to carry the war over Belgium and the Netherlands into
- German territory. It has 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.” (_TC-57_)
-
-It is unnecessary, in view of the documents previously adverted to, to
-emphasize the falsity of that statement. It is now known that for months
-preparations had been made to violate the neutrality of these three
-countries. This document is merely saying, “The orders to do so have now
-been issued.”
-
-A similar document, similar in terms altogether, was handed to the
-representatives of the Netherlands Government; and a memorandum was sent
-to the Luxembourg Government, which enclosed with it a copy of the
-document handed to the Governments of Belgium and the Netherlands. The
-second paragraph of the latter declared:
-
- “In defense against the imminent attack, the German troops have
- now received the order to safeguard the neutrality of these two
- countries * * *”. (_TC-60_)
-
-The protest of the Belgium Government against the crime which was
-committed against her is contained in _TC-59_.
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO AGGRESSION AGAINST
- BELGIUM, THE NETHERLANDS AND LUXEMBOURG
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6 (a). │ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Sections IV (F) │ │
- │ 5; V. │ I │ 27, 29
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document was referred to during the │ │
- │trial but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
-  *375-PS │Case Green with wider implications, │ │
- │report of Intelligence Division, │ │
- │Luftwaffe General Staff, 25 August 1938.│ │
- │(USA 84) │ III │ 280
- │ │ │
-  *440-PS │Directive No. 8 signed by Keitel, 20 │ │
- │November 1939, for the conduct of the │ │
- │war. (GB 107) │ III │ 397
- │ │ │
-  *798-PS │Hitler’s speech to Commanders-in-Chief, │ │
- │at Obersalzberg, 22 August 1939. (USA │ │
- │29) │ III │ 581
- │ │ │
- *1809-PS │Entries from Jodl’s diary, February 1940│ │
- │to May 1940. (GB 88) │ IV │ 377
- │ │ │
- *2329-PS │Order by Commander in Chief of the Army,│ │
- │7 October 1939. (GB 105) │ IV │ 1037
- │ │ │
- *3054-PS │“The Nazi Plan”, script of a motion │ │
- │picture composed of captured German │ │
- │film. (USA 167) │ V │ 801
- │ │ │
- *C-10 │OKW directive, 28 November 1939, signed │ │
- │by Keitel, subject: Employment of 7th │ │
- │Flieger Division. (GB 108) │ VI │ 817
- │ │ │
- *C-62 │Directive No. 6 on the conduct of war, │ │
- │signed by Hitler, 9 October 1939; │ │
- │directive by Keitel, 15 October 1939 on │ │
- │Fall “Gelb”. (GB 106) │ VI │ 880
- │ │ │
- *C-72 │Orders postponing “A” day in the West, │ │
- │November 1939 to May 1940. (GB 109) │ VI │ 893
- │ │ │
- *L-52 │Memorandum and Directives for conduct of│ │
- │war in the West, 9 October 1939. (USA │ │
- │540) │ VII │ 800
- │ │ │
- *L-79 │Minutes of conference, 23 May 1939, │ │
- │“Indoctrination on the political │ │
- │situation and future aims”. (USA 27) │ VII │ 847
- │ │ │
- *TC-3 │Hague Convention (3) Relative to opening│ │
- │of Hostilities. (GB 2) │ VIII │ 279
- │ │ │
- *TC-4 │Hague Convention (5) Respecting Rights │ │
- │and Duties of Neutral Powers and Persons│ │
- │in War on Land. (GB 2) │ VIII │ 282
- │ │ │
- *TC-13 │Arbitration Convention between Germany │ │
- │and Belgium at Locarno, 16 October 1925.│ │
- │(GB 15) │ VIII │ 320
- │ │ │
- *TC-16 │Convention of Arbitration and │ │
- │conciliation between Germany and the │ │
- │Netherlands, signed at The Hague, 20 May│ │
- │1926. (GB 97) │ VIII │ 337
- │ │ │
- *TC-19 │Kellogg-Briand Pact at Paris. 1929 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part II, No. 9, pp. │ │
- │97-101. (GB 18) │ VIII │ 359
- │ │ │
- *TC-20 │Treaty of Arbitration and Conciliation │ │
- │between Germany and Luxembourg, signed │ │
- │at Geneva, 11 September 1929. (GB 98) │ VIII │ 362
- │ │ │
- *TC-30 │German assurance to Denmark, Norway, │ │
- │Belgium, and the Netherlands, 28 April │ │
- │1939, from Documents of German Politics,│ │
- │Part VII, I, pp. 139, 172-175. (GB 78) │ VIII │ 379
- │ │ │
- *TC-32 │German assurance to Norway, 6 October │ │
- │1939, from Documents of German Politics,│ │
- │Vol. VII, p. 350. (GB 80) │ VIII │ 381
- │ │ │
- *TC-33 │German assurance to Belgium and the │ │
- │Netherlands, 30 January 1937, from │ │
- │Documents of German Politics, Part IV, │ │
- │pp. 42-43. (GB 99) │ VIII │ 381
- │ │ │
- *TC-34 │German Declaration to the Belgian │ │
- │Minister of 13 October 1937. (GB 100) │ VIII │ 381
- │ │ │
- *TC-36 │Declaration made by Ambassador of │ │
- │Germany on 26 August 1939. (GB 102) │ VIII │ 382
- │ │ │
-  TC-37 │German assurance to Belgium, 6 October │ │
- │1939, from Documents of German Politics,│ │
- │Vol. VII, p. 351. │ VIII │ 383
- │ │ │
- *TC-40 │Declaration of German Minister to the │ │
- │Netherlands, 26 August 1939. (GB 103) │ VIII │ 383
- │ │ │
-  TC-41 │German assurance to the Netherlands, 6 │ │
- │October 1939, from Documents of German │ │
- │Politics, Vol. VII, p. 351. │ VIII │ 384
- │ │ │
- *TC-42 │German assurance to Luxembourg, 26 │ │
- │August 1939. (GB 104) │ VIII │ 384
- │ │ │
- *TC-42-A │German assurance to Luxembourg, 28 April│ │
- │1939. (GB 101) │ VIII │ 385
- │ │ │
- *TC-57 │German ultimatum to Belgium and the │ │
- │Netherlands, 9 May 1940, from Documents │ │
- │of German Politics, Part VIII, pp. │ │
- │142-150. (GB 112) │ VIII │ 416
- │ │ │
- *TC-58 │“Belgium, the official account of what │ │
- │happened 1939-1940”. (GB 111) │ VIII │ 421
- │ │ │
- *TC-58-A │Secret instruction to the Commander of │ │
- │2nd Luftflotte found in German Aeroplane│ │
- │of 10 January 1940. (GB 110) │ VIII │ 423
- │ │ │
- *TC-59 │Protest from Belgium, 10 May 1940, │ │
- │following German aggression. (GB 111) │ VIII │ 429
- │ │ │
- *TC-60 │German memorandum to Luxembourg, 9 May │ │
- │1940, from Documents of German Politics,│ │
- │Part VIII, pp. 150-151. (GB 113) │ VIII │ 431
- │ │ │
-  Affidavit H │Affidavit of Franz Halder, 22 November │ │
- │1945. │ VIII │ 643
- │ │ │
-**Chart No. 12 │German Aggression. (Enlargement │ │
- │displayed to Tribunal.) │ VIII │ 781
- │ │ │
-**Chart No. 13 │Violations of Treaties, Agreements and │ │
- │Assurances. (Enlargement displayed to │ │
- │Tribunal.) │ VIII │ 782
-
-
- 11. AGGRESSION AGAINST GREECE AND YUGOSLAVIA
-
-A. _Treaties and Assurances Breached._
-
-The invasions of Greece and of Yugoslavia by the Germans, which took
-place in the early hours of the morning of 6 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. In the case of Yugoslavia, the invasion further constituted a
-breach of an express assurance by the Nazis. The assurance was
-originally given in a German Foreign Office release made in Berlin on 28
-April 1938 (_2719-PS_), but was subsequently repeated by Hitler himself
-on 6 October 1939 in a speech he made in the Reichstag. The German
-Foreign Office release on 28 April 1938 reads, in part:
-
- “Berlin, 28 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:”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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 3 April, the Fuehrer
- 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.”
- (_2719-PS_)
-
-In a speech made on the occasion of the dinner in honor of the Prince
-Regent of Yugoslavia on 1 June 1939, Hitler declared:
-
- “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’s
- 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 to 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-wracked continent. This peace is the goal of all
- who are disposed to perform really constructive work.” (_TC-92_)
-
-As is now known this speech was made at the time when Hitler had already
-decided upon the European war. It occurred a week after the
-Reichschancellery conference recorded in the Schmundt note (_L-79_). The
-reference to “nerve-wracked continent” might perhaps be attributed to
-the war of nerves which Hitler had himself been conducting for many
-months. The German Assurance to Yugoslavia on 6 October 1939 was in
-these terms:
-
- “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.” (_TC-43_)
-
-B. _Planning for Invasion: Collaboration with Italy and Bulgaria._
-
-Despite the obligation of Germany, under the Convention of 1899, and the
-Kellogg-Briand Pact, and under the foregoing Assurance which I have
-read, the fate of both Greece and Yugoslavia had, as is now known, been
-sealed ever since the meeting between Hitler, Ribbentrop, and Ciano at
-Obersalzberg, 12 and 13 August 1939 (_TC-77_). The effect of the meeting
-was that Hitler and Ribbentrop, only two months after the dinner to the
-Prince Regent, were seeking to persuade Italy to make war on Yugoslavia
-at the same time that Germany was to commence hostilities against
-Poland, which 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 while himself anxious to
-secure Salonika, stated that Italy was not yet ready for a general
-European war. Thus, despite all the persuasion which Hitler and
-Ribbentrop exerted at the meeting, it became necessary for the Nazi
-conspirators to reassure their intended victim, Yugoslavia, since in
-fact Italy maintained its position and did not enter the war when
-Germany invaded Poland, and since the Germans themselves were not yet
-ready to strike in the Balkans. If was apparently for this reason that
-on 6 October, through Hitler’s speech, the Nazis repeated the assurance
-they had made in April 1938. It is 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 three o’clock in the
-morning on 28 October 1940, the Italian Minister at Athens presented the
-Greek Government with a 3 hour ultimatum, upon the expiration of which
-Italian troops were already invading the soil of Greece.
-
-This event was reported by the British Minister at Athens in these
-words:
-
- “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 rejecting 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.”
-
-A letter from Hitler to Mussolini, which is undated but which—this is
-clear from the contents—must have been written shortly after the
-Italian invasion of Greece on 28 November [transcriber's note: October]
-1940, contained these sentiments:
-
- “Jugoslavia must become disinterested, if possible however from
- our point of view interested in cooperating in the liquidation
- of the Greek question. Without assurances from Jugoslavia, 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 Jugoslavia would be useless, since the
- impossibility of a materialization of such threats before March
- is well known to the Serbian general staff. Therefore,
- Jugoslavia must, if at all possible, be won over by other means
- and other ways.” (_2762-PS_)
-
-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. It was an integral part of those plans that Yugoslavia should be
-induced to cooperate in them or at least to maintain a disinterested
-attitude towards the liquidation of the other Balkan States. These facts
-are disclosed in a “Top Secret Directive” issued from the Fuehrer’s
-Headquarters, signed by Hitler, initialed by Jodl, and dated 12 November
-1940. This order reads, in part:
-
- “_Directive No. 18._
-
- “The preparatory measures of Supreme HQ for the prosecution of
- the war in the near future are to be made along the following
- lines.* * *” (_444-PS_)
-
-After sections dealing with operations against Gibraltar and an
-offensive against Egypt, the order continues:
-
- “_Balkans_
-
- “The commanders-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 Rumanian 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 ten 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 Roumania, 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 South
- East Balkans and for aerial reconnaissance on the southern
- border of Bulgaria, in accordance with the intended ground
- operations.” (_444-PS_)
-
-The positions of the Italian invading forces in Greece in December 1940
-may be summarized in the words in which the British Minister reported to
-Foreign Secretary Eden:
-
- “The morale of the Greek Army throughout has been of the
- highest, and our own naval and land successes at Tarento 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 tradition of their country and that
- they, like their distant forbears, 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 with the order for the German attack on
-Greece.
-
-This Directive of 13 December 1940, which is Top Secret Directive number
-20, dealing with Operation _Marita_, bears a distribution list which
-shows that copies went to the Commander of the Navy (Raeder), to the
-Commander of the Air Force (Goering), to the Supreme Commander of the
-Armed Forces (Keitel), and to the Command Staff (Jodl). The first two
-paragraphs state:
-
- “The result of the battles in Albania is not yet decisive.
- Because of a dangerous situation in Albania it is doubly
- necessary that the British endeavour be foiled to create air
- bases under the protection of a Balkan front, which would be
- dangerous above all to Italy as well as to the Rumanian oil
- fields.
-
- “My plan, therefore, is (_a_) to form a slowly increasing task
- force in Southern Rumania within the next months. (_b_) After
- the setting in of favorable weather, probably in March, to send
- the 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.” (_1541-PS_)
-
-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 General Staff. The transport
- through Hungary and the arrival in Rumania will be reported step
- by step by the General Staff of the Armed Forces, and are to be
- explained at first as a strengthening of the German Army mission
- in Rumania.
-
- “Consultations with the Rumanians 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.” (_1541-PS_)
-
-Another “Top Secret Directive” carries the plan a little farther. It
-deals with decisive action in support of the Italian forces in Tripoli
-and in Albania. The first short paragraph reads:
-
- “The situation in the Mediterranean Theater of Operations
- demands for strategical political and psychological reasons
- German assistance, due to employment of superior forces by
- England against our allies.” (_448-PS_)
-
-Paragraph three, after dealing with the forces to be transferred to
-Albania, 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.”
- (_448-PS_)
-
-That directive was signed by Hitler, and, as shown on the original, was
-initialed by both Keitel and Jodl. A copy went to Raeder, and the copy
-sent to Foreign Intelligence presumably reached Ribbentrop.
-
-A conference took place on 19 and 20 January between Keitel and the
-Italian General, Guzzoni. This was followed by a meeting between Hitler
-and Mussolini, at which Ribbentrop, Keitel, and Jodl were present. In
-the speech which the Fuehrer made on 20 January 1941, after the
-conference with the Italians, he declared:
-
- “* * * The massing of troops in Roumania serves a threefold
- purpose:
-
- “_a._ An operation against Greece.
-
- “_b._ Protection of Bulgaria against Russia and Turkey.
-
- “_c._ Safeguarding the guarantee to Roumania.
-
- “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.” (_C-134_)
-
-At a conference between Field Marshal List and the Bulgarians, on 8
-February, the following plans were discussed:
-
- “Minutes of questions discussed between the representatives of
- the Royal Bulgarian General Staff and the German Supreme
- 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “* * * The Bulgarian and the German general staff 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 to be
- suitable to inform their governments that it will be good to
- take the necessity of secrecy and surprise into consideration
- when the three-power treaty is signed by Bulgaria, in order to
- assure the success of the military operations.” (_1746-PS_)
-
-A further top secret directive of 19 February sets the date for the
-Operation _Marita_ (_C-59_). It states that the bridge across the Danube
-is to be begun on 28 February, the river crossed on 2 March, and the
-final orders to be issued on 26 February at the latest. On the original
-of this order the actual dates are filled in in the handwriting of
-Keitel.
-
-The position of Bulgaria at this moment was this: Bulgaria adhered to
-the Three-Power Pact on 1 March 1941. On the same day the entry of
-German troops into Bulgaria began in accordance with the Plan _Marita_
-and associated directives already referred to. The landing of British
-troops in Greece on 3 March, in accordance with the guarantee given in
-the spring of 1939 by the British Government, may have accelerated the
-movement of the German forces. In any event, as has been shown, the
-invasion of Greece had been planned long beforehand and was already in
-progress at this time.
-
-A short extract from a report by Raeder on an interview with Hitler,
-which the original shows took place in the presence of Keitel and Jodl
-at 1600 hours on 18 March, shows the ruthless nature of the German
-intentions:
-
- “The C in C of the Navy asks for confirmation that the whole of
- Greece will have to be occupied even in the event of a peaceful
- settlement.
-
- “_Fuehrer_: The complete occupation is a prerequisite of any
- settlement.” (_C-167_)
-
-This report shows, it seems clear, that the Nazi conspirators, in
-accordance with their principle of liquidating any neutral which 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.
-
-C. _Lulling the Unsuspecting Victim._
-
-They were not yet, however, ready to deal with Yugoslavia, towards which
-their policy accordingly remained one of lulling the unsuspecting
-victim. On 25 March, in accordance with this policy, the adherence of
-Yugoslavia to the Three-Power Pact was secured. This adherence followed
-a visit on 15 February 1941 by the Yugoslav Premier Cvetkovic and the
-Foreign Minister Cinkar-Markvic to Ribbentrop at Salzburg and
-subsequently to Hitler at Berchtesgaden, after which these ministers
-were induced to sign the Pact at Vienna on 25 March. On this occasion
-Ribbentrop wrote the two letters of assurance. The first made this
-guarantee:
-
- “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 its 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 confirms its
- determination to respect the sovereignty and territorial
- integrity of Yugoslavia at all times.’” (_2450-PS_)
-
-That letter was signed by Ribbentrop, who was present at the meeting in
-August 1939 when he and Hitler tried to persuade the Italians to invade
-Yugoslavia. It was in fact 11 days after this letter was written that
-the Germans did invade Yugoslavia, and two days after the letter was
-written that they issued the necessary order.
-
-The second letter reads:
-
- “Mr. Prime Minister:
-
- “With reference to the conversations that occurred in connection
- with the Yugoslavian entry 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.” (_2450-PS_)
-
-The position at this stage, 25 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 an extract from the minutes of a meeting
-between Hitler and Ciano. The first paragraph states:
-
- “The Fuehrer 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.” (_2765-PS_)
-
-Again, it is a matter of history that on the night of 26 March 1941,
-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 27 March ready to defend, if need
-be, its independence.
-
-D. _Further Planning for Attack._
-
-The Nazis reacted rapidly to this altered situation, and the immediate
-liquidation of Yugoslavia was decided on. A conference of Hitler and the
-German High Command on the situation in Yugoslavia took place on 27
-March 1941. Those present included the Fuehrer; the Reich Marshall
-(Goering); Chief, OKW, (Keitel); and the Chief of the _Wehrmacht
-Fuehrungstab_, (Jodl). A report of the conference notes that “later on
-the following persons were added,” and among them is included Ribbentrop
-(_1746-PS_). Hitler’s statement proceeded as follows:
-
- “The Fuehrer 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-German.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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 toward 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “The Fuehrer 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. Roumania’s main task is the protection against
- Russia. The Hungarian and the Bulgarian ambassador 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 Adria 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.” (_1746-PS_)
-
-Thus it appears that two days after Yugoslavia had signed the
-Tri-Partite Pact and the Nazis had given assurances, simply because
-there had been a _coup d’état_ and it was possible that the operations
-against Greece might be affected, the destruction of Yugoslavia was
-decided on without any question of taking the trouble to ascertain the
-views of the new Government.
-
-The report of the meeting continues:
-
- “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.” (_1746-PS_)
-
-It is again a matter of history that the residential areas of Belgrade
-were bombed at 7 o’clock on the following Sunday morning, 6 April 1941.
-
-At that same meeting of 27 March 1941 a tentative plan, drawn up by
-Jodl, was offered:
-
- “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.” (_1746-PS_)
-
-An order (Directive No. 25) was issued after the meeting of 27 March.
-The first paragraph reads:
-
- “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.”
- (_C-127_)
-
-As another result of the meeting, a telegram, containing a letter from
-Hitler to Mussolini, was forwarded to the German Ambassador in Rome by
-Hitler and Ribbentrop. It was written to advise Mussolini of the course
-decided on, and under the guise of somewhat fulsome language the Duce
-was given his orders. The first five paragraphs read:
-
- “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 a
- 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 don’t 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 fourteen days to three 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.” (_1835-PS_)
-
-Hitler continues with a further emphasis on the importance of secrecy.
-An operational order (_R-95_) followed, which was signed by General von
-Brauchitsch, and which merely passed to the Armies the orders contained
-in Directive No. 25. (_C-127_)
-
-E. _Explanations._
-
-The invasion of Greece and Yugoslavia took place in the morning of 6
-April 1941. On that day Hitler issued a proclamation (_TC-93_). The
-following passage is an extract:
-
- “From the beginning of the struggle it has been England’s
- steadfast endeavor to make the Balkans a theatre 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 [the German ‘White Book’] 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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.” (_TC-93_)
-
-One can only think that when he issued that proclamation Hitler must
-momentarily have forgotten the meeting with Ciano in August 1939, and
-the meeting with Ribbentrop and the others on 27 March, a few days
-earlier.
-
-In a lecture delivered by Jodl on 7 November 1943, he sets out his
-views, two and a half years later on the action taken in April, 1941. In
-Paragraph 11 he stated:
-
- “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 Roumanian oil
- area from that country.” (_L-172_)
-
-F. _Summary._
-
-To summarize: The invasion of Greece was decided on at least as early as
-November or December 1940 and was scheduled 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 cooperation 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 the Nazis to take any steps to ascertain
-Yugoslavia’s intentions, for 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, 6 April 1941,
-German troops marched into Yugoslavia without warning and into Greece
-simultaneously. The formality was observed 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 it had given to the Italians in the preceding
-October.
-
-G. _The Pattern of Aggression._
-
-There is one common factor which runs through the whole of the Nazi
-aggressions. 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 1940, 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 four and five on that morning.
-
-The invasion of Belgium, Luxembourg, and Holland began not later than
-five o’clock, in the small hours of 10 of May, 1940, while the formal
-ultimatum, delivered in each case with the diplomatic excuses and
-explanations, was not presented until afterwards. In the ease of Holland
-the invasion began between three and four in the morning. It was not
-until about six, 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 five, the German Minister did not see M. Spaak until
-eight. The invasion of Luxembourg began at four and it was at seven when
-the German Minister asked to see M. Beck.
-
-Mussolini copied this technique. It was 3 o’clock on the morning of 28
-October 1940 when his Minister in Athens presented a three hour
-ultimatum to General Metaxas.
-
-The invasion of Greece and Yugoslavia, also, both began in the small
-hours of 6 April 1941. In the case of Yugoslavia no diplomatic exchange
-took place even after the event, but a proclamation was issued by Hitler
-at five o’clock that Sunday morning, some two hours before Belgrade was
-bombed. In the case of Greece, it was at twenty minutes past five 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: to attack without warning at
-night to secure an initial advantage, and to proffer excuses or reasons
-afterwards. This is clearly the method of the State which has no respect
-for its own pledged word, nor for the rights of any people but its own.
-
-It is impossible not to speculate whether this technique was evolved by
-the “honest broker” himself or by his honest clerk, Ribbentrop.
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO AGGRESSION AGAINST
- GREECE AND YUGOSLAVIA
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6 (a). │ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Sections IV (F) │ │
- │ 5; V. │ I │ 27, 29
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document was referred to during the │ │
- │trial but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
- *444-PS │Original Directive No. 18 from Fuehrer’s│ │
- │Headquarters signed by Hitler and │ │
- │initialled by Jodl, 12 November 1940, │ │
- │concerning plans for prosecution of war │ │
- │in Mediterranean Area and occupation of │ │
- │Greece. (GB 116) │ III │ 403
- │ │ │
- *448-PS │Hitler Order No. 22, initialled by │ │
- │Keitel and Jodl, 11 January 1941, │ │
- │concerning participation of German │ │
- │Forces in the Fighting in the │ │
- │Mediterranean Theater of Operations. (GB│ │
- │118) │ III │ 413
- │ │ │
-*1195-PS │Keitel Order, 12 April 1941, for │ │
- │provisional directions for partition of │ │
- │Yugoslavia. (GB 144) │ III │ 838
- │ │ │
-*1541-PS │Directive No. 20, Operation Marita, 13 │ │
- │December 1940. (GB 117) │ IV │ 101
- │ │ │
-*1746-PS │Conference between German and Bulgarian │ │
- │Generals, 8 February 1941; speech by │ │
- │Hitler to German High Command on │ │
- │situation in Yugoslavia, 27 March 1941; │ │
- │plan for invasion of Yugoslavia, 28 │ │
- │March 1941. (GB 120) │ IV │ 272
- │ │ │
-*1834-PS │Report on conference between Ribbentrop │ │
- │and Oshima, 23 February 1941. (USA 129) │ IV │ 469
- │ │ │
-*1835-PS │Letter from Hitler to Mussolini, 28 │ │
- │March 1941. (GB 126) │ IV │ 475
- │ │ │
-*1842-PS │Meeting of Mussolini and Ribbentrop in │ │
- │Rome, 19 September 1940. (GB 143) │ IV │ 477
- │ │ │
-*1871-PS │Report on Hitler and Ciano meeting, 12 │ │
- │August 1939. (GB 142) │ IV │ 508
- │ │ │
-*2450-PS │Two letters from Ribbentrop to Prime │ │
- │Minister of Yugoslavia, as published in │ │
- │Voelkischer Beobachter, Munich Edition, │ │
- │26 March 1941. (GB 123) │ V │ 186
- │ │ │
- 2719-PS │German assurance to Yugoslavia; official│ │
- │announcement by German Foreign Office, │ │
- │28 April 1938, to German Diplomatic │ │
- │Representatives, published in Documents │ │
- │of the Origin of War, 1939, No. 2, p. │ │
- │324. │ V │ 378
- │ │ │
-*2762-PS │Letter from Hitler to Mussolini │ │
- │(probably early November 1940). (GB 115)│ V │ 410
- │ │ │
-*2765-PS │Extract from notes of conference between│ │
- │Hitler and Ciano in Vienna, 25 March │ │
- │1941. (GB 124) │ V │ 411
- │ │ │
-*2987-PS │Entries in diary of Count Ciano. (USA │ │
- │166) │ V │ 689
- │ │ │
-*3054-PS │“The Nazi Plan”, script of a motion │ │
- │picture composed of captured German │ │
- │film. (USA 167) │ V │ 801
- │ │ │
-*C-59 │Order signed by Warlimont for execution │ │
- │of operation “Marita”, 19 February 1941.│ │
- │(GB 121) │ VI │ 879
- │ │ │
-*C-127 │Extract from Directive No. 25 by Hitler,│ │
- │27 March 1941. (GB 125) │ VI │ 938
- │ │ │
-*C-134 │Letter from Jodl enclosing memorandum on│ │
- │conference between German and Italian │ │
- │Generals on 19 January and subsequent │ │
- │speech by Hitler, 20 January 1941. (GB │ │
- │119) │ VI │ 939
- │ │ │
- C-147 │Extracts from Directive No. 18, signed │ │
- │by Hitler, 12 November 1940. │ VI │ 957
- │ │ │
-*C-167 │Report of meeting between Raeder and │ │
- │Hitler, 18 March 1941. (GB 122) │ VI │ 977
- │ │ │
-*L-79 │Minutes of conference, 23 May 1939, │ │
- │“Indoctrination on the political │ │
- │situation and future aims”. (USA 27) │ VII │ 847
- │ │ │
-*R-95 │Army Order signed by von Brauchitsch, 30│ │
- │March 1941, concerning deployment │ │
- │instructions for “Action 25” and │ │
- │supplementary instruction for action │ │
- │“Marita”. (GB 127) │ VIII │ 70
- │ │ │
- TC-43 │German assurance to Yugoslavia, 6 │ │
- │October 1939, from Documents of German │ │
- │Politics, Vol. VII, p. 352. │ VIII │ 386
- │ │ │
-*TC-77 │Memorandum of conversation between │ │
- │Hitler, Ribbentrop and Ciano, 12 August │ │
- │1939. (GB 48) │ VIII │ 516
- │ │ │
-*TC-92 │Hitler’s address at dinner for Prince │ │
- │Regent of Yugoslavia, 1 June 1939. (GB │ │
- │114) │ VIII │ 536
- │ │ │
-*TC-93 │Proclamation of the Fuehrer to the │ │
- │German people, 6 April 1941, from │ │
- │Documents Concerning the Conflict with │ │
- │Yugoslavia and Greece. (GB 114) │ VIII │ 537
-
-
- 12. AGGRESSION AGAINST THE U.S.S.R.
-
-A. _Inception of the Plan._
-
-The point of departure for the story of the aggression against the
-Soviet Union is the date, 23 August 1939. On that day—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. This Treaty
-(_TC-25_) contained two significant articles:
-
- “Article 1: 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 5: Should disputes or conflicts arise between the
- contracting parties regarding questions of any kind whatsoever,
- the two partners would clear away these disputes or conflicts
- solely by friendly exchanges of views or if necessary by
- arbitration commission.” (_TC-25_)
-
-The Treaty was signed for the U.S.S.R. by the Soviet Foreign Minister
-Molotov, and for the German Government by 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 was provided, however, by Ribbentrop
-himself, in a discussion which he had with the Japanese Ambassador,
-Oshima, at Fuchel 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 (_1834-PS_).
-Ribbentrop told Oshima the reason for the Pact with the U.S.S.R. in the
-following words:
-
- “Then when it came to war the Fuehrer decided on a treaty with
- Russia—a necessity for avoiding a two-front war. Perhaps this
- moment was difficult for Japan. The treaty was, however, in the
- interest of Japan, for the Japanese empire was interested in as
- rapid a German victory as possible, which was assured by the
- treaty with Russia.” (_1834-PS_)
-
-In view of this spirit of opportunism which motivated the Nazi
-Conspirators in entering into this solemn pledge of arbitration and
-nonaggression, it is not 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 do so. That they did so regard it is evident
-from 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 the Reichsleiters and
-Gauleiters at Munich in November 1943, Jodl admitted that:
-
- “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 latterly, for diplomatic reasons, had
- deliberately to be ignored. However, the Fuehrer 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.” (_L-172_)
-
-At the time this statement 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 Compiegne 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 dominance 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. 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
-Nazi conspirators 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 practicable.
-
-As early as August of 1940, General Thomas received a hint from Goering
-that planning for a campaign against the Soviet Union was already under
-way. Thomas at that time was the Chief of the _Wirtschaft Rustung Amt_,
-or Office for Economy and Armaments, of the OKW (_Wi Rue Amt_). General
-Thomas tells about receiving this information from Goering in his draft
-of a work entitled “Basic Facts For a History of German War and
-Armaments Economy,” which he prepared during the Summer of 1944
-(_2353-PS_). On pages 313 to 315 of this work, Thomas discusses the
-Russo-German trade agreement of 1939 and relates that, 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 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:
-
- “On August 14, the Chief of Wi Rue, during a conference with
- Reichmarshal Goering, was informed, that the Fuehrer desired
- punctual delivery to the Russians only till spring 1941. Later
- on we would have no further interest in completely satisfying
- the Russian demands. This allusion moved the Chief of Wi Rue to
- give priority to matters concerning Russian War Economy.”
- (_2353-PS_)
-
-This statement will be referred to again later in the discussion of
-preparations for the economic exploitation of Soviet territory. At that
-time too, evidence will be presented that in November of 1940 Goering
-categorically 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 this 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 Jodl and issued to the Counter-Intelligence Service
-Abroad on 6 September 1940, such measures were ordered (_1229-PS_). 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 necessary implication, the extent of the preparations
-already underway. It provides:
-
- “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 Gouvernement, in the Eastern provinces, and
- in the Protekterat; she should draw the conclusion that we can
- at any time protect our interests—especially on the
- Balkan—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.
-
- “2. The impression is to be created that the center of the
- massing of troops is in the Southern part of the Gouvernement,
- in the Protekterat 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 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_, _etc._, 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, etc., 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.” (_1229-PS_)
-
-Early in November 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 plans. This order was contained in a Top
-Secret directive from the Fuehrer’s Headquarters No. 18, dated 12
-November 1940, signed by Hitler and initialed by Jodl (_444-PS_). The
-directive begins by saying that:
-
- “The preparatory measures of Supreme Headquarters for the
- prosecution of the war in the near future are to be made along
- the following lines.” (_444-PS_)
-
-It then outlines plans for the various theaters and the policy regarding
-relations with other countries and says regarding the U.S.S.R.:
-
- “* * * 5. _Russia_
-
- “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 has been submitted to,
- and approved by me.” (_444-PS_)
-
-On 5 December 1940 the Chief of the General Staff of the Army, at that
-time General Halder, reported to the Fuehrer concerning the progress of
-the plans for the coming operation against the U.S.S.R. A report of this
-conference with Hitler is set forth in a folder containing many
-documents, all labelled annexes and all bearing on _Fall Barbarossa_
-(_1799-PS_). This folder was discovered with the War Diary of the
-_Wehrmacht Fuehrungsstab_ and was apparently an inclosure to that Diary.
-Annex No. 1, dated 5 December 1940, indicates the state which planning
-for this aggression had reached six and a half months before it
-occurred:
-
- “Report to the Fuehrer on 5 December 1940.
-
- “The Chief of the General Staff of the Army then reports about
- the planned operation in the East. He expanded at first on the
- geographic fundamentals. The main war industrial centers are in
- the Ukraine, in Moscow and in Leningrad.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “The Fuehrer declares that he is agreed with the discussed
- operational plans and adds the following: The most important
- goal is to prevent that the Russians should withdraw 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
- territories. 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 to make the annihilation of strong enemy units possible.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “It is essential that the Russians should not take up positions
- in the rear again. The number of 130-140 Divisions as planned
- for the entire operation is sufficient.” (_1799-PS_)
-
-B. _Plan Barbarossa._
-
-By 18 December 1940 the general outline of the army’s operational plans
-having been submitted to Hitler, the basic strategical directive to the
-High Commands of the Army, Navy, and Air Forces for
-_Barbarossa_—Directive No. 21—was issued (_446-PS_). This directive
-marks the first time the plan to invade the U.S.S.R. 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 the
-operation against the Soviet Union. One of the most significant passages
-in that directive is the opening sentence:
-
- “The German Armed Forces must be prepared to crush Soviet Russia
- in a quick campaign even before the end of the war against
- England. (Case Barbarossa).” (_446-PS_)
-
-The directive continues:
-
- “Preparations requiring more time to start are—if this has not
- yet been done—to begin presently and are to be completed not
- later than 15 May 1941.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Great caution has to be exercised that the intention of an
- attack will not be recognized.” (_446-PS_)
-
-The directive then outlined the broad strategy on which the intended
-invasion was to proceed and the parts which the Army, Navy, and Air
-Forces were to play therein, and called for oral reports to Hitler by
-the Commanders-in-Chief. The directive concluded as follows:
-
- “V. 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.” (_446-PS_)
-
-The directive is signed by Hitler and initialled by Jodl, Keitel,
-Warlimont, and one illegible signature.
-
-It is perfectly clear both from the contents of the order itself as well
-as from its history, which has been outlined, that this directive was no
-mere staff planning exercise. 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 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 the basic directive.
-
-C. _Military Planning and Preparation for the Implementation of
-Barbarossa._
-
-The Naval War Diary for 30 January 1941 indicates the early compliance
-of the OKM with that part of Directive No. 21 (_446-PS_) which ordered
-progress in preparation to be reported to Hitler through the High
-Command of the Armed Forces. This entry in the War Diary 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 that part (_C-35_). The following passage shows that the Navy
-was actively preparing for the attack at this early date:
-
- “_30 January 1941_
-
- 7. Talk by Ia about the plans and preparations for the
- “Barbarossa” case to be submitted to the High Command of the
- Armed Forces”. (_C-35_)
-
-”Ia” is, in this case, the abbreviation for a deputy head of the
-Operations Division of the Naval War Staff.) Then follows a list of the
-Navy’s objectives in the war against Russia. Under the latter, many
-tasks for the Navy are listed, one of which is sufficiently typical to
-give an idea of all:
-
- “II. _Objectives of War Against Russia._
-
- * * * * * *
-
- _d._ To harass the Russian fleet by surprise blows as:
-
- “1. Lightning-like commitments at the outbreak of the war of air
- force units against strong points and combat vessels in the
- Baltic, Black Sea, and Ice Sea.” (_C-35_)
-
-This document indicates the detailed thinking and planning which was
-being carried out to implement _Barbarossa_ almost six months before the
-operation actually got underway. It is but another piece in the mosaic
-of evidence which demonstrates beyond question of doubt that the
-invasion of the Soviet Union was undeniably a premeditated attack.
-
-Similarly, the Naval War Diary for the month of February contains at
-least several references to the planning and preparation for the coming
-campaign (_C-33_). The entry for 19 February 1941 is typical:
-
- “In regard to the impending operation ‘Barbarossa’ for which all
- S-Boats in the Baltic will be needed, a transfer of some can
- only be considered after conclusion of the Barbarossa
- operations.” (_C-33_)
-
-On 3 February 1941 the Fuehrer 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. Attending this conference were, in addition to
-Hitler, the Chief of the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces, Keitel;
-the Chief of the Armed Forces Operations Staff, Jodl; the
-Commander-in-Chief of the Army, von Brauchitsch; the Chief of the Army
-General Staff, Halder; as well as several others including, Colonel
-Schmundt, Hitler’s Adjutant (_872-PS_). During the course of this
-conference, the Chief of the Army General Staff gave a long report about
-enemy strength as compared with German strength, and about the general
-overall operational plans for the invasion. This report was punctuated
-at various intervals by comments from the Fuehrer. An extract from this
-report, although written in a semishorthand form, is at least
-sufficiently clear to disclose that elaborate timetables had already
-been set up for the deployment of troops, as well as for industrial
-operations:
-
- “_The intended time period_ was discussed with a plan.
-
- 1st Deployment Staffel (_Aufmarschstaffel_)
-
- 2nd “ “ “
-
- transfer now, Front—Germany—East from the middle of March will
- give up 3 divisions for reinforcement in the West. Army groups
- and Army High Commands are being withdrawn from the West. There
- are already considerable reinforcements though still in the rear
- area. From now on, Attila [the code word for the operation for
- the occupation of unoccupied France] can be carried out only
- under difficulties. Industrial traffic is hampered by transport
- movements. From the middle of April, Hungary will be approached
- about the march through. Three deployment staffels from the
- middle of April. Felix is now no longer possible as the main
- part of the artillery is being entrained. [Felix is the code
- word for the occupation of Canary Islands, North Africa and
- Gibraltar.]
-
- “_In industry_ the full capacity timetable is in force. No more
- camouflage.
-
- “From 25.IV-15.V, 4 staffels to withdraw considerable forces
- from the West. (Seeloewe [Seeloewe was the code word for the
- planned operation against England] can no longer be carried
- out). The strategic concentration in the East is quite
- recognizable.
-
- “The full capacity timetable remains. 8 Marita [Marita was the
- code word for the action against Greece] divisions complete the
- picture of the disposition of forces on the plan.
-
- “_C-in-C Army_ requested that he no longer have to employ 5
- control divisions for this, but might hold them ready as
- reserves for commanders in the West.
-
- “_Fuehrer_ When Barbarossa commences, the world will hold its
- breath and make no comment.” (_872-PS_)
-
-This much, when read with the conference conclusions, 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 five months prior to 22 June, the date
-when the attack was actually launched. The conference report summarized
-the conclusions of the conference, insofar as they affected
-_Barbarossa_, as follows:
-
- “_Conclusions_:
-
- “1. _Barbarossa_
-
- “_a._ The Fuehrer on the whole was 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 Fuehrer desires that the operation map and the
- plan of the disposition of forces be sent to him as soon
- as possible.
-
- “_c._ Agreements with neighbouring states, who are
- taking part, may not be concluded until there is no
- longer any necessity for camouflage. The exception is
- Roumania with regard to the reinforcing of the Moldaw.
-
- “_d._ It must, at all costs, be possible to carry out
- Attila (auxiliary measure).
-
- “_e._ The strategic concentration for Barbarossa will be
- camouflaged as a feint for Seeloewe and the subsidiary
- measure Marita.” (_872-PS_)
-
-As the plans for the invasion became more detailed, involved, and
-complete, more and more agencies outside the Armed Forces had to be
-brought into the picture, let in on the secret, and assigned their
-respective parts. For example, early in March, 1941, Keitel drafted a
-letter to be sent to Reich Minister Todt, then Reich Minister of
-Armaments and Munitions and head of the organization Todt. In this
-letter Keitel explained the principles on which the camouflage for the
-operation was based and requested that the organization Todt follow the
-same line (_874-PS_). This letter illustrates the elaborate deceit with
-which the Nazi conspirators sought to hide the preparations for their
-treacherous attack:
-
- “_Top Secret_
- “The Chief of the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces.
- “Hq. of the Fuehrer 9 March 41
- DRAFT
-
- “Honorable Reich Minister! (TODT)
-
- “For the missions which the Fuehrer has assigned to the Armed
- Forces in the East, extensive measures for the diversion and
- deception of friend and foe are necessary prerequisites for the
- success of the operations.
-
- “The Supreme Command of the Armed Forces has issued guiding
- rules for the deception in accordance with more detailed
- directives of the Fuehrer. These rules aim essentially at
- continuing preparations for the attack against England in an
- increasing degree. Simultaneously the actual preparations for
- deployment in the East should be represented as a diversionary
- maneuvre to divert from plans which are being pursued for an
- attack against England. In order to insure success for these
- measures, it is indispensable that these same principles are
- being also followed on the part of the Organization Todt.
-
- “K. J. W.”
- [Initials of
- Keitel, Jodl and Warlimont] (_874-PS_)
-
-On 13 March 1941 Keitel signed an operational supplement to Fuehrer
-Order #21 (_446-PS_), which was issued in the form of “Directives for
-Special Areas” (_447-PS_). This detailed operational order, which was
-issued more than three 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, the Supreme Commander of
-the Army has the executive power in territory through which the army is
-advancing. During this period, however, the Reichsfuehrer SS is
-entrusted with “special tasks.” This assignment is discussed in
-paragraph 2b:
-
- “* * * _b._ In the area of operations, the _Reichsfuehrer SS_
- is, on behalf of the Fuehrer, 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
- Reichsfuehrer 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
- Reichsfuehrer SS that through the execution of his tasks
- military operations shall not be disturbed. Details shall be
- arranged directly through the OKH with the Reichsfuehrer SS.”
- (_447-PS_)
-
-The order then states that, in time, political administration will be
-set up under Commissioners of the Reich. The relationship of these
-officials to the army is discussed in paragraphs 2c and 3:
-
- “_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, according to its genealogic basis and 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 Fuehrer.
-
- “3. For the execution of all _military tasks_ within the areas
- under 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 cooperation with the Commissioner of the Reich in
- order to support him in his political task.
-
- “_b._ Exploitation of the country and securing its economic
- values for use by German industry (see par. 4). (_447-PS_)
-
-The directive also outlines the responsibility for the administration of
-economy in the conquered territory. This provision is also contained in
-Section I, paragraph 4:
-
- “4. The Fuehrer 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 Rue Amt’ with the execution
- of the task. Special orders on that will come from the
- OKW/Wi/Rue/Amt.” (_447-PS_)
-
-The second section deals with matters of personnel, supply, and
-communication traffic. Section III of the order deals with the relations
-with certain other countries and states, in part, as follows:
-
- “III. _Regulations regarding Rumania, 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 wishes 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.” (_447-PS_)
-
-The document closes with a section regarding Sweden:
-
- “IV. _Directives regarding Sweden._
-
- 12. Since Sweden can only become a transient-area for troops, no
- special authority is to be granted the commander of the German
- troops. However, he is entitled and compelled to secure the
- immediate protection of RR-transports against sabotage and
- attacks.
-
- “The Chief of the High Command of the Armed Forces
-
- “signed: KEITEL”
- (_447-PS_)
-
-As was hinted in the original Barbarossa Order, Directive No. 21
-(_446-PS_), 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 (_C-170_) which has been identified
-by 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. This item dated 3 April 1941 reads as follows:
-
- “_Balkan Operations delayed ‘Barbarossa’ at first for about five
- weeks._ All measures which can be construed as _offensive
- actions_ are to be stopped according to Fuehrer order.”
- (_C-170_)
-
-By the end of April, however, things were sufficiently straightened out
-to permit the Fuehrer definitely to set D-Day as 22 June—more than
-seven weeks away. A “Top Secret” report of a conference with the Chief
-of the Section _Landsverteidigung_ of the _Wehrmachtfuhrungsstab_ on 30
-April 1941 states, in the first two paragraphs:
-
- “1. _Timetable Barbarossa_:
-
- The Fuehrer 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.” (_873-PS_)
-
-Early in June, approximately three 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 (_C-39_) was
-prepared in 21 copies. The copy reproduced 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 Military Secret_
- “Supreme Command of the Armed Forces
- Nr. 44842/41 Top Military Secret WFST/Abt.L (I op)
- “Fuehrer’s Headquarters
- (no date)
- “Top Secret (_Chefsache_)
- _Only through officer_
-
- “_21 copies_
- 3rd copy Ob. d. m.
- I op.00845/41
- Received 6 June
- Enclosures:—
-
- “The Fuehrer has authorized the appended timetable as a
- foundation for further preparations for ‘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”
- (_C-39_)
-
-The document then proceeds to outline the state of preparations as of 1
-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. The remainder of the document is
-in tabular form with six columns headed from left to right at the top of
-each page—Date; Serial No.; Army; Navy; OKW; Remarks. The item
-appearing under date 21 June and Serial No. 29, provides in the columns
-for Army, Navy, and Air Forces that, “Till 1300 hours latest time at
-which operation can be cancelled (_spaetester Anhaltetermin_)” (_C-39_).
-Under the column headed OKW appears the note: “Cancelled by code word
-‘Altona’ or further confirmation of start of attack by code word:
-‘Dortmund’” (_C-39_). In the Remarks column appears the statement that:
-“Complete absence of camouflage of formation of Army point of main
-effort (_Schwerpunkt_), concentration of armour and artillery must be
-reckoned with” (_C-39_). The entry for 22 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:
-
- “_Invasion Day_
-
- “H-hour for the start of the invasion by the Army and crossing
- of the frontier by the Air Forces. 0330 hours”. (_C-39_)
-
-In the Remarks column it is stated that:
-
- “Army assembly independent of any lateness in starting owing to
- weather on the part of the Air Force.” (_C-39_)
-
-The other parts of the chart are similar in nature to those quoted and
-give great detail concerning the disposition and missions of the various
-components of the Armed Forces.
-
-On 9 June 1941 the order of the Fuehrer went out for final reports on
-Barbarossa to be made in Berlin on 14 June 1941—8 days before “D-Day”
-(_C-78_). This order, signed by Hitler’s Adjutant, Schmundt, reads as
-follows:
-
- “TOP SECRET
- Only by Officer
- “Office of Wehrmacht Adjutant
- “at Berchtesgaden
- 9th June 1941
-
- “_To the Fuehrer_
-
- Br. B. No. 7 Top Secret
-
- “_Top Secret_
-
- “_Re: Conference ‘Barbarossa’_
-
- “1. The Fuehrer and Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces have
- 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. _Time Table._
- “_a._ 11.00 hrs. “Silver Fox”
- “_b._ 12.00 hrs-14.00 hrs. Army Group South
- “_c._ 14.00 hrs-15.30 hrs. Lunch party for all
- participants in
- conference
- “_d._ From 15.30 hrs. Baltic, Army Group
- North, Army Group
- “Center” in this
- order.
-
- Participants see enclosed list of participants.
-
- (list of names, etc. follows)
-
- “(signed) Schmundt
- Colonel of the General Staff and Chief
- Wehrmacht Adjutant to the Fuehrer”.
- (_C-78_)
-
-There is attached a list of participants and the order in which they
-will report. The list includes a large number of the members of the High
-Command and General Staff Group as of that date. Among those to
-participate were Goering, Keitel, Jodl, and Raeder.
-
-The foregoing documents are sufficient to establish the premeditation
-and calculation which marked the military preparations for the invasion
-of the U.S.S.R. Starting almost a full year before the launching of the
-attack, the Nazi conspirators planned and prepared every military detail
-of their aggression against the Soviet Union with all that thoroughness
-and meticulousness which has come to be associated with the German
-character. The leading roles were performed in this preparation by the
-military figures—Goering, Keitel, Jodl, and Raeder.
-
-D. _Plans for the Economic Exploitation and Spoliation of the U.S.S.R._
-
-Not only was there detailed preparation for the invasion from a purely
-military standpoint, but equally elaborate and detailed planning was
-undertaken by the Nazi conspirators to insure that their aggression
-would prove economically profitable. The motives which led the
-conspirators to plan and launch attack were both political and economic.
-The economic basis may be simply summarized 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 the Nazi conspirators a need
-was translated as a right, and they early began planning and preparing
-with typical care and detail to insure 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.
-
-As early as August 1940 General Thomas, Chief of the _Wi Rue Amt_,
-received a hint from Goering about a possible attack on the U.S.S.R.,
-which prompted him to begin considering the Soviet war economy. In
-November 1940—8 months before the attack—Thomas was categorically
-informed by Goering 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
-(_2353-PS_). Goering 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 in these
-terms:
-
- “* * * In November, 1940, the Chief of the _Wi Rue_ together
- with Secretaries of state Koerner, Neumann, Backe and General
- von Hanneken were informed by the Reichmarshal 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 Rue 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 capacity of the different big armament
- centers and their dependency one on the other.
-
- “3. Determine 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,
- etc.”
-
- “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 Brigadier General Schubert. The work was carried
- out according to the directives from the Chief of the Office,
- resp. the group of depts. for foreign territories (Ausland) with
- the cooperation 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
- territory.” (_2353-PS_)
-
-By the end of February 1941 this preliminary planning had proceeded to a
-point where a broader plan of organization was needed. 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, 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 cooperation, but
- instructions direct from the central office in Berlin.
-
- “4. Scope of activities to be divided in 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 complimentary districts.
-
- “5. In view of the extended field of activity, the term _war
- economy_ inspection is to be used preferably, instead of
- 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 concerns_. 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 experiences, (for example,
- lignite, ore, chemistry, petroleum).
-
- “After the discussion of further details, Lt. Col. Luther was
- instructed to make an initial draft of such an organization
- within one week.
-
- “Close cooperation with the individual sections in the building
- is essential. An officer must still be appointed for Wi and Rue,
- with whom the operational staff can remain in constant contact.
- Wi is to give each section chief and Lt. Col. Luther a copy of
- the new plan regarding Russia.
-
- “Major 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 next week.
-
- “(signed:) Hamann”.
- (_1317-PS_)
-
-Hamann, who signed the report is listed among those attending as a
-Captain, was apparently the junior officer present. Presumably it fell
-naturally to his lot to prepare the minutes of the meeting.
-
-The authority and mission of this organization which Thomas was
-organizing at the direction of Goering was clearly recognized by Keitel
-in his operational order of 13 March 1941 (_447-PS_). The order stated
-that the Fuehrer had entrusted the uniform direction of the
-administration of economy in the area of operations and political
-administration to the Reichsmarshal (Goering) who in turn had delegated
-his authority to the Chief of the _Wi Rue Amt_ (Thomas). (_447-PS_)
-
-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 Economic Staff _Oldenburg_. (_Oldenburg_
-was the code name given to this economic counterpart of _Barbarossa_.)
-Section I of the report of this conference (_1157-PS_) deals with the
-general organization of Economic Staff _Oldenburg_ as it had developed.
-The report begins:
-
-“_Conference with the Branches of the Armed Forces at 1000 hours on 29th
- April 1941_
- I.
- _Welcome_
-
- “Purpose of meeting: introduction to the organizational
- structure of the economic sector of the action.
-
- “_Barbarossa—Oldenburg_
-
- “As already known, the Fuehrer, 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 industrial
- armament office (_Chef Wi Rue Amt_).
-
- “Under the Reich Marshal and the economic general staff, the
- supreme central authority in the area of the drive itself is the
- _Economic Staff Oldenburg for special duties_ under the command
- of Major General (Generalleutnant) Schubert.
-
- “His subordinate authorities, geographically subdivided are:
-
- 5 economic inspectorates
-
- 23 economic commands
-
- 12 sub-offices, which are distributed among important
- places within the area of the economic commands.
-
- “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 on
- the one hand and the battle area proper and the rear area of the
- army on the other hand. In the last economic matters are dealt
- with by the IV Econ (IV Wi) of the Army Headquarters Commands,
- i.e. the liaison officer of the industrial armament office
- within the supreme command of the armed forces at the army
- headquarters commands. 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 territory between the battle and the military rear area,
- the rear area of the Army, group IV Econs at the various field
- commands are placed at the disposal of the liaison officer of
- the industrial armaments office in order to support the army
- headquarters commands specialists 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, etc.
-
- “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 H_ dealing with troop requirements, armaments,
- industrial transport organization.
-
- “_Group L_ which concerns itself with all questions of feed and
- agriculture, and
-
- “_Group W_ which is in charge of the entire field of trade and
- industry, including raw materials and suppliers; 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 v.
- Hanneken.” (_1157-PS_)
-
-The remainder of the document deals with local subdivisions, personnel
-and staffing problems, and similar details.
-
-These documents portray the calculated method with which the Nazi
-conspirators prepared months in advance to rob and loot their intended
-victim. They show that the conspirators not only planned to stage an
-attack on a neighbor they had pledged to security, but that they also
-intended to strip that neighbor of its food, its factories, and all its
-means of livelihood. The Nazi conspirators made these 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
-story of how this plot was executed forms a part of the case to be
-presented by the Soviet prosecuting staff.)
-
-E. _Preparation for the Political Phase of the Aggression._
-
-As has already been indicated, and as will be later more fully
-developed, there were both economic and political motives for the action
-of the Nazi conspirators in invading the Soviet Union. The economic
-aspects have been discussed. Equally elaborate planning was engaged in
-by the Nazi conspirators to insure the effectuation of the political aim
-of their aggression. That political aim may be described as the
-elimination of the U.S.S.R. as a powerful political factor in Europe,
-and the acquisition of _Lebensraum_. For the accomplishment of these
-purposes the Nazi conspirators selected as their agent Rosenberg.
-
-As early as 2 April 1941 Rosenberg, or a member of his staff, prepared a
-memorandum on the U.S.S.R. (_1017-PS_). 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. The
-memorandum then considers what the political goal of such occupation
-should be and suggests ways for reaching such a goal. This memorandum
-begins:
-
- “_Subject: The U.S.S.R._
-
- “Bolshevik Russia, just as the one-time Czarist Russia, is a
- conglomeration of peoples of very different types, which has
- come into being through the annexation of states of a related or
- even of an essentially alien character.
-
- “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 and/or
- economic needs, 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, as regards 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 the 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 of course only hold good 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 centre.
-
- “_b._ White Russia with Minsk or Smolensk as its capital.
-
- “_c._ Esthonia, Latvia, and Lithuania.
-
- “_d._ The Ukraine and the Crimea with Kiev as its centre.
-
- “_e._ The Don area with Rostov as its capital.
-
- “_f._ The area of the Caucasus.
-
- “_g._ Russian Central Asia or Russian Turkestan.” (_1017-PS_)
-
-The memorandum then proceeds to discuss each of the areas or
-geographical units thus listed in some detail. At the end of the paper
-the writer sums up his thoughts and briefly outlines his plan in these
-terms:
-
- “_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 wartime.
-
- “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 area, 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 area, 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.
-
- “2.4.41” (_1017-PS_)
-
-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 was set up under Goering and Thomas.
-
-Rosenberg’s statement of the political purpose of the invasion and his
-analysis of methods for achieving it apparently did not fall on deaf
-ears. By a Fuehrer Order dated 20 April 1941 he was named “Commissioner
-for the Central Control of Questions Connected with the East-European
-Region”. This order is part of a correspondence file regarding
-Rosenberg’s appointment (_865-PS_). Hitler’s order reads as follows:
-
- “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 established 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.
-
- “Fuehrer’s Headquarters 20th April 1941.
- “The Fuehrer
- (signed) Adolf Hitler
- “Reich Minister and Head of Reich Chancellery
- (signed) Dr. Lammers”
- (_865-PS_)
-
-This particular copy of the Fuehrer’s Order was enclosed in a letter
-which Dr. Lammers wrote to Keitel requesting cooperation for Rosenberg
-and asking that Keitel appoint a Deputy to work with Rosenberg. This
-letter reads as follows:
-
- “The Reich Minister and the Head of the Reich Chancellery
- “Berlin W8 21st April 1941
- VossStrasse 6
-
- At present Fuehrer
- Headquarters, mail
- without exception to
- be sent to the Berlin
- address.
-
- “To: The Chief of the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces,
- General Field Marshal Keitel
-
- “Personal. By courier.
-
- “My dear General Field Marshal.
-
- “Herewith I am sending you a copy of the Fuehrer’s Decree by
- which the Fuehrer 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 Fuehrer wishes that Rosenberg shall be
- authorized for this purpose to obtain the closest cooperation 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 cooperation Reichsleiter Rosenberg will
- primarily depend. There are: the Commissioner for the Four Year
- plan, the Reich Minister of Economics and you, yourself.
-
- “Therefore may I ask you, in accordance with the Fuehrer’s
- wishes, to place your cooperation 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,
- Dr. Lammers.”
- (_865-PS_)
-
-Keitel wrote Lammers acknowledging receipt of his letter and telling of
-his compliance with the request:
-
- “The Chief of the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces.
- “25 April 1941
- “Most Secret
- “By courier
-
- “To:
-
- “The Head of the Reich Chancellery,
-
- Reich Minister Dr. Lammers.
-
- “Personal
-
- “Dear Reich Minister.
-
- “I acknowledge receipt of the copy of the Fuehrer’s Decree in
- which the Fuehrer 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.
-
- “Heil Hitler
- “Yours very sincerely,
- “K.
- 25/4”
- (_865-PS_)
-
-Keitel also wrote Rosenberg, telling of his compliance with Lammers’
-request:
-
- “The Chief of the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces
- “25th April 1941
- “Most Secret
- “By courier
-
- “To:
-
- “Reichsleiter Rosenberg
-
- “_Personal._
-
- “Dear Reichsleiter,
-
- “The Head of the Reich Chancellery has sent me a copy of the
- Fuehrer’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 him
- only.
-
- “Heil Hitler
- “Yours very sincerely,
- “K.
- 25/4” (_865-PS_)
-
-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,
-the citation of a small number which are typical should be sufficient.
-All the documents now discussed were found in Rosenberg’s files.
-
-In a memorandum dated 8 May 1941, entitled “General Instructions for all
-Reichcommissars in the occupied Eastern Territories”, Rosenberg gives
-instructions to his chief henchmen and outlines clearly the political
-aims and purposes of the attack. In the second two paragraphs of the
-English translation the following remarks appear:
-
- “The only possible political goal of war can be the aim to free
- the German Reich from the Great Russian (_gross-russisch_)
- 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 Petersburg 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, from the East shall be eliminated forever.
-
- “Therefore this huge area must be divided according to its
- historical and racial conditions into Reichs-Commissariats, each
- of which bears within itself a different political aim. The
- Reich Commissariat 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 Commissar. Beyond that there are
- still a few general considerations which possess validity for
- all Reich Commissars.” (_1030-PS_)
-
-The fifth paragraph presents an interesting rationalization of a
-contemplated robbery:
-
- “The German people has achieved, in the course of centuries,
- tremendous accomplishments in the Eastern European area. Nearly
- its entire real estate property was confiscated without
- indemnification, hundreds of thousands (in the South, on the
- Volga) starved or were deported or, like in the Baltic
- territories, were cheated out of the fruits of their cultural
- work during the past 700 years. The German Reich will now have
- to proclaim the principle, that after the occupation of the
- Eastern Territories, the former German assets have become
- 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
- Commissariat.” (_1030-PS_)
-
-“An Instruction for a Reich Commissar in the Baltic Countries and White
-Russia” (_1029-PS_) is typical of the directives issued to each of the
-appointed commissioners. This order is amazingly frank in outlining the
-intentions of the Nazi conspirators toward the country they intended to
-occupy in the course of their aggression. 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 added this
- region to the living space of Greater Germany.
-
- “The aim of a Reich Commissar for Esthonia, Latvia, Lithuania
- and White Russia [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 Commissar 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 Esthonian people are strongly
- germanized to the extent of 50% 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 Esthonia. 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 emigration of racial Germans
- is called for in order to promote very intensive Germanization
- (on the East Prussian border).”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “The task of a Reich Commissar 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 emigration 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.” (_1029-PS_)
-
-These two directives are sufficiently typical of the lot to show 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.
-They are reinforced by a later report of Rosenberg’s. 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
-(_1039-PS_). This report makes disclosures concerning the number of
-conspirators who worked with and assisted Rosenberg in the planning and
-preparation for this phase of the aggression and the extent to which
-practically all the ministries and offices of both the State and the
-Party were involved in this operation. The report was found in
-Rosenberg’s files and, although it is rather long, it is of sufficient
-importance in implicating persons, groups and organizations to justify
-quotation in full:
-
- “_Report on the Preparatory Work in Eastern European Questions_
-
- “Immediately after the notification of individual Supreme Reich
- offices regarding the Fuehrer’s decree of 20.4.1941 a conference
- with the Chief of the OKW [Armed Forces High Command] took
- place. After presentation of the various political aims in the
- proposed Reichskommissariats and presentation of personal
- requirements for the East, the Chief of the OKW explained that a
- deferment (_OK-stellung_) would be too complicated in this case
- and that this matter could be carried out best by direct
- cancellation (_Abkommandierung_) by command of the Chief of the
- OKW. Generalfeldmarschall Keitel then issued an appropriate
- command which established the basis for the coming requirements.
- He named as deputy and liaison officer General Jodl and Maj.
- Gen. Warlimont. The negotiations which then commenced relative
- in all questions of the Eastern Territory 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 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 Generalfeldmarschall 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
- Economy (_Reichswirtschaftsminister_) Funk, who appointed as his
- permanent deputy Ministerialdirektor Dr. Schlotterer. Almost
- daily conferences were then held with Dr. Schlotterer with
- reference to the war-economic intentions of the Economic
- Operational Staff (_Wirtschaftsfuehrungsstab_) East. In this
- connection I had conferences with General Thomas, State
- Secretary (_Staatssekretaer_) Koerner, 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 relationship of the proposed Reich
- ministry toward the four-year plan are still open and will be
- subject, after submission, to a decision of the Fuehrer. In
- principle I declared that I am in no way intended to found an
- economic department in my office, economics would rather be
- handled substantially and practically by the Reichsmarschall and
- the persons appointed by him, however the two responsible
- department heads, namely Ministerial Director Dr. Schlotterer
- for industrial economics and Ministerial Director Riecke for
- food economies, would be placed in my office as permanent
- liaison men, to coordinate here political aims with the economic
- necessities, in a department which would have to unite yet other
- persons for such coordinating work, depending on later and for
- work (political leadership of labor unions, construction etc.).
- 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 General Counsel Dr.
- Braeutigam, 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 Fuehrer are under way with the foreign
- office regarding its wishes for the assignment of its
- representatives to the future Reich commissioners.
-
- “The propaganda ministry 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, etc. 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 cooperation the propaganda ministry assigns yet
- another person directly to my department ‘Enlightenment and
- Press’ (_Aufklaerung und Presse_) 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 agreement on contents and terminology
- takes place continually every day.
-
- “Thorough discussions took place with Reichsminister Ohnesorge
- concerning future transmission of communication and setting up
- of all technical necessities in future occupied territories;
- with Reichsminister Seldte on the supply of labor forces, with
- Reichsminister Frick (State Secretary Stuckart) in detailed form
- on the assignment of numerous necessary officials for the
- commissariats. According to the present estimate there will be
- four Reichs Kommissariats, as approved by the Fuehrer. I shall
- propose to the Fuehrer for political and other reasons to set up
- a suitable number of General Commissariats (24) Main
- Commissariats (about 80) and Regional (_Gebiet_) Commissariats
- (over 900). A General Commissariat would correspond to a former
- Generalgovernment, a Main Commissariat to a Maingovernment. A
- Regional Commissariat contains 3 or 4 Districts (_Kreise_). In
- view of the huge spaces that is the minimum number which appears
- necessary for a future civil government and/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.
-
- “In the same manner conferences have taken place with the Reich
- Physicians Leader (_Reichsaerztefuehrer_) Dr. Conti, the
- Inspector of the Army Veterinary Service, and all specialists
- belonging thereto. The difficulties of medical and veterinary
- supply were thoroughly discussed and the measures were
- previewed, in order to insure well-prepared employment of the
- forces mentioned after the end of the operations. A conference
- with Reichsminister Dr. Todt resulted in the assignment first of
- all of 4 higher leaders of the Construction Service, whereupon
- Dr. Todt proposed to unite administratively under one leadership
- the whole Construction Service.
-
- “Discussions took place with Reich Leader Amann and his chief of
- staff Rienhardt regarding the publication of four German
- newspapers in the Reich Commissariats to start with. Furthermore
- a number of newspapers in the prospective native tongues were
- considered. According to the latest information the technical
- forces, for this work are already at the border and may be
- committed at any time to determine whether the prerequisites for
- printing shops are present.
-
- “Discussions are also under way with Corpsleader
- (_Korpsfuehrer_) Huehnlein and with the Reich youth leadership
- to assure a necessary and suitable mobilization. Intensive talks
- also took place with the Chief of Staff (_Stabschef_) of the SA.
- He was asked to make available a number of the most reliable SA
- leaders for this gigantic territory, which he agreed to do. The
- personnel suggestions together with other suggestions will be
- submitted to the Fuehrer. The same agreement has been reached
- with the Reich organizational leader
- (_Reichsorganisationsleiter_), who has instructed the commander
- of Kroessinsee, Gohdes, to carry out the swelling channelling of
- requested persons, to admit them into Kroessinsee for schooling
- and instruction on the whole problem and prepare them in the
- best manner for commitment. On the orders of Dr. Ley party
- member Marrenbach was then employed in order to take over
- already now the leadership of Russian labor unions in connection
- with the Wehrmacht. That appeared as an eminently important
- problem, particularly also in connection with the economic
- leadership, because the labor unions undoubtedly have been a
- powerful support of the Soviets and especially have the
- commitment of the German Labor Front appeared necessary under
- certain conditions.
-
- “Lengthy discussions regarding the relationship of the Police to
- the new order in the East have taken place. Certain proposed
- changes thereto have been suggested by the Reichsfuehrer SS and
- on his order by Gruppenfuehrer [SS Lt Gen] Heydrich which do not
- appear supportable to me for the complete authority of the
- German Reich government in the East. Also the documents of this
- problem will have to be laid before the Fuehrer for decision.
-
- “Aside from these negotiations I received the responsible
- deputies of the entire propaganda, namely Ministerial Director
- Fritsche, Ambassador Schmidt, Reich Superintendent of
- Broadcasting Glasmeier, Dr. Grothe OKW, and others. Without
- going into details of political objectives I instructed the
- above-named persons in confidence about the necessary attitude,
- with the request to tone down the whole terminology of the
- press, without issuing any statements.
-
- “The works for substantial coverage of the Eastern question
- prepared long ago appeared in my office, which I turned over to
- the propaganda deputies. I enclose a few samples thereof. These
- pamphlets, which may later be turned over to the press for
- development, deal with the whole structure and organization of
- the USSR, the economic possibilities of the East, Agriculture,
- the peoples of the Soviet Union, the work of the Komintern since
- 1889, the Jews in the Soviet Union since 1933, statistical
- results of the poll taken among the Germans in Russia, the
- history of the Ukraine, of the Caucasus, of Turkestan. Extensive
- works are in preparation for the foundation of legal
- administration: German law in the Ukraine, German art in the
- Ukraine, influence of the German language on the Ukrainian
- language, the Ukrainians from the viewpoint of the Germans. In
- addition a number of articles are being prepared in Russian
- language which have the purpose of enlightening the people of
- the Soviet Union about true conditions in Germany. These
- articles are also suitable as the basis for newspaper articles
- in the newly occupied territories. Finally, after extensive
- work, an ethnological map of the East based on the most recent
- statistical reports has been printed in great number and made
- available to all offices. This map can be used as the basis of
- eventual fixing of boundaries in the north as well as in the
- south, and offers points of departure for fixing the boundaries
- of the future Reich Commissariats.
-
- “As a result of these conferences, conducted for the most part
- by myself, continuous consultation and organizational
- preparation is under way through my office and through those of
- the liaison men delegated from the other offices of the Party
- and the State. I may say that all the work, inasmuch as it is at
- all possible under present condition, is in full swing. Aside
- from the General and Chief commissariats more than 900 Regional
- Commissariats are planned, which must all be manned by political
- leaders, representatives of the department and officials of the
- Reich Ministry of the Interior. The work in the East differs
- basically from the conditions in the West. Whereas we can count
- on every technical installation and a cultured population here
- in the big cities, that is not the case in the East. There
- literally everything will have to be prepared and taken along,
- additionally for the gigantic spaces—not only an auto park but
- a great number of typewriters, office material, above all
- medical supplies and much more down to the bed sheets. It does
- not appear possible to accomplish such a project suddenly in 14
- days, therefore all these arrangements had to be set in full
- motion already now on my responsibility on the basis of the
- Fuehrer’s decree.
-
- “The structure of my office itself is temporarily organized as
- follows in carrying out the Fuehrer’s order. I have requested
- Gauleiter and Reichsstatthalter Dr. Meyer as my permanent
- representative. He has negotiated personally and thoroughly,
- through the whole time with all pertinent offices, in order to
- develop all aspects down to the details. A political department
- has been founded for the execution of the substantial work,
- under my co-worker of many years Dr. Leibbrandt (deputy General
- Consul Dr. Braeutigam), who prepares the various books and
- pamphlets for information. A great number of propaganda leaflets
- have been composed by him which will then have been scattered
- over the Russian front in huge numbers by the armed forces. Also
- for a specific time other leaflets are ready which are addressed
- directly to the individual races. I do not care to decide on
- this date for myself, and will lay these originals before the
- Fuehrer at the first opportunity with the request to check the
- contents and determine the time of the eventually approved
- appeals. The political department is also undertaking a thorough
- investigation of all those, with the exception of Russians, who
- eventually can be used as advisors for the administration of the
- various nationalities. Continuous discussions about this subject
- are under way with representatives of the OKW, the propaganda
- ministry, etc. Secondly a department of economic—political
- cooperation has been founded under direction of
- Oberbereichsleiter Malletke. A department of ‘Law, Finance, and
- Administration’ has been taken over by Regierungspraesident
- Runte. A department for Culture and Science is as yet unoccupied
- since the development of this question does not appear urgent.
- Also the department ‘Enlightenment and Press’. It is occupied by
- Major of the Air Force Carl Cranz, deputy Job Zimmermann.
- Integrated here are co-workers who command the Russian,
- Ukrainian, and other languages. The wishes of the Reich Press
- Chief (_Reichspressechef_) for setting up one press chief for
- each Reichskommissar are under discussion in order to decide
- them in that sense if possible.
-
- “Thus I hope that when, after preliminary conclusion of the
- military action the Fuehrer has the possibility for a report
- from me, I shall be able to report to the Fuehrer far-reaching
- preparations, up to those points of special and personal nature
- which the Fuehrer alone can decide.” (_1039-PS_)
-
-(As a part of the case to be presented by the Soviet prosecuting staff,
-it will be shown how all this planning and preparation for the
-elimination of the U.S.S.R. as a political factor were 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, which declared: “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; that the
-plans darkly conceived almost a full year before and secretly and
-continuously developed since then, had now been brought to fruition. The
-Nazi conspirators, having carefully and completely planned and prepared
-this war of aggression, now proceeded to initiate and wage it.
-
-F. _The Motives for the Attack._
-
-It should first be pointed out that not only was Germany bound by 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 the 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” (_2353-PS_), 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 material being thus delivered was 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 maintaining their obligations. At page 315 of his book Thomas
-says:
-
- “Later on the urgency of the Russian deliveries diminished, as
- preparations for the campaign in the East were already under
- way.
-
- “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.” (_2353-PS_)
-
-Again at page 404, Thomas brings this point out even more forcefully:
-
- “In addition to the Italian negotiations, until June, 1941, the
- negotiations with Russia were accorded a great deal of
- attention. The Fuehrer 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
- 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 Rue office to enter into numerous
- individual negotiations with German firms in order to coordinate
- Russian orders with those of the German 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.” (_2353-PS_)
-
-Not only was the Soviet Union faithful to its treaty obligations with
-Germany, but she had no aggressive intentions toward German territory. 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
-(_C-170_), demonstrates this point conclusively. It will be sufficient
-to quote a few entries, which include reports from the German ambassador
-in Moscow as late as June 1941. Entry 165 reads:
-
- “165 A 22.29 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.” (_C-170_)
-
-Entry 167 reads:
-
- “167 A 22.53 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 as good.” (_C-170_)
-
-Entry 169 also reiterates this point:
-
- “169 A 22.65 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.” (_C-170_)
-
-The reasons, therefore, which led to the attack on the Soviet Union
-could not have been self-defense or treaty breaches. 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 motif of Nazi policy. The
-pattern into which these varied reasons 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, “_Drang Nach Osten_,”
-had been a cardinal principle of the Party almost since its birth, and
-rested on the twin bases of political strategy and economic
-aggrandizement. Politically, such action meant elimination of the
-powerful force to the East, which might constitute a threat to German
-ambition, and acquisition of _Lebensraum_. Economically, it offered
-opportunities for the plunder of vast quantities of food, raw materials,
-and other supplies. Undoubtedly the demands of the German War economy
-for food and raw material served to revive the attractiveness of 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, at page 641 of the Houghton Mifflin English
-edition:
-
- “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.”
-
-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 six hundred 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 dichotomy of purpose is clearly reflected
-in the stated purposes, previously discussed, of the organization which
-Rosenberg set up to administer the occupied Eastern Territories. In a
-speech which Rosenberg delivered, two days before the attack, to the
-people most interested in the problem of the East, he restated in his
-usual somewhat mystic fashion the political basis for the campaign and
-its interrelationship with the economic goal (_1058-PS_). A short
-extract from that speech reads as follows:
-
- “The job of feeding the German people stands, this year, without
- a doubt, at the top of the list of Germany’s claims on 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 which extent industries can still be maintained
- there (Wagon Factories, etc.). 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 maybe in a 100 years. For the
- Russian soul has been torn in the struggle of the last 200
- years. The original Russians are excellent artistic craftsmen,
- dancers and musicians. They have certain hereditary talents, but
- these talents are different from these of the Western people.
- The fight between Turgenjew and Dostejewsky was symbolic for the
- nation. The Russian soul found no outlet, either way. If we now
- close the West to the Russians, they might become conscious of
- their own inborn, proper forces and of the area to which they
- belong. An historian will maybe see this decision in a different
- light, in hundreds of years than it might appear to a Russian
- today.” (_1058-PS_)
-
-As has been indicated, the failure of the Nazi conspirators to defeat
-Britain had served further to strengthen them in their belief in 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 disclosed in the previous
-discussion of the organization set up under Goering and General Thomas
-to carry out the economic exploitation of the territory to be occupied.
-The purely materialistic basis for the attack was unmistakable. 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 consequences to the Russian people which such robbery
-would entail, that doubt is dispelled by a memorandum showing clear and
-conscious recognition by the Nazis that their plans would no doubt
-result in starving to death millions of people. (_2718-PS_)
-
-On 20 June 1941 General Thomas wrote a memorandum along a similar line,
-in which he stated that Keitel had confirmed to him Hitler’s present
-conception of the German economic policy concerning raw materials
-(_1456-PS_). This policy expressed the 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
-memorandum reads, in part:
-
- “The following is the new conception of the Fuehrer, which
- Minister Todt has explained to me and which has been confirmed
- later on by Field Marshal Keitel:
-
- “1. The course of the war shows that we went too far in our
- autarchical endeavors. It is impossible to try and 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
- autarchical endeavors ask for 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 one single
- time, will not be as great as the one that is currently needed
- for the running of the synthetic factories in question. The aim
- must also be to secure all territories, which are of special
- interest to us for the war economy, by conquering them.
-
- “At the time the 4-year-plan was established, I issued the
- statement where I made it clear that a completely autarchical
- economy is impossible for us, because the need of men will be
- too great. Nevertheless, my solution was always to provide the
- necessary reserves for missing stocks respectively to secure the
- delivery in wartime through economic alliances.” (_1456-PS_)
-
-On this macabre note the story of this aggression comes to an end. In
-view of the solemn pledge of nonaggression; the base and sinister
-motives involved; the months of secret planning and preparation; and the
-suffering intentionally and deliberately wrought; it may perhaps not be
-too much to say that in the history of relations between sovereign
-nations, a blacker chapter has never been written than the one which
-tells of the Nazi conspirators’ unprovoked invasion of the territory of
-the Soviet Union.
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO AGGRESSION AGAINST
- THE USSR
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6 (a) │ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Sections IV (F) │ │
- │ 6; V. │ I │ 27, 29
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document was referred to during the │ │
- │trial but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
- *444-PS │Original Directive No. 18 from Fuehrer’s│ │
- │Headquarters signed by Hitler and │ │
- │initialled by Jodl, 12 November 1940, │ │
- │concerning plans for prosecution of war │ │
- │in Mediterranean Area and occupation of │ │
- │Greece. (GB 116) │ III │ 403
- │ │ │
- *446-PS │Top Secret Fuehrer Order No. 21 signed │ │
- │by Hitler and initialled by Jodl, │ │
- │Warlimont and Keitel, 18 December 1940, │ │
- │concerning the Invasion of Russia (case │ │
- │Barbarossa). (USA 31) │ III │ 407
- │ │ │
- *447-PS │Top Secret Operational Order to Order │ │
- │No. 21, signed by Keitel, 13 March 1941,│ │
- │concerning Directives for special areas.│ │
- │(USA 135) │ III │ 409
- │ │ │
- *864-PS │Top Secret Note, 20 October 1939, on │ │
- │conference between Hitler and Chief OKW │ │
- │concerning future relations of Poland to│ │
- │Germany, 17 October 1939. (USA 609) │ III │ 619
- │ │ │
- *865-PS │Correspondence between Keitel, Rosenberg│ │
- │and Lammers, April 1941, concerning │ │
- │appointment of Jodl and Warlimont as OKW│ │
- │representatives with Rosenberg. (USA │ │
- │143) │ III │ 621
- │ │ │
- *872-PS │Memorandum of Discussion between the │ │
- │Fuehrer and the OKW, concerning case │ │
- │“Barbarossa” and “Sonnenblume” (African │ │
- │operation). (USA 134) │ III │ 626
- │ │ │
- *873-PS │Top secret memorandum of discussion with│ │
- │the Chief “L”, 30 April 1941, about the │ │
- │invasion of Russia. (USA 137) │ III │ 633
- │ │ │
-  874-PS │Draft letter to Todt, initialled K, J, │ │
- │and W, 9 March 1941, concerning │ │
- │Deception measures. │ III │ 634
- │ │ │
-  876-PS │Letter from Keitel, 12 May 1941, │ │
- │concerning Deception of the enemy. │ III │ 635
- │ │ │
-  886-PS │Fuehrer decree, 13 May 1941, on │ │
- │courts-martial and treatment of enemy │ │
- │civilians in the district “Barbarossa”, │ │
- │signed by Keitel for Hitler, and │ │
- │initialled by Jodl. │ III │ 637
- │ │ │
-*1017-PS │Memorandum entitled “Memorial No. 1 │ │
- │regarding USSR”, 2 April 1941, found in │ │
- │Rosenberg’s “Russia File”. (USA 142) │ III │ 674
- │ │ │
-*1019-PS │Appendix to Memorandum No. 2. │ │
- │Recommendation as to the personnel for │ │
- │the Reich Commissariats in the East and │ │
- │for the Political Central Office in │ │
- │Berlin, 7 April 1941. (USA 823) │ III │ 681
- │ │ │
-*1029-PS │Paper entitled “Instructions for a Reich│ │
- │Commissar in the Baltic States”, 8 May │ │
- │1941, found in Rosenberg’s “Russia │ │
- │File”. (USA 145) │ III │ 690
- │ │ │
-*1030-PS │General instructions for all Reich │ │
- │Commissars in the Occupied Eastern │ │
- │Territories, 8 May 1941, found in │ │
- │Rosenberg file. (USA 144) │ III │ 692
- │ │ │
- 1034-PS │Minutes of discussion concerning │ │
- │Construction and Administration, 22 June│ │
- │1941. │ III │ 693
- │ │ │
-*1039-PS │Report concerning preparatory work │ │
- │regarding problems in Eastern │ │
- │Territories, 28 June 1941, found in │ │
- │Rosenberg’s “Russia File”. (USA 146) │ III │ 695
- │ │ │
-*1058-PS │Excerpt from a speech, 20 June 1941, by │ │
- │Rosenberg before people most intimately │ │
- │concerned with Eastern Problem, found in│ │
- │his “Russia File”. (USA 147) │ III │ 716
- │ │ │
- 1156-PS │Report to Goering from Chief of Office │ │
- │for War Mobilization of Economy, 19 │ │
- │March 1941. │ III │ 808
- │ │ │
-*1157-PS │Report on conference, 29 April 1941, │ │
- │concerning top secret plan for Economic │ │
- │exploitation of Soviet Areas (Oldenburg │ │
- │Plan). (USA 141) │ III │ 811
- │ │ │
-*1229-PS │OKW Directive to the German Intelligence│ │
- │Service in the East, signed by Jodl, 6 │ │
- │September 1940. (USA 130) │ III │ 849
- │ │ │
- 1316-PS │Top secret note for files on conference │ │
- │of 21 March 1941 concerning employment │ │
- │of Quartermaster General. │ III │ 908
- │ │ │
-*1317-PS │Top secret notes taken by Hamann of a │ │
- │discussion of the economic exploitation │ │
- │of Russia, presided over by General │ │
- │Thomas, 28 February 1941. (USA 140) │ III │ 911
- │ │ │
-*1456-PS │Thomas memorandum 20 June 1941; Keitel │ │
- │consulted about resources of USSR. (USA │ │
- │148) │ IV │ 21
- │ │ │
-*1517-PS │Memorandum from Rosenberg concerning │ │
- │discussion with the Fuehrer, 14 December│ │
- │1941. (USA 824) │ IV │ 55
- │ │ │
-*1799-PS │Annex 1 to report of Chief of General │ │
- │Staff of the Army, 5 December 1940, │ │
- │concerning planned operation in the │ │
- │East. (USA 131) │ IV │ 374
- │ │ │
-*1834-PS │Report on conference between Ribbentrop │ │
- │and Oshima, 23 February 1941. (USA 129) │ IV │ 469
- │ │ │
-*2353-PS │Extracts from General Thomas’ Basic │ │
- │Facts for History of German War and │ │
- │Armament Economy. (USA 35) │ IV │ 1071
- │ │ │
-*2718-PS │Memorandum “About the result of today’s │ │
- │discussion with State Secretaries about │ │
- │Barbarossa”, 2 May 1941. (USA 32) │ V │ 378
- │ │ │
- 3014-PS │Affidavit of General Ernst Koestring, │ │
- │former German military attache in │ │
- │Moscow, concerning planning for the │ │
- │attack on the USSR in early August 1940.│ V │ 734
- │ │ │
- 3031-PS │Affidavit of General Warlimont, 21 │ │
- │November 1945, stating that first │ │
- │directive for campaign against USSR was │ │
- │issued in August 1940. │ V │ 740
- │ │ │
- 3032-PS │Affidavit of General Walter Warlimont, │ │
- │21 November 1945, stating that the │ │
- │projected campaign against USSR was │ │
- │first made known to him at conference │ │
- │with Jodl, 29 July 1940. │ V │ 741
- │ │ │
-*3054-PS │“The Nazi Plan”, script of a motion │ │
- │picture composed of captured German │ │
- │film. (USA 167) │ V │ 801
- │ │ │
- 3579-PS │Memorandum, signed Schnurre, on the │ │
- │status of deliveries under │ │
- │German-Russian economic agreement, 28 │ │
- │September 1940. │ VI │ 276
- │ │ │
-*C-33 │Entries in Naval War Diary, concerning │ │
- │operation “Barbarossa” and “Marita”. │ │
- │(USA 133) │ VI │ 846
- │ │ │
-*C-35 │Entry in Naval War Diary, January 1941, │ │
- │p. 401. (USA 132) │ VI │ 852
- │ │ │
- C-37 │References to operation “Barbarossa” in │ │
- │the German Naval War Diary, June 1941. │ VI │ 854
- │ │ │
-*C-38 │Letter, 13 June 1941, requesting │ │
- │decision on action against enemy │ │
- │submarines and Order to attack Soviet │ │
- │submarines, 15 June 1941. (GB 223) │ VI │ 855
- │ │ │
-*C-39 │Timetable for Barbarossa, approved by │ │
- │Hitler and signed by Keitel. (USA 138) │ VI │ 857
- │ │ │
-*C-50 │Covering letters and Order of 13 May │ │
- │1941, signed by Keitel on ruthless │ │
- │treatment of civilians in the USSR for │ │
- │offenses committed by them. (USA 554; GB│ │
- │162) │ VI │ 871
- │ │ │
- C-51 │Order signed by Keitel, 27 July 1941, │ │
- │for destruction of all copies of Order │ │
- │of 13 May 1941 (document C-50) without │ │
- │affecting its validity. │ VI │ 875
- │ │ │
- C-53 │Order signed by Keitel, 20 September │ │
- │1940, concerning Military Missions to │ │
- │Rumania. │ VI │ 877
- │ │ │
- C-54 │Fuehrer Order, 23 May 1941, concerning │ │
- │military activities in Rumania. │ VI │ 877
- │ │ │
-*C-77 │Memorandum from Chief of High Command to│ │
- │Navy High Command, 18 May 1941. (GB 146)│ VI │ 908
- │ │ │
-*C-78 │Schmundt’s Order of 9 June 1941, │ │
- │convening conference on Barbarossa on 14│ │
- │June. (USA 139) │ VI │ 909
- │ │ │
- C-150 │Letter from Hitler to General Antonescu,│ │
- │18 June 1941. │ VI │ 963
- │ │ │
-*C-170 │File of Russo-German relations found in │ │
- │OKM files covering period 25 August 1939│ │
- │to 22 June 1941. (USA 136) │ VI │ 977
- │ │ │
-*L-172 │“The Strategic Position at the Beginning│ │
- │of the 5th Year of War”, a lecture │ │
- │delivered by Jodl on 7 November 1943 at │ │
- │Munich to Reich and Gauleiters. (USA 34)│ VII │ 920
- │ │ │
-*TC-25 │Non-aggression Treaty between Germany │ │
- │and USSR and announcement of 25 │ │
- │September 1939 relating to it. (GB 145) │ VIII │ 375
- │ │ │
- Statement XIV │Hungarian Relations with Germany Before │ │
- │and During the War by Nicholas Horthy, │ │
- │Jr., Nurnberg, 22 February 1946. │ VIII │ 756
- │ │ │
- Statement XV │Why Hungary Went to War Against the │ │
- │Soviet Union by Nicholas Horthy, Jr., │ │
- │Nurnberg, 3 May 1946. │ VIII │ 767
-
-
- 13. COLLABORATION WITH ITALY AND JAPAN AND
- AGGRESSIVE WAR AGAINST THE UNITED STATES:
- NOVEMBER 1936 TO DECEMBER 1941
-
-In the course of two years, the swastika had been carried forward by
-force of arms from a tightly controlled and remilitarized Germany to the
-four corners of Europe. The conspirators then projected the Nazi plan
-upon a universal screen, involving the old 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 aboard a United States battleship riding at anchor in the Bay
-of Tokyo.
-
-A. _Formal German—Japanese—Italian Alliances._
-
-The first formal alliance between Hitler’s Germany and the Japanese
-Government was the Anti-Comintern Pact signed in Berlin on 25 November
-1936 (_2508-PS_). 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 (_2506-PS_).
-
-It is an interesting fact—especially in light of the evidence to be
-presented regarding 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
-ten-year military-economic alliance (_2643-PS_). Again Ribbentrop signed
-for Germany, this time in his capacity as Foreign Minister: This
-Tripartite Pact pledged Germany, Italy, and Japan to support of, and
-collaboration with each other in the establishment of a “new order” in
-Europe and East Asia. The agreement stated, in part:
-
- “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 cooperate 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 cooperation 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 cooperate 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Article 6: The present Pact shall come into force immediately
- upon signature and shall remain in force for ten years from the
- date of its coming into force.” (_2643-PS_)
-
-The Tripartite Pact of 27 September 1940 thus was a bold announcement to
-the world that the leaders of Germany, Japan, and Italy had cemented a
-full military alliance to achieve world domination and to establish the
-“new order” presaged by the Japanese invasion of Manchuria in 1931, the
-Italian conquest of Ethiopia in 1935, and the Nazi overflow into Austria
-early in 1938.
-
-A statement by Cordell Hull, Secretary of State of the United States at
-the time of the signing of the Tripartite Pact, is relevant in this
-connection. Mr. Hull declared:
-
- “The reported agreement of alliance does not, in the 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 has 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 United States
- in the determining of this country’s policies.” (_2944-PS_)
-
-No attempt is made here to trace the relationships and negotiations
-leading up to the Tripartite Pact of 27 November 1940. Nevertheless, one
-example of the type of German-Japanese relationship existing before the
-formalization of the Tripartite Pact is noteworthy—the record of a
-conversation of 31 January 1939 between Himmler and General Oshima,
-Japanese Ambassador at Berlin. This record, which is signed by Himmler
-in crayon, reads:
-
- “_File Memorandum_
-
- “Today I visited General Oshima. The conversation ranged over
- the following subjects:
-
- “1. The Fuehrer speech, which pleased him very much, especially
- because it had been spiritually warranted in all its features.
-
- “2. We discussed 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 to send 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.”
- (_2195-PS_)
-
-B. _Nazi Encouragement of Aggression by Japan_
-
-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 against those with whom
-they contemplated war. In this the Nazi 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. The Nazi conspirators
-set about to induce similar action by Japan on the other side of the
-world.
-
-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.
-
-(1) _Exhortations to Attack the British Commonwealth._ At least as early
-as 23 February 1941 the Nazi conspirators undertook to exploit their
-alliance with Japan by exhortations to commit aggression against the
-British Commonwealth. Again the figure of 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.
-(_1834-PS_)
-
-As can be seen on the cover page of the English translation of the
-report of that conference, 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 “these statements are of
-fundamental significance for orientation in the general political
-situation facing Germany in early Spring 1941.” The report stated, in
-part:
-
- “Strictly secret
- “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]
- 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.
-
- “* * * Now 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? (_1834-PS_)
-
-Ribbentrop subsequently proceeded to shape the argument for Japanese
-intervention against the British. First outlining the intended air and
-U-boat warfare against England, he said:
-
- “* * * 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “The Fuehrer would beat England wherever he would encounter 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 was unlimited. The same was true for our
- airplane production capacity. As far as quality is concerned
- ours was always superior to the English (to say nothing about
- the American) and we were on the way even to enlarge this lead.
- On order of the Fuehrer the antiaircraft defense too would be
- greatly reinforced. Since the army had been supplied far beyond
- its requirements, and enormous reserves had been piled up (the
- ammunitions plants have been slowed down because of the immense
- stock of material), production would now 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 had the
- desire to end the war quickly and to force England to sue for
- peace soon. The Fuehrer was vigorous and healthy, fully
- convinced of victory and determined to bring the war to a quick
- and victorious end. To this end the cooperation with Japan was
- of importance. However, Japan in its 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 its position in the Far East, a position which it 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,
- etc.) 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 surprising intervention by Japan was bound to keep America
- out of the war. America, which at present is not armed as yet
- and would hesitate greatly to expose her Navy to any risks West
- of Hawaii, could do this even less so in such a case. 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 was
- very unlikely that America would declare war if it 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 already during the
- war the position she wants to hold in the Far East at the time
- of a peace treaty. Ambassador Oshima agreed with me entirely and
- said that he would do everything to carry through this policy.”
- (_1834-PS_)
-
-The subtlety of Ribbentrop’s argument is noteworthy. 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 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.
-
-The remainder of Ribbentrop’s argument shows something of the real
-nature of the German-Japanese alliance:
-
- “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
- interest 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 in steadily 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 itself
- confronted by a world-coalition within a short time. We were all
- in the same boat. The fate of both nations was being determined
- now 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 its
- 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 overcentralization 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 interest 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, Indochina,
- etc. 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.” (_1834-PS_)
-
-The instigation to war by Ribbentrop, the German Foreign Minister, is
-clear. The participation of the German military representatives in the
-encouragement and provocation of wars of aggression is shown in a Top
-Secret order signed by Keitel as Chief of the OKW and entitled “Basic
-Order No. 24 Regarding Collaboration with Japan” (_C-75_). It is dated 5
-March 1941, about a week and a half after Ribbentrop’s conference with
-Oshima, 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. Two copies of this order, identical except for handwritten
-notations presumably made by the recipients, were turned up by the
-prosecution. Document _C-75_ is Copy No. 2 of the order, distributed to
-the Naval War Staff of the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy (the OKM).
-Copy No. 4, designed for the _Wehrmacht Fuehrungsstab_—the Operations
-Staff of the High Command of the Armed Forces—was found in the OKW
-files at Flensburg. The head of this Operations Staff was Jodl.
-
-Basic Order No. 24 was the authoritative Nazi policy on collaboration
-with Japan (_C-75_). It reads:
-
- “TOP SECRET
- “Only by Officer
-
- “Armed Forces High Command (OKW)
-
- Joint Operations Staff, Branch L (I Op.)
-
- No. 44 282/41 Top Secret
-
- “Fuehrer’s Headquarters
- 5 March 1941
- [Various handwritten notations and stamps]
- “14 copies
- “2nd copy
- “Basic Order No. 24
- regarding collaboration with Japan
-
- “The Fuehrer 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_. 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 it intervenes, the greater will be the prospects of
- success for Japan in view of the still undeveloped preparedness
- for war on the part of its adversaries. The “Barbarossa”
- operation will create particularly favorable political and
- military prerequisites for this. [Marginal note—“slightly
- exaggerated”]
-
- “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 Fuehrer reserves the decisions to himself.
-
- “3. The _harmonizing of the operational plans of the two
- parties_ is the responsibility of the Navy 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 cooperation of the Armed Forces High
- Command.
-
- “5. The Japanese must not be given any intimation of the
- Barbarossa operation.
-
- “The Chief of the Armed Forces High Command
-
- “Signed in draft: Keitel
-
- “Correctness certified by
- JUNGE
- Lieutenant Commander” (_C-75_)
-
-It appears from this document that the Nazi conspirators’ cardinal
-operational principle in their collaboration with Japan was, as early as
-March 1941, the inducement of Japan to aggression against Singapore and
-other British Far Eastern bases.
-
-A meeting was held on 18 March 1941, about two weeks after the issuance
-of Basic Order No. 24 (_C-75_) and was attended by Hitler, Raeder,
-Keitel, and Jodl. The top secret record of this meeting discloses that
-Raeder, then Commander in Chief of the Navy, made the following
-calculations:
-
- “Japan must take steps to seize Singapore as soon as possible,
- since the opportunity will never again be as favourable (whole
- English Fleet contained; unpreparedness of U. S. A. for war
- against Japan; inferiority of U. S. Fleet vis-à-vis 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 U. S. A. She can
- do so if she determinedly takes Singapore as soon as possible.”
- (_C-152_)
-
-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. Another passage in the record of
-this meeting establishes this:
-
- “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.”
- (_C-152_)
-
-Apparently the Nazis were subsequently able to persuade the Japanese to
-eliminate this condition precedent to their performance under the
-contract.
-
-Meanwhile, Ribbentrop continued to make further efforts to induce the
-Japanese to aggression against the British Commonwealth. On 29 March
-1941, he met with the Japanese Foreign Minister Matsuoka, who was then
-in Berlin. The following is a report of their conversations, found in
-the German Foreign Office Archives:
-
-“REPORT ON THE CONVERSATION BETWEEN THE REICH MINISTER FOR FOREIGN AFFAIRS
- (RAM) AND THE JAPANESE FOREIGN MINISTER MATSUOKA IN BERLIN ON 29 MARCH
- 1941.
-
- “The RAM resumed the preceding conversation with Matsuoka about
- the latter’s impending talks with the Russians in Moscow, where
- they had left off. 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, however, was certain,
- 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 anyway on the Eastern
- frontiers of the Reich, and fully prepared to open the attack at
- any time. He (the RAM), however, believed that Russia would try
- to avoid development leading to war. Should Germany however
- enter into a conflict with Russia, the USSR would be finished
- off within a few months. In this case, Japan had of course even
- less reason to be afraid than ever, if it wants to advance on
- Singapore. Consequently, it 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 anyhow 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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 General-Admiral 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. General-Admiral Raeder had described the
- U. S. submarines as so bad 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 five 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 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 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 of 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 fate, which would come, whether
- you wanted it or not.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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 Fuehrer—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 divebombers
- 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 Fuehrer 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
- three 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
- six 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 Netherland East
- Indies, since he was afraid that in case of a Japanese attack on
- this area, the oilfields 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
- Netherland East Indies simultaneously with the capture of
- Singapore.” (_1877-PS_)
-
-On 5 April, about a week after the conference just noted, 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 German Foreign Office Archives, reveal the following
-exchange:
-
- “* * * In answer to a remark by Matsuoka, that Japan was now
- awakening 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 certain risk in this connection, just as the Fuehrer
- had done so successfully with the occupation of the Rhineland,
- with the proclamation of sovereignty of armament, and with the
- resignation from the League of Nations.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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 trip:
-
- “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 it 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.” (_1882-PS_)
-
-Here again, in the portions just quoted, Ribbentrop is seen pursuing the
-same tack previously noted: Germany has already won the war for all
-practical purposes. Japan’s entry will hasten the inevitable end. _And_
-Japan had better get the positions she wants _during_ the war.
-Ribbentrop’s assurances, (_1877-PS_) that Japan likewise had nothing to
-fear from the Soviet Union if Japan entered the conflict, and his
-continual references to the weakness of the United States scattered
-throughout his conversations, were other means used to hurry along the
-Japanese.
-
-The success of the Nazi methods is shown in a top secret report, dated
-24 May 1941, from the German Military Attache in Tokyo to the
-Intelligence Division of the OKW. The last sentence in paragraph 1,
-states:
-
- “The preparations for attack on Singapore and Manila stand.”
- (_1538-PS_)
-
-The fact appears from this sentence that the German military were
-keeping in close touch with the Japanese operational plans against
-Singapore, which the Nazi conspirators had fostered.
-
-(2) _Exhortations to Japanese Aggression Against the U.S.S.R._
-
-The Nazi conspirators also directed their efforts to induce a Japanese
-“stab in the back” against the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Here
-again Ribbentrop appears as a central figure.
-
-For some months prior to the issuance of Basic Order No. 24 regarding
-collaboration with Japan (_C-75_), the Nazi conspirators had been
-preparing “_Fall Barbarossa_”, the plan for attack on the U.S.S.R. Basic
-Order No. 24 decreed, however, that the Japanese “must not be given any
-intimation of the Barbarossa operation”. (_C-75_)
-
-In his conference with the Japanese Foreign Minister Matsuoka on 29
-March 1941, almost 3 weeks after the issuance of Basic Order No. 24,
-Ribbentrop nevertheless hinted at things to come. 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. (_1877-PS_)
-
-Whatever conclusions the Japanese Ambassador drew from these remarks in
-April 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
-despatched a coded telegram to Ott, the German Ambassador in Tokyo
-(_2896-PS_). Pertinent passages in that telegram read as follows:
-
- “Please take this opportunity to thank the Japanese Ambassador
- in Moscow for conveying the cable report. It would be convenient
- if we could keep on receiving news from Russia this way. In
- summing up, I would 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 its
- nation if it 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 at the present war
- situation, it is simply impossible that Japan does not solve the
- matter of Vladivostok and the Siberian area as soon as her
- military preparations are completed.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “However, I ask you to employ all available means in further
- insisting upon Japan’s entry into the war against Russia at the
- soonest possible date, as I have mentioned already in my note to
- Matsuoka. The sooner this entry is effected, the better it is.
- 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 English
- islands, respectively, will only be 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 unshakable 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.” (_2896-PS_)
-
-Ott’s reply to this telegram (_2897-PS_), dated 13 July 1941, was as
-follows:
-
- “Telegram
- (Secret Cipher System)
- “Tokyo 14 July 1941 0230 hrs.
- Arrived 14 July 1941 1120 hrs.
- As fast as possible!
- “#1217 dated 13.7
- for Minister for Foreign Affairs.
-
- Answer to telegram 10, #108 Reichsminister for Foreign Affairs
-
- Arrived Tokyo 12 July 1941
-
- “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
- business men. I believe that, according to military
- preparations, Japanese participation will soon take place. The
- greatest obstacles against which one has to fight thereby is the
- disunity among Activist groups which, without unified command,
- follows various aims and only slowly adjusts itself to the
- changed situation.
-
- Ott.” (_2897-PS_)
-
-On subsequent occasions Ribbentrop repeated his exhortations to induce
-the Japanese to aggression against the U.S.S.R. Three documents,
-covering July of 1942 and March and April of 1943, record these
-exhortations.
-
-The first discussion occurred between Ribbentrop and Oshima, Japanese
-Ambassador to Berlin, on 9 July 1942. As a matter of background, it may
-be noted that at that time German armies were sweeping forward in the
-U.S.S.R. and the fall of Sevastapol had just been announced. The
-discussion proceeded as follows:
-
- “_Notes concerning the discussion between the Minister for
- Foreign Affairs and Ambassador Oshima at Steinort, on 9 July
- 1942._
-
- “He, the German Foreign 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 itself
- sufficiently strong militarily, the moment for Japan to attack
- Russia was probably now. He thought it possible that, if Japan
- attacked Russia now, it would lead to her (Russia’s) 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 Fuehrer, and the Fuehrer 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 halfway
- mark, and we do not want to urge Japan into an action that is
- not mutually profitable.” (_2911-PS_)
-
-Ribbentrop and Ambassador Oshima had another conference on 6 March 1943.
-It is noted, 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 severe losses. To the
-north and west their winter offensive had recovered large areas from the
-hands of the invaders. In addition, combined U. S. and British forces
-had already landed in North Africa. The tone of Ribbentrop’s argument
-reflects the changed military situation. The familiar Japanese refrain
-of “so sorry please” likewise appears to have crept in. It is noted, in
-this regard, that the month of February 1943 had also seen the end of
-organized Japanese resistance on the island of Guadalcanal. The
-conference went as follows:
-
- “Ambassador Oshima declared that he had received a telegram from
- Tokyo, and he is to report by order of his government to the
- Reich Minister for Foreign Affairs (RAM) 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 recognizes the
- danger which threatens from Russia, and completely understands
- the desire of its 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. It is 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 has the intention to become aggressive
- again in the future on other fronts.
-
- “The RAM brought up the question, after the explanation by the
- Ambassador, of 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 to defeat England and America, but also Russia together.
- It is not good when one part must fight alone. One cannot
- overstrain the German national strength. He has worried silently
- that certain forces work in Tokyo, who are of the opinion and
- who propagate it, that Germany would come through the fight
- victoriously, and that therefore Japan should consolidate itself
- further at first, before it makes further and utmost efforts.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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—there are mostly very few ground forces committed.
- Therefore the attack on Russia is primarily an army affair, and
- he asked himself whether the necessary forces would not be ready
- for that”. (_2954-PS_)
-
-Ribbentrop kept on trying. He held another conference with Oshima about
-three weeks later, on 18 April 1943. The top secret notes of this
-conference reveal the following:
-
- “The Reichminister 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 is at the
- moment.” (_2929-PS_)
-
-(3) _Nazi Preparations and Collaboration with the Japanese Against the
-United States._ The Nazi preparations and collaboration with the
-Japanese against the United States present a twofold aspect: one of
-preparations by the Nazis themselves for attack from across the
-Atlantic; the other of the fomenting of war in the Pacific.
-
-In the previous discussion of the Nazi exhortations to the Japanese to
-war against the British Commonwealth and the U.S.S.R., reference has
-been made to certain documents relating to the United States. Those
-documents will be taken up again, in their relevant passages, to show
-their particular application. In the treatment of Ribbentrop’s urging
-the Japanese to war against the U.S.S.R., documents have been introduced
-chronicling conferences which took place after 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. These documents have indicated that 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.
-
-(_a_) _Preliminary Nazi Preparations Against the United States._ The
-Nazi conspirators’ 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 Goering in a speech on 8 July
-1938, when the Nazi conspirators had already forcibly annexed Austria
-and were perfecting their plans for occupation of Czechoslovakia. This
-speech was delivered to representatives of the aircraft industry and the
-copy which the prosecution has obtained was transmitted as the enclosure
-to a secret memorandum from Goering’s adjutant to General Udet, who was
-then in charge of experimental research for the Luftwaffe (_R-140_). The
-statement in the covering memorandum notes that the enclosure is a “copy
-of the shorthand minutes of the conference”. In the course of his long
-speech, Goering called for increased aircraft production and referred to
-the necessity for full mobilization of German industrial capacity. He
-continued:
-
- “I still am missing entirely the bomber which flies with 5 tons
- of explosives as far as New York and back. I should be extremely
- happy to have such a bomber so that I would at last be able to
- stop somewhat the mouth of the arrogant people over there.”
- (_R-140_)
-
-Goering’s fervent hope, of course, was not capable of realization at
-that time, either technically or in the face of the Nazi conspirators’
-schedule of aggression that has already been outlined. During the period
-of their preparation for and waging of aggressive war in Europe, up
-through the launching of the campaign against the U.S.S.R., it is only
-reasonable to believe that the Nazi 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 was found in the files of the
-OKL, the German Air Force (_376-PS_). This memorandum is marked
-“_Chefsache_”—the German designation for Top Secret—and is directed
-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 Jodl. His memorandum, which he
-characterizes as a “brief resumé of the military questions current
-here”, is dated 29 October 1940. It covers several questions. Paragraph
-5 states:
-
- “5. The Fuehrer is at present occupied with the question of the
- occupation of the Atlantic Islands with a view to the
- prosecution of war against America at a later date.
- Deliberations on this subject are being embarked upon here.
- Essential conditions are at the present:—
-
- “a. No 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.
-
- “Major Queisner will fetch the documents for himself from Ic
- Kurfurst (C. in C. GAF Rear Hq.). I would like to ask Colonel
- Schmidt to arrange that he be supplied with the information he
- desires.” (_376-PS_)
-
-The Nazi Military interest in the United States is further indicated by
-paragraph 7:
-
- “7. General von Boetticher has made repeated reference,
- especially in his telegram 2314 dated 26/10, 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 a specifically GAF one, but have
- taken the liberty of referring the matter to you on its own
- merits.” (_376-PS_)
-
-Again in July 1941, in his first flush of confidence resulting from
-early gains in the aggression against the U.S.S.R., the Fuehrer signed
-an order for further preliminary preparations for the attack on the
-United States. This top secret order, found in files of the German Navy,
-reads:
-
- “By virtue of the intentions announced in Directive No. 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 Armoured 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.” (_C-74_)
-
-(_b_) _Collaboration with the Japanese Against the United States._ From
-the documents just quoted, it appears that the Nazi conspirators were
-making at least preliminary military plans of their own against the
-United States. The Nazi over-all plan with regard to the United States,
-however, was 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.
-
-It will be recalled that in Basic Order No. 24 regarding collaboration
-with the Japanese (_C-75_), which was issued on 5 March 1941, the Nazi
-policy was stated in subparagraph 3_a_ as aiming at “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 instigating. This
-could result from an attack by Japan on United States’ possessions
-practically simultaneously with the assault on the British Empire (as
-actually happened). Other possibilities of involvement of the United
-States were also discussed. Thus, Basic Order No. 24 stated in
-subparagraph 3 (_c_):
-
- “_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.” (_C-75_)
-
-The order continues, in the 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).” (_C-75_)
-
-In these passages there is a clear envisionment of U.S. involvement, as
-well as a clear intent to attack. The vital threat to United States’
-interests if Japan were to capture Singapore was also clearly envisaged
-by Raeder in his meeting of March 1941 with Hitler, Keitel, and Jodl, in
-which he stated:
-
- “Japan must take steps to seize Singapore as soon as possible,
- since the opportunity will never again be as favourable (whole
- English Fleet contained: unpreparedness of U.S.A. for war
- against Japan: inferiority of U.S. Fleet vis-a-vis 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 U.S.A. She can do
- so if she determinedly takes Singapore as soon as possible.”
- (_C-152_)
-
-Ribbentrop also recognized the possibility of U.S. involvement as a
-result of the course of aggression that he was urging on the Japanese.
-In his meeting of 23 February 1941 with the Japanese Ambassador Oshima,
-the notes of which are contained in (_1834-PS_), Ribbentrop assured
-Matsuoka that a surprise intervention 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:
-
- “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 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
- cancelled 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 rapidly to an end. 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.”
- (_1834-PS_)
-
-In the paragraphs that follow, Ribbentrop again stresses the mutual
-interdependence of the Tripartite Pact powers and suggests coordinated
-action. He indulged in a typical bit of Nazi cynicism:
-
- “The Reich Foreign Minister then touched upon the question,
- explicitly pointed out 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, but
- also jointly in this matter. Such a lesson should open the eyes
- of the people in the U.S.A. to the situation and under certain
- conditions bring about a swing toward isolation in public
- opinion. 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.” (_1834-PS_)
-
-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. (_1877-PS_)
-
-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 the U.S. to involvement in the contemplated Far
-Eastern conflict. This fact is clear from the report of the conference
-between Hitler and the Japanese Foreign Minister Matsuoka in Berlin on 4
-April 1941 (_1881-PS_). The report states, in part:
-
- “* * * Matsuoka then also expressed the request that the Fuehrer
- should instruct the proper authorities in Germany to meet as
- broad-mindedly as possible the wishes of the Japanese Military
- Commission. Japan was in need of German help particularly
- concerning the U-boat warfare, which could be given by making
- available to them the latest experiences of the war as well as
- the latest technical improvements and inventions. Japan would do
- her utmost to avoid a war with the United States. In case that
- the country should decide to attack Singapore, the Japanese
- Navy, of course, had to be prepared for a fight with the United
- States, because in that case America probably would side with
- Great Britain. He (Matsuoka) personally believed that the United
- States would be restrained by diplomatic exertions from entering
- the war at the side of Great Britain. The Army and Navy had,
- however, to count on the worst situation, that is, with war
- against America. They were of the opinion that such a war would
- extend for five years or longer and would take the form of
- guerrilla warfare in the Pacific and would be fought out in the
- South Sea. For this reason the German experiences in her
- guerrilla warfare are of the greatest value to Japan. It was a
- question how such a war would best be conducted and how all the
- technical improvements of submarines, in all details such as
- periscopes and such like, could best be exploited by Japan.
-
- “To sum up, Matsuoka requested that the Fuehrer should see to it
- that the proper German authorities would place at the disposal
- of the Japanese those developments and inventions concerning
- Navy and Army, which were needed by the Japanese.
-
- “The Fuehrer promised this and pointed out that Germany too
- considered a conflict with the United States undesirable, but
- that it had already made allowances for such a contingency.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Matsuoka once more repeated his request that the Fuehrer might
- give the necessary instructions, in order that the proper German
- authorities would place at the disposal of the Japanese the
- latest improvement and inventions, which are of interest to
- them, because the Japanese Navy had to prepare immediately for a
- conflict with the United States.
-
- “As regards Japanese-American relationship, Matsuoka explained
- further that he has always declared in his country that sooner
- or later a war with the United States would be unavoidable, if
- Japan continued to drift along as at present. In his opinion
- this conflict would happen rather sooner than later. His
- argumentation went on, why should Japan, therefore, not
- decisively strike at the right moment and take the risk upon
- herself of a fight against America?” (_1881-PS_)
-
-The passages just quoted 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, the Nazis knew at least a part of what those war
-plans were. This fact is revealed in a secret telegram from the German
-military-attache in Tokyo, dated 24 May 1941 (_1538-PS_). The attache
-reports 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 paragraph 1, this sentence appears:
-
- “Preparations for attack on Singapore and Manila stand.”
- (_1538-PS_).
-
-A review of the Nazi position with regard to the United States at this
-point, the Spring of 1941, shows that in view of their press of
-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 war at
-that time. Nevertheless they had been considering their own preliminary
-plans against the United States, as seen in the Atlantic Islands
-document (_376-PS_). 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. 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 knew also that the
-Japanese Army and Navy were preparing operational plans against the
-United States. 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 farther along that course. On 4 April
-1941, Hitler told the Japanese Foreign Minister that in the event Japan
-were to become involved in war with the United States, Germany would
-immediately take the consequences and strike without delay. The
-following is a passage from the notes of the Hitler-Matsuoka conference
-in Berlin on 4 April 1941:
-
- “In the further course of the discussion the Fuehrer pointed out
- that Germany on her part would immediately take the
- consequences, if Japan would get involved with the United
- States. It did not matter with whom the United States would
- first get involved, if with Germany or with Japan. They would
- always try to eliminate one country at a time, not to come to an
- understanding with the other country subsequently, but to
- liquidate this one just the same. Therefore Germany would
- strike, as already mentioned, without delay in case of a
- conflict between Japan and America, because the strength of the
- tripartite powers lies in their joined action. Their weakness
- would be if they would let themselves be beaten individually.”
- (_1881-PS_)
-
-Hitler then encouraged Matsuoka in his decision to strike against the
-United States:
-
- “The Fuehrer replied that he could well understand the situation
- of Matsuoka, because he himself was in similar situations (the
- clearing of the Rhineland, declaration of sovereignty of armed
- Forces). He too was of the opinion that he had to exploit
- favorable conditions and accept the risk of an anyhow
- unavoidable fight at a time when he himself was still young and
- full of vigor. How right he was in his attitude was proven by
- events. Europe now was free. He would not hesitate a moment to
- instantly reply to any widening of the war, be it by Russia, be
- it by America. Providence favored those who will not let dangers
- come to them, but who will bravely face them.” (_1881-PS_)
-
-Here, in the passages just quoted, 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. Another telegram from the German Ambassador
-in Tokyo regarding conversations with the Japanese Foreign Minister,
-dated 30 November 1941, one week before Pearl Harbor, read as follows:
-
- “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 it sent Ambassador
- Kurusu has 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
- divergences in the viewpoints of the two nations. These
- differences of opinion concern, for example, the further
- treatment of the Chinese question. The biggest (one word
- missing) however resulted from the U. S. attempt to make the
- three-power agreement ineffective. U. S. suggested to Japan to
- conclude treaties of nonaggression with the U. S., 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 U. S. and merely
- mentioned that grave decisions were at stake. “The U.S. is
- seriously preparing for war and is about to operate a
- considerable part of its fleet from Southern Pacific bases. The
- Japanese Government is busy working out an answer in order to
- clarify its 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 in that case Germany and Italy, according to the
- Three Power Agreement, 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 community of fate. I
- answered, according to my opinion, Germany was certainly ready
- to have mutual agreement between the two countries over this
- situation.
-
- “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 U.
- S. 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-U. S. negotiations
- seems to point to the fact that the Japanese Government is
- becoming aware of the necessity of close cooperation with the
- Axis powers.” (_2898-PS_)
-
-Extracts from the handwritten diary of Count Galleazzo Ciano during the
-period 3 December to 8 December 1941 fill in the picture (_2987-PS_).
-These are taken from notes which Ciano jotted down in the course of his
-daily business as Foreign Minister of Italy. The entries for 3, 4, and 5
-December read:
-
- “_December 3._
-
- _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 signature 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 into the war
- immediately and directly, he has 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.
-
- “_December 4._
-
- _Thursday_
-
- “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. * * *”
-
- “_December 5._
-
- _Friday_
-
- “A night interrupted by Ribbentrop’s restlessness. After
- delaying two days, now he cannot wait a minute to answer the
- Japanese and at three in the morning he sent Mackenson 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 hadn’t * * *.” (_2987-PS_)
-
-It appears from the last entry that some sort of 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, four days after the
-Japanese assault in the Pacific, the German Government declared war on
-the United States. (_2507-PS_)
-
-The same day, 11 December 1941, 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”. (_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
-the war at the time, they nevertheless foresaw the distinct possibility,
-even probability of such involvement as a result of the actions 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 U.S.-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 introduced
-into evidence before the 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.
-
-The entry in the Ciano Diary for 8 December 1941 gives an interesting
-sidelight on Ribbentrop’s reaction to the Japanese sneak attack:
-
- “_December 8._
-
- _Monday._
-
- “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
- force. 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.” (_2987-PS_)
-
-A conference was held between Hitler and Japanese Ambassador Oshima on
-14 December 1941, from 1300 to 1400 hours, in the presence of the Reich
-Foreign Minister, Ribbentrop. The subject matter was the Pearl Harbor
-attack. The top secret notes of this conference read in part:
-
- “* * * First the Fuehrer 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 cooperation, 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 Fuehrer 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 that the other is interested
- only in putting one off, in shaming 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 heartwarming 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 formalities. He would continue to
- go this way in the future.” (_2932-PS_)
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO COLLABORATION WITH
- ITALY AND JAPAN AND AGGRESSIVE WAR AGAINST THE UNITED STATES: NOVEMBER
- 1936 TO DECEMBER 1941
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6 (a). │ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Sections IV (F) │ │
- │ 7; V. │ I │ 28, 29
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document was referred to during the │ │
- │trial but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
- *376-PS │Top secret memorandum signed by Major │ │
- │Falkenstein, 29 October 1940, concerning│ │
- │current military questions, including │ │
- │question of occupation of Atlantic │ │
- │Islands referring to the United States. │ │
- │(USA 161) │ III │ 288
- │ │ │
-*1538-PS │Report from German Military Attache in │ │
- │Tokyo to Office Foreign Intelligence, 24│ │
- │May 1941. (USA 154) │ IV │ 100
- │ │ │
-*1834-PS │Report on conference between Ribbentrop │ │
- │and Oshima, 23 February 1941. (USA 129) │ IV │ 469
- │ │ │
-*1866-PS │Record of conversation between Reich │ │
- │Foreign Minister and the Duce, 13 May │ │
- │1941. (GB 273) │ IV │ 499
- │ │ │
-*1877-PS │Report on conversation between │ │
- │Ribbentrop and Matsuoka in Berlin, 29 │ │
- │March 1941. (USA 152) │ IV │ 520
- │ │ │
-*1881-PS │Notes on conference between Hitler and │ │
- │Matsuoka in presence of Ribbentrop, in │ │
- │Berlin, 4 April 1941. (USA 33) │ IV │ 522
- │ │ │
-*1882-PS │Notes on conference between Ribbentrop │ │
- │and Matsuoka in Berlin, 5 April 1941. │ │
- │(USA 153) │ IV │ 526
- │ │ │
-*2195-PS │File memorandum on conversation with │ │
- │Oshima, 31 January 1939, signed Himmler.│ │
- │(USA 150) │ IV │ 852
- │ │ │
- 2506-PS │Protocol of Adherence by Italy to │ │
- │Anti-Comintern Pact, 6 November 1937, │ │
- │published in Documents of German │ │
- │Politics, 1940, 4th edition. │ V │ 239
- │ │ │
-*2507-PS │Note from Ribbentrop to U. S. Charge │ │
- │d’Affaires in Berlin, 11 December 1941, │ │
- │containing German Declaration of War on │ │
- │United States, published in Documents of│ │
- │German Politics, Vol. IX, Part 1, No. │ │
- │74, pp. 497-9. (USA 164) │ V │ 241
- │ │ │
-*2508-PS │German-Japanese Agreement against the │ │
- │Communist International, 25 November │ │
- │1936, signed by Ribbentrop. Documents of│ │
- │German Politics, Vol. 4. (GB 147) │ V │ 242
- │ │ │
-*2643-PS │Announcement concerning Three-Power Pact│ │
- │between Germany, Italy and Japan, 27 │ │
- │September 1940, signed by Ribbentrop for│ │
- │Germany. 1940 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part │ │
- │II, No. 41, p. 279. (USA 149) │ V │ 355
- │ │ │
-*2896-PS │Telegram from Ribbentrop to German │ │
- │Ambassador in Tokyo, Ott, 10 July 1941. │ │
- │(USA 155) │ V │ 564
- │ │ │
-*2897-PS │Telegram from German Ambassador in │ │
- │Tokyo, Ott, to Ribbentrop, 13 July 1941.│ │
- │(USA 156) │ V │ 566
- │ │ │
-*2898-PS │Telegram from German Ambassador to │ │
- │Tokyo, Ott, to Ribbentrop, 30 November │ │
- │1941. (USA 163) │ V │ 566
- │ │ │
-*2911-PS │Notes on conversation between Ribbentrop│ │
- │and Oshima, 9 July 1942. (USA 157) │ V │ 580
- │ │ │
-*2929-PS │Notes on conversation between Ribbentrop│ │
- │and Oshima, 18 April 1943. (USA 159) │ V │ 603
- │ │ │
-*2932-PS │Notes on conference between Hitler and │ │
- │Oshima, 14 December 1941. (USA 165) │ V │ 603
- │ │ │
- 2944-PS │Statement by U. S. Secretary of State, │ │
- │27 September 1940, published in Peace │ │
- │and War, U. S. Foreign Policy, │ │
- │1931-1941. │ V │ 624
- │ │ │
- 2945-PS │Joint resolution by the U. S. Senate and│ │
- │House of Representatives declaring state│ │
- │of war with Germany, 11 December 1941, │ │
- │published in Peace and War, U. S. │ │
- │Foreign Policy, 1931-1941. │ V │ 625
- │ │ │
-*2954-PS │Minutes of conversation between │ │
- │Ribbentrop and Oshima, 6 March 1943. │ │
- │(USA 158; GB 150) │ V │ 658
- │ │ │
-*2987-PS │Entries in diary of Count Ciano. (USA │ │
- │166) │ V │ 689
- │ │ │
-*3054-PS │“The Nazi Plan”, script of a motion │ │
- │picture composed of captured German │ │
- │film. (USA 167) │ V │ 801
- │ │ │
- 3598-PS │Intercepted Japanese Diplomatic message,│ │
- │Tokyo to Berlin, 30 November 1941. VI │ 308 │
- │ │ │
- 3599-PS │Intercepted Japanese Diplomatic message,│ │
- │Rome to Tokyo, 3 December 1941. │ VI │ 310
- │ │ │
- 3600-PS │Intercepted Japanese Diplomatic message,│ │
- │Tokyo to Berlin, 6 December 1941. │ VI │ 312
- │ │ │
- 3733-PS │Minutes of interview held on 19 August │ │
- │1941, between Vice-Minister Aman and │ │
- │Ambassador Ott. │ VI │ 545
- │ │ │
-*3780-PS │Record of Fuehrer’s conference with │ │
- │Oshima, 27 May 1944, concerning Japanese│ │
- │treatment of American terror pilots. (GB│ │
- │293) │ VI │ 655
- │ │ │
-*3817-PS │File of correspondence and reports by │ │
- │Dr. Haushofer on Asiatic situation. (USA│ │
- │790) │ VI │ 752
- │ │ │
-*C-74 │Top Secret Order concerning personnel │ │
- │and materiel program, signed by Hitler, │ │
- │14 July 1941. (USA 162) │ VI │ 905
- │ │ │
-*C-75 │OKW Order No. 24 initialled Jodl, signed│ │
- │Keitel, 5 March 1941, concerning │ (USA │
- │collaboration with Japan. │ 151) │ VI
- │ │ │
- C-147 │Extracts from Directive No. 18, signed │ │
- │by Hitler, 12 November 1940. │ VI │ 957
- │ │ │
-*C-152 │Extract from Naval War Staff files, 18 │ │
- │March 1941, concerning audience of │ │
- │C-in-C of Navy with Hitler on 18 March │ │
- │1941. (GB 122) │ VI │ 966
- │ │ │
-*D-656 │Extract of 29 November 1941 from │ │
- │Intercepted Diplomatic Messages sent by │ │
- │Japanese Government between 1 July and 8│ │
- │December 1941. (GB 148) │ VII │ 160
- │ │ │
-*D-657 │Extract of 8 December 1941 from │ │
- │Intercepted Diplomatic Messages sent by │ │
- │Japanese Government between 1 July and 8│ │
- │December 1941. (GB 149) │ VII │ 163
- │ │ │
-*R-140 │Secret letter from Goering’s adjutant, │ │
- │Major Conrath, 11 July 1938, enclosing │ │
- │transcript of Goering’s speech of 8 July│ │
- │to representatives of aircraft industry.│ │
- │(USA 160) │ VIII │ 221
-
-
-
-
- Chapter X
- THE SLAVE LABOR PROGRAM,
- THE ILLEGAL USE OF PRISONERS
- OF WAR, AND THE SPECIAL RESPONSIBILITY
- OF SAUCKEL AND SPEER THEREFOR
-
-
-In general terms, the basic elements of the Nazi foreign labor policy
-consisted of mass deportation and mass enslavement. It was a policy of
-underfeeding and overworking foreign laborers, of subjecting them to
-every form of degradation and brutality. 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, in short, a policy which constituted a flagrant violation of the
-laws of war and the laws of humanity.
-
-Fritz Sauckel and Albert Speer are principally responsible for the
-formulation of this policy and for its execution. Sauckel, the Nazi’s
-Plenipotentiary General for Manpower, directed the recruitment,
-deportation, and allocation of foreign civilian labor. Sanctioning and
-directing the use of force as a means of recruitment, he was responsible
-for the mistreatment of the enslaved millions. Speer—as Reichsminister
-for Armaments 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, for the decision to recruit by force, and for the use and
-brutal treatment of foreign civilians and prisoners of war in the
-manufacture of armaments and munitions, in the construction of
-fortifications, and in active military operations.
-
-Hermann Goering, as Plenipotentiary General for the Four Year Plan, is
-also responsible for all the crimes involved in the Nazi slave labor
-program. In addition, Alfred Rosenberg as Reichsminister for the
-Occupied Eastern Territories, Hans Frank as Governor-General of the
-Government-General of Poland, Artur Seyss-Inquart as Reichskommissar for
-the Occupied Netherlands, and Wilhelm 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_.
-
- 1. PLANNING FOR THE USE OF SLAVE LABOR
-
-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 23 May 1939 a meeting was held in Hitler’s study at
-the Reichs Chancellery. Goering, Raeder, and Keitel were present.
-According to the minutes of this meeting, (_L-79_) Hitler stated that he
-intended to attack Poland at the first suitable opportunity. He further
-stated:
-
- “* * * If fate brings us into contact 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”. (_L-79_)
-
-The slave labor program was designed to achieve two purposes. The
-primary purpose was to satisfy the labor requirements of the Nazi war
-machine by compelling foreign workers, in effect, to make war against
-their own countries and its 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. In Sauckel’s
-Labor Mobilization Program (_016-PS_) which he sent to Rosenberg on 20
-April 1942, Sauckel declared:
-
- “* * * 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 their allies.” (_016-PS_)
-
-The theory of the “master race,” which underlay the conspirators’ labor
-policy in the East, was expressed in the following words by Erich Koch,
-Reichskommissar for the Ukraine, at a meeting of the National Socialist
-Party on 5 March 1943 in Kiev:
-
- “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 Fuehrer. 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”. (_1130-PS_)
-
-And in a speech delivered to a group of SS Generals on 4 October 1943 at
-Posen, Himmler stated:
-
- “* * * What happens to a Russian, to a Czech, 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 nations
- live in prosperity or starve to death interests me only in so
- far as we need them as slaves for our _Kultur_: otherwise, it is
- of no interest to me. Whether 10,000 Russian females fall down
- from exhaustion while digging an anti-tank ditch interests me
- only in so far as the anti-tank ditch for Germany is finished *
- * *.” (_1919-PS_)
-
-A Top Secret memorandum prepared for the Ministry of the Occupied
-Eastern Territories on 12 June 1944, and approved by Rosenberg, contains
-the following plans:
-
- “The Army Group ‘Center’ has the intention to apprehend
- 40-50,000 youths at the ages of 10 to 14 who are in the Army
- territory and to transport them to the Reich * * *.”
-
- “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 through 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “1. This action is not only aimed 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 Reichsfuehrer of the SS but also by the Fuehrer.
- Corresponding orders were given during last year’s withdrawals
- in the southern sector * * *.”(_031-PS_)
-
-Rosenberg’s approval is at the end of the document:
-
- “regarding the above—Obergruppenfuehrer Berger received the
- memorandum on June 14. Consequently the Reichsminister has
- approved the Action.” (_031-PS_)
-
- 2. EXECUTION OF THE SLAVE LABOR PROGRAM
-
-The purposes of the slave labor program, namely, the strengthening of
-the Nazi war machine and the destruction or weakening of peoples deemed
-inferior, were achieved by the impressment and deportation of millions
-of persons into Germany for forced labor, by the separation of husbands
-from their wives and children from their parents, and by the imposition
-of conditions so inhuman that countless numbers perished.
-
-A. _Poland._
-
-Poland was the first victim. Frank, as Governor of the
-Government-General of Poland, announced that under his program 1,000,000
-workers were to be sent to Germany, and recommended that police surround
-Polish villages and seize the inhabitants for deportation. These
-intentions appear in the following letter from Frank to Goering, dated
-25 January 1940 (_1375-PS_):
-
- “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
- General-Gouvernement. Rather, it is necessary so to steer the
- economy of the General Gouvernement that it will, in the
- shortest possible time, accomplish results representing the
- maximum that can be gotten out of the economic strength of the
- General-Gouvernement for the immediate strengthening of our
- capacity for defense.
-
- “2. In particular the following performances are expected of the
- total economy of the General-Gouvernement * * *.”
-
- “(g) Supply and transportation of at least 1 million male and
- female agricultural and industrial workers to the Reich—among
- them at least 7,500,000 [sic] agricultural workers of which at
- least 50% must be women—in order to guarantee agricultural
- production in the Reich and as a replacement
-
-The methods by which these workers were to be supplied were outlined by
-Frank in his diary entry for Friday, 10 May 1940 (_2233-A-PS_):
-
- “* * * Then the Governor-General deals with the problem of the
- _Compulsory Labor Service_ of the Poles. Upon the demands 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 which might produce difficulties everywhere.
- General Fieldmarshal Goering 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. Therefore it would be advisable
- to consult 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 successful. The arrest of young Poles
- when leaving church service or the cinema would bring about an
- increasing nervousness of the Poles. Generally speaking, he had
- no objections at all if the rubbish, capable of work yet often
- loitering about, would be 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 what he was doing, where he was
- working etc.” (_2233-A-PS_)
-
-Another entry in the diary of Frank, for 16 March 1940, contains the
-following discourse on methods:
-
- “* * * The Governor-General remarks that he had long
- negotiations in Berlin with representatives of the Reich
- Ministry for Finance and the Reich Ministry for Food. One has
- made the urgent demand 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, can
- naturally exercise force in such a manner that he has 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 those workers in question.”
- (_2233-B-PS_)
-
-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 theatres, seized those present, and shipped them to
-Germany. These facts appear in a memorandum to Himmler dated 17 April
-1943, written by Dr. Lammers, chief of the Reichs Chancellery, with
-regard to the situation in the Government General of Poland:
-
- “* * * As things were, the utilization of manpower had to be
- enforced 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 here and there and transported
- them into the Reich. That such methods not 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”. (_2220-PS_)
-
-Polish farmland was confiscated with the aid of the SS, distributed to
-German inhabitants, or held in trust for the German community. The farm
-owners were thereupon employed as laborers or transported to Germany
-against their will. A report of the SS entitled “Achievement of
-Confiscations of Polish Agricultural Enterprises with the Purpose to
-Transfer the Poles to the old Reich and to Employ Them as Agricultural
-Workers,” contains these disclosures:
-
- “* * * 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. * * * _The former
- owners of Polish farms, together with their families will be
- transferred to the old Reich by the employment agencies 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. This way the most pressing shortage is removed that is
- now in a very disagreeable manner felt especially in the
- root-crop districts.” (_1352-PS_)
-
-Pursuant to the directions of Sauckel, his agents and the SS deported
-Polish men to Germany without their families, thereby accomplishing the
-basic purposes of the program: supplying labor for the German war effort
-and weakening the reproductive potential of the Polish people. Thus, in
-a letter from Sauckel to the Presidents of the “Landes” Employment
-Offices, dated 26 November 1942, it is stated that:
-
- “In agreement with the Chief of the Security Police and the SD,
- Jews who are still in employment are, from now on, to be
- evacuated from the territory of the Reich and are to be replaced
- by Poles, who are being deported from the General-Gouvernement.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “The Poles who are to be evacuated as a result of this measure
- will be put into concentration camps and put to work where they
- are criminal or asocial elements. The remaining Poles where they
- are suitable for labor, will be transported—without
- family—into the Reich, particularly to Berlin; there 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.” (_L-61_)
-
-The Nazi campaign of force, terror, and abduction was described in a
-letter to Frank written by the Chairman of the Ukrainian Main Committee,
-at Cracow, in February 1943. The letter states:
-
- “The general nervousness is still more enhanced by the wrong
- methods of finding labor which have been used more and more
- frequently in recent months.
-
- “The wild and ruthless man-hunt as exercised everywhere in towns
- and country, in streets, squares, stations, even in churches, at
- night in houses, has badly shaken the feeling of security of the
- inhabitants. Everybody is exposed to the danger, to be seized
- anywhere and at any time by members of the police, suddenly and
- unexpectedly and to be brought into an assembly camp. None of
- his relatives knows what has happened to him, only months later
- one or the other gives news of his fate by a postcard.”
- (_1526-PS_)
-
-And in enclosure 5 of the letter it is related that:
-
- “In November of last year an inspection of all males of the age
- groups 1910 to 1920 was ordered in the area of Zaleschozyki
- (district of Czortkow). After the men had appeared for
- inspection, all those who were chosen were arrested at once,
- loaded into trains and sent to the Reich. Such recruiting of
- laborers for the Reich also took place in other areas of this
- district. Following some interventions the action was then
- stopped”. (_1526-PS_)
-
-The resistance of the Polish people to this Nazi enslavement program and
-the necessity for increased force were described by Sauckel’s deputy
-Timm at a meeting of the Central Planning Board, Hitler’s wartime
-planning agency, which was composed of Speer, Field Marshal Milch, and
-State Secretary Koerner. The Central Planning Board was the highest
-level economic planning agency, and exercised production controls by
-allocating raw materials and labor to industrial users. Timm’s
-statement, which was made at the 36th conference of the Board, is as
-follows:
-
- “* * * Especially in Poland the situation at the moment is
- extraordinarily serious. It is well known that vehement battle
- 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 it
- was just in the last two or three weeks that some of them were
- shot dead, e.g. the Head of the Labor Office of Warsaw who was
- shot in his office, and yesterday another man again. This is how
- matters stand presently, and the recruiting itself even if done
- with the best will remains extremely difficult unless police
- reinforcements are at hand.” (_R-124_)
-
-B. _The Occupied Eastern Territories._
-
-Deportation and enslavement of civilians reached unprecedented levels in
-the Occupied Eastern Territories as a direct result of labor demands
-made by Sauckel on Rosenberg, Reichsminister for the Occupied Eastern
-Territories, on Rosenberg’s subordinates, and on the Armed Forces. On 5
-October 1942, for example, Sauckel wrote to Rosenberg stating that
-2,000,000 more 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. The letter, (_017-PS_)
-reads as follows:
-
- “The Fuehrer has worked out new and most urgent plans for the
- armament which require the quick mobilization of two more
- million foreign labor forces. The Fuehrer therefore has granted
- me, for the execution of my 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 General-Gouvernement, 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
- majority from the recently occupied Eastern Territories,
- especially from the Reichskommissariat Ukraine. Therefore, the
- Reichskommissariat Ukraine must furnish:
-
- “225,000 labor forces by 31 December 1942 and 225,000 more by 1
- May 1943.
-
- “I ask you to inform Reichskommissar Gauleiter party fellow
- member Koch about the new situation and requirements and
- especially to see to it that he will support personally in any
- possible way the execution of this new requirement.
-
- “I have the intention to visit Party member Koch shortly and I
- would be grateful to you if you could inform me as to where and
- when I could meet him for a personal discussion.
-
- “Right now though, I ask that the procurement be taken up at
- once with every possible pressure and the commitment of all
- powers especially also of the experts of the labor offices. All
- the directives which had limited temporarily the procurement of
- Eastern laborers are annulled. The Reichs 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 requirement, but I am convinced that with the
- ruthless commitment of all resources, and with the full
- cooperation of all those interested, the execution of the new
- demands can be accomplished for the fixed date. I have already
- communicated the new demands to the Reichskommissar Ukraine via
- mail. In reference to our long distance phone call of today I
- will send you the text of the Fuehrer’s decree at the beginning
- of next week.” (_017-PS_)
-
-Again on 17 March 1943 Sauckel wrote Rosenberg, demanding the
-importation of another 1,000,000 men and women from the Eastern
-territories within the following four months (_019-PS_). Sauckel said:
-
- “After a protracted illness my Deputy for Labor Supply in the
- occupied Eastern Territories, State Councillor Peukert, is going
- there to regulate the labor supply 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 Peukert’s
- mission. Already now I may thank you for the hitherto good
- reception accorded to Peukert. He himself has been charged by me
- with the absolute and completely unreserved cooperation with all
- bureaus of the Eastern Territories.
-
- “Especially the labor supply for the German agriculture, and
- likewise for the most urgent armament production programs
- ordered by the Fuehrer make the fastest importation of
- approximately 1 million women and men from the Eastern
- Territories within the next four months a must. Starting 15
- March the daily shipment must have reached 5,000 female and male
- workers respectively, while beginning of April this number has
- to be stepped up to 10,000. This is a requisite of the most
- urgent programs, and the spring tillage, and other agricultural
- tasks are not to suffer for the detriment of the nutrition and
- of the armed forces.
-
- “I have foreseen the allotment of the draft quotas for the
- individual territories in agreement with your experts for the
- labor supply as follows:—
-
- “Daily quota starting 15 March 1943:
-
- _People_
- “From General Commissariat White Ruthenia 500
- “Economic Inspection Center 500
- “Reichs Commissariat Ukraine 3,000
- “Economic Inspection South 1,000
- ———
- Total 5,000
-
- “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.”
- (_019-PS_)
-
-Sauckel travelled to Kauen in Lithuania to press his demands. A synopsis
-of a report of the City Commissioner of Kauen and minutes of a meeting
-in which Sauckel participated, reveal that:
-
- “In a lecture which the Plenipotentiary for the
- _Arbeitseinsatz_, Gauleiter Sauckel made on 18 July 1943 in
- Kauen and in an official conference following it, between
- Gauleiter Sauckel and the General Commissar, the pool of labor
- in the Reich was again brought up urgently: Gauleiter Sauckel
- again demanded that Lithuanian labor be furnished in greater
- volume for the purposes of the Reich.” (_204-PS_)
-
-Sauckel also visited Riga, Latvia, to assert his demands. The purpose of
-this visit is described in a letter from the Reich Commissar for the
-Ostland to the Commissioner General in Riga, dated 3 May 1943. The
-letter states, in part:
-
- “In reference to the basic statements of the Plenipotentiary
- General for manpower, Gauleiter Sauckel on the occasion of his
- visit to Riga on 21 April 1943, and in view of the critical
- situation and in disregard of all contrary considerations, it
- was decided that a total of 183,000 workers have to be supplied
- from the Ostland for the Reich territory. This task must
- absolutely be accomplished within the next four months and at
- the latest must be completed by the end of August.” (_2280-PS_)
-
-Sauckel asked the German Army for assistance in the recruitment and
-deportation of civilian labor from the Eastern Territories. A secret
-organization order of the Army Group South, dated 17 August 1943, is to
-the following effect:
-
- “The Plenipotentiary General for Labor Employment ordered the
- recruitment and employment of all born during two years for the
- whole, newly occupied Eastern territory in Decree Az. VI A
- 5780.28 (Inclosure 1), copy of which is inclosed. The Reich
- Minister for Armament and Munition approved this order.
-
- “According to this order by the Plenipotentiary General for
- Labor Employment (BGA) you have to recruit and to transport to
- the Reich immediately all labor forces in your territory born
- during 1926 and 1927. The decree relative labor duty and labor
- employment in the theater of operations of the newly occupied
- Eastern territory of the 6 February 1943 and the executive
- orders therefore are the authority for the execution of this
- measure. Enlistment must be completed by 30 Sept. 43 at the
- latest.” (_3010-PS_)
-
-Clearly, the demands made by Sauckel did result in the deportation of
-civilians from the occupied Eastern territories. Speer has stated in a
-record of conferences with Hitler on 10, 11, and 12 August 1942 that:
-
- “Gauleiter Sauckel promises to make Russian labor available for
- the fulfillment of the iron and coal program and reports
- that—if required—he can supply a further million Russian
- laborers for the German armament industry up to and including
- October 1942. So far, he has already supplied 1 million for
- industry and 700,000 for agriculture. In this connection the
- Fuehrer states that the problem of providing labor can be solved
- in all cases and to any extent; he authorizes Gauleiter Sauckel
- to take all measures required.
-
- “He would agree to any necessary compulsion (_zwangsmassnahmen_)
- in the East as well as in the West if this question could not be
- solved on a voluntary basis.” (_R-124_)
-
- 3. VIOLENT METHODS OF DEPORTATION FOR SLAVE LABOR
-
-In order to meet these demands, the Nazi conspirators made terror,
-violence, and arson the staple instruments of their policy of
-enslavement. Twenty days after Sauckel’s demands of 5 October 1942, a
-high official in Rosenberg’s Ministry by the name of Braeutigam, in a
-Top Secret memorandum dated 25 October 1942 described measures taken to
-meet these demands:
-
- “* * * We now experienced the grotesque picture of having to
- recruit millions of laborers from the Occupied Eastern
- Territories, after prisoners of war have died of hunger like
- flies, in order to fill the gaps that have formed within
- Germany. Now the food question no longer existed. In the
- prevailing limitless abuse of the Slavic humanity ‘recruiting’
- methods were used which probably have their origin 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
- illnesses and other incapabilities for work.” (_294-PS_)
-
-Rosenberg on 21 December 1942 wrote to Sauckel, the instigator of these
-brutalities, as follows:
-
- “The reports I have received show, that the increase of the
- guerilla bands in the occupied Eastern Regions 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.”
- (_018-PS_)
-
-An attachment to Rosenberg’s letter, consisting of parts excerpted from
-letters of residents of the Occupied Eastern territories by Nazi
-censors, relates that:
-
- “At our place, new things have happened. People are being taken
- to Germany. On Dec. 5, some people from the Kowkuski district
- were scheduled to go, but they didn’t want to and the village
- was set afire. They threatened to do the same thing in
- Borowytschi, as not all who were scheduled to depart wanted to
- go. Thereupon 3 truck loads of Germans arrived and set fire to
- their houses. In Wrasnytschi 12 houses and in Borowytschi 3
- houses were burned.
-
- “On Oct. 1 a new conscription of labor forces took place. From
- what has happened, I will describe the most important to you.
- You can not 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 militia came and began
- to ignite the houses of those who had fled. The fire became very
- violent, 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, beaten and arrested, so that 7 homesteads
- burned down. The policemen meanwhile ignited other houses. The
- people fell on their knees and kiss their hands, but the
- policemen beat them with rubber truncheons and threaten to burn
- down the whole village. I don’t know how this would have ended
- if I Sapurkany had not intervened. He promised that there would
- be laborers by morning. During the fire the militia 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 Bielosirka. The workers which
- had not yet appeared till 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 like the dog-catchers used to catch dogs. They
- are already hunting for one week and have not yet enough. The
- imprisoned workers are locked in at the schoolhouse. They cannot
- even go out 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 monastery Potschaew. They
- were all arrested, locked in, and will be sent to work. Among
- them there are lame, blind and aged people”. (_018-PS_)
-
-Rosenberg, 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. The transcript of an
-interrogation of Rosenberg under oath on 6 October 1945, contains the
-following admissions:
-
- “* * * Q. You recognized, did you not, that the quotas set by
- Sauckel could not be filled by voluntary labor, and you didn’t
- 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 recruitment
- and thus I submitted to the necessity of forced impressment.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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 labor against their will; they
- indicate, as I remember, that you were opposed to the treatment
- that was later accorded these workers; that you did not oppose
- their initial impressment.
-
- “A. That is right. In those letters I mostly discussed the
- possibility of finding the least harsh methods of handling the
- matter; whereas, in no way, I placed myself in opposition to the
- orders that he was carrying out for the Fuehrer.”
-
-Moreover, in a letter dated 21 December 1942 Rosenberg stated:
-
- “* * * Even if I do not close my eyes to the necessity that the
- numbers demanded by the Reichs Minister for weapons and
- ammunition as well as by the agricultural economy justify
- unusual and hard measures, I have to ask, due to the
- responsibility for the occupied Eastern Territories which lies
- upon me, that in the accomplishment of the ordered tasks such
- measures be excluded, the toleration and prosecution of which
- will some day be held against me, and my collaborators.”
- (_018-PS_)
-
-Arson was used as a terror device in the Ukraine to enforce conscription
-measures. One instance is reported in a document from an official of the
-Rosenberg Ministry dated 29 June 1944, enclosing a copy of a letter from
-Paul Raab, a district commissioner in the territory of Wassilkow, to
-Rosenberg. Raab’s letter reads as follows:
-
- “According to a charge by the Supreme Command of the Armed
- Forces I burned down a few houses in the territory of
- Wassilkow/Ukr. belonging to insubordinate people ordered for
- work-duty (_Arbeitseinsatzpflichtigen_). This accusation is
- true.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “During the year 1942, the conscription of workers was
- accomplished by way of propaganda. Only very rarely was force
- necessary. Only in August 1942, measures had to be taken against
- 2 families in the villages Glewenka and Salisny-Chutter, each of
- which were to supply one person for labor. Both were requested
- in June for the first time, but didn’t obey although requested
- repeatedly. They had to be brought up by force, but succeeded
- twice to escape from the collecting camp, or when being on
- transport. Before the second arrest, the fathers of both of the
- men were taken into custody, to be kept as hostages and to be
- released only when their sons would show up. When, after the
- second escape, rearrest of both the fathers and boys was
- ordered, the police patrols ordered to do so, found the houses
- to be empty.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “That time I decided to take measures to show the increasingly
- rebellious Ukrainian youth that our orders have to be followed.
- I ordered the burning down of the houses of the fugitives.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “After the initial successes, a passive resistance of the
- population started, which finally forced me to start again on
- making arrests, confiscations, and transfers to labor camps.
- After a while a transport of people, obliged to work, overran
- the police in the railroad station in Wassilkow and escaped. I
- saw again the necessity for strict measures. A few ring leaders,
- which of course escaped before they were found in Plissezkoje
- and in Mitnitza. After repeated attempts to get hold of them,
- their houses were burned down.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “My actions against fugitive people obliged to work
- (_Arbeitseinsatzpflichtige_), were always reported to district
- commissioner Doehrer, in office in Wassilkow, and to the
- general-commissioner (_Generalkommissar_) in Kiev. Both of them
- know the circumstances and agreed with my measures, because of
- their success.” (_254-PS_)
-
-The village of Biloserka in the Ukraine was also the victim of arson as
-has already been related in the quotation from the enclosure to
-Rosenberg’s letter of 21 December 1942 to Sauckel (_018-PS_). Additional
-proof of resort to arson in this village is furnished by other
-correspondence originating within the Rosenberg Ministry and dated 12
-November 1943:
-
- “But even if Mueller had been present at the burning of houses
- in connection with the national conscription in Biloserka, this
- should by no means lead to the relief of Mueller from office. It
- is mentioned specifically in a directive of the Commissioner
- General in Lusk of 21 Sept 1942, referring to the extreme
- urgency of the national conscription.
-
- ‘Estates of those who refuse to work are to be burned, their
- relatives are to be arrested as hostages and to be brought to
- forced labor camps.’” (_290-PS_)
-
-The SS was directed to participate in the abduction of slave laborers,
-and in the case of raids on villages or burning of villages, to turn the
-entire population over for slave labor in Germany. A secret SS order
-dated 19 March 1943 (_3012-PS_) states:
-
- “The activity of the labor offices, resp. 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 Commitment
- Staffs, an agreement was reached stating that whatever prisoners
- can be released, they should be put at the disposal of the
- Commissioner of the Labor Office. When searching (_Uberholung_)
- villages, resp., when it has become necessary to burn down
- villages, the whole population will be put at the disposal of
- the Commissioner by force.” (_3012-PS_)
-
-From Shitomir, where Sauckel appealed for more workers for the Reich,
-the Commissioner General reported on the brutality of the conspirators’
-program, which he described as a program of coercion and slavery. This
-is revealed in a secret report of a conference between the Commissioner
-General of Shitomir and Rosenberg in Winniza on 17 June 1943 (_265-PS_).
-The report is dated 30 June 1943 and is signed by Leyser. It reads as
-follows:
-
- “The symptoms created by the recruiting of workers are, no
- doubt, well known to the Reichs Minister through reports and his
- own observations. Therefore, I shall not report them. It is
- certain that a recruitment of labor, in this sense of the word,
- can hardly be spoken of. In most cases, it is nowadays a matter
- of actual conscription by force.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “But as the Chief Plenipotentiary for the mobilization of labor
- explained to us the gravity of the situation, we had no other
- device. I consequently have authorized the commissioners of the
- areas to apply the severest measures in order to achieve the
- imposed quota. The deterioration of morale in conjunction with
- this does not necessitate any further proof. It is nevertheless
- essential to win the war on this front too. The problem of labor
- mobilization cannot be handled with gloves.” (_265-PS_)
-
-These recruitment measures enslaved so many citizens of occupied
-countries that entire areas were depopulated. Thus, a report from the
-Chief of Main Office III with the High Command in Minsk, dated 28 June
-1943, to Ministerialdirektor Riecke, a top official in the Rosenberg
-Ministry states:
-
- “The recruitment of labor for the Reich, however necessary, had
- disastrous effects. The recruitment measures in the last months
- and weeks were absolute manhunts, which have an irreparable
- political and economic effect. From White Ruthenia, approx.
- 50,000 people have been obtained for the Reich so far. Another
- 130,000 are to be obtained. Considering the 2.4 million total
- population these figures are impossible. * * *
-
- “Due to the sweeping drives (_Grossaktionen_) of the SS and
- police in November 1942, about 115,000 hectar farmland is not
- used, as the population is not there and the villages have been
- razed. * * *” (_3000-PS_)
-
-The conspirators’ policy, of permanently weakening the enemy through the
-enslavement of labor and breaking up of families, was applied in the
-Occupied Eastern Territories after Rosenberg’s approval of a plan for
-the apprehension and deportation of 40,000 to 50,000 youths of the ages
-from 10 to 14. The stated purpose of this plan, approved by Rosenberg,
-was to prevent a reinforcement of the enemy’s military strength and to
-reduce the enemy’s biological potentialities. (_031-PS_)
-
-Further evidence of the Nazi conspirators’ plan to weaken their enemies
-in utter disregard of the rules of International Law is contained in a
-secret order issued by a rear-area Military Commandant, to the District
-Commissar at Kasatin on 25 December 1943. The order provided in part
-that:
-
- “1. The able-bodied male population between 15 and 65 years of
- age and the cattle are to be shipped back from the district East
- of the line Belilowka-Berditschen-Shitomir (places excluded).”
- (_1702-PS_)
-
-The program of enslavement and its accompanying measures of brutality
-were not limited to Poland and the Eastern Occupied Territories, but
-extended to Western Europe as well. Frenchmen, Dutchmen, Belgians, and
-Italians all came to know the Nazi slavemasters. In France these
-slavemasters intensified their program in the early part of 1943
-pursuant to instructions which Speer telephoned to Sauckel from Hitler’s
-headquarters at eight in the evening of 4 January 1943. These
-instructions are found in a note for the files signed by Sauckel, dated
-5 January 1943, which states:
-
- “1. On 4 January 1943 at 8 p. m. Minister Speer telephones from
- the Fuehrer’s headquarters and communicates that on the basis of
- the Fuehrer’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 emphasis and sharpened measures.” (_556-13-PS_)
-
-To overcome the resistance to his enslavement program, Sauckel
-improvised new impressment measures which were applied in both France
-and Italy by his own agents and which he himself labelled as grotesque.
-At a meeting of the Central Planning Board on 1 March 1944 Sauckel
-stated:
-
- “The most abominable point made by my adversaries is their claim
- that no executive had been provided within these areas in order
- to recruit in a sensible manner the Frenchmen, Belgians and
- Italians and to dispatch them to work. Thereupon I even
- proceeded to employ and train a whole batch of French male and
- female agents who for good pay just as was done in olden times
- for “shanghaiing” went hunting for men and made them drunk by
- using liquor as well as words, in order to dispatch them to
- Germany.
-
- “Moreover, I charged some able men with founding a special labor
- supply executive of our own, and this they did by training and
- arming with the help of the Higher SS and Police Fuehrer, a
- number of natives, but I still have to ask the Munitions
- Ministry for arms for the use of these men. For during the last
- year alone several dozens of very able labor executive officers
- have been shot dead. All these means I have to apply, grotesque
- as it sounds, to refute the allegation there was no executive to
- bring labor to Germany from these countries.” (_R-124_)
-
-As in France, the slave hunt in Holland was accompanied by terror and
-abduction. The “Statement of the Netherlands Government in view of the
-Prosecution and Punishment of the German Major War Criminals”,
-(_1726-PS_) contains the following account of the deportation of
-Netherlands workmen to Germany:
-
- “Many big and reasonably large business concerns, especially in
- the metal industry, were visited by German commissions who
- appointed workmen for deportation. This combing out of the
- concerns was called the “Sauckel-action”, so named after its
- leader, who was charged with the appointment of foreign workmen
- in Germany.
-
- “The employers had to cancel the contracts with the appointed
- workmen temporarily, and the latter were forced to register at
- the labour offices, which then took care of the deportation
- under supervision of German ‘_Fachberater_.’
-
- “Workmen who refused (relatively few) were prosecuted by the
- _Sicherheitsdeinst_ (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 this prosecution the _Sicherheitsdienst_ was supported by
- the German Police Service, which was connected with the labour
- offices, and was composed of members of the N.S.B. and the like.
-
- “At the end of April 1942 the deportation of working labourers
- started on a grand scale. Consequently in the months of May and
- June the number of deportees amounted to not less than 22,000,
- resp. 24,000 of which many were metal workers.
-
- “After that the action slackened somewhat, but in October 1942
- another top 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 labour 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 (razzia’s) took
- place on 10 and 11 November, the amount 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 * * *.” (_1726-PS_)
-
-A document found in the OKH files furnishes further evidence of the
-seizure of workers in Holland. This document contains the partial text
-of a lecture delivered by a Lieutenant Haupt of the German _Wehrmacht_
-concerning the situation of the war economy in the Netherlands:
-
- “There had been some difficulties with the _Arbeitseinsatz_,
- i.e., during the man-catching action (_Menchenfang Aktion_)
- 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 unified
- release procedure in advance, because for security reasons, the
- time for the action had not been previously announced.
- Certificates of release, 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. They were apprehended
- or did not dare to go into the streets. In any case it proved to
- be a great loss to us. * * *” (_3003-PS_)
-
- 4. RESULTS OF THE SLAVE LABOR PROGRAM
-
-The hordes of displaced persons in Germany today reflect the extent to
-which the Nazi 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, among them slave laborers of more than 14
-different nationalities. An affidavit executed by Edward L. Deuss, an
-economic analyst, contains the following statistical summation:
-
-“_APPROXIMATE NUMBER OF FOREIGNERS PUT TO WORK FOR THE GERMAN WAR EFFORT
- IN THE OLD REICH_”
- [Status January 1945]
-
- Nationality │ Workers │ P/W’s │ Politicals │ Total
- │ │ │ │
- Russians │ 1,900,000│ 600,000│ 11,000│ 2,500,000
- │ 764,000│ 750,000│ │ 1,525,000
- Poles │ 851,000│ 60,000│ │ 911,000
- Italians │ 227,000│ 400,000│ │ 627,000
- Dutch │ 274,000│ │ 2,300│ 277,000
- Belgians │ 183,000│ 63,000│ 8,900│ 254,000
- Yugoslavs │ 230,000│ │ │ 230,000
- Czechoslovaks │ 140,000│ │ │ 140,000
- Balts │ 130,000│ │ │ 130,000
- Greeks │ 15,000│ │ │ 15,000
- Luxembourgers │ 14,000│ │ 1,000│ 15,000
- Hungarians │ 10,000│ │ │ 10,000
- Rumanians │ 5,000│ │ │ 5,000
- Bulgarians │ 2,000│ │ │ 2,000
- Others │ 50,000│ │ │ 50,000
- │ ————│ ————│ ————│ ————
-     Totals │ 4,795,000│ 1,873,000│ 23,200│ 6,691,000
-
- “Note: Of the estimated 6,691,000 approximately 2,000,000
- civilian foreigners and 245,000 prisoners of war were employed
- directly in the manufacture of armaments and munitions (end
- products or components) on the 31 December 1944, according to
- Speer Ministry tabulations. The highest number of prisoners of
- war so employed was 400,000 in June 1944, the decrease to
- December 1944 being accounted for in part by a change in status
- from prisoners to civilian workers. A figure of 2,070,000
- Russians uncovered in the American, British and French zones,
- given in ‘Displaced Persons Report No. 43,’ of the Combined
- Displaced Persons’ Executive, c/o G-5 Division, USFET, 30
- September 1945, was increased by 430,000 to allow for Russians
- estimated to have been found on German territory conquered by
- the Red Army.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “The designation ‘Politicals’ at the head of the third column in
- the table should be taken to mean persons who upon being
- uncovered in Germany by the Allied forces asserted that they
- were arrested in their native countries for subversive
- activities against the Nazis, and were transported to Germany
- for incarceration. The figures do not include racial or
- religious deportees, nor persons imprisoned for crimes allegedly
- committed in Germany * * *.” (_2520-PS_)
-
-Only a small proportion of the foreign workers brought to Germany were
-volunteers. At the 1 March 1944 meeting of the Central Planning Board,
-Sauckel made clear the vast scale of slavery. He stated:
-
- “* * * Out of five million foreign workers who arrived in
- Germany, not even 200,000 came voluntarily.” (_R-124_)
-
- 5. CONDITIONS OF DEPORTATION AND SLAVE LABOR
-
-The Nazi conspirators were not satisfied to tear 5,000,000 persons from
-their families, their homes, and their country. They insisted that these
-5,000,000 wretches, while being deported to Germany or after their
-arrival, be degraded, beaten, and permitted to die for want of food,
-clothing, and adequate shelter. Conditions of deportation are vividly
-described in a report to Rosenberg concerning treatment of Ukrainian
-labor (_054-PS_):
-
- “The starosts esp. 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 pack their luggage, etc., many skilled
- workers arrive at the Collecting Center for Skilled Workers with
- equipment entirely insufficient (without shoes, only two
- dresses, no eating and drinking utensils, no blankets, etc.). In
- particularly extreme cases new arrivals therefore 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 militia is a
- daily occurrence and is 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 (place Sozolinkow, district Dergatschi). 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, can not be said of some of the administrative agencies.
- To illustrate this be it mentioned, that a woman once arrived
- being dressed with barely more than a shirt.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “* * * On the basis of reported incidents, attention must be
- called to the fact that it is irresponsible 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 in
- order to get drinking water, to wash, and in order to relieve
- themselves. Cars have been showed in which people had made holes
- so that they could take care of the calls of nature. When
- nearing bigger stations persons should, if possible, relieve
- themselves far from these stations.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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 helped 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 decency, 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 Kiewerce. Such incidents in
- complete disregard of the honor and respect of the Greater
- German Reich may still occur again here or there.” (_054-PS_)
-
-Sick and infirm citizens 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
-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. Thus, the report
-continues:
-
- “* * * Very depressing for the morale of the skilled workers and
- the population is the effect of those persons shipped back from
- Germany for having become disabled or not having been fit for
- labor commitment 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 longer period
- of time. Those returning transports are insufficiently cared
- for. Nothing but sick, injured of weak people, mostly 50-60 to a
- car, are usually escorted by 3-4 men. There is neither
- sufficient care or food. The returnees made frequently
- unfavourable—but 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 specialist workers resp.
- the whole transport to Germany. Several transport leaders of the
- 62d and the 63d in particular reported thereto in detail. In one
- case the leader of the transport of skilled workers observed
- with own eyes how a person who died of hunger was unloaded from
- a returning transport on the side track. (1st Lt. Hofman of the
- 63rd transport Station Darniza). Another time it was reported
- that 3 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. According to the reports of the transport
- commanders one gets the impression that these persons unable to
- work are assembled, penned into the wagons and are sent off
- provided only by a few men escort, 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.” (_054-PS_)
-
-Mothers in childbirth shared cars with those infected with tuberculosis
-or venereal diseases. Babies when born were hurled out of windows. Dying
-persons lay on the bare floors of freight cars without even the small
-comfort of straw. These conditions are revealed in an interdepartmental
-report prepared by Dr. Gutkelch in Rosenberg’s Ministry, dated 30
-September 1942, from which the following quotation is taken:
-
- “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 laborers had stopped.
- Because of the corpses in the train-load 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.” (_084-PS_)
-
-Some aspects of Nazi transport were described by Sauckel himself in a
-decree which he issued on 20 July 1942, (_2241-PS_). The original decree
-is published in section B1a, page 48e of a book entitled “_Die
-Beschaeftigung von auslaendischen Arbeitskraeften in Deutschland_.” The
-decree reads, in part, as follows:
-
- “According to reports of transportation commanders
- (_Transportleiters_) presented to me, the special trains
- provided by the German railway have frequently been in a really
- deficient condition. Numerous windowpanes 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.” (_2241-PS_)
-
-Many of the foregoing documents, it will be noted, consist of complaints
-by functionaries of the Rosenberg ministry or by others concerning the
-conditions under which foreign workers were recruited and compelled to
-live. These documents establish not only the facts therein recited, but
-also show that the Nazi conspirators had knowledge of such conditions.
-Notwithstanding their knowledge of these conditions, however, the Nazi
-conspirators continued to countenance and assist in the enslavement of a
-vast number of citizens of occupied countries.
-
-Once within Germany, slave laborers were subjected to treatment of an
-unusually brutal and degrading nature. The character of Nazi treatment
-was in part made plain by the conspirator’s own statements. Sauckel
-declared on one occasion:
-
- “All the men must be fed, sheltered and treated in such a way as
- to exploit them to the highest possible extent at the lowest
- conceivable degree of expenditure.” (_016-PS_)
-
-Force and brutality as instruments of production found a ready adherent
-in Speer who, in the presence of Sauckel, said at a meeting of the
-Central Planning Board:
-
- “We must also discuss the slackers. Ley has ascertained that the
- sick-list decreased to one-fourth or one-fifth in factories
- where doctors are on the staff who are examining 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 round.” (_R-124_)
-
-At a later meeting of the Central Planning Board, Field Marshall Milch
-agreed that so far as workers were concerned,
-
- “The list of the shirkers should be entrusted to Himmler’s
- trustworthy hands.” (_R-124_)
-
-Milch made particular reference to foreign workers by stating:
-
- “It is therefore not possible to exploit fully all the
- foreigners unless we compel them by piece-work or we have the
- possibility of taking measures against foreigners who are not
- doing their bit.” (_R-124_)
-
-The policy as actually executed was even more Draconian than the policy
-as planned by the conspirators. Impressed workers were underfed and
-overworked. They were forced to live in grossly overcrowded camps where
-they were held as virtual prisoners and were otherwise denied adequate
-shelter. They were denied adequate clothing, adequate medical care and
-treatment and, as a result, 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 inhuman indignities.
-
-An example of this mistreatment 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. A memorandum upon Krupp stationery to Mr. Hupe, director of the
-Krupp Locomotive Factory in Essen, dated 14 March 1942, states:
-
- “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
- at all places of work where Russians are employed.” (_D-316_)
-
-The condition of foreign workers in Krupp workers camps is described in
-detail in an affidavit executed in Essen, Germany, on 15 October 1945 by
-Dr. Wilhelm Jager, who was the senior camp doctor. Dr. Jager makes the
-following statement:
-
- “* * * Conditions in all 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
- Kramerplatz, 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 cm.
- but the bunks in these camps were separated by a _maximum_ of
- 20-30 cm.
-
- “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 in comparable jobs received only 2,000
- calories. The eastern workers were given only 2 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, when 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 clothing of the eastern workers was likewise completely
- inadequate. They worked and slept in the same clothing in which
- they had arrived from the east. Virtually all of them had no
- overcoats and were compelled, therefore, to use their blankets
- as coats in cold and rainy weather. In view of the shortage of
- shoes many workers were forced to go to work in their bare feet,
- even in the winter. Wooden shoes were given to some of the
- workers, but their quality was such as to give the workers sore
- feet. Many workers preferred to go to work in their bare feet
- rather than endure the suffering caused by the wooden shoes.
- Apart from the wooden shoes, no clothing of any kind was issued
- to the workers until the latter part of 1943, when a single blue
- suit was issued to some of them. To my knowledge, this
- represented the sole issue of clothing to the workers from the
- time of their arrival until the American forces entered Essen.
-
- “Sanitary conditions were exceedingly bad. At Kramerplatz, where
- approximately 1,200 eastern workers were crowded into the rooms
- of an old school, the sanitary conditions were atrocious in the
- extreme. Only 10 children’s toilets were available for the 1,200
- inhabitants. At Dechenschule, 15 children’s toilets were
- available for the 400-500 eastern workers. Excretion
- contaminated the entire floors of these lavatories. There were
- also few facilities for washing. The supply of bandages,
- medicine, surgical instruments, and other medical supplies at
- these camps was likewise altogether insufficient. As a
- consequence, only the very worst cases were treated.
-
- “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 T. B. rate among them
- was 4 times the normal rate of (2 percent eastern workers,
- German .5 percent). At Dechenschule approximately 2½ percent of
- the workers suffered from open T. B. These were all active T. B.
- cases. The Tartars and Kirghis 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 Hunher-Oedem, Nephritis, and
- Shighakruse.
-
- “It was the general rule that workers were compelled to go to
- work unless a camp doctor had prescribed that they were unfit
- for work. At Seumannstrasse, Grieperstrasse, Germanistrasse,
- Kapitanlehmannstrasse, and Dechenschule, there was no daily sick
- call. At these camps, the doctors did not appear for two or
- three days. As a consequence, workers were forced to go to work
- despite illnesses.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Camp Humboldstrasse has been inhabitated by Italian prisoners
- of war. After it had been destroyed by an air raid, the Italians
- were removed and 600 Jewish females from Buchenwald
- Concentration Camp were brought in to work at the Krupp
- factories. Upon my first visit at Camp Humboldstrasse, I found
- these females suffering from open festering wounds and other
- diseases.
-
- “I was the first doctor they had seen for at least a fortnight.
- There was no doctor in attendance at the camp. There was 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 meagre 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 a Mr. Green 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 de-louse 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 Labour Exchange in
- Essen and from there, they were sent to a camp at
- Friedrichsfeld. Among persons who were returned over to the
- Labour Exchange were aggravated cases of tuberculosis, malaria,
- neurosis, career 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 who no longer of any use to Krupp
- were sent.
-
- “My colleagues and I reported all of the foregoing matters to
- Mr. Ihh, Director of Friedrich Krupp A. G. Dr. Wiels, personal
- physician of Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach, Senior Camp
- Leader Kupke, and at all times to the health department.
- Moreover, I know that these gentlemen personally visited the
- camps.
-
- “(Signed) Dr. Wilhelm Jager.” (_D-288_)
-
-The conditions just described were not confined to the Krupp factories
-but existed throughout Germany. A report of the Polish Main Committee to
-the Administration of the Government-General of Poland, dated 17 May
-1944, describes in similar terms the situation of Polish workers in
-Germany (_R-103_):
-
- “The 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 linen. 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
- fourth grade of rations—is absolutely insufficient to maintain
- the energies spent in heavy work. 3.5 kg. of bread weekly and a
- thin soup at lunch time, cooked with swedes or other vegetables
- without any meat or fat, with a meager addition of potatoes now
- and then is a hunger ration for a heavy worker.
-
- “Sometimes punishment consists of starvation which is inflicted,
- i.e. for refusal to wear the badge, ‘East’. Such punishment has
- the result that workers faint at work (Klosterteich Camp,
- Gruenheim, Saxony). The consequence is complete exhaustion, an
- ailing state of health and tuberculosis. The spreading of
- tuberculosis among the Polish factory workers is a result of the
- deficient food rations meted out in the community camps because
- energy spent in heavy work cannot be replaced * * *.
-
- “The call for help which reaches us, brings to light starvation
- and hunger, severe stomach 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 are not available in the
- mass camps. * * *”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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 unwanted results in
- these children * * *. An indication of the awful conditions this
- may lead to is given by the fact that in the camps for Eastern
- workers—(camp for Eastern workers, ‘Waldlust’, Post Office
- Lauf, 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.* * *”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “If, under these bad 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 practice and
- religious care from the life of the Polish workers, the
- prohibition of church attendance at a time 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.” (_R-103_)
-
-Particularly harsh and brutal treatment was reserved for workers
-imported from the conquered Eastern territories. They lived in bondage,
-were quartered in stables with animals, and were denied the right of
-worship and the pleasures of human society. A document entitled
-“Directives on the Treatment of Foreign Farmworkers of Polish
-Nationality”, issued by the Minister for Finance and Economy of Baden on
-6 March 1941, describes this treatment (_EC-68_):
-
- “The agencies of the Reich Food Administration
- (_Reichsnaehrstand_) State Peasant Association of Baden have
- received the result of the negotiations with the Higher SS and
- Police Officer 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 how they are now to be applied accordingly:
-
- “1. Fundamentally, farmworkers of Polish nationality no longer
- have the right to complain, and thus no complaints may be
- accepted any more by any official agency.
-
- “2. The farmworkers of Polish nationality may not 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 of 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 farmworkers of Polish
- nationality.
-
- “6. The visit of restaurants is strictly prohibited to
- farmworkers of Polish nationality except for one restaurant in
- the village, which will be selected by the Rural Councillor’s
- office (_Landratsamt_), and then only one day per week. The day,
- which is determined as the day to visit the restaurant, will
- also be determined by the _Landratsamt_. This regulation does
- not change the curfew regulation mentioned above under No. 2.
-
- “7. Sexual intercourse with women and girls is strictly
- prohibited, and where it is established, it must be reported.
-
- “8. Gatherings of farmworkers 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
- farmworkers of Polish nationality is prohibited.
-
- “10. Permits to leave the village may only be granted in very
- exceptional cases, by the local police authority (Mayor’s
- office). However, in no case may it be granted if he wants to
- visit a public agency on his own, whether it is a labor office
- or the District Peasants Association or whether he wants to
- change his place of employment.
-
- “11. Arbitrary change of employment is strictly prohibited. The
- farmworkers of Polish nationality have to work daily so long as
- the interests of the enterprise demands it, and as it is
- demanded by the employer. There are no time limits to the
- working time.
-
- “12. Every employer has the right to give corporal punishment
- toward farmworkers of Polish nationality, if instructions and
- good words fail. The employer may not be held accountable in any
- such case by an official agency.
-
- “13. Farmworkers of Polish nationality should, if possible, be
- removed from the community of the home and they can be quartered
- in stables, etc. No remorse whatever should restrict such
- action.
-
- “14. Report to the authorities is compulsory in all cases, when
- crimes have been committed by farmworkers of Polish nationality,
- which are to sabotage the enterprise or slow down work, for
- instance unwillingness to work, impertinent behavior; it is
- compulsory even in minor cases. An employer, who loses his Pole
- who must serve a longer prison sentence because of such a
- compulsory report, will receive another Pole from the competent
- labor office on request with preference.
-
- “15. In all other cases, only the state police is still
- competent.
-
- “For the employer himself, severe punishment is contemplated if
- it is established that the necessary distance from farmworkers
- of Polish nationality has not been kept. The same applies to
- women and girls. Extra rations are strictly prohibited.
- Noncompliance to the Reich tariffs for farmworkers of Polish
- nationality will be punished by the competent labor office by
- the taking away of the worker.” (_EC-68_)
-
-The women of the conquered territories were led away against their will
-to serve as domestics. Sauckel described this program as follows:
-
- “* * * 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 Fuehrer also charged me with procurement of
- 400,000-500,000 selected, healthy and strong girls from the
- territories of the East for Germany.” (_016-PS_)
-
-Once captured, these Eastern women, by order of Sauckel, were bound to
-the household to which they were assigned, permitted at the most three
-hours of freedom a week, and denied the right to return to their homes.
-The decree issued by Sauckel containing instructions for housewives
-concerning Eastern household workers, provides in part, 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 20:00 hours. It is
- prohibited to enter restaurants, movies, or other theatres 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 with the German Women’s League
- (_Deutsches Frauenwerk_). Outside the home, the Eastern domestic
- must always carry her work card as a personal pass.
-
- “10. Vacations, Return to Homes.
-
- “Vacations are not granted as yet. The recruiting of Eastern
- domestics is for an indefinite period.” (_3044-B-PS_)
-
-At all times the shadow of the Gestapo and the concentration camp
-hovered over the enslaved workers. As with the other major programs of
-the Nazi conspirators, Himmler’s black-shirted SS formations were the
-instruments employed for enforcement. A secret order dated 20 February
-1942, issued by Reichsfuehrer SS Himmler to SD and security police
-officers spells out the violence which was applied against the Eastern
-workers. (_3040-PS_):
-
- “III. Combatting violations against discipline.
-
- “(1) According to the equal status of the manpower from the
- original Soviet Russian territory with prisoners of war, a
- strict discipline must be exercised in the quarters and at the
- working place. Violations against discipline, including work
- refusal and loafing at work, will be fought exclusively by the
- secret State police. The smaller cases will be settled by the
- leader of the guard according to instruction of the State police
- administration offices with measures as provided for in the
- enclosure. To break acute resistance, the guards shall be
- permitted to use also physical power against the manpower. But
- this may be done only for a cogent cause.
-
- The manpower should always be informed about the fact that they
- will be treated decently when conducting themselves with
- discipline and accomplishing good work.
-
- “(2) In severe cases, that is in such cases where the measures
- at the disposal of the leader of the guard do not suffice, the
- State police office has to act with its means. Accordingly, they
- will be treated, as a rule, only with strict measures, that is
- with transfer to a concentration camp or with special treatment.
-
- “(3) The transfer to a concentration camp is done in the usual
- manner.
-
- “(4) In especially severe cases special treatment is to be
- requested at the Reich Security Main Office, stating personnel
- data and the exact history of the act.
-
- “(5) Special treatment is hanging. It should not take place in
- the immediate vicinity of the camp. A certain number of manpower
- from the original Soviet Russian territory should attend the
- special treatment; at that time they are warned about the
- circumstances which led to this special treatment.
-
- “(6) Should special treatment be required within the camp for
- exceptional reasons of camp discipline, this is also to be
- requested.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “VI. Sexual Intercourse.
-
- “Sexual intercourse is forbidden to the manpower of the original
- Soviet Russian territory. By means of their closely confined
- quarters they have no opportunity for it. Should sexual
- intercourse be exercised nevertheless—especially among the
- individually employed manpower on the farms—the following is
- directed:
-
- “(1) For every case of sexual intercourse with German countrymen
- or women, special treatment is to be requested for male manpower
- from the original Soviet Russian territory, transfer to a
- concentration camp for female manpower.
-
- “(2) When exercising sexual intercourse with other foreign
- workers, the conduct of the manpower from the original Soviet
- Russian territory is to be punished as severe violation of
- discipline with transfer to a concentration camp.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “VIII. Search.
-
- “(1) Fugitive workers from the original Soviet Russian territory
- are to be announced principally in the German search book
- (_Fanndungsbuch_). Furthermore, search measures are to be
- decreed locally.
-
- “(2) When caught, the fugitive must receive special treatment *
- * *.” (_3040-PS_)
-
- 6. USE OF SLAVE LABOR IN GERMAN WAR INDUSTRIES
-
-The primary purpose of the slave labor program was to compel the people
-of the occupied countries to work for the German war economy. The decree
-appointing Sauckel Plenipotentiary-General for Manpower declares the
-purpose of the appointment to be 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 (_1666-PS_). This decree, signed by Hitler, Lammers and
-Keitel, and dated 21 March 1942, provides:
-
- “In order to secure the manpower requisite for the war
- industries as a whole, and particularly for armaments, it is
- necessary that the utilization of all available manpower,
- including that of workers recruited (_angeworbenen_) 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, and in the General Government 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 utilization of labor. In that
- capacity he will be directly responsible to the Commissioner 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.”
- (_1666-PS_)
-
-Sauckel’s success can be gauged from a letter he wrote to Hitler on 15
-April 1943, containing a report on one year’s activities:
-
- “1. After one year’s activity as Plenipotentiary for the
- Direction 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 this year.
-
- “2. The 3,638,056 are distributed amongst the following branches
- of the German war economy
-
- Armament—1,568,801.” (_407-VI-PS_)
-
-Further evidence of this use of enslaved foreign labor is found in a
-report of a meeting of the Central Planning Board on 16 February 1944,
-during which Field Marshal Milch stated:
-
- “The armament industry employs foreign workmen to a large
- extent; according to the latest figures—40 percent.” (_R-124_)
-
-Moreover, according to tabulations of Speer’s Ministry, as of 31
-December 1944 approximately two million civilian foreign workers were
-employed directly in the manufacture of armaments and munitions (end
-products or components). (_2520-PS_)
-
-Sauckel, Speer, and Keitel also 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”. Hitler, in an order dated 8
-September 1942, initialed by Keitel, decreed that:
-
- “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 should be committed
- and should give the fullest extent of their productive
- capacities. The previous allotment of domestic workers 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 abandoning 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
- Commissar, will issue the corresponding decrees for execution.”
- (_556-2-PS_)
-
-Sauckel boasted to Hitler concerning the contribution of the forced
-labor program to the construction of the Atlantic Wall by Speer’s
-Organization Todt (OT). In a letter to Hitler dated 17 May 1943, Sauckel
-wrote:
-
- “* * * 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.” (_407-VIII-PS_)
-
-Similarly, Russian civilians were forced into labor battalions and
-compelled to build fortifications to be used against their own
-countrymen. A memorandum of the Rosenberg Ministry states that:
-
- “* * * 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 * * *.” (_031-PS_)
-
-In addition, the Nazi 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 held on February 19, 1943,
-attended by Speer, Sauckel, and Field Marshal Milch, the following
-conversation occurred:
-
- “Sauckel: If any prisoners are taken, there, they will be
- needed.
-
- “Milch: We have made a request for an order that a certain
- percentage of men in the antiaircraft artillery must be
- Russians. 50,000 will be taken altogether; 30,000 are already
- employed as gunners. This is an amusing thing that Russians must
- work the guns.” (_R-124_)
-
-(At this point a series of official German Army photographs were offered
-in evidence. The first one shows Russian Prisoners of War acting as
-ammunition bearers during the attack upon Tschudowo. The second group
-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.)
-
-This use of prisoners of war was in flagrant disregard of the rules of
-international law, particularly Article 6 of the Regulations annexed to
-Hague Convention Number 4 of 1907, which provides that the tasks of
-prisoners of war shall have no connection with the operations of war.
-
-The Nazi conspirators made extensive use of prisoners of war not only in
-active operations of war but also in the German armament industry. A
-secret letter from the Reichminister of Labor to the Presidents of the
-Regional Labor Exchange Offices refers to an order of Goering to the
-effect that:
-
- “Upon personal order of the Reich Marshal, 100,000 men are to be
- taken from among the French PWs not yet employed in armament
- industry, and are to be assigned to the armament industry
- (airplanes industry). Gaps in manpower supply resulting
- therefrom will be filled by Soviet PWs. The transfer of the
- above-named French PWs is to be accomplished by 1 October.”
- (_3005-PS_)
-
-A similar policy was followed with respect to Russian prisoners of war.
-In a secret memorandum issued from Hitler’s headquarters on 31 October
-1942, Keitel directed the execution of Hitler’s order to use such
-prisoners in the German war economy (_EC-194_):
-
- “The lack of workers is becoming an increasingly dangerous
- hindrance for the future German war and armament industry. The
- expected relief through discharges from the armed forces is
- uncertain as to the extent and date; however, its possible
- extent will by no means correspond to expectations and
- requirements in view of the great demand.
-
- “The Fuehrer has now ordered that even the working power of the
- Russian prisoner of war should be utilized to a large extent by
- large scale assignment for the requirements of the war industry.
- The prerequisite for production is adequate nourishment. Also
- very small wages are to be planned for the most modest supply
- with a few consumers’ goods (_Genussmittel_) for every day’s
- life, eventual rewards for production.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “II. _Construction and Armament Industry._
-
- “_a._ Work units for constructions of all kind, particularly for
- the fortification of coastal defenses (concrete workers,
- unloading units for essential war plants).
-
- “_b._ Suitable armament factories which have to be selected in
- such a way that their personnel should consist in the majority
- of prisoners of war under guidance and supervision (eventually
- after 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 etc.
-
- “_c._ Agriculture and forestry in closed units. The utilization
- of Russian prisoners of war is to be regulated on the basis of
- above examples by:
-
- “To I. The armed forces
-
- “To II. The Reich Minister for Arms and Ammunition and the
- Inspector General for the German road system in agreement with
- the Reich Minister for Labor and Supreme Commander of the Armed
- Forces (_Wi Rue Amt_). Deputies of the Reich Minister for Arms
- and Ammunition are to be admitted to the prisoner of war camps
- to assist in the selection of skilled workers.” (_EC-194_)
-
-Goering, at a conference at the Air Ministry on 7 November 1941, also
-discussed the use of prisoners of war in the armament industry. The Top
-Secret notes on Goering’s instructions as to the employment and
-treatment of prisoners of war in many phases of the German war industry
-read as follows (_1206-PS_):
-
- “The Fuehrer’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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “For 4) _In the Interior and the Protectorate_, it would be
- ideal if entire factories could be manned by Russian PW’s except
- the employees necessary for direction. For employment in the
- Interior and the Protectorate the following are to have
- priority:
-
- “_a._ _At the top coal mining industry._
-
- “Order by the Fuehrer to investigate all mines as to suitability
- for employment of Russians. At times manning the entire plant
- with Russian laborers.
-
- “_b._ _Transportation_ (construction of locomotives and cars,
- repair shops).
-
- “Railroad-repair and industry workers are to be sought out from
- the PW’s. Railroad is most important means of transportation in
- the East.
-
- “_c._ _Armament industries_
-
- “Preferably factories of armor and guns. Possibly also
- construction of parts for airplane engines. Suitable complete
- sections of factories to be manned exclusively by Russians. For
- the remainder employment in columns. Use in factories of tool
- machinery, production of farm tractors, generators, etc. In
- emergency, erect in individual places barracks for occasional
- workers which are used as unloading details and similar
- purposes. (Reich Minister of the Interior through communal
- authorities.)
-
- “OKW/AWA is competent for _transporting_ Russian PW’s employment
- through “_Planning Board for Employment of all PW’s_
- (_Planstelle fuer den Einsatz fuer alle Kriegsgefangenen_).” If
- necessary, offices of Reich Commissariates.
-
- “No employment where _danger to men_ or their supply exists,
- i.e. factories exposed to explosives, waterworks, powerworks,
- etc. No contact with German population, especially no
- ‘solidarity.’ German worker as a rule is foreman of Russians.
-
- “Food is a matter of the Four Years’ Plan. Supply their own food
- (cats, horses, etc.)
-
- “_Clothes_, _billeting_, _messing_ somewhat better than at home
- where part of the people live in caverns.
-
- “_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 engineers.” (_1206-PS_)
-
-Speer also sponsored and applied the policy of using prisoners of war in
-the armament industry. In a speech to the Nazi Gauleiters on 24 February
-1942, Speer said:
-
- “I therefore proposed to the Fuehrer at the end of December that
- all my labor force, including specialists be released for mass
- employment in the East. Subsequently the remaining PW’s, about
- 10,000 were put at disposal of the armaments industry by me.”
- (_1435-PS_)
-
-Speer also reported at the 36th meeting of the Central Planning Board,
-held on 22 April 1943, that only 30% of the Russian prisoners of war
-were engaged in the armament industry. This he found unsatisfactory.
-Speer continued:
-
- “There is a specified statement showing in what sectors the
- Russian PW’s have been distributed, and this statement is quite
- interesting. It shows that the armaments industry only received
- 30%. I always complained about this.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “The 90,000 Russian PW’s employed in the whole of the armaments
- industry are for the greatest part skilled men.” (_R-124_)
-
-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 contains the following statement:
-
- “All prisoners of war, from the territories of the West as well
- as of the East, actually in Germany, must be completely
- incorporated into the German armament and nutrition industries.
- Their production must be brought to the highest possible level.”
- (_016-PS_)
-
- 7. THE CONCENTRATION CAMP PROGRAM OF EXTERMINATION THROUGH WORK
-
-A special Nazi program combined the brutality and the purposes of the
-slave labor program with those of the concentration camp. The Nazis
-placed Allied nationals in concentration camps and forced them, along
-with the other inmates of the concentration camps, to work in the
-armaments industry under conditions designed to exterminate them. This
-was the Nazi program of extermination through work.
-
-The program was initiated in the spring of 1942. It was outlined as
-follows in a letter to Himmler, dated 30 April 1942, from his
-subordinate Pohl, SS Obergruppenfuehrer and General of the Waffen SS:
-
- “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 March 1942.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “1. The war has brought about a marked change in the structure
- of the concentration camps and has changed their duties with
- regard to the employment of the prisoners. The custody of
- prisoners for the sole reasons of security, education, or
- prevention is no longer the main consideration. The mobilization
- of all prisoners who are fit for work for purposes of the war
- now, and for purposes of construction in the forthcoming peace,
- come to the foreground more and more.
-
- “2. From this knowledge some necessary measures result with the
- aim to transform the concentration camps into organizations more
- suitable for the economic tasks, whilst they were formerly
- merely politically interested.
-
- “3. For this reason I have gathered 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; I have explained personally to them
- this new development. I have compiled in the order attached the
- main essentials, which have to be brought into effect with the
- utmost urgency if the commencement of work for purposes of the
- armament industry is not to be delayed.” (_R-129_)
-
-The order referred to in paragraph 3 above set the framework for a
-program of relentless exploitation, providing in part as follows:
-
- “4. The camp commander alone is responsible for the employment
- of the labor available. This employment must be, in the true
- meaning of the word, exhaustive, in order to obtain the greatest
- measure of performance. Work is allotted by the Chief of the
- Department D centrally and alone. 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 (e.g. meals, roll-calls) have therefore to be
- restricted to the minimum which cannot be condensed any more. It
- is forbidden to allow long walks to the place of working and
- noon intervals only for eating purposes.” (_R-129_)
-
-This armaments production program was not merely a scheme for mobilizing
-the manpower potential of the camps. It was directly integrated into the
-larger Nazi program of extermination. A memorandum of an agreement
-between Himmler and the Minister of Justice, Thierack sets for the Nazi
-objective of extermination through work:
-
- “* * * 2. The delivery of anti-social elements from the
- execution of their sentence to the Reich Fuehrer of SS to be
- worked to death. 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 anti-social elements amongst those just mentioned are to
- be handed over. I shall inform the Fuehrer of this through
- Reichsleiter Bormann.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “14. It is agreed that, in consideration of the intended aims of
- the Government for the clearing up of the Eastern problems, in
- future Jews, Poles, Gypsies, Russians and Ukrainians are no
- longer to be judged by the ordinary courts, so far as punishable
- offenses are concerned, but are to be dealt with by the Reich
- Fuehrer of SS. This does not apply to civil lawsuits, nor to
- Poles whose names are announced or entered in the German Racial
- Lists.” (_654-PS_)
-
-In September, 1942, Speer arranged 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 in camps. In fact, without Speer’s cooperation, it
-would have been 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 Speer’s control. To
-compensate Himmler for surrendering this jurisdiction to Speer, 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. The minutes of Speer’s conference with Hitler on 20, 21, 22
-September 1942, are as follows (_R-124_):
-
- “* * * I pointed out to the Fuehrer 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 armaments industry,
- if use could be made of them by a second shift.
-
- “The Fuehrer agrees to my proposal, that the numerous factories
- set up outside towns for ARP reasons, should release their
- workers for supplementing 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 Fuehrer the difficulties which I expect to
- encounter if Reichsfuehrer SS Himmler should be able, as he
- requests, to exercise authoritative influence over these
- factories. The Fuehrer, too, does not consider such an influence
- necessary.
-
- “The Fuehrer however agrees that Reichsfuehrer SS Himmler should
- draw advantages from making his prisoners available; he should
- get equipment for his division.
-
- “I suggest to give him a share in kind (war equipment) in ratio
- to the working hours done by his prisoners. A 3-5% share is
- discussed, the equipment also being calculated according to
- working hours. The Fuehrer would agree to such a solution.
-
- “The Fuehrer is prepared to order the additional delivery of
- this equipment and weapons to the SS, according to a list
- submitted to him.” (_R-124_)
-
-After a demand for concentration camp labor had been created, and a
-mechanism set up by 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 the
-agreement between Himmler and the Minister of Justice mentioned above.
-This was implemented by such programs as the following, expressed in
-Sauckel’s letter of 26 November 1942 to Presidents of Landes Employment
-Offices regarding the program for the evacuation of Poles from the
-Lublin district:
-
- “The Poles who are to be evacuated as a result of this measure
- will be put into concentration camps and put to work where they
- are criminal or asocial elements.” (_L-61_)
-
-General measures were supplemented by special drives for persons who
-would not otherwise have been sent to concentration camps. For example,
-for “reasons of war necessity” Himmler ordered on 17 December 1942 that
-at least 35,000 prisoners qualified for work should be transferred
-immediately to concentration camps, (_1063-D-PS_). The order provided
-that:
-
- “For reasons of war necessity not to be discussed further here,
- the Reichsfuehrer SS and Chief of the German Police on 14
- December 1942 has ordered that until the end of January 1943, at
- least 35,000 prisoners qualified 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 (so far until 1 Feb. 1943) all eastern workers or
- such 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 ruling
-
- _a._ the prisons
-
- _b._ the labor reformatory camps
-
- “All prisoners qualified for work, if it is essentially and
- humanly possible, will be committed at once to the nearest
- concentration camp, according to the following instructions, for
- instance also if penal procedures were to be established in the
- near future. Only such prisoners who in the interest of
- investigation procedures are to remain absolutely in solitary
- confinement can be left there.
-
- “_Every single laborer counts!_” (_1063-D-PS_)
-
-Measures were also adopted to insure that extermination through work was
-practiced with maximum efficiency. Subsidiary concentration camps were
-established near important war plants. Speer has admitted that he
-personally toured Upper Austria and selected sites for concentration
-camps near various munitions factories in the area. This admission
-appears in the transcript of an interrogation of Speer under oath on 18
-October 1945, in which Speer stated:
-
- “The fact that we were anxious to use workers from concentration
- camps in factories and to establish small concentration camps
- near the factories in order to use the manpower that was
- available there was a general fact. But it did not only come up
- in connection with this trip.” [i.e. Speer’s trip to Austria].
- (_3720-PS_)
-
-Goering endorsed this use of concentration camp labor and asked for
-more. In a teletype which Goering sent to Himmler on 14 February 1944,
-he stated:
-
- “At the same time I ask you to put at my disposal as great a
- number of concentration camp (KZ-) 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 concentration camp (KZ-) convicts can be especially
- well concentrated at work and in the camp.” (_1584-I-PS_)
-
-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’s record of conferences with Hitler on April 6 and 7, 1944,
-contain the following quotation:
-
- “* * * Suggested to the Fuehrer 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
- suitable soil (preferable on gravel base and with transport
- facilities) on French, Belgian or Dutch territory. The Fuehrer
- agrees to this suggestion if the works could be set up behind a
- fortified zone. For the suggestion of setting this plant up in
- French territory speaks mainly the fact that it would be much
- easier to procure the necessary workers. Nevertheless, the
- Fuehrer asks an attempt be made to set up the second works in a
- safer area, namely in the Protectorate. If it should prove
- impossible there, too, to get hold of the necessary workers, the
- Fuehrer himself will contact the Reichsfuehrer 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 the
- building organization of the _Industriegemeinschaft Schlesien
- Silesia_ was a failure, the Fuehrer demands that these works
- must be built by the O.T. exclusively and that the workers
- should be made available by the Reichsfuehrer SS. He wants to
- hold a meeting shortly in order to discuss details with all the
- men concerned.” (_R-124_)
-
-The character of the treatment inflicted on Allied nationals and other
-victims of concentration camps while they were being worked to death is
-described in an official report prepared by a U.S. Congressional
-Committee which inspected the liberated camps at the request of General
-Eisenhower (_L-159_). The report states in part:
-
- “* * * 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 the
- 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 * * *.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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.” (_L-159_)
-
-Such was the cycle of work, torture, starvation and death for
-concentration camp labor—labor which Goering, while requesting that
-more of it be placed at his disposal, said had proved very useful; labor
-which Speer was “anxious” to use in the factories under his control.
-
- 8. THE SPECIAL RESPONSIBILITY OF SAUCKEL
-
-Sauckel bears special responsibility for the Nazi slave labor program
-and the manner in which it was executed. Sauckel was appointed as
-Plenipotentiary General for Manpower because he was an old and trusted
-Nazi. He has certified, on 17 November 1945, that he held the following
-positions:
-
- “1. Member of _Nationalsozialistischen Deutschen Arbeiterpartei_
- (1925-1945). (Member of National Socialist German Workers Party.
- Member No. 1395.)
-
- 2. Member of Reichstag (_Mitglied des Reichstags_) (1933-1945).
-
- 3. Gauleiter of Thuringia (1927-1945).
-
- 4. Member of Thuringian legislature (_Landtag_) (1927-1933/34).
-
- 5. Minister of Interior and head of Thuringian State Ministry
- (May 1933).
-
- 6. _Reichsstatthalter_ for Thuringia (1933-1945).
-
- 7. SA Obergruppenfuehrer (November 1937-1945).
-
- 8. SS Obergruppenfuehrer (January 1942-1945).
-
- 9. Administrator Berlin-Suhler Waffen & Fahrzeugwerke (1935).
-
- 10. Head of Gustloff-Werke Nationalsozialistische
- Industrie-Stiftung (1936). Honorary Head of Foundation.
-
- 11. General Plenipotentiary for Labor Allocation
- (_Generalbevollmaechtigter fuer den Arbeitseinsatz_) (21 March
- 1942-1945).” (_2974-PS_)
-
-Sauckel’s official responsibilities are borne out by other evidence. His
-appointment as Plenipotentiary-General for Manpower was effected by a
-decree of 21 March 1942 signed by Hitler, Lammers, and Keitel. By that
-decree (_1666-PS_) Sauckel was given authority as well as responsibility
-subordinate only to that of Hitler and Goering for all matters relating
-to recruitment, allocation, and handling of foreign and domestic
-manpower. Goering, to whom Sauckel was directly responsible, abolished
-the recruitment and allocation agencies for the Four Year Plan,
-delegated their powers to Sauckel and placed his far-reaching authority,
-as deputy for the Four Year Plan, at Sauckel’s disposal. This was the
-result of Goering’s decree dated 27 March 1942 (_1666-PS_) and providing
-as follows:
-
- “In pursuance of the Fuehrer’s Decree of 21 March 1942 (RGBl I,
- 179), I decree as follows:
-
- “1. My manpower sections (_Geschaeftsgruppen Arbeitseinsatz_)
- are hereby abolished (circular letter of 22 Oct 1936/St M. Dev.
- 265). Their duties (recruitment and allocation of manpower,
- regulations for labor conditions (_Arbeitsbedingungen_)) are
- taken over by the Plenipotentiary General for Arbeitseinsatz,
- who is directly under me.
-
- “2. The Plenipotentiary General for _Arbeitseinsatz_ will be
- responsible for regulating the conditions of labor (wage policy)
- employed in the Reich Territory, having regard to the
- requirements of _Arbeitseinsatz_.
-
- “3. The Plenipotentiary General for _Arbeitseinsatz_ is part of
- the Four Year Plan. In cases where new legislation is required,
- or existing laws required to be modified, he will submit
- appropriate proposals to me.
-
- “4. The Plenipotentiary General for _Arbeitseinsatz_ will have
- at his disposal for the performance of his task the right
- delegated to me by the Fuehrer for issuing instructions to the
- higher Reich authorities, their branches and the Party offices,
- and their associated organisms and also the Reich Protector, the
- General Governor, the Commander-in-Chief, 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.” (_1666-PS_)
-
-By a Hitler decree of 30 September 1942 Sauckel was given extraordinary
-powers over the civil and military authorities of the territories
-occupied by Germany. The decree (_1903-PS_) provided as follows:
-
- “I herewith authorize the Deputy General for the
- _Arbeitseinsatz_, Reich-governor and district leader (Gauleiter)
- Fritz Sauckel to take all necessary measures for the enforcement
- of my decree referring to a Deputy General for the
- _Arbeitseinsatz_ of 21 March 1942 (_Reichsgesetzblatt_, I, page
- 179) according to his own judgment in the Greater German Reich,
- in the Protectorate, and in the Government General
- (_General-gouvernement_) as well as in the occupied territories,
- measures which will safeguard under all circumstances the
- regulated deployment of labor (_Geordneter Arbeitseinsatz_) for
- the German war-economy. For this purpose he may appoint
- commissioners (_Beauftragte_) to the bureaux of the military and
- civilian administration. These are subordinated directly to
- Deputy General for the _Arbeitseinsatz_. In order to carry out
- their tasks, they are entitled to issue directives to the
- competent military and civilian authorities in charge of the
- _Arbeitseinsatz_ and of wage-policy.
-
- “More detailed directives will be issued by the Deputy General
- for the _Arbeitseinsatz_.
-
- “Fuehrer-Headquarters, 30 Sept. 1942.
-
- “The Fuehrer
- “(signed) Adolph Hitler.” (_1903-PS_)
-
-Within a month after his appointment, Sauckel sent Rosenberg his “Labor
-Mobilization Program”, which might more appropriately be termed
-Sauckel’s “Charter of Enslavement.” This program envisaged the forcible
-recruitment 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. Sauckel explained his plans in these terms:
-
- “It must be emphasized, however, that an additional tremendous
- number of foreign labor has to be found for the Reich. The
- greatest pool for that purpose are the occupied territories of
- the East. Consequently, it is an immediate 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 or 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 labor mobilization * * *.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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 undisputable necessity for the solution
- of the mobilization of labor program in this war.” (_016-PS_)
-
-Sauckel proceeded to implement this “Charter of Enslavement” with
-certain basic directives. In Regulation No. 4, which he issued on 7 May
-1942, Sauckel provided that if voluntary recruitment of foreign workers
-was unsuccessful, compulsory service should be instituted. This
-regulation provides:
-
- “The recruitment of foreign labor will be done on the
- fundamental basis of volunteering. 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.” (_3044-PS_)
-
-Sauckel provided also for the allocation of foreign labor in the order
-of its importance to the Nazi war machine. Sauckel’s regulation No. 10
-of 22 August 1942 had these aims:
-
- “* * * 3. 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 the German armaments (_Ruestungen_);
-
- “(_c_) Labor required for food and agriculture;
-
- “(_d_) Labor required for industrial work other than armaments,
- which is in the interest of Germany;
-
- “(_e_) Labor required for industrial work in the interests of
- the population of the territory in question.” (_3044-A-PS_)
-
-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. Sauckel affirmed this
-authority in the following decree:
-
- “The recruitment of foreign labor in the areas occupied by
- Germany, in allied, friendly or neutral states will be carried
- out exclusively by my commissioners, or by the competent German
- military or civil agencies for the tasks of labor mobilization.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “For the carrying out of recruitment in allied, friendly or
- neutral foreign countries, my commissioners are solely
- responsible.” (_3044-PS_)
-
-Sauckel participated in the formulation of overall labor requirements
-for Germany and assigned quotas to be filled by and with the assistance
-of the individuals and agencies mentioned above, with knowledge that
-force and brutality were the only means whereby his demands could be
-met. Thus, the Lammer’s report states (_1292-PS_):
-
- “1. A conference took place with the Fuehrer today which was
- attended by:
-
- “The Plenipotentiary for the Employment 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, Reichfuehrer 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 Fuehrer did not wish their
- attendance.)
-
- “The Fuehrer 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 this matter of making up for losses by death,
- infirmity, the constant fluctuation of workers, and so
- forth, and further it is a matter of procuring
- additional workers.’
-
- “The Plenipotentiary for the Employment of Labor, Sauckel,
- declared that, in order to maintain the present pool of workers,
- he would have to add at least 2½ but probably 3 million new
- workers in 1944. Otherwise production would fall off.
- Reichsminister Speer declared that he needs an additional 1.3
- million 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 for the Employment of Labor. The Fuehrer agreed
- with the opinions of Reichsminister Speer and emphasized that
- the measures taken by the Plenipotentiary for the Employment of
- Labor should order no circumstances which would lead to the
- withdrawal of workers from armament and auxiliary industries
- working in occupied territories, because such a shift of workers
- would only cause disturbance of production in occupied
- countries.
-
- “The Fuehrer 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
- for the Employment of Labor must add at least 4 million workers
- to the manpower pool, considering that he requires 2½ million
- workers for maintenance of the present level, that Reich
- Minister Speer needs 1.3 million additional workers, and that
- the above-mentioned preparations for security measures against
- air attacks call for 0.25 million laborers.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “The Reichsfuehrer SS explained that the enforcement 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 Reichsfuehrer SS made immediately available
- 2,000 to 2,500 men from concentration camps for air raid
- preparations in Vienna.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “_Results of the Conference_:
-
- “(1) The Plenipotentiary for Employment of Labor shall procure
- at least 4 million new workers from occupied territories.”
- (_1292-PS_)
-
-Moreover, Sauckel, in requesting the assistance of the Army for the
-recruitment of 1,000,000 men and women from the occupied Eastern
-territories, informed 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 (_3012-PS_). Finally, Sauckel was informed
-by Rosenberg that the enslavement of foreign labor was achieved by force
-and brutality (_018-PS_). Notwithstanding his knowledge of conditions,
-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 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, dated 10 March 1943, in which he implored him to
-intervene:
-
- “Therefore, my Fuehrer, I ask you to abolish all orders which
- oppose the obligation of foreign workers for labor * * *.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “If the obligation for labor and the forced recruiting of
- workers in the East is not possible any more, then the German
- war industry and agriculture cannot fulfill their tasks to the
- full extent.” (_407-II-PS_)
-
-In addition to being responsible for the recruitment of foreign civilian
-labor by force, 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. The conditions under which Sauckel’s
-slaves were transported to Germany, were known to Sauckel (_2241-PS_).
-Moreover, he accepted responsibility for these conditions. Regulation
-Number 4 of 7 May 1942, issued by Sauckel as Plenipotentiary General for
-the Mobilization of Labor, deals with recruitment, care, lodging,
-feeding, and treatment of foreign workers of both sexes (_3044-PS_). By
-this decree, 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, Sauckel directed that within Germany the care of
-foreign industrial workers was to be carried out by the German Labor
-Front and that 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. The regulation reads (_3044-PS_):
-
- “The care of foreign labor will be carried out.
-
- “_a._ up to the Reichs border
- “by my commissioners or—in the occupied areas by the competent
- military or civil labor mobilization agencies. Care of the labor
- will be carried out in cooperation 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 agencies of the labor mobilization administration 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 of foreign labor is
- not prejudiced by the assignment of these tasks to the German
- Labor Front and the Reichs Food Administration.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “_b._ Composition and operation of the transports.
-
- “The composition and operations of the transports up to the
- place of work is the task of my representatives, in the occupied
- territories of the labor mobilization agencies of the military
- and civil administration. In the countries in which foreign
- representatives are to direct the transports up to the frontier,
- the German recruiting agency must take part in the supervision
- and care of the transports.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “_c._ Supply for the Transports.
-
- “The food supply for the industrial workers in transit within
- the Reich, is the duty of the (DAF) German workers front, office
- for labor mobilization.
-
- For the rest, my offices effect the supply for the transport.”
- (_3044-PS_)
-
-Sauckel, in an agreement with Ley, the head of the German Labor Front
-(DAF) dated 2 June 1943, again emphasized his ultimate responsibility by
-creating a central inspectorate charged with examining the working and
-living conditions of foreign workers, and reporting thereon to Sauckel’s
-agency (_1913-PS_). The agreement reads in part as follows:
-
- “* * * 2. The Reichsleiter of the German Labor Front,
- Reichsorganisationleiter Dr. Ley, in collaboration with the
- Plenipotentiary General for the _Arbeitseinsatz_, 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.’
-
- “The central inspection for the care of foreign workers
- exercises its functions upon directives and in the name of the
- Plenipotentiary General for the _Arbeitseinsatz_ and of the
- Reichsleiter of the German Labor Front. In order to avoid all
- duplication of work, it will be its sole responsibility, to
- scrutinize all measures taken for the care of foreign workers
- employed in the factories and camps, also to remove immediately
- all defects discovered—as far as possible—on the spot and to
- issue the necessary instructions for this.
-
- “The authority of the Plenipotentiary General for the
- _Arbeitseinsatz_ 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.
-
- “3. The central inspection for the care of foreign workers will
- be continuously in touch with the main office VI of the
- Plenipotentiary General for the _Arbeitseinsatz_. It will
- instruct the office on the general observations made and will
- make suggestions for changes, if that should become necessary.
-
- “4. The offices of the administration of the _Arbeitseinsatz_
- 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.” (_1913-PS_)
-
-Sauckel was also responsible for compelling citizens of the occupied
-countries against their will to manufacture implements of war for use in
-operations against their own country and its allies. These functions
-were included in the terms of Sauckel’s appointment. (_1666-PS_)
-
-In a series of reports to Hitler, Sauckel described how successful he
-had been in carrying out his program. One such report, dated 14 April
-1943, states that in a single year Sauckel had incorporated 1,622,829
-prisoners of war into the German economy:
-
- “My Fuehrer,
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “1. After having been active as Plenipotentiary for
- _Arbeitseinsatz_ 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Besides the foreign civilian workers another 1,622,829
- prisoners of war are employed in the German economy.”
- (_407-V-PS_)
-
-A subsequent report dated 3 June 1943, states that 846,511 additional
-foreign laborers and prisoners of war were incorporated into the German
-war industry:
-
- “My Fuehrer:
-
- “1. I beg to be permitted to report to you on the situation of
- the _Arbeitseinsatz_ for the first five 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”. (_407-IX-PS_)
-
- 9. THE SPECIAL RESPONSIBILITY OF INDIVIDUAL CONSPIRATORS
-
-In addition, the following conspirators who were informed by Sauckel of
-the quotas of foreign laborers which he required, collaborated with
-Sauckel and his agents in filling these quotas:
-
-A. _Keitel, Chief of the OKW._
-
-The record of a telephone conversation of the Chief of the Economic
-Staff East of the German Army, dated 11 March 1943, reads in part as
-follows (_3012-PS_):
-
- “The plenipotentiary for the _Arbeitseinsatz_, Gauleiter
- Sauckel, points out to me in an urgent teletype, that the
- _Arbeitseinsatz_ in German agriculture as well as all the most
- urgent armament programs, ordered by the Fuehrer, make the most
- rapid procurement of approx. 1 million women and men from the
- newly occupied territories 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 territories.
-
- “The daily quota of 5,000 (10,000) workers was distributed with
- the consent of the GBA as follows:
-
- Reich Commissioner Ukraine daily 3,000 (6,000) workers.
-
- Wl Jn South daily 1,000 (2,000) workers.
-
- Wl Jn Center daily 500 (1,000) workers.
-
- Commissioner General White Ruthenia daily 500 (1,000) workers.
-
- “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 emphasis. 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, has because of
- this, turned immediately to General Fieldmarshal Keitel on 10
- March 1943, in a teletype, and has emphasized on this occasion,
- that, as in all other occupied territories, there, where all
- other methods fail, by order of the Fuehrer a certain pressure
- must be used.” (_3012-PS_)
-
-Confirmation of Keitel’s collaboration with Sauckel is also found in the
-transcript of an interrogation under oath of Sauckel held on the morning
-of 5 October 1945:
-
- “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 Fuehrer 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 Fuehrer, 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 out
- their missions, was it not?
-
- “A. Yes, the Fuehrer had told me that he would inform the Chief
- of the OKW, and the Chief of the Reichs chancellery, as to these
- missions. The same applies to the Foreign Minister.” (_3722-PS_)
-
-B. _Alfred Rosenberg, Reichs Minister for the Occupied Eastern
-Territories._
-
-The following colloquy is taken from the transcript of an interrogation
-under oath of Alfred Rosenberg on the afternoon of 6 October 1945:
-
- “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; isn’t that right?
-
- “A. Sauckel, normally, had very far-reaching desires, which one
- couldn’t fulfill 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, so 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 Reichskommissar
- for the Ukraine, but, as such, they were placed in their office
- by the Ministry for the Eastern Occupied Territories.”
- (_3719-PS_)
-
-Corroboration is to be found in letters written by Sauckel to Rosenberg
-requesting the latter’s assistance in the recruitment of additional
-foreign laborers. (_017-PS_; _019-PS_)
-
-C. _Seyss-Inquart, Reichscommissar for the Occupied Netherlands._
-
-The transcript of an interrogation under oath of Sauckel on the morning
-of 5 October 1945, reads in part, as follows:
-
- “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
- Reichskommissar 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.” (_3722-PS_)
-
-D. _Frank, Governor-General of the Government-General of Poland._
-
-The transcript of interrogation under oath of Sauckel on the morning of
-5 October 1945 reveals the part played by Frank:
-
- “Q. Was the same procedure substantially followed of allocating
- quotas in the General Government Poland?
-
- “A. Yes. I have to basically state again 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
- Fuehrer and ask them very urgently, as I have always done, to
- fulfill these orders.
-
- “Q. Such discussions in Poland, of course, were with the General
- Governor Frank?
-
- “A. Yes. I spent a morning and afternoon in Krakov twice or
- three times, and I personally spoke to General Governor Frank.
- Naturally, there was also present Secretary Dr. Goebble.”
- (_3722-PS_)
-
-E. _The SS, as in all matters involving the use of force and brutality,
-extended its assistance._
-
-This is clearly indicated in Reichschancellor Lammers’ report of a
-conference with Hitler attended by, among others, Sauckel, Speer, and
-Himmler (the Reichsfuehrer SS). The conference proceeded as follows:
-
- “The Plenipotentiary for Employment 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 powers to furnish the
- requested manpower in 1944. Whether it will succeed depends
- primarily on what _German_ enforcement agents will be made
- available. His project cannot be carried out with domestic
- enforcement agents. The Reichsfuehrer SS explained that the
- enforcement 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.” (_1292-PS_)
-
- 10. THE SPECIAL RESPONSIBILITY OF SPEER
-
-The use of prisoners of war in the manufacture of arms and munitions,
-allocated thereto by Sauckel, was confirmed by Speer. Speer stated in an
-interrogation under oath on 18 October 1945 that 40% of all prisoners of
-war were employed in the production of weapons and munitions and in
-subsidiary industries:
-
- “* * * A. In the last phase of production, that is, in the year
- 1944 when everything collapsed, I had 40% of all prisoners of
- war employed in the production. I wanted to have this percentage
- increased.
-
- “Q. And when you say employed in the 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 is the total extent of my task.” (_3720-PS_)
-
-The minutes of the 36th Meeting of the Central Planning Board, of 22
-April 1943, report Speer’s statement that:
-
- “* * * 90,000 Russian prisoners of war employed in the whole of
- the armament industry are for the greatest part skilled men.”
- (_R-124_)
-
-Speer actively participated in the planning and execution of the vast
-program of forcible deportation and enslavement of the citizens of the
-occupied countries. As Reich Minister of Armaments and Munitions and
-Chief of the Organization Todt, both of which positions he acquired on
-15 February 1942, and by virtue of his later acquisition of control over
-the armament offices of the Army, Navy and Airforce and the production
-offices of the Ministry of Economics, 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 Speer is supplied by his signed statement. (_2980-PS_)
-
-The industries under Speer’s control were the most important users of
-manpower in Germany. According to Sauckel, Speer’s labor requirements
-received unconditional priority over all other demands for labor. In an
-interrogation under oath on 22nd September 1945, Sauckel stated:
-
- “The others I only got whatever was left. Because Speer told me
- once in the presence of the Fuehrer that I am here to work for
- Speer and that mainly I am his man.” (_3721-PS_)
-
-Speer has admitted under oath that he participated in the discussions
-during which the decision to use foreign forced labor was made, that he
-concurred in the decision, and that it was the basis for the program of
-bringing foreign workers into Germany by compulsion. The transcript of
-the interrogation under oath of Speer, on 18 October 1945, contains the
-following colloquy:
-
- “Q. But is it clear to you Mr. Speer, that in 1942 when the
- decisions were being taken 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 taken 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.” (_3720-PS_)
-
-This admission is confirmed by minutes of Speer’s conferences with
-Hitler on 10, 11, and 12 August 1942 (_R-124_). In these meetings Speer
-related the outcome of negotiations concerning the forcible recruitment
-of a million Russian laborers for the German armaments industry, and
-stated that Hitler would agree to any necessary compulsion.
-
-The use of force was again discussed by Hitler and Speer on 4 January
-1943. It was decided that stronger measures were to be used to
-accelerate the conscription of French civilian workers. (_556-13-PS_).
-
-Speer demanded foreign workers for the industries under his control and
-used these workers with the knowledge that they had been deported by
-force and were being compelled to work. Speer has stated under oath, in
-an interrogation on 18 October 1945 that:
-
- “I do not wish to give the impression that I want to deny the
- fact that I demanded manpower and foreign manpower from Sauckel
- very energetically.” (_3720-PS_)
-
-Speer also admitted, in the course of the same interrogation, that he
-knew he was obtaining foreign labor, a large part of which was forced
-labor:
-
- “Q. So that during the period when you were asking for labor, it
- seems clear, does it not, that you knew that 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 required 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.” (_3720-PS_)
-
-Speer has furthermore stated under oath that he knew at least as early
-as September 1942 that workers from the Ukraine were being forcibly
-deported for labor in Germany. He also knew that the great majority of
-the workers of the Western occupied countries were slave laborers forced
-against their will to come to Germany. These facts are revealed in his
-interrogation under oath on 18 October 1945:
-
- “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 that 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.
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Q. But many workers did come from the West, did they not, to
- Germany?
-
- “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.” (_3720-PS_)
-
-This admission is borne out by other evidence. In April 1943 Speer was
-informed at a meeting of the Central Planning Board, that in all
-countries conscription for work in Germany could be carried out only
-with the active assistance of the police, and that the prevailing
-methods of recruitment had provoked such violence that many German
-recruiting agents had been killed (_R-124_). Again, at a meeting with
-Hitler to discuss overall manpower requirements for 1944, Speer was
-informed by Sauckel that labor requirements for the German war economy
-(including Speer’s requirements of 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. (_1292-PS_)
-
-Notwithstanding his knowledge that foreign workers were being
-conscripted and deported for use as slave laborers in Germany, Speer
-formulated requirements for the foreign workers and requested their
-allocation to industries subject to his control. At another meeting of
-the Central Planning Board, Speer stated:
-
- “_Speer_: Now, the labor problem in Germany. I believe it is
- still possible to transfer some from the western territories.
- The Fuehrer stated only recently 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 Fuehrer to clear up the coal situation. Keitel
- and Zeitzler will be invited to attend in order to determine the
- number of Russians from the rear army territories who can be
- sent to us. However, I see another possibility; we might
- organize another drive to screen out workers for the mines from
- the Russian Ps/W in the Reich. But this possibility is none too
- promising.” (_R-124_)
-
-At another meeting of the Central Planning Board, Speer rejected a
-suggestion that labor for industries under his control be furnished from
-German sources instead of from foreign countries, for these reasons:
-
- “_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_: I wish to urge that the allotments to the mines should
- not be made dependent on the recruitment of men abroad. We were
- completely frustrated these last three 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!” (_R-124_)
-
-Speer also advocated terror and brutality as a means of maximizing
-production by slave laborers who worked in the industries under his
-control. In the course of a discussion concerning the supply and
-exploitation of labor, Speer stated:
-
- “_Speer_: We must also discuss the slackers. Ley has ascertained
- that the sick list decreased to one-fourth or one-fifth in
- factories where doctors are on the staff who are examining 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 round.” (_R-124_)
-
-Speer is also guilty of compelling Allied nationals and prisoners of war
-to engage not only in the production of armaments and munitions, but
-also in direct military operations, against their own country and its
-actively resisting allies. Speer, as Chief of the Organization Todt, is
-accountable for its policies which were in direct conflict with the laws
-of war. The Organization Todt, in violation of the laws of war,
-impressed allied nationals into its service. Proof of its activity is
-furnished by an International Labor Office Study of Exploitation of
-Foreign Labor by Germany:
-
- “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 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 territory.
-
- “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
- * * *.” (_L-191_)
-
-Similar violations of the laws of warfare are disclosed in
-(_407-VIII-PS_).
-
-As Chief of German war production, Speer sponsored and approved the use
-of prisoners of war in the production of armaments and munitions which
-were used against their own country and its actively resisting allies.
-This fact has been demonstrated by the evidence already discussed. To
-recapitulate:
-
-1. After Speer assumed responsibility for armament production, his
-primary concern in his discussions with his co-conspirators was to
-secure a larger allocation of prisoners of war for his armament
-factories. In a meeting of the Central Planning Board on 22 April 1943,
-Speer complained that only 30% of the Russian prisoners of war were
-engaged in the armament industry. (_R-124_)
-
-2. In an earlier speech, Speer stated that 10,000 prisoners of war were
-put at the disposal of the armaments industry upon his orders.
-(_1435-PS_)
-
-3. Finally, Speer advocated returning escaped prisoners of war to
-factories as convicts. He said, at a meeting of the Central Planning
-Board:
-
- “We have to come to an arrangement with the Reichsfuehrer SS as
- soon as possible so that prisoners of war he picks up are made
- available for our purposes. The Reichsfuehrer SS gets from 30 to
- 40,000 men per month. First of all they have to be divided up.
- From what classes do these people come, anyhow? There certainly
- is a certain percentage of miners among these people who are
- picked up. These few thousand men have to go to the mines
- automatically. Certainly, some educational work has to be done.
- The men should be put into the factories as convicts. But they
- have to return to the factories where they were before * * *.”
- (_R-124_)
-
-Speer is also guilty of having approved and sponsored the program for
-using concentration camp labor in Nazi armament factories, which was
-part of the larger program of extermination through work. The proof of
-this activity may be summarized and supplemented as follows:
-
-1. Speer proposed measures for the exploitation of the concentration
-camp labor in armament factories under his jurisdiction. At a meeting
-with Hitler Speer proposed and Hitler agreed that armament production
-should not be established within concentration camps but that
-concentration camp labor should be made available to established
-armament factories. (_R-124_)
-
-2. Speer, by arranging for the use of concentration camp laborers in
-factories under his control, created an increasing demand for such
-labor. This demand was filled in part by placing in concentration camps
-persons who would not ordinarily have been sent there. (_1063-D-PS_)
-
-3. Speer participated in the exploitation of the victims of the Nazi
-program of extermination through work. He personally selected sites for
-subsidiary concentration camps which were established near factories in
-Upper Austria, and knew and approved of the general practice of locating
-concentration camps near industrial plants which they supplied with
-labor (Speer’s interrogation under oath on 18 October 1945. (_3720-PS_)
-
-Speer visited the concentration camp Mauthaussen and factories such as
-those of Krupp, where concentration camp labor was exploited under
-barbarous conditions. Despite personal and first-hand knowledge of these
-conditions, Speer continued to direct the use of concentration camp
-labor in factories under his jurisdiction. In Speer’s interrogation
-under oath on 18 October 1945, he stated:
-
- “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 didn’t—well I was in Mauthaussen 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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 Krupp had in
- foreign workers.
-
- “Q. Did you ever discuss it with any of the members of the Krupp
- first?
-
- “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.”
- (_3720-PS_)
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO THE SLAVE LABOR
- PROGRAM, THE ILLEGAL USE OF PRISONERS OF WAR, AND THE SPECIAL
- RESPONSIBILITY OF SAUCKEL AND SPEER THEREFOR
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6 (b, c). │ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Sections III; │ │ 15, 39,
- │ VIII (B, C, H); X; Appendix A. │ I │ 41, 50,
- │ │ │
-  3737-PS │Hague Convention of 1907 respecting │ │
- │ the Laws and Customs of War on Land,│ │590, 597,
- │ Annex, Articles 6, 46, 52. │ VI │ 598
- │ │ │
-  3738-PS │Geneva Convention of 1929 relative to │ │
- │ treatment of Prisoners of War, │ │
- │ Articles 2, 3, 6. │ VI │ 600, 601
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document │ │
- │was received in evidence at the │ │
- │Nurnberg trial. A double asterisk (**)│ │
- │before a document number indicates │ │
- │that the document was referred to │ │
- │during the trial but was not formally │ │
- │received in evidence, for the reason │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document. The USA │ │
- │series number, given in parentheses │ │
- │following the description of the │ │
- │document, is the official exhibit │ │
- │number assigned by the court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
-  *016-PS │Sauckel’s Labor Mobilization Program, │ │
- │20 April 1942. (USA 168) │ III │ 46
- │ │ │
-  *017-PS │Letter from Sauckel to Reichminister │ │
- │for the Occupied Eastern Territories, │ │
- │5 October 1942, concerning │ │
- │mobilization of foreign labor forces. │ │
- │(USA 180) │ III │ 60
- │ │ │
-  *018-PS │Letter from Rosenberg to Sauckel, 21 │ │
- │December 1942, concerning labor in the│ │
- │East. (USA 186) │ III │ 61
- │ │ │
-  *019-PS │Letter from Sauckel to Rosenberg, 17 │ │
- │March 1943, concerning draft of │ │
- │workers from the East. (USA 181) │ III │ 65
- │ │ │
-  *031-PS │Memorandum, 12 June 1944, concerning │ │
- │evacuation of youths from the │ │
- │territory of Army Group “Center”, and │ │
- │interoffice memorandum, Ministry for │ │
- │Occupied Eastern Territories, 14 June │ │
- │1944. (USA 171) │ III │ 71
- │ │ │
-  *054-PS │Report to Reich Ministry for Occupied │ │
- │Eastern Territories, 7 October 1942, │ │
- │concerning treatment of Ukrainian │ │
- │Specialists. (USA 198) │ III │ 90
- │ │ │
-  *084-PS │Interdepartmental report of Ministry │ │
- │for Occupied Eastern Territories, 30 │ │
- │September 1942, concerning status of │ │
- │Eastern laborers. (USA 199) │ III │ 130
- │ │ │
-  *204-PS │Memorandum of conference, │ │
- │18 February 1944, concerning release │ │
- │of Indigenous Labor for purposes of │ │
- │the Reich. (USA 182) │ III │ 215
- │ │ │
-  *254-PS │Letter from Raab to Reichminister for │ │
- │Occupied Eastern Territories, 7 June │ │
- │1944, concerning burning of houses in │ │
- │Wassilkow district. (USA 188) │ III │ 231
- │ │ │
-  *265-PS │Memorandum of oral report by Lyser to │ │
- │Rosenberg, 30 June 1943, on situation │ │
- │in district Shitomir. (USA 191) │ III │ 234
- │ │ │
-  *290-PS │Letter from Rosenberg Ministry, 12 │ │
- │November 1943, concerning burning of │ │
- │houses in Mueller’s district. (USA │ │
- │189) │ III │ 240
- │ │ │
-  *294-PS │Top secret memorandum signed by │ │
- │Brautigam, 25 October 1942, concerning│ │
- │conditions in Russia. (USA 185) │ III │ 242
- │ │ │
-  *407-II-PS │Letter from Sauckel to Hitler, 10 │ │
- │March 1943, concerning difficulty in │ │
- │recruiting of workers in former Soviet│ │
- │territories. (USA 226) │ III │ 389
- │ │ │
-  *407-V │ │ │
-    and VI-PS │Letter from Sauckel to Hitler, 15 │ │
- │April 1943, concerning labor │ │
- │questions. (USA 209; USA 228) │ III │ 391
- │ │ │
-  *407-VIII-PS │Telegram from Sauckel to Hitler, 17 │ │
- │May 1943, concerning foreign labor. │ │
- │(USA 210) │ III │ 394
- │ │ │
-  *407-IX-PS │Letter from Sauckel to Hitler, 3 June │ │
- │1943, concerning foreign labor │ │
- │situation. (USA 229) │ III │ 395
- │ │ │
-  *556-2-PS │Order initialled by Keitel, 8 │ │
- │September 1942, for civilians to work │ │
- │on “West Wall”. (USA 194) │ III │ 443
- │ │ │
-  *556-13-PS │Sauckel note for the files, 5 January │ │
- │1943. (USA 194) │ III │ 444
- │ │ │
-  *654-PS │Thierack’s notes, 18 September 1942, │ │
- │on discussion with Himmler concerning │ │
- │delivery of Jews to Himmler for │ │
- │extermination through work. (USA 218) │ III │ 467
- │ │ │
- *1063-D-PS │Mueller’s order, 17 December 1942, │ │
- │concerning prisoners qualified for │ │
- │work to be sent to concentration │ │
- │camps. (USA 219) │ III │ 778
- │ │ │
- *1130-PS │Note, 11 April 1943, and report of │ │
- │speech by Koch in Kiev on 5 March │ │
- │1943, concerning treatment of civilian│ │
- │population in Ukraine. (USA 169) │ III │ 797
- │ │ │
- *1206-PS │Notes of Goering’s remarks at the Air │ │
- │Ministry, 7 November 1941, concerning │ │
- │employment of laborers in war │ │
- │industries. (USA 215) │ III │ 841
- │ │ │
- *1292-PS │Memorandum of conference with Hitler, │ │
- │4 January 1944, concerning allocation │ │
- │of labor, 1944. (USA 225) │ III │ 866
- │ │ │
- *1352-PS │Reports concerning the confiscation of│ │
- │Polish agricultural properties, 16 and│ │
- │29 May 1940, signed Kusche. (USA 176) │ III │ 916
- │ │ │
- *1375-PS │Letter from Frank to Goering, 25 │ │
- │January 1940. (USA 172) │ III │ 925
- │ │ │
-  1381-PS │Secret report of the Reich Ministry │ │
- │for the Occupied Eastern Territories │ │
- │on Political and Economic Situation in│ │
- │these Territories, December 1942. │ III │ 932
- │ │ │
- *1435-PS │Speech of Speer to Gauleiters, 24 │ │
- │February 1942. (USA 216) │ IV │ 16
- │ │ │
- *1526-PS │Letter from Ukrainian Main Committee │ │
- │to Frank, February 1943. (USA 178) │ IV │ 79
- │ │ │
- *1584-I-PS │Teletype from Goering to Himmler, 14 │ │
- │February 1944, concerning formation of│ │
- │7th Airforce Group squadron for │ │
- │special purposes. (USA 221) │ IV │ 117
- │ │ │
- *1666-PS │Decree appointing Sauckel General │ │
- │Plenipotentiary for Manpower, 21 March│ │
- │1942 and decree of Goering conferring │ │
- │certain powers on Sauckel, 27 March │ │
- │1942. 1942 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, │ │
- │pp. 179-180. (USA 208) │ IV │ 182
- │ │ │
- *1702-PS │Report on evacuation of Kasatin │ │
- │November-December 1943. (USA 193) │ IV │ 205
- │ │ │
- *1726-PS │Statement of Netherlands Government in│ │
- │view of Prosecution and punishment of │ │
- │the German Nazi War Criminals. (USA │ │
- │195) │ IV │ 227
- │ │ │
- *1742-PS │Directives to Army Commands from │ │
- │Goering, 26 October 1942, concerning │ │
- │combatting of partisan activities. │ │
- │(USA 789) │ IV │ 262
- │ │ │
- *1903-PS │Decree of Fuehrer on execution of │ │
- │decree concerning Deputy General for │ │
- │mobilization of labor. Decrees, │ │
- │Regulations, Announcements, Vol. II, │ │
- │p. 510. (USA 206) │ IV │ 546
- │ │ │
- *1913-PS │Agreement between Plenipotentiary │ │
- │General for Arbeitseinsatz and German │ │
- │Labor Front concerning care of │ │
- │non-German workers. 1943 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 588. │ │
- │(USA 227) │ IV │ 547
- │ │ │
- *1919-PS │Himmler’s speech to SS │ │
- │Gruppenfuehrers, 4 October 1943. (USA │ │
- │170) │ IV │ 558
- │ │ │
- *2220-PS │Lammers report to Himmler, 12 April │ │
- │1943, concerning the situation in the │ │
- │Government General. (USA 175) │ IV │ 855
- │ │ │
- *2233-A-PS │Frank Diary, │ │
- │Abteilungsleitersitzungen, 1939-1940. │ │
- │Minutes of conferences, December and │ │
- │May 1940. (USA 173) │ IV │ 883
- │ │ │
- *2233-B-PS │Frank Diary. Tagebuch. 1940. Part I. │ │
- │January-March. (USA 174) │ IV │ 885
- │ │ │
- *2241-PS │Sauckel Order, 20 July 1942, │ │
- │concerning employment of foreign labor│ │
- │forces in Germany. (USA 200) │ IV │ 923
- │ │ │
- *2280-PS │Letter from Reichs Commissar for │ │
- │Ostland, 3 May 1943, concerning │ │
- │recruiting of manpower in Baltic │ │
- │Countries for Reich territories. (USA │ │
- │183) │ IV │ 969
- │ │ │
- *2520-PS │Affidavit of Edward L. Deuss, 1 │ │
- │November 1945, concerning approximate │ │
- │number of foreigners put to work for │ │
- │German War Effort in Old Reich. (USA │ │
- │197) │ V │ 257
- │ │ │
- *2974-PS │Statement by Fritz Sauckel concerning │ │
- │positions held. (USA 15) │ V │ 680
- │ │ │
- *2980-PS │Statement of Albert Speer, concerning │ │
- │positions held. (USA 18) │ V │ 685
- │ │ │
- *3000-PS │Report, from Chief of Main Office III │ │
- │with the High Command in Minsk to │ │
- │Reicke, 28 June 1943, on experiences │ │
- │in political and economic problems in │ │
- │the East, particularly White Ruthenia.│ │
- │(USA 192) │ V │ 726
- │ │ │
- *3003-PS │Report of Lt. Haupt concerning the │ │
- │situation of war economy in │ │
- │Netherlands. (USA 196) │ V │ 726
- │ │ │
- *3005-PS │Letter from Reich Labor Ministry to │ │
- │Presidents of Regional Labor Offices, │ │
- │26 August 1941, concerning use of │ │
- │Russian PWs. (USA 213) │ V │ 727
- │ │ │
- *3010-PS │Secret organization order from │ │
- │Economic Inspection South, 17 August │ │
- │1943, concerning recruitment of │ │
- │Workers for the Reich. (USA 184) │ V │ 728
- │ │ │
- *3012-PS │Order signed Christiansen, 19 March │ │
- │1943, to all group leaders of Security│ │
- │Service, and record of telephone │ │
- │conversation signed by Stapj, 11 March│ │
- │1943. (USA 190) │ V │ 731
- │ │ │
- *3040-PS │Secret order of Reichsfuehrer SS, 20 │ │
- │February 1942, concerning commitment │ │
- │of manpower from the East. (USA 207) │ V │ 744
- │ │ │
- *3044-PS │Sauckel Order Number 4, 7 May 1942, │ │
- │published in Decrees, Regulations, │ │
- │Announcements. (USA 206) │ V │ 756
- │ │ │
-  3044-A-PS │Sauckel Order Number 10, 22 August │ │
- │1942, published in Decrees, │ │
- │Regulations, Announcements. │ V │ 764
- │ │ │
-  3044-B-PS │Instructions concerning Eastern │ │
- │Household workers, published in │ │
- │Decrees, Regulations, Announcements. │ V │ 765
- │ │ │
-  3057-PS │Statement of Fritz Sauckel, 5 │ │
- │September 1945. │ V │ 853
- │ │ │
-**3719-PS │Testimony of Alfred Rosenberg, 6 │ │
- │October 1945. (USA 187) (Referred to │ │
- │but not offered in evidence.) │ VI │ 436
- │ │ │
- *3720-PS │Testimony of Albert Speer, 18 October │ │
- │1945. (USA 220) │ VI │ 438
- │ │ │
- *3721-PS │Testimony of Fritz Sauckel, 22 │ │
- │September 1945. (USA 230) │ VI │ 458
- │ │ │
- *3722-PS │Testimony of Fritz Sauckel, 5 October │ │
- │1945. (USA 224) │ VI │ 459
- │ │ │
- *3787-PS │Report of the Second Meeting of the │ │
- │Reich Defense Council, 25 June 1939. │ │
- │(USA 782) │ VI │ 718
- │ │ │
- *3819-PS │Letter from Sauckel to Fuehrer, 17 │ │
- │March 1944; letter from Speer to │ │
- │Fuehrer, 5 April 1944; and Minutes of │ │
- │conference on 11 July 1944 concerning │ │
- │Labor Problem. (GB 306) │ VI │ 760
- │ │ │
- *D-288 │Affidavit of Dr. Wilhelm Jaeger, 15 │ │
- │October 1945. (USA 202) │ VII │ 2
- │ │ │
-  D-305 │Affidavit of Heinrich Buschhauer, 5 │ │
- │October 1945. │ VII │ 13
- │ │ │
- *D-316 │Memorandum to Mr. Hupe, 14 March 1942,│ │
- │concerning employment of Russians. │ │
- │(USA 201) │ VII │ 20
- │ │ │
- *EC-68 │Confidential letter from Minister of │ │
- │Finance and Economy, Baden, containing│ │
- │directives on treatment of Polish │ │
- │Farmworkers, 6 March 1941. (USA 205) │ VII │ 260
- │ │ │
- *EC-194 │Secret memorandum of Keitel concerning│ │
- │use of prisoners of war in the war │ │
- │industry, 31 October 1941. (USA 214) │ VII │ 336
- │ │ │
- *L-61 │Express letter from Sauckel to │ │
- │Presidents of Landes Employment │ │
- │Offices, 26 November 1942, concerning │ │
- │employment of Jews and exchange of │ │
- │Jews in essential employment against │ │
- │Polish labor. (USA 177) │ VII │ 816
- │ │ │
- *L-79 │Minutes of conference, 23 May 1939, │ │
- │“Indoctrination on the political │ │
- │situation and future aims”. (USA 27) │ VII │ 847
- │ │ │
- *L-191 │“The Exploitation of Foreign Labor by │ │
- │Germany” (International Labor Office │ │
- │Study). (USA 231) │ VII │ 1026
- │ │ │
- *R-103 │Letter from Polish Main Committee to │ │
- │General Government of Poland on │ │
- │situation of Polish workers in the │ │
- │Reich, 17 May 1944. (USA 204) │ VIII │ 104
- │ │ │
- *R-124 │Speer’s conference minutes of Central │ │
- │Planning Board, 1942-44, concerning │ │
- │labor supply. (USA 179) │ VIII │ 146
- │ │ │
- *R-129 │Letter and enclosure from Pohl to │ │
- │Himmler, 30 April 1942, concerning │ │
- │concentration camps. (USA 217) │ VIII │ 198
- │ │ │
-  Statement XII │Political Testament of Robert Ley │ │
- │written in Nurnberg Prison, October │ │
- │1945. │ VIII │ 742
- │ │ │
-  Statement XIII │Outline of Defense of Dr. Robert Ley, │ │
- │written in Nurnberg Prison, 24 October│ │
- │1945. │ VIII │ 751
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XI
- CONCENTRATION CAMPS
-
-
-The Concentration Camp, used against the people of Germany and allied
-nationals, was one of the fundamental institutions of the Nazi regime.
-It was a pillar of the system of terror by which the Nazis consolidated
-their power over Germany. It was 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. 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. 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.
-
-The SS through its espionage system tracked down the victims; the
-criminal police and the Gestapo seized them and brought them to the
-concentration camps; and the concentration camps were administered by
-the SS. No attempt will be made to present a complete catalogue of
-individual brutalities. The emphasis will rather be upon the fundamental
-purposes for which these camps were used, the techniques of terror which
-were employed, the large number of their victims, and the death and
-anguish which they caused.
-
- 1. THE BEGINNING OF “PROTECTIVE CUSTODY”
-
-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. Immediately after Hitler became Chancellor, the
-conspirators promptly destroyed civil liberties by issuing the
-Presidential Emergency Decree of 28 February 1933 (_1390-PS_). It was
-this decree which was the basis for “_Schutzhaft_”, that is, “protective
-custody”—the power of the Gestapo to imprison people without judicial
-proceedings. This is made clear by a typical order for protective
-custody:
-
- “_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, p. 83), you are taken
- into protective custody in the interest of public security and
- order.
-
- “Reason: Suspicion of activities inimical toward the State.”
- (_2499-PS_)
-
-Goering, in a book entitled “_Aufbau Einer Nation_” and published in
-1934, sought to give the impression that the camps originally were
-directed at those whom the Nazis considered “Communists” and “Social
-Democrats”. At page 89 of this book he stated:
-
- “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.” (_2324-PS_)
-
-In practical operations, the power to order confinement was almost
-without limit: Frick, in an order which he issued on 25 January 1938, as
-Minister of Interior, made this clear. Article 1 of this order provided:
-
- “Protective custody can be decreed as a coercive measure of the
- Secret State Police against persons who endanger the security of
- the people and the State through their attitude in order to
- counter all aspirations of enemies of the people and State.”
- (_1723-PS_)
-
-This order further provides:
-
- “* * * In a summary of all the previously issued decrees on the
- cooperation between the Party and the Gestapo I refer to the
- following and ordain:
-
- “1. To the Gestapo has been entrusted the mission by the Fuehrer
- to watch over and to eliminate all enemies of the Party and the
- National Socialist 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 prerequisite for the
- unhampered and frictionless work of the Party. The Gestapo, in
- their extremely difficult task, is to be granted support and
- assistance in every possible way by the NSDAP.” (_1723-PS_)
-
-A. _Persecution of Pacifists._
-
-The conspirators, then, were directing their apparatus of terror against
-the “enemies of the State”, against “disintegrating forces”, and against
-those people who endangered the State “with their attitudes”. Whom did
-they consider as belonging in these broad categories? First, they were
-the men in Germany who wanted peace. In this connection an affidavit by
-Gerhart H. Segar declares as follows:
-
- “* * * 2. During the period after World War I up until my
- commitment to the Leipzig jail and Oranienburg concentration
- camp in the spring of 1933 following the Nazis’ 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 * * *”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “* * * (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
- Reichminister of Interior and promptly carried out his threat in
- collaboration with Goering, as Chief of the Prussian State
- Police, and Himmler.” (_L-83_)
-
-Thus, even before the Nazis had seized power in Germany they had
-conceived of the plan to repress any potential opposition by terror.
-
-Frick’s statement to Gerhart Segar is completely consistent with an
-earlier statement which he made on 18 October 1929. Frick at that time
-declared:
-
- “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 this 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.” (_2513-PS_)
-
-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 “_Bibel Forscher_” (Bible Research Workers), most of whom were
-Jehovah’s Witnesses. Since they were pacifists, the conspirators
-provided not only for their prosecution in the regular courts, but also
-for confining them in concentration camps after they had served the
-judicial sentences. An order by the Secret State Police, Berlin, dated 5
-August 1937, provided:
-
- “The Reichsminister 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
- _Bibelforschers_ 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
- _Bibelforschers_ into protective custody under circumstances
- detrimental to the respect of the law courts * * *.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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 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 a concentration camp
- immediately after the serving of the sentence not be possible,
- _Bibelforschers_ will be detained in police prisons.” (_D-84_)
-
-B. _Persecution of Trade Union Members._
-
-Labor unions, traditionally opposed to wars of aggression, also felt the
-full force of Nazi terror. The concentration camp was an important
-weapon in the campaign against the trade unions. Goering made it plain,
-for instance, that members of the Social Democratic Party were to be
-confined in concentration camps (_2324-PS_). Labor leaders were largely
-members of that party and soon learned the meaning of “protective
-custody”.
-
-In this connection, an order that one Joseph Simon should be placed in
-protective custody, is pertinent (_2330-PS_). The “reasons” given were
-as follows:
-
- “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 Nurnberg. 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 3 May 1933, and was kept, until 25 January
- 1934, in the Dachau concentration camp. Simon is under the
- urgent 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.” (_2330-PS_)
-
-Further instances of this persecution of members of trade unions are
-contained in (_2334-PS_) and (_2928-PS_).
-
-C. _Persecution of Jews._
-
-Thousands of Jews, were, of course, confined in concentration camps.
-(For a fuller discussion of this point see Chapter XII.) Among the
-wealth of evidence showing the confinement of Germans only because they
-were Jews, a teletype from SS Gruppenfuehrer Heydrich is typical. This
-order is dated 10 November 1938, and is addressed to all headquarters of
-the State Police and all districts and sub-districts of the SD
-(_3051-PS_). Paragraph 5 of this teletype, which was entitled “Measures
-against Jews tonight,” provided:
-
- “* * * 5. Inasmuch as in the course of the events of this night
- the employment of officials used for this purpose would be
- possible, in all districts as many Jews, especially rich ones,
- are to be arrested as can be accommodated in the existing
- prisons. 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.” (_3051-PS_)
-
-Himmler in 1943 indicated that use of the concentration camp against the
-Jews had been motivated, not simply by Nazi racialism, but also by a
-fear that the Jews might have been an obstacle to aggression. In a
-speech delivered at a meeting of the SS Major Generals at Posen on 4
-October 1943, Himmler sought to justify the Nazi anti-Jewish policy:
-
- “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 they
- come, 80 million worthy Germans, and each one has his decent
- Jew. Of course, the others are vermin, but this one is an A-1
- 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 the bombing raids, the burden and
- deprivations of war—we still had Jews today in every town as
- secret saboteurs, agitators and trouble-mongers.” (_1919-PS_)
-
-It is clear from the foregoing evidence that prior to the launching of a
-Nazi 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 the
-conspirators launched their aggression and their armies swept over
-Europe, they brought the concentration camp and the whole system of Nazi
-terror to occupied countries. In addition, they brought the citizens of
-the occupied countries to Germany and subjected them to the whole
-apparatus of Nazi brutality. In a communication to Himmler dated 16
-December 1942, Mueller, for the Chief of the Security Police and SD,
-deals with the seizure of Polish Jews for deportation to concentration
-camps in Germany. I should like to quote the body of this communication:
-
- “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 _Byalystock_. 10,000 Jews from the Ghetto
- _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 over 60 year old Jews * * *. 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. 3,000 Jews from the occupied Dutch territories,
- 2,000 Jews from Berlin—45,000. The figure of 45,000 includes
- the invalid (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.”
- (_R-91_)
-
-The Jews of Hungary suffered the same fate. Between 19 March 1944 and 1
-August 1944 more than 400,000 Hungarian Jews were rounded up. Many of
-these were put in wagons and sent to extermination camps. An affidavit
-made in London by Dr. Rudolph Kastner, a former official of the
-Hungarian Zionist Organization, states in part:
-
- “19 March 1944: Together with the German military occupation
- arrived in Budapest a ‘Special Section Commando’ of the German
- Secret Police with the sole object of liquidating the Hungarian
- Jews * * * 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 * * *.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Up to 27 June 1944, 475,000 Jews were deported.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “According to statements of Krumey and Wislicseny in February or
- March 1945 a conference of the officers of IV.B. was called to
- Berlin by Eichmann in the spring of 1942. He then informed them
- that the government decided in favor of the complete
- annihilation of the European Jews and that this will be carried
- out silently in the gas-chambers. ‘Victory is ours,’ declared
- Eichmann. ‘The end of the war is near. We must hurry as this is
- the last chance to free Europe of the Jews. After the war it
- will not be possible to utilize such methods.’”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Commanders of the death-camps gassed only on direct or indirect
- instructions of Eichmann. 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-NCO escorting the
- train. The letters ‘A’ or ‘M’ on the escorting instruction
- documents indicated Auschwitz or Majdanek; it meant that the
- passengers were to be gassed. * * * Regarding Hungarian Jews the
- following general ruling was laid down in Auschwitz: children up
- to the age of 12 or 14, older people above 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.” (_2605-PS_)
-
- 2. “CHARGES” AGAINST CONCENTRATION CAMP INMATES
-
-In the 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 were
-apparently made against some of the victims. Some of the charges which
-the Nazis considered sufficient basis for confinement in a concentration
-camp are illustrated in a summary of the file of the dossier of 25
-persons arrested in Luxembourg for commitment to various concentration
-camps and sets forth the charges made against each person (_L-215_).
-These charges read as follows:
-
- “Name Charge Place of
- Confinement
-
- HENRICY— By associating with members of illegal Natzweiler
- 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.
-
-
- KRIER— By being responsible for advanced sabotage Buchenwald
- of labor and causing fear because of his
- political and criminal past. Freedom
- would only further his anti-social urge.
-
-
- * * * * * * * *
-
-
- MONTI— By being strongly suspected of aiding Sachsenhausen
- desertion.
-
-
- JUNKER— Because as a relative of a deserter he is Sachsenhausen
- expected to endanger the interests of the
- German Reich if allowed to go free.
-
-
- JAEGER— Because as a relative of a deserter he is Sachsenhausen
- expected to take advantage of every
- occasion to harm the German Reich.
-
-
- * * * * * * * *
-
-
- LUDWIG— For being strongly suspected of aiding Dachau
- desertion.” (_L-215_)
-
- 3. USE OF CONCENTRATION CAMPS FOR PRISONERS OF WAR
-
-Not only civilians of the occupied territories, but also prisoners of
-war were subjected to the concentration camp. A memorandum to all
-officers of the State Police, signed by Mueller, Chief of the Gestapo,
-dated 9 November 1941, discusses the “Transportation of Russian
-Prisoners of War, Destined for Execution, into the Concentration Camps.”
-(_1165-PS_). This memorandum states in part:
-
- “The commandants of the concentration camps are complaining that
- 5 to 10% 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
- PWs 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 typhus) and who therefore would not be
- 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.”
- (_1165-PS_)
-
-Additional evidence of the confinement of Russian prisoners of war in
-concentration camps is found in an official report of the investigation
-of the Flossenburg concentration camp by Headquarters Third United
-States Army, Judge Advocate Section, War Crimes Branch, dated 21 June
-1945 (_2309-PS_). This report states:
-
- “In 1941 an additional stockade was added at the Flossenburg
- Camp, to hold 2,000 Russian prisoners. From these 2,000
- prisoners only 102 survived.” (_2309-PS_)
-
-Soviet prisoners of war found their allies in the concentration camps.
-The same official report continues:
-
- “The victims of Flossenburg included among the 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.” (_2309-PS_)
-
-Escaped prisoners of war were sent to concentration camps, which were
-specially set up as extermination centers. A communication from the
-Secret State Police Office, Cologne, dated 4 March 1944, transmitted the
-following orders of the OKW—for which Keitel is responsible—concerning
-escaped prisoners of war:
-
- “1. Every captured escaped prisoner of war who is an officer or
- a non-working non-commissioned 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.” (_1650-PS_)
-
-The same communication carried a copy of an order of SS General Mueller,
-acting for the Chief of the Security Police and SD, which directed the
-Gestapo to transport escaped prisoners directly to Mauthausen. The first
-two paragraphs of Mueller’s order provide:
-
- “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 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 (sharp). * * * 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 and not to send them directly to Mauthausen.”
- (_1650-PS_)
-
-It is no coincidence that the literal translation for the German word
-“_Kugel_” is “bullet”, since Mauthausen, where the escaped prisoners
-were sent, was an extermination center.
-
- 4. THE NETWORK OF CONCENTRATION CAMPS
-
-Nazi conquest was marked by the establishment of concentration camps
-over all of Europe. The following report on the location of
-concentration camps, signed by Pohl, an SS General who was in charge of
-concentration camp labor policies, indicates the scope of these
-activities:
-
- “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 Flossenburg, 1939, 1,600 prisoners, today 4,700.
-
- f Ravensbrueck, 1939, 2,500 prisoners, today 7,500.
-
- “2. In the years 1940 to 1942 nine further camps were erected,
- viz.:
-
- a. Auschwitz (Poland)
-
- b. Neuengamme
-
- c. Gusen (Austria)
-
- d. Natzweiler (France)
-
- e. Gross-Rosen
-
- f. Lublin (Poland)
-
- g. Niederhagen
-
- h. Stutthof (near Danzig)
-
- i. Arbeitsdorf.” (_R-129_)
-
-In addition to these camps in occupied territory, there were many
-others. The official report by the Headquarters, Third U. S. Army, Judge
-Advocate Section, War Crimes Branch, contains the following evidence:
-
- “Concentration Camp Flossenburg 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. * * * Flossenburg 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.” (_2309-PS_)
-
- 5. THE CONCENTRATION CAMP AS AN INSTRUMENT OF TERROR
-
-The savage treatment which was inflicted in these concentration camps
-upon allied nationals, prisoners of war, and other victims of Nazi
-terror has been depicted in motion picture evidence. Verbal discussion
-of this subject may therefore be brief.
-
-The minutes of the Central Planning Committee, on which Speer sat, and
-where the high strategy of Nazi armament production was formulated,
-record a conference on the question of squeezing more work out of slave
-laborers. Speer, who was not generally considered a fanatic like Frick,
-or a man of Blood and Iron like Goering, handled the problem in this
-fashion:
-
- “Speer: We must also discuss the slackers. Ley has ascertained
- that the sick list decreased to one-fourth or one-fifth in
- factories where doctors are on the staff who are examining 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.” (_R-124_)
-
-The deterrent effect of the concentration camps upon the public was
-carefully planned. To heighten the atmosphere of terror surrounding the
-concentration camps, they were shrouded in secrecy. What went on behind
-the barbed wire enclosures was a matter of fearful conjecture in Germany
-and the countries under Nazi control.
-
-This was the policy from the very beginning, when the Nazis first came
-into power in Germany and set up their concentration camp system. An
-order issued in 1 October 1933 by the Camp Commander of Dachau
-prescribes a program of floggings, solitary confinement, and executions
-for the inmates for infractions of the rules. (_778-PS_) Among the
-rules were those prescribing a rigid censorship concerning conditions
-within the camp:
-
- “By virture of the law on revolutionaries, the following
- offenders, considered as _agitators, will be hung_. 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: politicizes, holds 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 advices to that
- effect or supports such undertakings in any way whatsover.”
- (_778-PS_)
-
-Censorship concerning the camps 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. A “Top Secret” order, relating to concentration camps,
-issued by the Head of the Gestapo and distributed to appropriate police
-officers, and dated 26 October 1939, provides:
-
- “In order to achieve a further deterrent effect, the following
- must, in 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 Reichsfuehrer 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 the increasing
- of the deterrent effect by the spreading of cleverly carried out
- _rumour 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 Reichsfuehrer SS and Chief of the
- German Police will order flogging in addition to detention in a
- concentration camp. Orders of this kind will, in 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, in so far 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.” (_1531-PS_)
-
- 6. THE TREATMENT OF CONCENTRATION CAMP VICTIMS
-
-The deterrent effect of the concentration camps was based on the promise
-of savage brutality. This promise was fulfilled, to an extent which
-defies description. 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, or through mass execution gas
-chambers and furnaces of the camps (which were portrayed in the motion
-picture evidence). The reports of official government investigations
-furnish additional evidence of conditions within the concentration
-camps. The official report concerning the concentration camp
-Flossenberg, prefaced by the Office of the Judge Advocate General of the
-United States Army, dated 21 June 1945, and supported by attached
-affidavits and testimony, contains this description:
-
- “The work at these camps mainly consisted of underground labor,
- the purpose being the construction of large underground
- factories, storage rooms, etc. 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, Flossenburg 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 were 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 Flossenburg
- camp, to hold 2,000 Russian prisoners. From these 2,000
- prisoners only 102 survived.
-
- “Flossenburg 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, 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “On Christmas 1944 a number of prisoners were hung 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
- hung. They had been delivered to this camp sometime before and
- had been captured while trying to blow up bridges.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “On April 20, 1945, approximately 15,000 prisoners were
- assembled to make a forced march in the direction of
- Concentration Camp Dachau. The evacuation of these prisoners was
- caused by the impending capture of the camp by the Allies. These
- 15,000 prisoners were lined up in three groups and started on
- this march. Only those prisoners who could walk were taken and
- before leaving Flossenburg, many were executed, as also were
- those who collapsed in rank awaiting the movement to start the
- trek. No provision was made for the feeding of these prisoners
- or sleeping on this trip. They marched in long columns guarded
- by SS Guards.
-
- “Thousands were killed on the way and the paths which they took
- were littered with the dead. Groups of from 5 to 50 were taken
- out and forced to dig pits and then were shot. Many graves were
- not even covered. As the already starved and weakened prisoners
- fell from exhaustion, a group of SS guards bringing up the rear
- would kill them by a shot in the back of the head. All who fell
- out of line were immediately executed in this manner. Death was
- also caused by beatings or bashings in the skulls.
-
- “The prisoners marched from Friday till Monday during which time
- they received only 100 grams of bread. They marched in the rain
- and slept in the fields in the mud and water. Many died from
- exhaustion. On the 23rd day of April 1945, between the towns of
- Cham and Roding, they were liberated by the American troops.”
- (_2309-PS_)
-
-Conditions at Mauthausen, one of the most notorious extermination
-centers, are thus described in an official report of the office of the
-Judge Advocate General of the Third United States Army, dated 17 June
-1945:
-
- “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.” (_2176-PS_)
-
-It is clear from both the motion picture and these reports, which could
-be supplemented by many similar ones, that the brutal conditions in all
-concentration camps followed the same general pattern. The widespread
-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 by the Nazis in the concentration camp were on so
-vast a scale that individual atrocities pale into insignificance. But
-there are two exhibits in the possession of the prosecution which
-illustrate the contempt in which the Nazis held human values. The first
-is a frame showing sections of human skin, taken from human bodies in
-Buchenwald Concentration Camp and preserved as ornaments. (This was
-offered by the prosecution as a physical exhibit.) They were selected
-because of the tattooing which appeared on the skin. Attached to this
-exhibit is an extract of an official U. S. Army report describing the
-circumstances under which this exhibit was obtained (_3420-PS_):
-
- “Mobile Field Interrogation Unit No. 2
-
- PW INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN
-
- “No. 2/20
-
- 19 December 1944
- “Address Briefs and Requests to HQ, FID, MIS, APO 887
- “_EXTRACT_
-
- “13. _Concentration Camp, Buchenwald._
-
- “_Preamble._ The author of this account is PW Andreas
- Pfaffenberger, 1 Coy, 9 Landesschuetzen 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 PWIS
- (H)/LF/736 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
- PW’s account, which he wrote without being told anything of the
- intelligence already known. Results of interrogation on
- personalities at Buchenwald have already been published (PWIB No
- 2/12 Item 31).”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “In 1939, all prisoners with tattooing on them were ordered to
- report to the dispensary. 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 Standartenfuehrer
- Koch’s wife, who had them fashioned into lampshades and other
- ornamental household articles. I myself saw such tattooed skins
- with various designs and legends on them, such as “Hans’l und
- Gret’l”, which one prisoner had had on his knee, and ships from
- prisoners’ chests. This work was done by a prisoner named
- Wernerbach.” (_3420-PS_)
-
-The following certificate is also attached to the exhibit:
-
- “I, George C. Demas, Lieut., 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, U. S. Army, to me in my above capacity, in the
- usual course of official business, as an exhibit found in
- Buchenwald Camp and captured by military forces under the
- command of the Supreme Commander, Allied Expeditionary Forces.”
- (_3421-PS_)
-
-This is the conclusion reached in an official U. S. Army report attached
-to the exhibit:
-
- “Based on the findings in paragraph 2, all three specimens are
- tattooed human skin”. (_3423-PS_)
-
-One more example of this pathological phase of Nazi culture, another
-Nazi trophy, is a human head with the skull bone removed, shrunken,
-stuffed, and preserved. (This was offered by the prosecution as a
-physical exhibit.) This head probably belonged to a foreign worker,
-kidnapped by Sauckel to work in Speer’s armament industry. The Nazis had
-one of their many victims decapitated after having had him hanged for
-fraternizing with a German woman; they fashioned this ornament from his
-head. This represents the end product of the Nazi system, representing
-both the degradation of the Nazi “master” and the anguish of his victim.
-The official U. S. Army report attached to this exhibit deals with the
-manner in which this exhibit was acquired. It reads in part:
-
- “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.” (_3423-PS_)
-
- 7. THE NUMBER OF VICTIMS
-
-No accurate estimate of how many persons died in the concentration camps
-can be made. Although the Nazis were generally meticulous record
-keepers, the records they kept about concentration camps appear to have
-been incomplete.
-
-Occasionally there is a death book, or a set of index cards, but for the
-most part, the victims apparently faded into an unrecorded death. The
-scale of the concentration camp operations is suggested by a set of
-seven books, the death ledger of the Mauthausen Concentration Camp
-(physically offered to the court). Each book bears on its cover
-“_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.
-The books cover the period from January 1939 to April 1945. They give
-the name, 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. Addition of the serial numbers for the five-year period
-produces a total figure of 35,318.
-
-Examination of the books reveals the camp’s routine of death. For
-example, pages 568 to 582 of Volume 5 cover death entries made for 19
-March 1945 between fifteen minutes past one in the morning until 2
-o’clock in the afternoon. In this space of 12¾ hours, 203 persons are
-reported as having died. They were assigned serial numbers running from
-8390 to 8593. The names of the dead are listed. 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 one fifteen A.M. The last was a
-man named Zynger who died at 2 o’clock P.M.
-
-At twenty minutes past two o’clock on the afternoon of the same day, 19
-March 1945, the fatal roll call began again, and continued until half
-past four o’clock. In a space of two hours, 75 more persons died. Once
-again they died from heart failure and in alphabetical order. The
-entries are recorded in the same volume, from pages 582 through 586.
-
-Another death book was found at Camp Mauthausen. This is a single
-volume, which has on its cover the words—“Death Book—Prisoners of
-War”. Pages 234 through 246 contain entries recording 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 (Heydrich).
-
-It is common knowledge that the anguish of the concentration camp was
-spread, not only over the Continent of Europe, but over all the world.
-Even today all over the world people are still seeking word of their
-friends and relatives who vanished into the Nazi concentration camps and
-left no trace behind. This fact is emphasized by the 23 November 1945
-issue of the weekly newspaper, “_Aufbau_”, published in the German
-language in New York City. On the back pages—8, 9, 10, and 11—are
-published both notices requesting information about friends and
-relatives, and notices announcing the deaths of persons who were last
-heard of in a Nazi concentration camp. The personal tragedies, which
-these notices represent, multiplied an incalculable number of times, is
-part of the legacy which the Nazi conspirators have left to the world.
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO CONCENTRATION CAMPS
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6 (b, c). │ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Sections III; │ │ 15, 31,
- │ VIII (A, C); X. │ I │ 41, 53
- │ │ │
- 3737-PS │Hague Convention of 1907 respecting the │ │
- │ Laws and Customs of War on Land, │ │
- │ Annex, Article 46. │ VI │ 597
- │ │ │
- 3738-PS │Geneva Convention of 1929 relative to │ │
- │ treatment of Prisoners of War, │ │
- │ Articles 2, 3. │ VI │ 600
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document was referred to during the │ │
- │trial but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
- *374-PS │TWX Series of Orders signed by Heydrich │ │
- │and Mueller, issued by Gestapo │ │
- │Headquarters Berlin, 9-11 November 1938,│ │
- │concerning treatment of Jews. (USA 729) │ III │ 277
- │ │ │
- *392-PS │Official NSDAP circular entitled “The │ │
- │Social Life of New Germany with Special │ │
- │Consideration of the German Labor │ │
- │Front”, by Prof. Willy Mueller (Berlin, │ │
- │1938). (USA 326) │ III │ 380
- │ │ │
- *641-PS │Report of Public Prosecutor General in │ │
- │Munich, 1 June 1933, concerning murder │ │
- │of Dr. Strauss in Dachau by an SS guard.│ │
- │(USA 450) │ III │ 453
- │ │ │
-*642-PS │Report to Public Prosecutor General in │ │
- │Munich, 1 June 1933, concerning murder │ │
- │of Hausmann in Dachau by an SS guard. │ │
- │(USA 451) │ III │ 454
- │ │ │
- *644-PS │Report to Public Prosecutor General in │ │
- │Munich, 1 June 1933, concerning murder │ │
- │of Schloss in Dachau by an SS guard. │ │
- │(USA 452) │ III │ 455
- │ │ │
- *645-PS │Report to Public Prosecutor General in │ │
- │Munich, 1 June 1933, concerning murder │ │
- │of Nefzger in Dachau by an SS guard. │ │
- │(USA 453) │ III │ 457
- │ │ │
- *778-PS │Disciplinary and Penal Measures for │ │
- │Concentration Camp Dachau and Service │ │
- │Regulations for the Camp Personnel, │ │
- │signed by Eicke, 1 October 1933. (USA │ │
- │247) │ III │ 550
- │ │ │
-  833-PS │Instructions by Admiral Canaris, Head of│ │
- │the Abwehr, 2 February 1942, concerning │ │
- │prosecution of crimes against the Reich │ │
- │or occupying forces in the occupied │ │
- │territories. │ III │ 600
- │ │ │
-*1063-A-PS │Order of Chief of SIPO and SD, 2 January│ │
- │1941, concerning classification of │ │
- │concentration camps. (USA 492) │ III │ 775
- │ │ │
-*1063-B-PS │Letter signed by Kaltenbrunner, 26 July │ │
- │1943, concerning establishment of Labor │ │
- │Reformatory camps. (USA 492) │ III │ 777
- │ │ │
-*1063-D-PS │Mueller’s order, 17 December 1942, │ │
- │concerning prisoners qualified for work │ │
- │to be sent to concentration camps. (USA │ │
- │219) │ III │ 778
- │ │ │
- 1063-E-PS │Copy of Mueller’s order, 25 June 1942, │ │
- │concerning increased shipments to │ │
- │concentration camps. │ III │ 780
- │ │ │
- 1151-P-PS │Letter from WVHA, 28 March 1942, │ │
- │concerning “Action 14 F 13” from files │ │
- │of Gross Rosen Concentration camp. │ III │ 808
- │ │ │
-*1165-PS │Letter from Commandant of concentration │ │
- │Camp Gross Rosen, 23 October 1941, and │ │
- │letter of Mueller to all Gestapo │ │
- │offices, 9 November 1941, concerning │ │
- │execution of Russian PWs. (USA 244) │ III │ 821
- │ │ │
-*1166-PS │Interoffice memorandum of WVHA, 15 │ │
- │August 1944, concerning number of │ │
- │prisoners and survey of prisoners’ │ │
- │clothing. (USA 458) │ III │ 824
- │ │ │
- 1216-PS │Typewritten memorandum, “Important │ │
- │Incidents in Concentration camp Dachau”.│ III │ 846
- │ │ │
- 1390-PS │Decree of the Reich President for the │ │
- │Protection of the People and State, 28 │ │
- │February 1933. 1933 Reichsgesetzblatt, │ │
- │Part I, p. 83. │ III │ 968
- │ │ │
-*1531-PS │Directive from RSHA, 26 October 1939, │ │
- │concerning execution of protective │ │
- │custody, and directive, 12 June 1942, │ │
- │concerning third degree. (USA 248) │ IV │ 93
- │ │ │
-*1584-I-PS │Teletype from Goering to Himmler, 14 │ │
- │February 1944, concerning formation of │ │
- │7th Airforce Group squadron for special │ │
- │purposes. (USA 221) │ IV │ 117
- │ │ │
-*1584-III-PS │Correspondence between Himmler and │ │
- │Goering, 9 March 1944, concerning use of│ │
- │concentration camp inmates in aircraft │ │
- │industry. (USA 457) │ IV │ 118
- │ │ │
- 1616-PS │Letter from Dr. Rascher to Himmler, 17 │ │
- │February 1943, concerning freezing │ │
- │experiments. │ IV │ 133
- │ │ │
-*1650-PS │Directive to State Police Directorates │ │
- │from Chief of SIPO and SD by Mueller, 4 │ │
- │March 1944, concerning captured escaped │ │
- │PWs except British and American PWs. │ │
- │(USA 246) │ IV │ 158
- │ │ │
-*1723-PS │Order concerning cooperation of Party │ │
- │offices with the Secret State Police, 25│ │
- │January 1938, published in Decrees, │ │
- │Regulations, Announcements, 1937, Vol. │ │
- │II, pp. 430-439. (USA 206) │ IV │ 219
- │ │ │
-*1919-PS │Himmler’s speech to SS Gruppenfuehrers, │ │
- │4 October 1943. (USA 170) │ IV │ 558
- │ │ │
- 1956-PS │Meaning and Tasks of the Secret State │ │
- │Police, published in The Archives, │ │
- │January 1936, Vol. 22-24, p. 1342. │ IV │ 598
- │ │ │
- 2107-PS │Law on Secret State Police of 10 │ │
- │February 1936. 1936 Preussische │ │
- │Gesetzsammlung, pp. 21-22. │ IV │ 732
- │ │ │
- 2108-PS │Decree for execution of Law on Secret │ │
- │State Police of 10 February 1936. 1936 │ │
- │Preussische Gesetzsammlung, pp. 22-24. │ IV │ 732
- │ │ │
- 2169-PS │Quarterly report of the SS medical │ │
- │officer of Hmb. Neuengamme concentration│ │
- │camp, 29 March 1945. │ IV │ 799
- │ │ │
- 2171-PS │U. S. Government report B-2833 on │ │
- │Numerical Expansion of Buchenwald │ │
- │Concentration Camp, during years │ │
- │1937-1945. │ IV │ 800
- │ │ │
-*2176-PS │Report on Mauthausen concentration camp,│ │
- │by investigating officer, Office of │ │
- │Judge Advocate, Third U. S. Army, 17 │ │
- │June 1945. (USA 249). │ IV │ 836
- │ │ │
- 2187-PS │Order from Main SS economic │ │
- │administration office, 14 July 1943, │ │
- │concerning beating of female prisoners. │ IV │ 842
- │ │ │
-*2189-PS │Orders from Department D of Economic and│ │
- │Administrative Main Office, 11 August │ │
- │1942, concerning punishment by beating. │ │
- │(USA 460) │ IV │ 842
- │ │ │
- 2222-PS │Report of investigation of Buchenwald │ │
- │Concentration Camp, by Judge Advocate │ │
- │Section, Third United States Army, 25 │ │
- │May 1945. │ IV │ 860
- │ │ │
-*2285-PS │Affidavit, 13 May 1945, by two French │ │
- │officers, about shooting of prisoners at│ │
- │Mauthausen. (USA 490) │ IV │ 991
- │ │ │
-*2309-PS │Report by Headquarters Third United │ │
- │States Army, 21 June 1945, concerning │ │
- │Flossenburg Concentration Camp. (USA │ │
- │245) │ IV │ 999
- │ │ │
-*2324-PS │Extracts from Reconstruction of a │ │
- │Nation, by Hermann Goering, 1934. (USA │ │
- │233) │ IV │ 1033
- │ │ │
-*2330-PS │Order of Protective Custody, Police │ │
- │Directorate of Nurnberg-Fuerth of Josef │ │
- │Simon, Chairman of German Shoemaker’s │ │
- │Union, 29 August 1935. (USA 237) │ IV │ 1038
- │ │ │
-*2334-PS │Affidavits of Lorenz Hagen, Chairman of │ │
- │Local Committee, German Trade Unions, │ │
- │Nurnberg. (USA 238) │ IV │ 1041
- │ │ │
- 2344-PS │Reconstruction of a Nation by Goering, │ │
- │1934, p. 89. │ IV │ 1065
- │ │ │
- 2347-PS │Court decisions from 1935 │ │
- │Reichsverwaltungsblatt, Vol. 56, pp. │ │
- │577-578, 20 July 1935. │ IV │ 1066
- │ │ │
- 2476-PS │Affidavit of Josef Buehler, 4 November │ │
- │1945. │ V │ 228
- │ │ │
-*2477-PS │Affidavit of Willy Litzenberg, 4 │ │
- │November 1945. (USA 518) │ V │ 229
- │ │ │
- 2478-PS │Affidavit of Willy Litzenberg, 4 │ │
- │November 1945. │ V │ 230
- │ │ │
-*2499-PS │Original Protective Custody Order served│ │
- │on Dr. R. Kempner, 15 March 1935. (USA │ │
- │232) │ V │ 236
- │ │ │
-*2513-PS │Extract from The National Socialist │ │
- │Workers’ Party as an Association Hostile│ │
- │to State and to Republican Form of │ │
- │Government and Guilty of Treasonable │ │
- │Activity. (USA 235) │ V │ 252
- │ │ │
- 2533-PS │Extract from article “Legislation and │ │
- │Judiciary in Third Reich”, from Journal │ │
- │of the Academy for German Law, 1936, pp.│ │
- │141-142. │ V │ 277
- │ │ │
-*2605-PS │Affidavit of Dr. Rudolf Kastner, former │ │
- │President of the Hungarian Zionist │ │
- │Organization, 13 September 1945. (USA │ │
- │242) │ V │ 313
- │ │ │
- 2615-PS │Affidavit of Dr. Wilhelm Hoettl, 5 │ │
- │November 1945. │ V │ 338
- │ │ │
- 2655-PS │Concordat between the Holy See and the │ │
- │German Reich, Article 31. 1933 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part II, p. 679, │ │
- │687-8. │ V │ 364
- │ │ │
-*2663-PS │Hitler’s speech to the Reichstag, 30 │ │
- │January 1939, quoted from Voelkischer │ │
- │Beobachter, Munich edition, 1 February │ │
- │1939. (USA 268) │ V │ 367
- │ │ │
-*2745-PS │Order for commitment to concentration │ │
- │camp, 7 July 1943, Kaltenbrunner’s │ │
- │signature. (USA 519) │ V │ 383
- │ │ │
-*2753-PS │Affidavit of Alois Hoellriegl, 7 │ │
- │November 1945. (USA 515) │ V │ 393
- │ │ │
-*2928-PS │Affidavit of Mathias Lex, deputy │ │
- │president of the German Shoemakers │ │
- │Union. (USA 239) │ V │ 594
- │ │ │
-*3051-PS │Three teletype orders from Heydrich to │ │
- │all stations of State Police, 10 │ │
- │November 1938, on measures against Jews,│ │
- │and one order from Heydrich on │ │
- │termination of protest actions. (USA │ │
- │240) │ V │ 797
- │ │ │
-*3249-PS │Affidavit of Dr. Franz Blaha, 24 │ │
- │November 1945. (USA 663) │ V │ 949
- │ │ │
-*3420-PS │U. S. Army report on human skin exhibits│ │
- │at Buchenwald Concentration Camp. (USA │ │
- │252) │ VI │ 122
- │ │ │
-*3421-PS │Certificate accompanying human skin │ │
- │exhibit. (USA 253) │ VI │ 123
- │ │ │
-*3423-PS │U. S. Army report on identification of │ │
- │tattooed human skins. (USA 252) │ VI │ 123
- │ │ │
-*3590-PS │Charges and findings against Weiss and │ │
- │others tried by U. S. Military Court at │ │
- │Dachau. (USA 664) │ VI │ 288
- │ │ │
-*3601-PS │Affidavit of Sidney Mendel, 28 December │ │
- │1945, concerning the connection of │ │
- │Frick’s Ministry of Interior with │ │
- │concentration camps. (GB 324) │ VI │ 313
- │ │ │
-*3751-PS │Diary of the German Minister of Justice,│ │
- │1935 concerning prosecution of church │ │
- │officials and punishment in │ │
- │concentration camps. (USA 828; USA 858) │ VI │ 636
- │ │ │
-*3762-PS │Affidavit of SS Colonel Kurt Becher, 8 │ │
- │March 1946, concerning the │ │
- │responsibility of Kaltenbrunner for │ │
- │concentration camp executions. (USA 798)│ VI │ 645
- │ │ │
-*3844-PS │Statement of Josef Niedermayer, 7 March │ │
- │1946, concerning Kaltenbrunner’s part in│ │
- │“bullet” orders at Mauthausen │ │
- │concentration camp. (USA 801) │ VI │ 782
- │ │ │
-*3846-PS │Interrogation of Johann Kanduth, 30 │ │
- │November 1945, concerning crematorium at│ │
- │Mauthausen and the activities of │ │
- │Kaltenbrunner there. (USA 796) │ VI │ 788
- │ │ │
-*3868-PS │Affidavit of Rudolf Franz Ferdinand │ │
- │Hoess, 5 April 1946, concerning │ │
- │execution of 3,000,000 people at │ │
- │Auschwitz Extermination Center. (USA │ │
- │819) │ VI │ 787
- │ │ │
-*3870-PS │Affidavit of Hans Marsalek, 8 April │ │
- │1946, concerning Mauthausen │ │
- │Concentration Camp and dying statement │ │
- │of Franz Ziereis, the Commandant. (USA │ │
- │797) │ VI │ 790
- │ │ │
-*D-84 │Gestapo instructions to State Police │ │
- │Departments, 5 August 1937, regarding │ │
- │protective custody for Bible students. │ │
- │(USA 236) │ VI │ 1040
- │ │ │
-*D-569 │File of circulars from Reichsfuehrer SS,│ │
- │the OKW, Inspector of Concentration │ │
- │Camps, Chief of Security Police and SD, │ │
- │dating from 29 October 1941 through 22 │ │
- │February 1944, relative to procedure in │ │
- │cases of unnatural death of Soviet PW, │ │
- │execution of Soviet PW, etc. (GB 277) │ VII │ 74
- │ │ │
-*D-728 │Circular, 15 March 1945, from NSDAP │ │
- │Gauleitung Hessen-Nassau to the │ │
- │“Kreis”-Leaders of the Gau, concerning │ │
- │Action by the Party to keep Germans in │ │
- │check until end of the War. (GB 282) │ VII │ 174
- │ │ │
-*D-745-A │Deposition of Anton Kaindl, 8 March │ │
- │1946, concerning SS personnel │ │
- │supervising concentration camps. (USA │ │
- │811) │ VII │ 208
- │ │ │
-*D-745-B │Deposition of Anton Kaindl, 19 March │ │
- │1946, concerning SS personnel │ │
- │supervising concentration camps. (USA │ │
- │812) │ VII │ 209
- │ │ │
-*D-746-A │Deposition of Fritz Suhren, 8 March │ │
- │1946, concerning SS personnel │ │
- │supervising concentration camps. (USA │ │
- │813) │ VII │ 209
- │ │ │
-*D-746-B │Deposition of Fritz Suhren, │ │
- │19 March 1946, concerning SS personnel │ │
- │supervising concentration camps. (USA │ │
- │814) │ VII │ 210
- │ │ │
-*D-748 │Affidavit of Karl Totzauer, 15 March │ │
- │1946, concerning SS personnel │ │
- │supervising concentration camps. (USA │ │
- │816) │ VII │ 211
- │ │ │
-*D-749-B │Statement of Rudolf Hoess, │ │
- │20 March 1946, concerning SS personnel │ │
- │supervising concentration camps. (USA │ │
- │817) │ VII │ 212
- │ │ │
-*D-750 │Deposition of August Harbaum, │ │
- │19 March 1946, concerning SS personnel │ │
- │supervising concentration camps. (USA │ │
- │818) │ VII │ 213
- │ │ │
-*L-83 │Affidavit of Gerhart H. Seger, 21 July │ │
- │1945. (USA 234) │ VII │ 859
- │ │ │
-*L-215 │File of orders and dossiers of 25 │ │
- │Luxembourgers committed to concentration│ │
- │camps at various times in 1944. (USA │ │
- │243) │ VII │ 1045
- │ │ │
-*R-91 │Telegram from Mueller, SS Gruppenfuehrer│ │
- │to Reichsfuehrer SS, 16 December 1942. │ │
- │(USA 241) │ VIII │ 60
- │ │ │
-*R-124 │Speer’s conference minutes of Central │ │
- │Planning Board, 1942-44, concerning │ │
- │labor supply. (USA 179) │ VIII │ 146
- │ │ │
-*R-129 │Letter and enclosure from Pohl to │ │
- │Himmler, 30 April 1942, concerning │ │
- │concentration camps. (USA 217) │ VIII │ 198
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XII
- THE PERSECUTION OF THE JEWS
-
-
-It had long been a German theory that the First World War ended in
-Germany’s defeat because of a collapse behind the lines. In planning for
-future wars it was determined that the home front must be secured to
-prevent a repetition of this 1918 debacle. Unification of the German
-people was essential to successful planning and waging of war. Hence,
-the Nazi political goal must be sought:—“One race, one State, one
-Fuehrer.” Free trade unions must be abolished, political parties (other
-than the NSDAP) 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 a speech of Himmler’s at a meeting of SS Major
-Generals on 4 October 1943:
-
- “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 the 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.” (_1919-PS_)
-
-The treatment of the Jews within Germany was as much a part of the Nazi
-plan for aggressive war as was the building of armaments and the
-conscription of manpower.
-
- 1. HATE-PROPAGANDA AGAINST JEWS
-
-The objective of the elimination and extermination of the Jews, could
-not be accomplished without certain preliminary measures. One of these
-was the indoctrination of the German people with hatred against the
-Jews.
-
-The first evidence of the Party policies in this direction was expressed
-in the Party program of February 1920 (_1708-PS_). Paragraphs (4) and
-(6) of that program declared:
-
- “* * * 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 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.”
- (_1708-PS_)
-
-Hitler, at page 724 and 725 of _Mein Kampf_, spoke of the Jew. If the
-National Socialist movement was to fulfill its task, he declared:
-
- “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, to
- whom, however, we are tied by common blood or the great tide 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.” (_2662-PS_)
-
-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 _Der Giftpilz_. (_1778-PS_). This book brands
-the Jew as a persecutor of the labor class, a race defiler, a devil in
-human form, a poisonous mushroom, and a murderer. This particular book
-was used to instruct school children to recognize the Jew by caricatures
-of his physical features, (pages 6 and 7); and to teach them that the
-Jew abuses little boys and girls, (page 30), and that the Jewish Bible
-permits all crimes (pages 13-17). Streicher’s periodical, _Der
-Stuermer_, (issue no. 14 for April 1937) in particular, went to such
-extremes as to publish the statement that Jews at the ritual celebration
-of their Passover slaughtered Christians:
-
- “The numerous confessions made by the Jews show that the
- execution of ritual murders is a law to the Talmud Jew. The
- former chief rabbi, and later monk, Teofite, declared 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 instructions 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 Jewish head of the family. The
- procedure is as follows:
-
- “The family head empties a few drops of the fresh and powdered
- blood into the 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 ten
- 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.” (_2699-PS_)
-
-The Jew-baiting publication, _Der Stuermer_, was published by
-Streicher’s publishing firm (_2697-PS_). In one issue of this
-periodical, Streicher, speaking of the Jewish faith, said:
-
- “The Holy Scripture is a horrible criminal romance abounding
- with murder, incest, fraud and indecency.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “The Talmud is the great Jewish book of crimes that the Jew
- practices in his daily life.” (_2698-PS_)
-
-This propaganda campaign of hate, of which the above quotations are but
-random samples, was too widespread and notorious to require further
-elaboration.
-
- 2. DISCRIMINATORY DECREES AGAINST JEWS
-
-When the Nazi Party gained control of the German State, the conspirators
-used the means of official decrees as a weapon against the Jews. In this
-way the force of the state was applied against them.
-
-Jewish immigrants were denaturalized (1933 _Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I,
-page 480, signed by Frick and Neurath).
-
-Native Jews were precluded from citizenship (1935 _Reichsgesetzblatt_,
-Part I, page 1146, signed by Frick).
-
-Jews were forbidden to live in marriage or to have extra-marital
-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 Frick).
-
-Jews were denied the right to hold public office or civil service
-positions (1933 _Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I, page 277, signed by Frick).
-
-Jews were relegated to an inferior status by the denial of 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 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 Hess).
-
-The practice of law was denied to them (1938 _Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part
-I, page 1403, signed by Frick and Hess).
-
-The practice of medicine was forbidden them (1938 _Reichsgesetzblatt_,
-Part I, page 969, signed by Frick and Hess).
-
-They were denied employment by press and radio (1933
-_Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I, page 661).
-
-They were excluded from stock exchanges and stock brokerage (1934
-_Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I, page 661).
-
-They were excluded 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 Goering).
-
-The Jews were also forced to pay discriminatory taxes and huge atonement
-fines. Their homes, bank accounts, real estate, and intangibles were
-expropriated.
-
-A report of a conference under the chairmanship of Goering, and attended
-by Funk, among others, which was held at 11 o’clock on 12 November 1938
-at the Reich Ministry for Air, quotes Goering as saying:
-
- “One more question, gentlemen, what would you think the
- situation would be if I’d announced today that Jewry shall have
- to contribute this one billion as a punishment.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “I shall choose the wording this way that German Jewry shall, as
- punishment for their abominable crimes, etc., etc., have to make
- a contribution of one billion; that’ll work. The pigs won’t
- commit another murder. I’d like to say again that I would not
- like to be a Jew in Germany.” (_1816-PS_)
-
-Following these whimsical remarks a decree was issued over the signature
-of Goering, fining German Jews the sum of one billion Reichsmarks (1938
-_Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I, page 1579, dated 12 November 1938, signed
-by Goering).
-
-Similar decrees are contained in 1939 _Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I, page
-282, signed by Goering; and in 1941 _Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I, page
-722, signed by Frick and Bormann.
-
-Finally, in 1943, the Jews were placed beyond the protection of any
-judicial process by a decree signed by Bormann and Frick, among others;
-the police were made the sole arbiters of punishment and death (1943
-_Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I, page 372, signed by Frick and Bormann).
-
- 3. ANTI-JEWISH BOYCOTTS, RAIDS, AND VIOLENCE
-
-Simultaneously with the passage of these decrees and their execution,
-still another weapon was wielded by the Party and the party-controlled
-state. This was the openly sponsored and official anti-Jewish boycotts.
-The published diary of Joseph Goebbels, at page 290, contains this entry
-for 29 March 1933:
-
- “The boycott appeal is approved by the entire cabinet.”
- (_2409-PS_)
-
-Again, on 31 March 1933, he wrote:
-
- “We are having a last discussion among a very small circle and
- decide that the boycott is to start tomorrow with all severity.”
- (_2409-PS_)
-
-Streicher and 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 National Socialist Party
-correspondence for 29 March 1933. (_2156-PS_)
-
-In this early 1933 violence against the Jews, raids were conducted on
-synagogues by uniformed Nazis. Attending members of the synagogues were
-assaulted, and religious insignia and emblems were desecrated. A report
-of such an occurrence was contained in an official dispatch from the
-American Consul General in Leipzig, dated 5 April, 1943, which stated:
-
- “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.” (_2709-PS_)
-
-At a meeting in Nurnberg, before the representatives of the German
-press, Streicher and Mayor Liebel of Nurnberg revealed in advance to the
-gathered members of the press that the Nurnberg synagogue was to be
-destroyed. The minutes of this meeting, dated 4 August 1938, read as
-follows:
-
- “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
- synagogues will commence. Gauleiter Julius Streicher will
- personally set the crane into motion with which the Jewish
- symbols, Star of David, etc., will be torn down. This should be
- arranged in a big way. Closer details are still unknown.”
- (_1724-PS_)
-
-Streicher himself supervised the demolition, according to a newspaper
-account of 11 August 1938, which described the scene:
-
- “In Nurnberg 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.” (_2711-PS_)
-
-These accounts of violence were not localized anti-Semitic
-demonstrations, but were directed and ordered from a centralized
-headquarters in Berlin. This fact is established by a series of teletype
-messages sent by the Berlin Secret State Police Headquarters to police
-chiefs throughout Germany on 10 November 1938, which contained
-instructions pertaining to the prearranged demonstration (_3051-PS_).
-One of these confidential orders, signed by Heydrich, provides:
-
- “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 have to 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 Reichsfuehrer 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.” (_3051-PS_)
-
- 4. THE PROGRAM FOR THE COMPLETE ELIMINATION OF JEWRY
-
-At this point the gradual and mounting campaign against the Jews was
-prepared for the achievement of its ultimate violent ends. The German
-people had been indoctrinated, and the seeds of hatred had been sown.
-The German state was armed and prepared for conquest. The force of world
-opinion could now safely be ignored. Already the Nazi conspirators had
-forced out of Germany 200,000 of its former 500,000 Jews. The
-Nazi-controlled German state was therefore emboldened, and Hitler in
-anticipation of the aggressive wars already planned cast about for a
-provocation.
-
-In his speech before the Reichstag on 30 January 1939, Hitler declared:
-
- “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 Bolshevication of the world and
- the victory of Jewry, but the obliteration of the Jewish race in
- Europe.” (_2663-PS_)
-
-The chief editor of the official organ of the SS, the “_Schwarze
-Korps_,” expressed similar sentiments on 8 August 1940:
-
- “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.” (_2668-PS_)
-
-Other officials of the Party and State voiced the same views. Rosenberg
-wrote for the publication “World Struggle,” which in the April and
-September 1941 issues declared:
-
- “The Jewish question will be solved for Europe only when the
- last Jew has left the European continent.” (_2665-PS_)
-
-Hans Frank entered this apologetic note in his diary:
-
- “Of course, I could not eliminate all lice and Jews in only a
- year’s time. But in the course of time, and above all, if you
- will help me, this end will be attained.” (_2233-C-PS_)
-
-A. _Registration._
-
-The first step in accomplishing the purpose of the Nazi Party and the
-Nazi-dominated state, to eliminate the Jew, was to require a complete
-registration of all Jews. Inasmuch as the anti-Jewish policy was linked
-with the program of German aggression, such registration was required
-not only within the Reich, but successively within the conquered
-territories. For example, registration was required, by decree, within
-Germany (_Reichsgesetzblatt_ Part I, 1938, page 922, 23 July, signed by
-Frick); within Austria (_Reichsgesetzblatt_, Volume 1, 1940, page 694,
-29 April); within Poland (_Kurjer Krakowski_, 24 October, 1939); in
-France (_Journal Official_ No. 9, page 92, 30 September, 1940); in
-Holland (_Verordnungsblatt_, No. 16, 10 January, 1941, signed by
-Seyss-Inquart).
-
-B. _Segregation into Ghettos._
-
-The second step was to segregate and concentrate the Jews within
-restricted areas, called ghettos. This policy was carefully worked out,
-as is illustrated by the confidential statement taken from the files of
-Rosenberg (_212-PS_). This memorandum of Rosenberg’s, entitled
-“Directions for Handling of the Jewish Question”, states:
-
- “The first main goal of the German measures must be strict
- segregation of Jewry from the rest of the population. In the
- execution of this, first of all, is the seizing of the Jewish
- population by the introduction of a registration order and
- similar appropriate measures * * *.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “* * * 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 in case
- labor needs are present. 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 cases in which a ghetto could not yet be
- established, care is to be taken through strict prohibitions and
- similar suitable measures that a further intermingling of blood
- of the Jews and the rest of the populace does not continue.”
- (_212-PS_)
-
-In May 1941 Rosenberg, as the Reich Minister for the Occupied Eastern
-Territories, issued directions confining the Jews to ghettos in the
-Ukraine:
-
- “After the customary removal of Jews from all public offices,
- the Jewish question will have to have a decisive solution,
- through the institution of ghettos.” (_1028-PS_)
-
-The policies set forth in the foregoing utterances of Rosenberg were not
-accidental, isolated, or the views of one individual. They were the
-expressed State policies. Von Schirach played his part in the program of
-ghettoization. His speech before the European Youth Congress held in
-Vienna on 14 September 1942 was reported on page 2, column 2 of the
-Vienna edition of the “_Voelkischer Beobachter_” of 15 September, as
-follows:
-
- “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.” (_3048-PS_)
-
-One of the largest ghettos was within the city of Warsaw. The official
-report made by SS Major General Stroop concerning this ghetto is
-entitled “The Warsaw Ghetto Is No More.” (_1061-PS_)
-
-The report thus describes the ghetto:
-
- “The Ghetto thus established in Warsaw was inhabited by about
- 400,000 Jews. It contained 27,000 apartments with an average of
- 2½ rooms each. It was separated from the rest of the city by
- partition and other walls, and by walling-up of the
- thoroughfares, windows, doors, open spaces, etc. * * *”
- (_1061-PS_)
-
-Conditions within this ghetto are indicated in the statement of the
-report that an average of six persons lived in every room. (_1061-PS_)
-
-Himmler received a report from the SS Brigade Fuehrer Group A, dated 15
-October 1941, which further illustrates the establishment and operation
-of the ghettos. (_L-180_) The report states:
-
- “Apart from organizing and carrying out measures of execution,
- the creation of ghettos was begun in the larger towns at once
- during the first day of operations. This was especially urgent
- in Knowno because there were 30,000 Jews in a total population
- of 152,400.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “In Riga the so-called ‘_Moskau 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 Latvians
- dwelling in that district had to be evacuated and residential
- space in Riga is very crowded. 24,000 of the 28,000 Jews living
- in Riga 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 were left to civil
- administration; the labor officers were left in charge of Jewish
- labor.
-
- “In the other towns with a larger Jewish population ghettos
- shall be established likewise.” (_L-180_)
-
-Jews were forced into ghettos in the Polish Province of Galicia. The
-conditions in these ghettos are described in the report from Katzmann,
-Lt. General of Police, to Krueger, General of the Police East, dated 20
-June 1943, and entitled “Solution of Jewish Question in Galicia.”
-(_L-18_):
-
- “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 suffering from spotted fever in underground
- holes. When evacuation was to start the police 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 to destroy this plague-boil, losing thereby
- only one officer. Almost the same conditions were found in
- Rohatyn * * *.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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 ghetto in
- Lwow 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 places; they had committed suicide
- by taking poison. * * *”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “* * * Despite the extraordinary burden heaped upon every single
- SS-Police officer during these actions, mood and spirit of the
- men were extraordinarily good and praiseworthy from the first to
- the last day * * *.” (_L-18_)
-
-These acts of removal and slaughter were not entirely without profit.
-The report continues:
-
- “Together with the evacuation action, we executed the
- confiscation of Jewish property. Very high amounts were
- confiscated and paid 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’ * *
- *
-
- “20.952 kilograms of gold wedding rings.
- 7 Stamp collections, complete.
- 1 Suit case with pocket knives.
- 1 basket of fountain pens and propelled pencils.
- 3 bags filled with rings—not genuine.
- 35 wagons of furs.” (_L-18_)
-
-The thoroughness of the looting is illustrated by an item listing 11.73
-kilograms of gold teeth and inlays. (_L-18_)
-
-By the end of 1942, Jews in the General Government of Poland had been
-crowded into fifty-five localities, whereas before the German invasion
-there had been approximately 1,000 Jewish settlements within this same
-area. This fact is reported in the 1942 Official Gazette for the General
-Government, No. 94, page 665, 1 November 1942.
-
-C. _Forced Labor._
-
-The Jews, having been registered and confined within the ghettos, now
-furnished a reservoir for slave labor. The difference between slave
-labor and “labor duty” was this: the latter group were entitled to
-reasonable compensation, stated working 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 that
-of slaves.
-
-Rosenberg set up within his organization for the Occupied Eastern
-Territories a department which, among other things, was to seek a
-solution for the Jewish problem by means of forced labor. His plans,
-contained in a memorandum entitled “General Organizations and Tasks of
-our Office for the General Handling of Problems in the Eastern
-Territory,” and dated 29 April 1941, read 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, etc.).” (_1024-PS_)
-
-Thereafter Rosenberg issued instructions that Jewish forced labor should
-be utilized for every manual labor task:
-
- “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 occupied eastern territories.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Violations against German measures, especially against the
- forced labor regulations, are to be punished by death to the
- Jews.” (_212-PS_)
-
-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 could be expected to
-yield 10,000 to 15,000 usable laborers. This estimate is based on an
-RSHA telegram to Himmler, marked “Urgent” and “Secret”, and dated 16
-December 1942.
-
- “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.”
- (_1472-PS_)
-
-The report from Lieutenant General of Police, Katzmann, to General of
-the Police East, Krueger, clearly outlines the nature of the Jewish
-forced labor:
-
- “The best remedy consisted of the formation, by the SS and
- Police Leader, of forced labor camps. 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 15th 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Soon more camps followed these first ones, so that after a very
- short time the completion of fifteen 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 occurring at this
- work I can report today that about 160 kilometers of the road
- are completed.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “At the same time all other Jews fit for work were registered
- and distributed for useful work by the labor agencies.
-
- * * * 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 Lwow 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 Leaders through subordinate
- officials. This measure became the more urgent as in the winter,
- 1941, big centers of spotted fever were noted in many parts of
- the town.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “During this 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% 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “* * * 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 revalidated 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.” (_L-18_)
-
-D. _Extermination._
-
-(At this point a strip of motion picture footage taken, presumably, by a
-member of the SS, and captured by the United States military forces in
-an SS barracks near Augsburg, Germany, was shown to the tribunal. The
-film depicts what is believed to be the extermination of a ghetto by
-Gestapo agents, assisted by military units.
-
-The following scenes are representative:
-
-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 skull cap and a woman are manhandled.
-
-Scene 14: A half-naked woman runs through the crowd.
-
-Scene 15: Another half-naked woman runs out of the house.
-
-Scene 16: Two men drag an old man out.
-
-Scene 18: A man in German military uniform, with his back to the camera,
-watches.
-
-Scene 24: A general shot of the street, showing fallen bodies and naked
-women running.
-
-Scene 32: A shot of the street, showing five fallen bodies.
-
-Scene 37: A man with a bleeding head is hit again.
-
-Scene 39: A soldier in German military uniform, with a rifle, stands by
-as a crowd centers on a man coming out of the house.
-
-Scene 44: A soldier with a rifle, in German military uniform, walks past
-a woman clinging to a torn blouse.
-
-Scene 45: A woman is dragged by her hair across the street.)
-
-The means of accomplishing the extermination of the Jews are discussed
-in the diary of Hans Frank, then Governor-General of Occupied Poland
-(_2233-D-PS_). In a cabinet session on Tuesday, 16 December 1941 in the
-Government Building at Cracow, Frank made a closing address, as follows:
-
- “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 Fuehrer 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, etc. Before I continue, I want to 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 say: This war would only be 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 great discussion concerning that question will take
- place in Berlin in January, to which I am going to delegate the
- State Secretary Dr. Buehler. That discussion is to take place in
- the Reich Security Main Office with SS-Lt. 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’ nor in the ‘Reichskommissariat’. So
- liquidate them yourself.
-
- “Gentlemen, I must ask you to rid yourself of 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 framework
- 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
- General Government, 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 from the Reich. The General
- Government 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.” (_2233-D-PS_)
-
-This was not the planning and scheming of an irresponsible individual,
-but the expression by the Governor-General of Occupied Poland, of the
-official policy of the German State.
-
-Rosenberg’s notion of the means to be taken against the Jews is
-expressed in a secret “Document Memorandum for the Fuehrer—Concerning:
-Jewish Possessions in France,” dated 18 December 1941. Rosenberg urges
-plundering and death:
-
- “* * * In compliance with the order of the Fuehrer 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 practical to procure
- any more. Therefore, I beg the Fuehrer to permit the seizure of
- all Jewish home furnishings of Jews in Paris, who have fled or
- will leave shortly, and that 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 armed forces have not stopped; on the contrary
- they continue. This reveals an unmistakable plan to disrupt the
- German-French cooperation, to force Germany to retaliate, and,
- with this, evoke a new defense on the part of the French against
- Germany. I suggest to the Fuehrer that, instead of executing 100
- Frenchmen, we substitute 100 Jewish bankers, lawyers, etc. 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.
-
- “(Signed) A. Rosenberg.” (_001-PS_)
-
-(1) _Starvation._ Chief among the methods utilized for the annihilation
-of the Jewish people was starvation. Policies were designed and adopted
-to deprive the Jews of the most elemental necessities of life. Hans
-Frank, then Governor-General of Poland, wrote in his diary that hunger
-rations were introduced in the Warsaw Ghetto (_2233-E-PS_). Referring to
-the new food regulations of August 1942, he noted that by these food
-regulations more than one million Jews were virtually condemned to
-death.
-
- “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.” (_2233-E-PS_)
-
-In pursuance of the deliberate policy of Jewish starvation, Jews were
-prohibited from pursuing agricultural activities in order to cut them
-off from access to sources of food. A document entitled “Provisional
-Directives on the Treatment of Jews”, issued by the Reichscommissar for
-the Ostland, provided:
-
- “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.” (_1138-PS_)
-
-Jews were also excluded from the purchase of basic food, such as wheat
-products, meat, eggs, and milk. A decree dated 18 September 1942, from
-the Ministry of Agriculture, provided:
-
- “Jews will no longer receive the following foods, beginning with
- the 42nd distribution period (19 October 1942): meat, meat
- products, eggs, wheat products (cake, white bread, wheat rolls,
- wheat flour, etc.) 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 ten years
- of age will receive the bread ration of the normal consumer.”
- (_1347-PS_)
-
-The sick, the old, and 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 Jewish ration
-cards were distinctly marked with the word “Jew” in color across the
-face of the cards, so that the store-keepers could readily identify and
-discriminate against Jewish purchasers.
-
-According to page 110 of an official document of the Czechoslovakian
-government published in 1943 and entitled “Czechoslovakia Fights Back,”
-Jewish food purchases were confined to certain areas, to certain days,
-and to certain hours. As might be expected, the period permitted for the
-purchases occurred during the time when food stocks were likely to be
-exhausted. (_1689-PS_)
-
-By Special Order No. 44 for the Eastern Occupied Territories, dated 4
-November 1941, 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. A bulletin issued by the Polish Ministry of Information,
-dated 15 December 1942, concludes that upon the basis of the nature of
-the separate rationing and the amount of food available to Jews in the
-Warsaw and Cracow ghettos, the system was designed to bring about
-starvation:
-
- “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.” (_L-165_)
-
-(2) _Annihilation._ Annihilation within the ghettos is illustrated and
-glorified in the report of Major General of the Police Stroop, entitled
-“The Warsaw Ghetto is No More.” (_1061-PS_)
-
-This report bound in leather profusely illustrated, typed on heavy bond
-paper, and almost 75 pages in length, is the almost unbelievable recital
-of a proud accomplishment by Stroop, who signed the report with a bold
-hand. Stroop in his report first pays tribute to the bravery and heroism
-of the German forces who participated in the ruthless actions against a
-defenseless group of Jews numbering, to be exact 56,065—including
-infants and women. His report relates day-by-day progress in the
-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.
-
-These are some of the boastful and vivid account’s of the scenes within
-the Warsaw Ghetto:
-
- “The resistance put up by the Jews and bandits could be broken
- only by relentlessly using all our forces and energy by day and
- night. On 23 April 1943 the Reichsfuehrer SS issued through the
- Higher SS and Police Fuehrer East at Cracow 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 concern 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
- from 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 in 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 round 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 three to four 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.” (_1061-PS_)
-
-At the beginning of his report Stroop lists the losses of German troops:
-
- “For the Fuehrer and their country the following fell in the
- battle for the destruction of Jews and bandits in the former
- ghetto of Warsaw * * *” [Fifteen names are thereafter listed].
-
- “Furthermore, the Polish police sergeant Julian Zielinski, 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 * * *” [There 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 regular army personnel, engineers.”
- (_1061-PS_)
-
-The story continues in the daily teletype reports, from which the
-following are excerpts:
-
- “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 buildings, trying to escape the flames. 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Not until the blocks of buildings were well aflame and were
- about to collapse did a further considerable number of Jews
- emerge, forced to do so by the flames and the smoke. Time and
- again the Jews try 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Some depositions speak of three to four thousand Jews who still
- remain in underground holes, sewers, and dugouts; The
- undersigned is resolved not to terminate the large-scale
- operation until the last Jew has been destroyed.” (_1061-PS_)
-
-The teletype message of 15 May 1945 indicates that the operation is in
-its last stage:
-
- “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.”
- (_1061-PS_)
-
-On 24 May 1943 the final figures were compiled by Major General Stroop:
-
- “Of the total of 56,065 caught, about 7,000 were destroyed in
- the former Ghetto during large-scale operation. 6,929 Jews were
- destroyed by transporting them to T.II [believed to be Treblinka
- Camp No. 2]. The sum total of Jews destroyed is therefore
- 13,929. Beyond the number of 56,065 an estimated number of 5 to
- 6,000 Jews were destroyed by being blown up or by perishing in
- the flames.” (_1061-PS_)
-
-It was not always necessary, or perhaps desirable, to place the Jews
-within Ghettos to effect elimination. In the Baltic States a more direct
-course of action was followed. According to a report by SS Brigade
-Fuehrer Stahlecker to Himmler, dated 15 October 1941, entitled “Action
-Group A,” which was found in Himmler’s private files, 135,567 persons,
-nearly all Jews, were murdered in accordance to basic orders directing
-the complete annihilation of Jews. SS Brigade Fuehrer Stahlecker
-continues his report:
-
- “* * * 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
- Kowno 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 about 2,300 Jews were made harmless in a
- similar way. * * *”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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.” (_L-180_)
-
-Nazi ingenuity reached its zenith with the construction and operation of
-the gas van as a means of mass annihilation of the Jews. A description
-of the operation of these vehicles of death is fully set forth in a
-captured Top Secret document dated 16 May 1942, addressed to SS
-Obersturmbannfuehrer Rauff, 8 Prince Albrecht-Strasse, Berlin, from Dr.
-Becker, SS Untersturmfuehrer. The report reads in part:
-
- “The overhauling of vans by groups D and C is finished. While
- the vans of 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
- only a question now whether the van can only be used standing 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 km away from the highways 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 these vehicles appeared. It is my opinion the van cannot be
- kept secret for any length of time, not even camouflaged.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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 be brought
- to Berlin for repair. Transportation to Berlin would be much too
- expensive and would demand too much fuel. In order to save those
- expenses I ordered them to have smaller leaks soldered and if
- that should no longer be possible, to notify Berlin immediately
- by radio, that Pol. Nr. 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 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 those S.K. concerned the immense
- psychological injuries and damages 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 those damages, 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: Dr. Becker, SS Untersturmfuehrer.” (_501-PS_)
-
-A letter signed by Hauptsturmfuehrer Truehe on the subject of S-vans,
-addressed to the Reich Security Main Office, Room 2-D-3-A, Berlin, and
-marked “Top Secret,” establishes that the vans were used for the
-annihilation of the Jews. The message reads:
-
- “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 (five tons). At
- the same time I request the shipment of twenty 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.” (_501-PS_)
-
-It appears that a certain amount of discord existed between officials of
-the German government as to the proper means and methods to be used in
-connection with the extermination program. A secret report dated 18 June
-1943, addressed to Rosenberg, complained that five thousand 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:
-
- “The fact that Jews receive special treatment requires no
- further discussion. However, it appears hardly believable that
- this is 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 would become known to the other side
- and 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.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “To lock men, women, and children into barns and to set fire to
- them does not appear to be a suitable method of 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.” (_R-135_)
-
-Gunther, the prison warden at Minsk, in a letter dated 31 May 1943,
-addressed to the General Commissioner for White Ruthenia, was critical
-by implication. This letter, entitled, “Action Against Jews,” reads:
-
- “On 13 April 1943 the former German dentist Ernst Israel
- Tichauer and his wife, Elisa Sara Tichauer, nee 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 golden bridgework, crowns, and fillings pulled or
- broken out. This happens always one to two 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 fifty percent of the Jews had
- gold teeth, bridgework, or fillings. _Hauptscharfuehrer_ Rube of
- the Security Service was always personally present and he took
- the gold along, too.
-
- “Before 13 April 1943 this was not done.
-
- (signed) Gunther, Prison Warden.” (_R-135_)
-
-The foregoing letter was forwarded to Rosenberg, as Reich Minister for
-the Occupied Eastern Territories, on June 1943. The covering letter to
-Rosenberg reads:
-
- “The enclosed official report from the warden of the prison in
- Minsk is submitted to the Reich Minister and the Reich Commissar
- for Information.
-
- “(signed) The General Commissar in Minsk.” (_R-135_)
-
-A further complaint is contained in a secret letter addressed to General
-of Infantry, Thomas, Chief of the International Armament Department,
-dated 2 December 1941 (_3257-PS_). The writer of this letter
-apprehensively stated his reason for not forwarding the communication
-through official channels:
-
- “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 to make it known to other
- departments interested in it because I do not expect any results
- that way, but to 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:
-
- “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
- General Government—with a mass problem of policy concerning the
- population. Many cities had a percentage of Jews exceeding fifty
- 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 the entire trade and even a part
- of the manpower in small and medium industries besides the
- 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).”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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 the police executed a planned
- shooting of Jews. The 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 in 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 hated us
- undoubtedly.
-
- “(_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 executions.
-
- “(_f_) Brutalizing effect on the formations which carry out the
- execution—regular police.” (_3257-PS_)
-
-Lest it be thought that these conditions existed only in the East, the
-official Netherlands government report by the Commissioner for
-Repatriation as relates similar treatment of the Jews in the West
-(_1726-PS_). The German measures taken against the Dutch
-Jews—discriminatory decrees, anti-semitic demonstrations, burning of
-synagogues, purging of Jews from the economic life of their country,
-food restrictions, forced labor, concentration camp confinement,
-deportation, and death—all these measures follow the same pattern that
-was effected throughout Nazi-occupied Europe. The official Netherlands
-report states that full Jews, liable to deportation, numbered 140,000.
-The total number of actual Jewish deportees was 117,000, representing
-more than eighty-three per cent of all the Jews in the Netherlands. Of
-these, 115,000 were deported to Poland for slave labor, 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.
-(_1726-PS_)
-
-A Top Secret message from the commandant of the SIPO and SD for the
-Radom District, addressed to SS Hauptsturmfuehrer Thiel on the subject,
-“Clearance of Prisons,” reads as follows:
-
- “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 liquidated and their bodies disposed of
- as far as possible (burning, blowing up the building, etc.). 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
- [perhaps means ‘West-Bund,’ or ‘Western Ally’] or the Red Army,
- must be avoided under all circumstances, nor may they fall into
- their hands alive.” (_L-53_)
-
-(3) _Mass Disposal of Jews in Concentration Camps._ The concentration
-camps were utilized to dispose of literally millions of Jews, who died
-by mass shooting, gas, poison, starvation, and other means. The part
-which the concentration camps played in the annihilation of the Jewish
-people is indicated in an official Polish report on Auschwitz
-Concentration Camp (_L-161_). In Auschwitz during July 1944 Jews were
-killed at the rate of 12,000 daily:
-
- “* * * During July 1944, they were being liquidated at the rate
- of 12,000 Hungarian Jews daily, and as the crematory could not
- deal with such numbers, many bodies were thrown into large pits
- and covered with quick lime.” (_L-161_)
-
-The official Polish Government Commission Report on the Investigation of
-German crimes in Poland describes the concentration camp at Treblinka in
-these terms:
-
- “* * * 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 aiming 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, the erection of the first three chambers was
- finished in which these general massacres were to be performed
- by means of steam. Somewhat later the erection of the real death
- building was finished, which contains ten death chambers. It was
- opened for wholesale murders early in autumn 1942 * * *.”
- (_3311-PS_)
-
-The report of the Polish commission describes graphically the procedure
-for extermination within the camp:
-
- “* * * The average number of Jews dealt with at the camp in
- summer 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 on 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 eastern direction.
-
- “From reports received, it may be assumed that several hundred
- thousands of Jews have been exterminated in Treblinka.”
- (_3311-PS_)
-
-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, sets forth the number of Jews
-gassed in Birkenau in the two-year period between April 1942 and April
-1944. The figure printed in this report is not a typographical error.
-The number is 1,765,000. (_L-22_)
-
- 5. RESULTS OF THE EXTERMINATION PROGRAM
-
-The huge scale of the Jewish eliminations is also reflected in the
-bookkeeping and statistics of the Germans themselves. The 16 December
-1941 entry in the diary of Hans Frank contains these figures:
-
- “The Jews for us also represent extraordinarily malignant
- gluttons.
-
- “We have now approximately 2,500,000 of them in General
- Government—perhaps with the Jewish mixtures, and everything
- that goes with it, 3,500,000 Jews.” (_2233-D-PS_)
-
-On 25 January 1944, three years and one month later, Frank wrote in his
-diary these words:
-
- “At the present time we still have in the General Government
- perhaps 100,000 Jews.” (_2233-F-PS_)
-
-Thus, in this period of three 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 total number of Jews who died by Nazi hands can never be definitely
-ascertained. It is known, however, that 4 million Jews died in
-concentration camps, and that 2 million Jews were killed by the State
-Police in the East, making a total of 6 million murdered Jews. The
-source of these figures is Adolph Eichmann, Chief of the Jewish Section
-of the Gestapo. The figures are contained in an affidavit made by Dr.
-Wilhelm Hoettl, Deputy Group Leader of the Foreign Section of the
-Security Section, AMT VI, of the RSHA. Hoettl, in his affidavit, states
-as follows:
-
- “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.” (_2738-PS_)
-
-Hoettl describes the source of his information as follows:
-
- “According to my knowledge, Eichmann was at that time the leader
- of the Jewish Section of the Gestapo, and in addition to that he
- had been ordered by Himmler to get a 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 Rumania had
- withdrawn from the war in those days. Moreover, 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 now 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, would be interested, and that he would probably not
- return anyhow from his command in Rumania. 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.” (_2738-PS_)
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO THE PERSECUTION OF
- THE JEWS
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6 (b, c). │ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Sections IV (D) 3│ │
- │ (d); X (B). │ I │ 20, 55
- │ │ │
-  3737-PS │Hague Convention of 1907 respecting the │ │
- │ Laws and Customs of War on Land, │ │
- │ Annex, Article 46. │ VI │ 597
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document was referred to during the │ │
- │trial but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
-  *001-PS │Memorandum for the Fuehrer signed │ │
- │Rosenberg, 18 December 1941, concerning │ │
- │Jewish possessions in France. (USA 282) │ III │ 1
- │ │ │
-  *014-PS │Report to Fuehrer, 20 March 1941, │ │
- │concerning shipment of Jewish property. │ │
- │(USA 784) │ III │ 40
- │ │ │
-  *015-PS │Letter and report of Rosenberg to │ │
- │Hitler, 16 April 1943, concerning │ │
- │seizure of ownerless Jewish art │ │
- │possessions. (USA 387) │ III │ 41
- │ │ │
-  *025-PS │Conference report of 4 September 1942 │ │
- │concerning the importation of domestic │ │
- │workers from the East into the Reich. │ │
- │(USA 698) │ III │ 67
- │ │ │
-   041-PS │Memorandum, Rosenberg to Hitler, 3 │ │
- │October 1942, concerning seizure of │ │
- │Jewish property. │ III │ 80
- │ │ │
-   053-PS │Interoffice report from Hans Koch to │ │
- │Rosenberg, 5 October 1941, concerning │ │
- │political situation in Ukraine. │ III │ 83
- │ │ │
-  *069-PS │Letter from Bormann to Rosenberg, 17 │ │
- │January 1939, enclosing order of 28 │ │
- │December 1938, concerning decisions on │ │
- │Jewish question. (USA 589) │ III │ 116
- │ │ │
-   078-PS │Regulations issued by Heydrich, 28 June │ │
- │1941, for treatment of political │ │
- │prisoners of war. │ III │ 123
- │ │ │
-  *136-PS │Certified copy of Hitler Order, 29 │ │
- │January 1940, concerning establishment │ │
- │of “Hohe Schule”. (USA 367) │ III │ 184
- │ │ │
-  *141-PS │Goering Order, 5 November 1940, │ │
- │concerning seizure of Jewish art │ │
- │treasures. (USA 368) │ III │ 188
- │ │ │
-  *154-PS │Letter from Lammers to high State and │ │
- │Party authorities, 5 July 1942, │ │
- │confirming Rosenberg’s powers. (USA 370)│ III │ 193
- │ │ │
-   155-PS │“Einsatzstab”, administrative │ │
- │regulations, 30 September 1942. │ III │ 194
- │ │ │
-  *171-PS │Undated report on “Library for │ │
- │Exploration of the Jewish Question” by │ │
- │the Hohe Schule District Office. (USA │ │
- │383) │ III │ 200
- │ │ │
-   197-PS │Memorandum of a conference in HQ OKH │ │
- │Quartermaster General, 27 August 1941, │ │
- │concerning transfer of administration of│ │
- │Ukraine from Wehrmacht to civilian │ │
- │authorities; signed by Labs, Ministerial│ │
- │Director. │ III │ 210
- │ │ │
-  *212-PS │Memorandum from Rosenberg file │ │
- │concerning instructions for treatment of│ │
- │Jews. (USA 272) │ III │ 222
- │ │ │
-   285-PS │Henlein letter to Rosenberg, 31 October │ │
- │1938. │ III │ 238
- │ │ │
-   286-PS │Rosenberg letter to Henlein, 15 October │ │
- │1938. │ III │ 239
- │ │ │
-  *374-PS │TWX Series of Orders signed by Heydrich │ │
- │and Mueller, issued by Gestapo │ │
- │Headquarters Berlin, 9-11 November 1938,│ │
- │concerning treatment of Jews. (USA 729) │ III │ 277
- │ │ │
-   406-PS │Memorandum by Gauleiter Streicher, 14 │ │
- │April 1939, concerning certain acts │ │
- │against Jews. │ III │ 388
- │ │ │
-  *501-PS │Collection of four documents on │ │
- │execution by gas, June 1942, one signed │ │
- │by Dr. Becker, SS Untersturmfuehrerat │ │
- │Kiev, 16 May 1942. (USA 288) │ III │ 418
- │ │ │
-  *502-PS │Order, 17 July 1941, entitled │ │
- │“Regulations for the Commandos of the │ │
- │Chief of the SIPO and SD which are to be│ │
- │activated in Stalags”. (USA 486) │ III │ 422
- │ │ │
-   579-PS │Three letters, District Commissioner, │ │
- │Employment Director at Riga, and │ │
- │Economic Directorate in Latvia, 21 July │ │
- │1941, 10 February 1942 and 6 July 1942, │ │
- │concerning forced Jewish labor in Riga │ │
- │and Latvia. │ III │ 444
- │ │ │
-  *654-PS │Thierack’s notes, 18 September 1942, on │ │
- │discussion with Himmler concerning │ │
- │delivery of Jews to Himmler for │ │
- │extermination through work. (USA 218) │ III │ 467
- │ │ │
-   682-PS │Thierack’s notes on discussion with │ │
- │Goebbels, 14 September 1942, concerning │ │
- │groups to be exterminated. │ III │ 496
- │ │ │
-  *701-PS │Letter from Minister of Justice to │ │
- │Prosecutors, 1 April 1943, concerning │ │
- │Poles and Jews who are released from │ │
- │Penal institutions of Department of │ │
- │Justice. (USA 497) │ III │ 510
- │ │ │
-   765-PS │Teletype message from Heydrich to all SD│ │
- │and Police, 10 November 1938, concerning│ │
- │“Measures against Jews tonight”. │ III │ 545
- │ │ │
-   841-PS │Secret Order of Goering, 28 December │ │
- │1938, concerning Jewish problem. │ III │ 606
- │ │ │
-   847-PS │Hitler Decree, 5 July 1942, stating │ │
- │Rosenberg’s powers. │ III │ 610
- │ │ │
-   878-PS │Draft of Order signed by Keitel, 12 │ │
- │September 1941, providing that Jews may │ │
- │be put in labor-columns. │ III │ 636
- │ │ │
-  *998-PS │“German Crimes Against Czechoslovakia”. │ │
- │Excerpts from Czechoslovak Official │ │
- │Report for the prosecution and trial of │ │
- │the German Major War Criminals by the │ │
- │International Military Tribunal │ │
- │established according to Agreement of │ │
- │four Great Powers of 8 August 1945. (USA│ │
- │91) │ III │ 656
- │ │ │
-  1012-PS │Teletype from OKH to Military Commander │ │
- │of France, 3 February 1942, concerning │ │
- │consultation of Hitler and Keitel about │ │
- │shooting of Jews and Communists. │ III │ 664
- │ │ │
-  1015-B-PS │Report on activities of Special Staff │ │
- │for Pictorial Art, October 1940 to July │ │
- │1944. │ III │ 666
- │ │ │
- *1024-PS │Memorandum, 29 April 1941, concerning │ │
- │organization for handling problems in │ │
- │the Eastern Territories. (USA 278) │ III │ 685
- │ │ │
- *1028-PS │Memorandum from Rosenberg file, 7 May │ │
- │1941, concerning instructions for a │ │
- │Reichskommissar in the Ukraine. (USA │ │
- │273) │ III │ 690
- │ │ │
- *1061-PS │Official report of Stroop, SS and Police│ │
- │Leader of Warsaw, on destruction of │ │
- │Warsaw Ghetto, 1943. (USA 275) │ III │ 718
- │ │ │
- *1138-PS │Enclosure in letter from Reich │ │
- │Commissioner for Baltic States to │ │
- │Rosenberg, 13 August 1941, concerning │ │
- │provisional directives on treatment of │ │
- │Jews in area of Reichskommissariat │ │
- │Ostland. (USA 284) │ III │ 800
- │ │ │
- *1166-PS │Interoffice memorandum of WVHA, 15 │ │
- │August 1944, concerning number of │ │
- │prisoners and survey of prisoners’ │ │
- │clothing. (USA 458) │ III │ 824
- │ │ │
-  1189-PS │Special Order No. 44, 4 November 1941, │ │
- │concerning feeding of civilian │ │
- │population in Occupied Eastern │ │
- │Territories. │ III │ 833
- │ │ │
- *1301-PS │File relating to financing of armament │ │
- │including minutes of conference with │ │
- │Goering at the Air Ministry, 14 October │ │
- │1938, concerning acceleration of │ │
- │rearmament. (USA 123) │ III │ 868
- │ │ │
- *1347-PS │Extract of decree, 18 September 1942, │ │
- │Ministry of Agriculture, concerning food│ │
- │supply for Jews. (USA 285) │ III │ 914
- │ │ │
-  1384-PS │Stenographic report of Hitler discussion│ │
- │with Keitel and Zeitzler, 8 June 1943. │ III │ 959
- │ │ │
-  1412-PS │Decree relating to payment of fine by │ │
- │Jews of German nationality, 12 November │ │
- │1938. 1938 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p.│ │
- │1579. │ IV │ 6
- │ │ │
-  1415-PS │Police regulation concerning appearahce │ │
- │of Jews in public, 28 November 1938. │ │
- │1938 Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 1676.│ IV │ 6
- │ │ │
- *1472-PS │Copy of telegram from Mueller to │ │
- │Himmler, 16 December 1942, concerning │ │
- │recruiting Jewish labor. (USA 279) │ IV │ 49
- │ │ │
- *1517-PS │Memorandum from Rosenberg concerning │ │
- │discussion with the Fuehrer, 14 December│ │
- │1941. (USA 824) │ IV │ 55
- │ │ │
- *1689-PS │“Czechoslovakia Fights Back”, a document│ │
- │of the Czechoslovak Ministry of Foreign │ │
- │Affairs, 1943. (USA 286) │ IV │ 198
- │ │ │
- *1708-PS │The Program of the NSDAP. National │ │
- │Socialistic Yearbook, 1941, p. 153. (USA│ │
- │255; USA 324) │ IV │ 208
- │ │ │
- *1724-PS │Announcement in Press Conference, 4 │ │
- │August 1938 of breaking up of synagogue.│ │
- │(USA 266) │ IV │ 224
- │ │ │
- *1726-PS │Statement of Netherlands Government in │ │
- │view of Prosecution and punishment of │ │
- │the German Nazi War Criminals. (USA 195)│ IV │ 227
- │ │ │
- *1778-PS │Book “The Poisonous Mushroom”, published│ │
- │in Nurnberg 1938, concerning Jews. (USA │ │
- │257) │ IV │ 358
- │ │ │
- *1816-PS │Stenographic report of the meeting on │ │
- │The Jewish Question, under the │ │
- │Chairmanship of Fieldmarshal Goering, 12│ │
- │November 1938. (USA 261) │ IV │ 425
- │ │ │
- *1919-PS │Himmler’s speech to SS Gruppenfuehrers, │ │
- │4 October 1943. (USA 170) │ IV │ 558
- │ │ │
- *1948-PS │Letter from Governor in Vienna, 7 │ │
- │November 1940, evidencing RSHA │ │
- │instructions to recruit Jews from forced│ │
- │labor. (USA 680) │ IV │ 586
- │ │ │
-  2000-PS │Law for protection of German blood and │ │
- │German honor, 15 September 1935. 1935 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, No. 100, p. │ │
- │1146. │ IV │ 636
- │ │ │
- *2124-PS │Decree introducing the Nurnberg Racial │ │
- │Laws into Austria, 20 May 1938. 1938 │ │
- │Reichsgesetzblatt, Part I, p. 594. (GB │ │
- │259) │ IV │ 755
- │ │ │
-  2153-PS │Defeat the Enemy of the World, published│ │
- │in National Socialist Party │ │
- │Correspondence No. 358, 30 March 1933. │ │
- │(GB 166) │ IV │ 760
- │ │ │
- *2154-PS │Streicher decrees, published in National│ │
- │Socialist Party Correspondence, No. 359,│ │
- │31 March 1933. (GB 167) │ IV │ 760
- │ │ │
- *2156-PS │Announcement of Central Committee for │ │
- │defense against Jewish horror and │ │
- │boycott agitation, 29 March 1933, │ │
- │published in National Socialist Party │ │
- │Correspondence No. 357. (USA 263) │ IV │ 761
- │ │ │
- *2233-C-PS │Frank Diary. Tagebuch. 1940. Part IV. │ │
- │October-December. (USA 271) │ IV │ 890
- │ │ │
- *2233-D-PS │Frank Diary. Regierungsitzungen. 1941. │ │
- │October-December. Entry of 16 December │ │
- │1941 at pp. 76-77. (USA 281) │ IV │ 891
- │ │ │
- *2233-E-PS │Frank Diary. │ │
- │Regierungs-Hauptabteilungsleiter-Sitzung│ │
- │en. 1942. Entry of 24 August 1942. (USA │ │
- │283) │ IV │ 893
- │ │ │
- *2233-F-PS │Frank Diary. Tagebuch. 1 January 1944-28│ │
- │February 1944. Entry of 25 January 1944 │ │
- │at p. 5. (USA 295) │ IV │ 902
- │ │ │
-  2237-PS │Letter from Reich Commissar for Reunion │ │
- │of Austria with the German Reich to │ │
- │Goering, 18 November 1938, concerning │ │
- │actions against the Jews in November │ │
- │1938. │ IV │ 918
- │ │ │
- *2409-PS │Extracts from The Imperial House to the │ │
- │Reich Chancellery by Dr. Joseph │ │
- │Goebbels. (USA 262) │ V │ 83
- │ │ │
-  2583-PS │Quotation from speech made by Streicher,│ │
- │31 October 1939. │ V │ 311
- │ │ │
-  2602-PS │Telegram, Wilson to Secretary of State, │ │
- │Washington, 10 November 1938. │ V │ 311
- │ │ │
-  2603-PS │Letter from Kemp, U. S. Consul General │ │
- │in Bremen, to Secretary of State, 10 │ │
- │November 1938, concerning Anti-Jewish │ │
- │demonstrations in Bremen. │ V │ 312
- │ │ │
-  2604-PS │Report of American Consul General to │ │
- │Wilson, U. S. Ambassador in Berlin, 12 │ │
- │November 1938, concerning Anti-semitic │ │
- │persecution in Stuttgart Consular │ │
- │District. │ V │ 312
- │ │ │
- *2605-PS │Affidavit of Dr. Rudolf Kastner, former │ │
- │President of the Hungarian Zionist │ │
- │Organization, 13 September 1945. (USA │ │
- │242) │ V │ 313
- │ │ │
-  2613-PS │Extracts from “The Black Book of │ │
- │Poland”. │ V │ 332
- │ │ │
-  2617-A-PS │Reports of Department Interior │ │
- │Administration from the Office of Chief │ │
- │of District Warsaw, published by The │ │
- │General Government for Poland, 1940, p. │ │
- │59. │ V │ 339
- │ │ │
- *2662-PS │Extract from Mein Kampf, 39th edition, │ │
- │1933, pp. 724-725. (USA 256) │ V │ 366
- │ │ │
- *2663-PS │Hitler’s speech to the Reichstag, 30 │ │
- │January 1939, quoted from Voelkischer │ │
- │Beobachter, Munich edition, 1 February │ │
- │1939. (USA 268) │ V │ 367
- │ │ │
- *2665-PS │The Jewish Question Past and Present, │ │
- │from World Battle. (USA 270) │ V │ 367
- │ │ │
- *2668-PS │“And Don’t Forget the Jews”, from the │ │
- │Black Corps, 8 August 1940, No. 32, p. │ │
- │2. (USA 269) │ V │ 367
- │ │ │
-  2671-PS │Decree regarding the Designation of │ │
- │Business Enterprises in the Government │ │
- │General, from Verordnungsblatt of │ │
- │Governor-General for Occupied Polish │ │
- │Territory, No. 8, p. 61, 30 November │ │
- │1939. │ V │ 367
- │ │ │
-  2672-PS │Decree concerning designation of Jews │ │
- │and Jewesses in the Government General, │ │
- │from Verordnungsblatt of the │ │
- │Governor-General for Occupied Polish │ │
- │Territory, 1939, p. 61. │ V │ 368
- │ │ │
-  2673-PS │Extract from “The Archive”, No. 90, 30 │ │
- │October 1941, p. 495. │ V │ 369
- │ │ │
-  2682-PS │Excerpts from Voelkischer Beobachter │ │
- │concerning restriction against Jews, 5 │ │
- │December 1938, No. 339, p. 5. │ V │ 369
- │ │ │
-  2683-PS │Universities barred for Jews, published │ │
- │in Voelkischer Beobachter, 16 November │ │
- │1938. │ V │ 371
- │ │ │
- *2697-PS │Article: “The Chosen People of the │ │
- │Criminals” from Der Stuermer, No. 2, │ │
- │January 1935. (USA 259) │ V │ 372
- │ │ │
- *2698-PS │Article: “Two little Talmud Jews”, from │ │
- │Der Stuermer, No. 50, December 1938. │ │
- │(USA 260) │ V │ 372
- │ │ │
- *2699-PS │Article on Ritual Murder, from Der │ │
- │Stuermer, No. 14, April 1937. (USA 258) │ V │ 372
- │ │ │
-  2700-PS │Article: “The Ritual Murder”, from Der │ │
- │Stuermer, No. 28, July 1938. │ V │ 373
- │ │ │
-  2704-PS │Decree concerning Prohibition of Jewish │ │
- │Religious Slaughter, from │ │
- │Verordnungsblatt of the Governor-General│ │
- │for Occupied Polish Territory, 1939, p. │ │
- │7. │ V │ 373
- │ │ │
- *2709-PS │Report by Ralph C. Busser, American │ │
- │Consul-General in Leipzig, 5 April 1933,│ │
- │concerning Anti-Jewish movement in │ │
- │Central Germany. (USA 265) │ V │ 375
- │ │ │
-  2710-PS │Adolf Hitler Speaks, quoted from │ │
- │Voelkischer Beobachter, 26 February │ │
- │1938, No. 57, p. 4. │ V │ 376
- │ │ │
- *2711-PS │Article: “Symbolic Action”, published in│ │
- │Fraenkische Tageszeitung-Nurnberg, 11 │ │
- │August 1938. (USA 267) │ V │ 376
- │ │ │
-  2712-PS │Anti-Jewish demonstrations throughout │ │
- │the Reich, from Voelkischer Beobachter, │ │
- │11 November 1938, No. 315, p. 2. │ V │ 376
- │ │ │
-  2715-A-PS │Anti-semitic demonstrations in the │ │
- │Entire Reich, published in Voelkischer │ │
- │Beobachter, No. 315, 11 November 1938, │ │
- │p. 2. │ V │ 377
- │ │ │
-  2736-PS │Time without Precedent, by Dr. Joseph │ │
- │Goebbels, 4th edition, 1942, p. 531. │ V │ 380
- │ │ │
-  2737-PS │The Party Program, Nature, Fundamentals │ │
- │and Goals of the NSDAP, by Alfred │ │
- │Rosenberg, 25th Printing, 1943, p. 27. │ V │ 380
- │ │ │
- *2738-PS │Affidavit of Wilhelm Hoettl, 26 November│ │
- │1945. (USA 296) │ V │ 380
- │ │ │
-**3047-PS │File notes on conference in Fuehrer’s │ │
- │train on 12 September 1939; report on │ │
- │execution of Jews in Borrisow; and │ │
- │entries from diary of Admiral Canaris. │ │
- │(USA 80) (Referred to but not offered in│ │
- │evidence.) │ V │ 766
- │ │ │
- *3048-PS │Speech by von Schirach before European │ │
- │Youth Congress in Vienna, published in │ │
- │Voelkischer Beobachter, 15 September │ │
- │1942. (USA 274) │ V │ 776
- │ │ │
- *3051-PS │Three teletype orders from Heydrich to │ │
- │all stations of State Police, 10 │ │
- │November 1938, on measures against Jews,│ │
- │and one order from Heydrich on │ │
- │termination of protest actions. (USA │ │
- │240) │ V │ 797
- │ │ │
- *3058-PS │Letter from Heydrich to Goering, 11 │ │
- │November 1938, reporting action against │ │
- │the Jews. (USA 508) │ V │ 854
- │ │ │
- *3063-PS │Letters of transmission enclosing report│ │
- │about events and judicial proceedings in│ │
- │connection with anti-semitic │ │
- │demonstrations of 9 November 1938. (USA │ │
- │332) │ V │ 868
- │ │ │
-  3253-PS │Affidavit, 26 November 1945, of Dr. │ │
- │Benno F. T. Martin. │ V │ 959
- │ │ │
- *3257-PS │Letter from Armament Inspector in the │ │
- │Ukraine to General Thomas, Chief of the │ │
- │Industrial Armament Department, 2 │ │
- │December 1941, enclosing report by Prof.│ │
- │Seraphim on Jewish Problem in Ukraine. │ │
- │(USA 290) │ V │ 994
- │ │ │
- *3311-PS │Charge No. 6 against Hans Frank, │ │
- │submitted by Polish Government to │ │
- │International Military Tribunal. (USA │ │
- │293) │ V │ 1104
- │ │ │
- *3319-PS │Foreign Office Correspondence and │ │
- │reports on anti-Jewish action in foreign│ │
- │countries. (GB 287) │ VI │ 4
- │ │ │
- *3358-PS │German Foreign Office circular, 31 │ │
- │January 1939, “The Jewish Question as a │ │
- │factor in German Foreign Policy in the │ │
- │year 1938”. (GB 158) │ VI │ 87
- │ │ │
- *3428-PS │Letter from Kube, 31 July 1942, │ │
- │concerning combatting of Partisans and │ │
- │action against Jews in White Ruthenia. │ │
- │(USA 827) │ VI │ 131
- │ │ │
- *3663-PS │Letter, 31 October 1941, and reply 15 │ │
- │November 1941, concerning execution of │ │
- │Jews. (USA 825) │ VI │ 401
- │ │ │
- *3666-PS │Letter from Braeutiger to Reich │ │
- │Commissioner for East, 18 December 1941,│ │
- │concerning Jewish question. (USA 826) │ VI │ 402
- │ │ │
-  3688-PS │Notice from the Foreign Office, 24 │ │
- │September 1942, concerning evacuation of│ │
- │Jews from Occupied Territories. │ VI │ 403
- │ │ │
- *3762-PS │Affidavit of SS Colonel Kurt Becher, 8 │ │
- │March 1946, concerning the │ │
- │responsibility of Kaltenbrunner for │ │
- │concentration camp executions. (USA 798)│ VI │ 645
- │ │ │
- *3803-PS │Covering letter enclosing a letter from │ │
- │Kaltenbrunner dated 30 June 1944, │ │
- │concerning forced labor of Jews in │ │
- │Vienna. (USA 802) │ VI │ 737
- │ │ │
- *3840-PS │Statement of Karl Kaleske, 24 February │ │
- │1946, concerning the elimination of the │ │
- │Warsaw Ghetto. (USA 803) │ VI │ 775
- │ │ │
- *3841-PS │Statement of SS and Polizeifuehrer │ │
- │Juergen Stroop, 24 February 1946, │ │
- │concerning elimination of the Warsaw │ │
- │Ghetto. (USA 804) │ VI │ 776
- │ │ │
- *3846-PS │Interrogation of Johann Kanduth, 30 │ │
- │November 1945, concerning crematorium at│ │
- │Mauthausen and the activities of │ │
- │Kaltenbrunner there. (USA 796) │ VI │ 783
- │ │ │
- *3868-PS │Affidavit of Rudolf Franz Ferdinand │ │
- │Hoess, 5 April 1946, concerning │ │
- │execution of 3,000,000 people at │ │
- │Auschwitz Extermination Center. (USA │ │
- │819) │ VI │ 787
- │ │ │
- *3870-PS │Affidavit of Hans Marsalek, 8 April │ │
- │1946, concerning Mauthausen │ │
- │Concentration Camp and dying statement │ │
- │of Franz Ziereis, the Commandant. (USA │ │
- │797) │ VI │ 790
- │ │ │
-  D-229 │Extract from pamphlet “Judges Letters” │ │
- │concerning judgment of Lower Court, 24 │ │
- │April 1942, on concealment of Jewish │ │
- │identification. │ VI │ 1091
- │ │ │
-  D-251 │Lieberman memorandum, 27 September 1945,│ │
- │describing method of transport, gassing,│ │
- │and cremation. │ VI │ 1100
- │ │ │
-  D-734 │Note of conversation between Reich │ │
- │Foreign Minister and Duce in presence of│ │
- │von Mackenson, Alfieri and Bastianini, │ │
- │25 February 1943. │ VII │ 188
- │ │ │
- *D-736 │Notes on discussion between Fuehrer and │ │
- │Horthy on 17 April 1943. (GB 283) │ VII │ 190
- │ │ │
-  EC-265 │German Foreign Office telegram, 1 │ │
- │October 1940, concerning the Jews in │ │
- │Occupied French Territory. │ VII │ 375
- │ │ │
- *L-18 │Official report, Katzmann to General of │ │
- │Police Krueger, 30 June 1943, concerning│ │
- │“Solution of Jewish Question in │ │
- │Galicia”. (USA 277) │ VII │ 755
- │ │ │
- *L-22 │Public reports of War Refugee Board, │ │
- │Washington, on German Extermination │ │
- │Camps Auschwitz and Birkenau, April │ │
- │1944. (USA 294) │ VII │ 771
- │ │ │
- *L-53 │Order from Commandant of the SIPO and SD│ │
- │for the Radom District to Branch Office │ │
- │in Tomaschow, 21 July 1944, on clearance│ │
- │of prisons. (USA 291) │ VII │ 814
- │ │ │
- *L-161 │British War Office Report “Poland │ │
- │(Auschwitz) Concentration Camp”, 31 May │ │
- │1945. (USA 292) │ VII │ 908
- │ │ │
- *L-165 │Polish Ministry of Information, Press │ │
- │Bulletin, published in Polish │ │
- │Fortnightly Review, 15 December 1942, │ │
- │concerning Jewish Food Situation. (USA │ │
- │287) │ VII │ 908
- │ │ │
- *L-180 │Report by SS Brigade Commander │ │
- │Stahlecker to Himmler, “Action Group A”,│ │
- │15 October 1941. (USA 276) │ VII │ 978
- │ │ │
- *R-135 │Letter to Rosenberg enclosing secret │ │
- │reports from Kube on German atrocities │ │
- │in the East, 18 June 1943, found in │ │
- │Himmler’s personal files. (USA 289) │ VIII │ 205
- │ │ │
-Statement XI │Farewell Message of Robert Ley Found in │ │
- │Nurnberg prison, 25 October 1945, after │ │
- │discovery of his suicide. │ VIII │ 740
- │ │ │
-Statement XII │Political Testament of Robert Ley │ │
- │written in Nurnberg Prison, October │ │
- │1945. │ VIII │ 742
- │ │ │
-Statement XIII │Outline of Defense of Dr. Robert Ley, │ │
- │written in Nurnberg Prison, 24 October │ │
- │1945. │ VIII │ 749
- │ │ │
-Statement XIV │Hungarian Relations with Germany Before │ │
- │and During the War by Nicholas Horthy, │ │
- │Jr., Nurnberg, 22 February 1946. │ VIII │ 756
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XIII
- GERMANIZATION AND SPOLIATION
-
-
-The Nazi conspirators had made plans for the Germanization and
-spoliation of their conquered territories. Plans to Germanize meant
-plans to assimilate conquered territories politically, culturally,
-socially, and economically into the German Reich. Germanization 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. Plans for spoliation meant plans to
-plunder public and private property and, in general, to exploit the
-people and natural resources of occupied countries.
-
- 1. POLAND
-
-Poland was, in a sense, the testing ground for the conspirators’
-theories of “lebensraum.” 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, Goering, Frick, and
-Hess, is set forth in 1939 _Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I, p. 2042. These
-areas of Poland are frequently referred to in correspondence between the
-conspirators as the “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, Hans Frank was named Governor-General of the
-newly-created Government-General, and Seyss-Inquart was named Deputy
-Governor-General. This order is set forth in 1939 _Reichsgesetzblatt_,
-Part I, p. 2077.
-
-The plans with respect to Poland, which will appear gradually from the
-individual documents hereafter discussed, followed a broad pattern, as
-follows:
-
-_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 were to 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
-noncompliant elements. The Jews 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 was to serve 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.
-
-(_d_) They planned to mold 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 cooperate 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_) 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.
-
-These plans are developed in the specific documents which follow.
-
-A. _The Program in the Incorporated Area._
-
-(1) _Economic Spoliation._ A report of an interview with Frank on 3
-October 1939, which 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, states:
-
- “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 called
- Governor-General) had with Minister Frank on October 3, 1939 in
- Posen, Frank explained the directive, and the economic and
- political responsibilities which had been conferred upon him by
- the Fuehrer and according to which he intended to administer
- Poland. According to these directives, Poland can only be
- administered by utilizing the country through means of ruthless
- exploitation, deportation of all supplies, raw materials,
- machines, factory installations, etc., which are important for
- the German war economy, availability of all workers for work
- within Germany, reduction of the entire Polish economy to
- absolute minimum necessary for bare existence of the population,
- closing of all educational institutions, especially technical
- schools and colleges in order to prevent the growth of the new
- Polish intelligentsia. ‘Poland shall be treated as a colony; the
- Poles shall be the slaves of the Greater German World Empire’. *
- * *
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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.” (_EC-344-16 & 17_)
-
-The conspirators planned a difference in treatment for the incorporated
-area of Poland, and for the Government-General. A directive issued and
-signed by Goering on 19 October 1939, which was found among captured
-files of the OKW, stated, _inter alia_:
-
- “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 is involved which will
- be incorporated politically into the German Reich 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 etc., 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 these enterprises by
- giving them German orders to be executed at their present
- location.” (_EC-410_)
-
-Once the Government-General had been stripped of its industrial
-potential, the conspirators planned to leave the country desolate. Not
-even the war damage was to be repaired. This is the clear import of an
-order dated 20 November 1939, issued by Hess in his capacity as Deputy
-Fuehrer, and found in captured OKW files. Hess stated:
-
- “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, etc., intend to reconstruct
- certain industrial enterprises in Warsaw. However, in accordance
- with a decision by Minister Dr. Frank, as approved by the
- Fuehrer, Warsaw shall not be rebuilt nor is it the intention of
- the Fuehrer to rebuild or reconstruct any industry in the
- Government-General.” (_EC-411_)
-
-(2) _Deportation and Resettlement._ The Academy of German Law in January
-1940 prepared a secret report on 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. (The
-date of the report does not appear in the English translation, but it is
-clearly set forth on the cover page of the original document, as January
-1940.) It should be recalled that the decree of 11 July 1934
-(_Reichsgesetzblatt_, Part I, p. 605, 11 July 1934) 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.”
-
-It should also be stated that Frank was the president of the Academy of
-German Law during the period when this secret report was made
-(_2749-PS_). The report stated:
-
- “For 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. * * * 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-population.
-
- “This figure of 1.6 million will barely suffice to transfer from
- the Reich:
-
- “The Jews from the liberated East (over 600,000), parts of the
- remaining Jews, preferably the younger age groups from Germany
- proper, Austria, Sudetengau and the Protectorate (altogether
- over 1 million). * * *” (_661-PS_)
-
-The report then goes on to say that the following groups of people
-should be deported:
-
- “The Polish intelligentsia who have been politically active in
- the past, and potential political leaders; the leading economic
- personalities, comprising owners of large estates,
- industrialists and businessmen, etc.; 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 * * *.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “In order to relieve the living space of the Poles in the
- Government-General as well as in the liberated East, one should
- remove cheap labor temporarily 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.) * * *” (_661-PS_)
-
-Finally, the report stated:
-
- “Strictest care is to be taken that secret circulars, 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.” (_661-PS_)
-
-Frank made the following entry in his diary:
-
- “The Reichsfuehrer SS (Himmler) wishes that all Jews be
- evacuated from the newly gained Reich territories. Up to
- February approximately 1,000,000 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 4,000,000 people) should be transferred into the
- Reich and individually housed and thereby be uprooted as a
- people.” (_2233-G-PS_)
-
-The top secret minutes of a meeting held on 12 February 1940 on
-“questions concerning the East,” at which Goering was chairman and
-Himmler and Frank were present, stated, among other things:
-
- “By way of introduction, the General Field Marshal (_Goering_)
- 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. * * *”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “_Agriculture_:
-
- “The task consists of obtaining the greatest possible
- agriculture production from the new Eastern Gaus disregarding
- questions of ownership. * * *”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “_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 Gaus.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “The following reported on the situation in the Eastern
- territories: * * *
-
- “2. Reichsstatthalter Gauleiter Forster: 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). 87,000 persons have been evacuated, 40,000 of these from
- Gotenhafen. 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 further
- persons can be counted on for the current year. * * *”
- (_EC-305_)
-
-Comparable reports were made by other Gauleiters at this meeting. These
-figures, it may be noted, were only as of February 1940.
-
-These forcible deportations did not involve merely ordering the victims
-to leave their homes, and to take up new residences elsewhere. These
-deportations were accomplished, according to plan, in a brutal and
-inhuman manner. This is shown in a speech delivered by Himmler to
-officers of the SS on a day commemorating the presentation of the Nazi
-flag. The exact date of the speech does not appear in the document, but
-its contents plainly show that it was delivered sometime after Poland
-had been overrun. In this speech Himmler said:
-
- “Very frequently the member of the Waffen-SS thinks about the
- deportation of this 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, hundred thousands; where we had to have the toughness
- * * * you should hear this but also forget it again—to shoot
- thousands of leading Poles.” (_1918-PS_)
-
-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 degradation and brutality. For the Jews who
-were forcibly deported to the Government-General there was no hope.
-Frank, by his own admissions, had dedicated himself to their complete
-annihilation. In his diary Frank wrote:
-
- “We must annihilate the Jews, wherever we find them, and
- wherever it is possible.” (_2233-D-PS_)
-
-(3) _Forcible Return of Racial Germans to the Reich._ The conspirators
-had planned the forcible Germanization of persons in the incorporated
-area who were deemed to possess German blood. Such persons were given
-the choice of the concentration camp, or submission to Germanization.
-Himmler was the chief executioner of this program. In a secret decree
-signed by Hitler, Goering, and Keitel, dated 7 October 1939, Himmler was
-entrusted with the task of executing the conspirators’ Germanization
-program. The decree provided, among other things:
-
- “The Reichsfuehrer SS (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 re-settling, and in
- particular by settling of the returning German citizens and
- racial Germans from abroad.
-
- “The Reichsfuehrer SS is authorized to take all necessary
- general and administrative measures for the execution of this
- obligation.” (_686-PS_)
-
-Himmler’s conception of his tasks under this decree were plainly stated
-in the foreword which he wrote for the “_Deutsche Arbeit_” issue of
-June/July 1942. He wrote:
-
- “It is not our task to Germanize the East 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.” (_2915-PS_)
-
-The 1940 Edition of “_Der Menscheneinsatz_,” a confidential publication
-issued by Himmler’s Office for the Consolidation of German Nationhood,
-contained the following statements:
-
- “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 Reichsfuehrer SS, Reich Commissioner
- for the strengthening of the national character of the German
- people.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “* * * there are the following two primary reasons, which make
- the regaining of 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.” (_2916-PS_)
-
-Further light upon the goals which the conspirators had set for their
-Germanization program in conquered Eastern areas, is contained in a
-speech delivered by Himmler on 14 October 1943. This speech was
-published by the National Socialist Leadership staff of the OKW. The
-following are excerpts from this speech:
-
- “I consider that in dealing with members of a foreign country,
- especially some Slav nationality, we must not start from German
- points of view, and 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 any good blood that we can use for ourselves and
- give it a place in our people, or * * * we destroy that blood.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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 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 twenty
- years to rebuild and spread out our villages and towns, and that
- we shall push the borders of our German race 500 kilometers
- further out to the East.” (_L-70_)
-
-(4) _The Racial Register._ In furtherance of these plans, the
-conspirators established 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. The following are pertinent extracts:
-
- “The list of ‘ethnic Germans’ will be divided into four parts
- (limited to interoffice use).
-
- “1. Ethnic Germans who fought actively in the ethnic struggle.
- Besides the membership of a German organization, every other
- activity in favor of the German against a foreign nationality
- will be considered an active manifestation.
-
- “2. Ethnic Germans, who did not actively intervene in favor of
- the German nationality, but who 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 prerequisites 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 influence of the
- German spouse has prevailed. Persons of Masurian, Slonzak, or
- upper Silesian descent who are to be recognized as ethnic
- 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 ethnic Germans are Poles,
- or foreign nationals. Their treatment is regulated by BII.
-
- “Members of groups 1 and 2 are ethnic Germans who will be used
- for the reconstruction in the East. The differentiation between
- the groups 1 and 2 is important for the National Socialist
- Party; primarily only members of group 1 should be accepted in
- the Party according to the instructions of the deputy of the
- Fuehrer.
-
- “Members of groups 3 and 4 have to be educated as full Germans,
- that is, 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.” (_2916-PS_)
-
-The basic idea of creating a racial register for persons of German
-extraction was later incorporated into a decree of 3 March 1941, signed
-by Himmler, Frick, and Hess. This decree is set forth in the 1941
-_Reichsgesetzblatt_ Part 1, page 118.
-
-The entire apparatus of the SS was thrown behind the vigorous execution
-of these decrees. Proof of this fact is contained in the following
-extracts from directives issued by Himmler as the Reich Commissioner for
-the Consolidation of German Nationhood:
-
- “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 State Police (Superior)
- Office. Subsequently, you will report to me (Himmler).
-
- “II. The Local State Police (Superior) Office, will charge the
- persons whose names are turned over to them to prove within
- eight 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 into a concentration
- camp.” (_R-112_)
-
-The measures taken against persons in the fourth category, “Polonized
-Germans,” 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. In the words of Himmler’s decree of 16
-February 1942:
-
- “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 re-settled in Old Reich territory.
-
- “1. The Superior SS and Police Leaders are charged with
- evacuating and resettling them 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 Fuehrer
- (Inspectors of Security Police and Security Service) to the
- competent State Police (Superior) Office. The latter will
- arrange for their transfer into 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 Fuehrer (Inspectors of
- Security Police and Security Service) to the competent State
- Police (Superior) Office for transfer into 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 imprisoning her in a
- concentration camp. In such cases the children are to be
- separated from their parents and to be 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 (e.g., who participated in
- persecutions of Germans, or boycotts of Germans, etc.).”
- (_R-112_)
-
-(5) _Nazi Colonization._ 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 Obergruppenfuehrer and
-General of the Police, Wilhelm Koppe, who was one of Himmler’s trusted
-agents. The following is an excerpt from this article:
-
- “The victory of the 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 Fuehrer’s
- will—henceforth shall for all time remain an essential
- constituent part of the Greater German Reich. It is therefore of
- decisive importance to penetrate the regained German region with
- German farmers, laborers, civil servants, merchants, and
- artisans so that a living and deep-rooted bastion of German
- people can be formed as a protective wall against foreign
- infiltration, and possibly as a starting point for the racial
- penetration of the territories further East.” (_2915-PS_)
-
-B. _The Program in the Government-General_
-
-(1) _Germanization._ In the Government-General there were relatively few
-persons, at the outset, who qualified as Germans by 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 it is not known that any
-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 was an objective announced by Frank (_EC-344-16
-& 17_), 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, secret notes bearing the date line, “Department of
-the Interior, Krakow, 30th March, 1942,” reveal some of Himmler’s ideas
-on the “planned Germanization” of the Government-General. The following
-extracts are pertinent:
-
- “The Reichsfuehrer SS (Himmler) developed further trains of
- ideas to the effect that in the first five-year plan for
- re-settlement after the war the new German Eastern territories
- should first be filled; afterwards it is intended to provide at
- this time 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 Brig be
- achieved so that the parts of Poland are encircled with alien
- populations. Hitherto, it has been always proved that this kind
- of encirclement leads most quickly to the desired
- nationalization.” (_910-PS_)
-
-An entry in Frank’s Diary (1941, volume II, page 317) bears on the same
-point:
-
- “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.” (_2233-H-PS_)
-
-(2) _Confiscation of Property._ The conspirators had made plans to
-confiscate the property of Poles, Jews, and dissident elements. These
-plans were designed to accomplish a number of objectives. Insofar as the
-Jews were concerned, they were part of the conspirators’ over-all
-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 dispossessed Polish farmers available for slave labor in Germany,
-and operated to further the conspirators’ objective of preventing the
-growth of another generation of Poles.
-
-Proof of these matters appears in a number of reports by Kusche, who
-appears to have been one of Himmler’s chief deputies in Poland. In one
-of these reports Kusche pointed out that it was possible, without
-difficulty, to confiscate small farms and that
-
- “The former owners of Polish farms together with their families
- will be transferred to the old Reich by the employment agencies
- for employment as farm workers.” (_1352-PS_)
-
-In another secret report by Kusche dated 22 May 1940, and entitled
-“Details of the Confiscation in the Bielitz Country”, the following
-appears:
-
- “Some days ago the commandant of the concentration camp being
- built at Auschwitz spoke at Staff Leader Muller’s 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 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. Further than
- this, the camp commandant requests that further plots of
- farmland be placed at his disposal, so that he can keep the
- prisoners busy. This too can be done without further delay since
- enough land can be made available for the purpose. The owners of
- the plots are all Poles.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “I had the following discussion with the head of the labor
- office in Bielitz:
-
- “The lack of agricultural laborers still exists in the old
- Reich. The transfer of the previous owners of the confiscated
- enterprises, together with their entire families, to the Reich
- is possible without any further consideration. 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)”.
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “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, 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.”
- (_1352-PS_)
-
-On 17 September 1940, Goering issued a decree which was designed to
-regularize the program of confiscation (_Reichsgesetzblatt_, 1940, Part
-I, page 1270). 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, sub-section 2, if the property were required “for the public
-welfare, particularly in the interests of Reich defense or the
-strengthening of Germanism.” By section 9 of the decree, confiscation of
-sequestrated property was authorized “if the public welfare,
-particularly the defense of the Reich, or the strengthening of
-Germanism, so requires.” However, Section 1, sub-section 2, 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, clearly indicates a purpose to strip Poles,
-Jews, and dissident elements of their property. It was, moreover,
-avowedly designed to promote Germanism.
-
-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 Germanism.” The answer supplied by the conspirators was
-firm and clear: In _any_ case in which the property of a Pole was
-involved, the “strengthening of Germanism” required its seizure. On 15
-April 1941, on paper bearing the letterhead of the Reich Leader SS,
-Commissioner for the Consolidation of German Nationhood, instructions
-were given “for internal use on the application of the law concerning
-property of the Poles of 17 September 1940.” The following is an
-excerpt:
-
- “The conditions permitting seizure according to section II,
- sub-section 2, are always present if the property belongs to a
- Pole. For the Polish real estate will be needed without
- exception for the consolidation of the German nationhood.”
- (_R-92_)
-
-In the Government-General, Frank promulgated a decree on 24 January
-1940, authorizing sequestration “in connection with 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, No. 6, 27 January 1940,
-page 23. The undefined criteria in this decree clearly 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. The Nazis’ own statistics show that as of 31 May 1943, a
-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, Poznan, Zichenau,
-and Silesia (_R-92_). This, it will be noted, represented the seizures
-and confiscations which were effected by only four offices. Figures are
-not available at this time for other offices maintained by the
-conspirators for these purposes.
-
- 2. CZECHOSLOVAKIA
-
-The conspirators had given much thought to their plans to Germanize
-Bohemia and Moravia. Three plans, each characterized by severity, were
-discussed, and finally the Fuehrer decided on plan (_c_), which involved
-the assimilation of about one-half the Czech population by the Germans
-and the extermination of the other half. Moreover, this plan envisaged a
-large influx into Czechoslovakia of Germans whose loyalty to the Fuehrer
-was unquestioned.
-
-These matters appear from a top secret report dated 15 October 1940,
-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 original document bears the handwritten letters
-“K” and “J” on the first page on the left side, and the handwriting is
-unquestionably that of Keitel and Jodl. The report states:
-
- “On 9 October of this year the office of the Reich Protector
- held an official conference in which State Secretary SS Lt.
- General K. H. Frank spoke about the following: [SS
- Gruppenfuehrer K. H. Frank was Secretary of State under Von
- Neurath, who at the date of this report was the Protector of
- Bohemia and Moravia].
-
- “Since creation of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia,
- Party agencies, industrial circles, as well as agencies of the
- central authorities of Berlin have had difficulties about the
- solution of the Czech problem.
-
- “After ample deliberation, the Reich Protector expressed his
- views about the various plans in a memorandum. In this way,
- three ways of solution were indicated:
-
- “_a._ German infiltration of Moravia and reduction of the Czech
- nationality to a residual Bohemia. This solution is considered
- unsatisfactory, because the Czech problem, even if in a
- diminished form, will continue to exist.
-
- “_b._ Many arguments can be brought up against the most radical
- solution, namely, the deportation of all the Czechs. Therefore,
- the memorandum comes to the conclusion that it cannot be carried
- out within a reasonable period of time.
-
- “_c._ Assimilation of the Czechs, i.e., absorption of about half
- of the Czech nationality by the Germans, insofar as this is of
- importance by being valuable from a racial or other standpoint.
- This will take place, among other things, also by increasing the
- _Arbeitseinsatz_ of the Czechs in the Reich territory (with the
- exception of the Sudeten-German border district), in other
- words, by dispersing the closed Czech nationality.
-
- “The other half of the Czech nationality must be deprived of its
- 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 ideologically and would represent a
- burden by constantly making claims for the leadership over the
- other Czech classes and thus interfering with a rapid
- assimilation.
-
- “Elements which counteract the planned Germanization ought to be
- handled roughly and should be eliminated.
-
- “The above development naturally presupposes an increased influx
- of Germans from the Reich territory into the Protectorate.
-
- “After a discussion, the Fuehrer 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 drawn by the armed
- forces. This is the direction which has always been represented
- from here. In this connection, I refer to my memorandum which
- was sent to the Chief of the Supreme Command of the Armed
- Forces, dated 12 July 1939, file number 6/39, top secret,
- entitled: “The Czech Problem.” (Attached as annex.)
-
- “The Deputy General of the Armed Forces with the Reich Protector
- in Bohemia and Moravia.”
-
- “(Signed) FRIDERICI
- Infantry Lt. General.” (_862-PS_)
-
-Solution (_a_), as outlined in the foregoing report, would have called
-for German infiltration into Moravia and the forcible removal of the
-Czechs from that area to Bohemia. 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 people
-and the continued existence of their Czechoslovakian State would have
-been frustrated. Solution (_a_) 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_) 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. “Increasing the _Arbeitseinsatz_ of the Czechs in
-the Reich territory”, as stated in the report, 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 intellectuals and those who did not meet Nazi racial
-standards. Czech intellectuals, as the conspirators well know, had a
-conspicuous record of resistance to the Nazi ideology. They were,
-therefore, to be exterminated. That section of the report which stated,
-“elements which counteract the planned Germanization are to be handled
-roughly and should be 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 referred to above:
-
- “Either we win over any good blood that we can use for ourselves
- * * * or we destroy this blood.” (_L-70_)
-
- 3. THE U. S. S. R.
-
-(The Chief Prosecutor for the Soviet Union has assumed the task of
-introducing detailed evidence showing the results of the execution of
-this program. The American prosecution confined itself to showing the
-plan.)
-
-The evidence, individual items of which will be discussed hereafter,
-shows the following:
-
-A. The conspirators planned to remove to Germany all foodstuffs and raw
-materials from the south and southeast of the Soviet Union, over and
-above the needs of the Nazi invading forces and the absolute minimum
-necessary to supply the bare needs of the people in these particular
-regions who produced the materials which were to be removed to Germany.
-This region had previously supplied the northern area of the Soviet
-Union, which the conspirators called the “Forest Zone”. The latter zone
-embraced some of the leading industrial areas of the Soviet Union,
-including Moscow and Leningrad.
-
-B. They deliberately and systematically planned to starve millions of
-Russians. Starvation was to be accomplished by the following means:
-
-(1) As indicated under A above, products from the south and southeast of
-the Soviet Union which ordinarily were sent to the industrial regions of
-the north were to be forcibly diverted to Germany. Moreover, all
-livestock in the industrial regions was to be seized for use by the
-_Wehrmacht_ and the German civilian population. The necessary
-consequence was that the population of the northern regions would be
-reduced to starvation.
-
-(2) They established the following order of priority in which food
-produced by the Russians would be allocated:
-
- First, the combat troops.
-
- Second, the remainder of troops in enemy territory.
-
- Third, troops stationed in Germany.
-
- Fourth, the German civilian population, and
-
- Lastly, the population of the occupied countries.
-
-Thus, even Russians in the food-surplus area of the Ukraine, who were
-not essential to the production of products for the German war machine,
-were systematically to be starved.
-
-C. They planned the permanent destruction of all industry in the
-northern area of the Soviet Union in order that the remnants of the
-Russian population would be completely dependent upon Germany for
-consumer goods.
-
-D. They planned to incorporate a part of Galicia and all of the Baltic
-countries into Germany and to convert the Crimea, an area north of the
-Crimea, the Volga territory, and the district around Baku, into German
-colonies.
-
-By a directive issued by Goering’s office for “The Operation of the
-Economy in the newly-occupied Eastern Territories,” there was
-established the Economic Executive Staff, East, which was directly
-responsible to Goering, under which was created the Economic Staff,
-East. The Economic Staff, East, in turn was subdivided into four groups:
-the Chief of the Economic Staff, Group LA, Group W, and Group M. The
-functions of Group LA were stated to be as follows:
-
- “Group LA. (Functions: nutrition and agriculture, the economy of
- all agricultural products, provision of supplies for the Army,
- in cooperation with the Army groups concerned.)” (_EC-472_)
-
-A report was made on 23 May 1941 (which was before the invasion of the
-Soviet Union) on the subject, “Economic Policy Directives for Economic
-Organization, East, Agricultural Group.” (_EC-126_). It was prepared by
-the Economic Staff, East, Group LA, the Agricultural Group, which (as
-shown by _EC-472_) was an important part of the organization which
-Goering had established to formulate plans for the economic
-administration of Russia. The report begins by a recitation of figures
-pertaining to the production of agricultural products in the Soviet
-Union. It states that the grain surplus of Russia is determined by the
-level of domestic consumption and that this fact affords the basis upon
-which the planners must predicate their actions and economic policy. The
-report continues:
-
- “The surplus territories are situated in the black soil district
- (that is in the south and southeast) and in the Caucasus. The
- deficit areas are principally located in the forest zone of the
- north. Therefore, an isolation of the black soil areas must, in
- any case, place greater or lesser surpluses in these regions at
- our disposal. The consequences will be cessation of supplies to
- the entire forest zone, including the essential industrial
- centers of Moscow and St. Petersburg.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “This (the cessation of supplies) means:
-
- “1. All industry in the deficit area, particularly the
- manufacturing industries in the Moscow and Petersburg regions as
- well as the Ural industrial regions will be abandoned. It may be
- assumed that these regions today absorb an annual five to ten
- million tons from the food production zone.
-
- “2. The Trans-Caucasian oil district will have to be excepted,
- although it is a deficit area. This source of oil, cotton,
- manganese, copper, silk, and tea must continue to be supplied
- with food in any case, for special political and economic
- reasons.
-
- “3. No further exceptions with a view to preserving one or the
- other industrial region or industrial enterprise must be
- permitted.
-
- “4. Industry can only be preserved so far as it is located in
- the surplus region. This applies, apart from the above-mentioned
- oil field regions in the Caucasus, particularly to the heavy
- industries in the Donets district (Ukraine). Only the future
- will show to what extent it will prove possible to maintain in
- full these industries, and in particular the Ukrainian
- manufacturing industries, after the withdrawal of the food
- surpluses required by Germany.
-
- “The following consequences result from this situation, which
- has received the approval of the highest authorities, since it
- is in accord with the political tendencies (preservation of the
- small Russians, preservation of the Caucasus, of the Baltic
- provinces, of White Russia, to the prejudice of the Great
- Russians).
-
- “I. _For the forest belt_:
-
- “_a._ Production in the forest belt (the food-deficit area) will
- become ‘naturalized,’ similar to the events during the World War
- and the Communistic tendencies of the war, etc., namely:
- agriculture in that territory will begin to become a mere ‘home
- production.’ The result will be that the planting of products
- destined for the market such as, in particular, flax and hemp,
- will be discontinued, and the area used therefor will be taken
- over for products for the producer (grain, potatoes, etc.)
- Moreover, discontinuance of fodder for that area will lead to
- the collapse of the dairy production and pig producing in that
- territory.
-
- “_b._ Germany is not interested in the maintenance of the
- productive power of these territories, except for supplying the
- troops stationed there. The population, as in the old days, will
- utilize arable land for growing its own food. It is useless to
- expect grain or other surpluses to be produced. Only after many
- years can these extensive regions be intensified to an extent
- that they might produce genuine surpluses. The population of
- these areas, in particular the urban population, will have to
- face most serious distress from famine. It will be necessary to
- divert the population into the Siberian spaces. Since rail
- transport is out of the question, this too, will be an extremely
- difficult problem.
-
- “_c._ In this situation, Germany will only draw substantial
- advantages by quick, nonrecurrent seizure, that is, it will be
- vitally necessary to make the entire flax harvest available for
- German needs, not only the fibers but also the oleaginous seeds.
-
- “It will also be necessary to utilize for German purposes the
- livestock which has no fodder base of its own, that is, it will
- be necessary _to seize livestock holdings_ immediately, and to
- make them available to the troops not only for the moment, but
- in the long run, and also for exportation to Germany. Since
- fodder supplies will be cut off, pig and cattle holdings in
- these areas will of necessity drastically decline in the near
- future. If they are not seized by the Germans at an early date,
- they will be slaughtered by the population for its own use,
- without Germany getting anything out of it.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “It has been demanded by the Fuehrer that the reduction in the
- meat ration should be made good by the fall. This can only be
- achieved by the most drastic seizures of Russian livestock
- holdings, particularly in areas which are in a favorable
- transport situation in relation to Germany.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “In future, southern Russia must turn its face toward Europe.
- Its food surpluses, however, will only be paid for if it
- purchases its industrial consumer goods from Germany, or Europe.
- Russian competition from the forest zone must, therefore, be
- abolished.
-
- “It follows from all that has been said that the German
- administration in these territories may well attempt to mitigate
- the consequences of the famine which undoubtedly will take
- place, and to accelerate the return to primitive agricultural
- conditions. An attempt might be made to intensify cultivation in
- these areas by expanding the acreage under potatoes or other
- important food crops giving a high yield. However, these
- measures will not avert famine. Many tens of millions of people
- in this area will become redundant and will either die or have
- to emigrate to Siberia. Any attempt to save the population there
- from death by starvation by importing surpluses from the black
- soil zone would be at the expense of supplies to Europe. It
- would reduce Germany’s staying power in the war, and would
- undermine Germany’s and Europe’s power to resist the blockade.
- This must be clearly and absolutely understood.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “I. Supplies for the Army
-
- “Germany’s food situation in the third year of war demands it
- imperatively that the _Wehrmacht_, in all its provisioning, must
- not live off Greater German territory or that of incorporated or
- friendly areas from which this territory receives imports. This
- minimum aim, the provisioning of the _Wehrmacht_ from enemy
- territory in the third year, and if necessary in later years,
- must be attained at any price. This means that one-third of the
- _Wehrmacht_ must be fully provisioned by French deliveries to
- the army of occupation. The remaining two-thirds (and even
- slightly more in view of the present size of the Wehrmacht) must
- without exception be provisioned from the Eastern _space_.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Thus it is not important, under any circumstances, to preserve
- what has existed, but what matters is a deliberate turning away
- from the existing situation and introducing Russian food
- resources into the European framework. This will inevitably
- result in an extinction of industry as well as a large part of
- the people in what so far have been the food-deficit areas.
-
- “It is impossible to state an alternative in sufficiently hard
- and severe terms.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “Our problem is not to replace intensive food production in
- Europe through the incorporation of new space in the East, but
- to replace imports from overseas by imports from the East. The
- task is twofold:
-
- “1. We must use the eastern spaces for overcoming the food
- shortages during and after the war. This means that we must not
- be afraid of drawing upon the capital substance of the East.
- Such an intervention is much more acceptable from the European
- standpoint than drawing upon the capital substance of Europe’s
- agriculture.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “2. For the future new order, the food-producing areas in the
- East must be turned into a permanent and substantial
- complementary source of food for Europe, through intensified
- cultivation and resulting higher yields.
-
- “The first-named task must be accomplished at any price, even
- through the most ruthless cutting down of Russian domestic
- consumption, which will require discrimination between the
- consuming and producing zones.” (_EC-126_)
-
-It is submitted that this document discloses, on its face, a studied
-plan to murder millions of people through starvation. It reveals a
-program of premeditated murder on a scale so vast as to stagger human
-imagination. This plan was the logical culmination of general objectives
-clearly announced by Adolf Hitler in _Mein Kampf_. (See Section 6 of
-Chapter IX.)
-
-A top secret memorandum, dated 16 July, 1941, of a conference at the
-Fuehrer’s headquarters concerning the war in the East, seems to have
-been prepared by Bormann, because his initials appear at the top of page
-one (_L-221_). The text of the memorandum indicates that the conference
-was attended by Hitler, Lammers, Goering, Keitel, Rosenberg, and
-Bormann. This memorandum throws light upon the conspirators’ plans to
-Germanize conquered areas of the Soviet Union. It also discloses the
-fraudulent character of the Nazi propaganda program; and shows how the
-conspirators sought to deceive the entire world; how they pretended to
-pursue one course of action when their aims and purposes were to follow
-precisely the opposite course. The following portions are particularly
-relevant.
-
- “Now it was essential that we did not publicize our aims before
- the world; also there was no need for that, but the main thing
- was that we ourselves knew what we wanted. By no means should we
- render our task more difficult by making superfluous
- declarations. Such declarations were superfluous because we
- could do everything wherever we had the power, and what was
- beyond our power we would not be able to do anyway.
-
- “What we told the world about the motives for our measures ought
- to be conditioned, therefore, by tactical reasons. We ought to
- act here in exactly the same way as we did in the cases of
- Norway, Denmark, Holland, and Belgium. In these cases too we did
- not publish our aims, and it was only sensible to continue in
- the same way.
-
- “Therefore, we shall emphasize again that we were forced to
- occupy, administer, and secure a certain area; it was in the
- interest of the inhabitants that we provided order, food,
- traffic, etc., hence our measures. Nobody shall be able to
- recognize that it initiates final settlement. This need not
- prevent our taking all necessary measures—shooting,
- de-settling, etc.—and we shall take them.
-
- “But we do not want to make any people into enemies prematurely
- and unnecessarily. Therefore we shall act as though we wanted to
- exercise a mandate only. At the same time we must know clearly
- that we shall never leave those countries.
-
- “Our conduct therefore ought to be:
-
- “1. To do nothing which might obstruct the final settlement, but
- to prepare for it only in secret. * * *”
-
- “2. To emphasize that we are liberators.
-
- “In particular: The Crimea has to be evacuated by all foreigners
- and to be settled by Germans only. In the same way the former
- Austrian part of Galicia will become Reich territory.
-
- “Our present relations with Roumania are good, but nobody knows
- what they will be at any future time. This we have to consider,
- and we have to draw our frontiers accordingly. One ought not to
- be dependent on the good will of other people. We have to plan
- our relations with Roumania in accordance with this principle.
-
- “On principle, we have now to face the task of cutting up the
- giant cake according to our needs, in order to be able—
-
- “first, to dominate it;
-
- “second, to administer it, and;
-
- “third, to exploit it.
-
- “The Russians have now ordered partisan warfare behind our
- front. This partisan war again has some advantage for us; it
- enables us to eradicate everyone who opposes us.
-
- “Principles: Never again must it be possible to create a
- military power west of the Urals, even if we have to wage war
- for a hundred years in order to attain this goal. Every
- successor of the Fuehrer should know: security for the Reich
- exists only if there are no foreign military forces west of the
- Urals; it is Germany who undertakes the protection of this area
- against all possible danger. Our iron principle is and has to
- remain: We must never permit anybody but the Germans to carry
- arms.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “The Fuehrer emphasizes that the entire Baltic country will have
- to be incorporated into Germany.
-
- “At the same time the Crimea, including a considerable
- hinterland, (situated north of the Crimea) should become Reich
- territory; the hinterland should be as large as possible.
-
- “Rosenberg objects to this because of the Ukrainians living
- there.
-
- “Incidental question: It occurred to me several times that
- Rosenberg has a soft spot for the Ukrainians; thus he desires to
- aggrandize the former Ukraine to a considerable extent.”
-
- “The Fuehrer emphasizes furthermore that the Volga Colony, too,
- will have to become Reich territory, also the district around
- Baku; the latter will have to become a German concession
- (military colony).”
-
- “The Finns wanted East Carelia, but the Kola Peninsula will be
- taken by Germany because of the large nickel mines there.
-
- “The annexation of Finland as a federated state should be
- prepared with caution. The area around Leningrad is wanted by
- the Finns; the Fuehrer will raze Leningrad to the ground and
- then hand it over to the Finns.” (_L-221_)
-
-Thus, the program, as outlined by the conspirators at this meeting of 16
-July, 1941, called for the unlawful incorporation of a part of Galicia
-and all the Baltic countries into Germany; and for the unlawful
-conversion of the Crimea and areas north of it, the Volga territory and
-the district around Baku, into German colonies.
-
-This point is reinforced by a directive entitled, “Instruction for a
-Reich Commissar in the Baltic Countries and White Russia,” which states:
-
- “The aim of a Reich Commissar for Esthonia, Latvia, Lithuania,
- and White Russia [last two 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.” (_1029-PS_)
-
-Even in the food-surplus areas of the occupied regions of the Ukraine,
-the conspirators planned to allocate food on a basis which left
-virtually nothing for those persons who were not engaged in the
-compulsory production of commodities for the German war machine. This
-was in violation of the explicit provision in Article 52 of the Hague
-Regulations of 1907, that requisitions in kind and services shall not be
-demanded from municipalities or inhabitants except for the needs of the
-army of occupation. This program was disclosed in a top secret
-memorandum, dated 18 September, 1941, concerning a meeting of German
-military officials presided over by Goering (_EC-3_). The memorandum was
-signed by General Nagl, liaison officer between Goering’s Four Year Plan
-Office and the OKW. The memorandum states:
-
- “At this conference which was concerned with the better
- exploitation of the occupied territories for the German food
- economy, the Reich Marshal (Goering) called attention to the
- following:”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “It is clear that a graduated scale of food allocations is
- needed.
-
- “First in line are the combat troops, then the remainder of
- troops in enemy territory, and then those troops stationed at
- home. The rates are adjusted accordingly. The supply of the
- German nonmilitary population follows and only then comes the
- population of the occupied territories.” (_EC-3_)
-
-Another memorandum, dated 25 November 1941, relating to the general
-principles of economic policy in the newly-occupied eastern territories,
-as prescribed in a conference held in Berlin on 8 November 1941, also
-bears out this point. This memorandum was also written by General Nagl.
-It is on the stationery of the Supreme Headquarters Armament Procurement
-Office. The following portions are pertinent:
-
- “I. For the duration of the war the requirements of the war
- economy will be the all-dominant factor of any economic measures
- in the newly-occupied Eastern territories.
-
- “II. Seen from a long range point of view the newly-occupied
- eastern areas will be exploited economically from the point of
- view of colonial administration and by colonial methods.
-
- “Exceptions will be made only for those parts of the Eastland
- which are to be Germanized by order of the Fuehrer, but even
- they are subject to the principle expressed in paragraph I.
-
- “III. The main emphasis of all economic work rests with the
- production of food and raw materials.
-
- “The highest possible production surplus for the supply of the
- Reich and of other European countries is to be attained by cheap
- production based on the maintenance of the low living standard
- of the native population. Besides covering thereby the European
- needs for food supplies and raw materials as far as possible,
- this measure is intended to create a source of income for the
- Reich which will make it possible to liquidate in a few decades,
- with utmost consideration for the German taxpayer, an essential
- part of the debts incurred in the financing of the war.”
- (_EC-3_)
-
-On 17 July, 1941, Hitler and Keitel issued a decree appointing Rosenberg
-as Reich Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories. This was the day
-following the meeting at the Fuehrer’s headquarters, which is reported
-in the document previously quoted from (_L-221_). This decree states,
-_inter alia_:
-
- “The Civil Administration in the newly-occupied Eastern
- territories where these territories are not included in the
- administration of the territories bordering on the Reich or the
- Government-General, is subject to the Reich Minister for the
- Occupied Eastern Territories.
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “I appoint Reichsleiter Alfred Rosenberg as Reich Minister for
- the occupied Eastern territories. He will hold office in
- Berlin.” (_1997-PS_)
-
-Rosenberg’s views well fitted him for his task as one of the chief
-executioners of the conspirators’ plans in the Soviet Union. His views
-were plainly expressed in a speech delivered on 20 June 1941:
-
- “The job of feeding the German people, stands, this year,
- without a doubt, at the top of the list of Germany’s claims on
- 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.” (_1058-PS_)
-
-These views were implemented in the directives issued by Rosenberg in
-his capacity as Reich Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories.
-Among his directives were these:
-
- “The principal task of the civilian administration in the
- occupied Eastern territories is to represent the interest of the
- Reich. This basic principle is to be given precedence in all
- measures and considerations. Therefore, the occupied
- territories, in the future, may be permitted to have a life of
- their own in a form not as yet to be determined. However, they
- remain parts of the Greater German living space and are always
- to be governed according to this guiding principle.
-
- “The regulations of the Hague Convention on Land Warfare, which
- concern the administration of a country occupied by a foreign
- belligerent power, are not applicable, since the USSR is to be
- considered dissolved, and therefore the Reich has the obligation
- of exercising all governmental and other sovereign functions in
- the interests of the country’s inhabitants. Therefore, any
- measures are permitted which the German administration deems
- necessary and suitable for the execution of this comprehensive
- task.” (_EC-347_)
-
-Implicit in Rosenberg’s statement that the Hague Regulations are not
-applicable to the Soviet Union is the recognition by him that the
-conspirators’ action in the Soviet Union flagrantly violated the Hague
-Regulations and applicable principles of International Law.
-
-A top secret memorandum, dated 5 October 1942, written by Braeutigam,
-who was a high official in Rosenberg’s Ministry for the Occupied Eastern
-Territories, made the following statements:
-
- “In the East, Germany is carrying on a threefold war: a war for
- the destruction of Bolshevism, a war for the destruction of the
- greater Russian Empire, and finally a war for the acquisition of
- colonial territory for colonizing purposes and economic
- exploitation.
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “With the inherent instinct of the Eastern peoples the primitive
- man soon found out also that for Germany the slogan: ‘Liberation
- from Bolshevism’ was only a pretext to enslave the Eastern
- peoples according to her own methods.” (_294-PS_)
-
-Certain German industrialists and financiers aided and abetted Himmler
-in his relentless program of Germanization, exploitation, oppression,
-and destruction. A letter from the banker, Baron Kurt von Schroeder to
-Himmler, dated 27 August 1943, stated:
-
- “My very honorable Reichsfuehrer:
-
- “With great joy I learn of your appointment as Reichsminister of
- the Interior and take the liberty to extend my heartiest
- congratulations to you on assuming your new post.
-
- “A strong hand is now very necessary in the operation of this
- Department and it is universally welcomed but especially by your
- friends that it was you who were chosen for this by the Fuehrer.
- Please be assured that we will always do everything in our power
- at all times to assist you in every possible way.
-
- “I am pleased to inform you at this opportunity that your circle
- of friends has again placed at your disposal this year a sum
- slightly in excess of RM 1 million for ‘special purposes.’ An
- exact list showing the name of the contributors will be sent to
- you shortly.
-
- “Again all my very best wishes—as well as those of my family—I
- remain yours, in old loyalty and esteem.
-
-“Heil Hitler! Yours truly.” (_EC-454_)
-
-A later letter from von Schroeder to Himmler, dated 21 September 1943,
-enclosed the list of contributors. The letter stated:
-
- “Dear Reichsleader:
-
- “I thank you very much for your kind letter of the 14th of this
- month with which you made me very happy. At the same time, I am
- enclosing a list with the total amount of funds made available
- to you by your circle of friends and totalling RM 1,000,000. We
- are very glad indeed to render some assistance to you in your
- special tasks and to be able to provide some small relief for
- you in your still further extended sphere of duties.
-
- “Wishing you, dear Reichsleader, the best of luck, I remain in
- old loyalty and esteem.
-
-“Heil Hitler! Yours very truly.” (_EC-453_)
-
-The Himmler “circle of friends,” it may be noted, was a relatively
-small, select group. It did not include all, or even a majority of the
-industrialists and financiers in Germany. These contributions were not
-like the “_Hitler Spende_” or the Winter Relief contributions which were
-exacted from all industrialists by the Nazi state. These were
-contributions by a small group of very influential industrialists and
-financiers who, for selfish reasons, were anxious to “do everything in
-our power at all times to assist you “(Himmler)” in every possible way.”
-By a rather strange coincidence, firms like I. G. Farben, the Flick
-Combine, and the Herman Goering Werke, which are on the list of
-contributors to Himmler, were among the chief beneficiaries of the
-conspirators’ program of plunder of public and private property in the
-occupied countries. (_EC-453_)
-
- 4. THE WESTERN OCCUPIED COUNTRIES
-
-(This section is based on a brief originally prepared for submission by
-the United States Prosecution in support of the allegation, in Count One
-of the Indictment, of a plan or conspiracy to commit war crimes. The
-evidence relating to the plan or conspiracy, however, proved to be
-inseparable from that on the execution thereof, a subject assigned to
-the French Prosecution. The materials contained herein were accordingly
-made available to the French for such use as they might deem appropriate
-in connection with the proof of their case.)
-
-A. _The Nazi Conspirators Obtained Enormous Quantities of Foodstuffs,
-Raw Materials and Equipment From the Occupied Western Countries._
-
-(1) _The Nazis planned in advance of the invasion to secure from the
-conquered territories the strategic materials which Germany lacked and
-without which Germany could not prevail in a war of long duration._ In
-this war, as in the last, German resources were sufficient only for a
-conflict of short duration. As early as the winter of 1939-40, following
-the swift and crushing defeat of Poland, Germany suffered from a
-critical shortage of essential raw materials (_EC-615_). The Nazi
-leaders were thus faced with the question whether to conserve their
-supplies for a long war or to commit their limited reserves in the hope
-of obtaining an early decision. Hitler decided on the latter course. As
-Goering told General Thomas:
-
- “The Fuehrer is firmly convinced that he will succeed in
- reaching a decision * * * in the year 1940 by a big attack in
- the West. He reckons that Belgium, Holland, and Northern France
- will get into our possession and * * * had figured out that the
- industrial areas of Douai and Lens and those of Luxembourg,
- Longwy, and Briey could, from the point of view of raw material,
- replace the supplies from Sweden. Therefore, the Fuehrer had
- decided now to make use of our reserve of raw materials without
- regard to future times. * * *” (_EC-606_)
-
-Careful plans were made in advance of the invasion in 1940 to secure for
-Germany the raw material resources of the to-be-occupied countries. A
-manual of directives and decrees issued by the Quartermaster, OKH, for
-the economic administration of the military government set forth an
-exhaustive list of important raw materials to be seized wherever found
-(_EC-155_). Directives were issued to the so-called economic squads
-(_Wirtschafts Truppe_) attached to the tactical units on the procedures
-to be followed in locating, seizing, and preparing such materials for
-shipment to Germany (_EC-618_). Also included in the manual mentioned
-were drafts of decrees to be promulgated by the German occupation
-authorities, for the establishment in the occupied countries of Goods
-Offices, modeled after the German rationing boards, to control
-production and distribution in the occupied countries in the German
-interest. (_EC-155_)
-
-(2) _The occupied Western countries were ruthlessly exploited according
-to plan._ The occupied areas were systematically stripped of their
-economic resources to feed the German war machine. The extent of German
-exploitation is partially indicated by the staggering totals of the
-occupation levies and the “credit” balances of the local central banks
-under clearing arrangements imposed by the Nazis, the principal sources
-of the funds with which Germany financed the spoliation of Western
-Europe. (For a brief explanation of the clearing system, see _infra_
-under D, 2.)
-
-The total occupation charges exacted from France alone were
-31,600,000,000 RM from 25 June, 1940, to 5 September, 1944 (_3615-PS_).
-They averaged more than 7,000,000,000 RM annually, a sum more than four
-times the German annual payments under the Dawes and Young Plans. This
-sum is in addition to a “credit” of the Bank of France under the
-Franco-German clearing, which, as of September, 1943, amounted to
-4,400,000,000 RM (_3615-PS_). For the period May 1942-43, the tribute
-exacted from Belgium (mainly from occupation charges and clearing
-credits) amounted to more than two-thirds of the Belgium national income
-(_ECR-149_). These figures, large as they are, take no account of the
-substantial quantities of materials seized and removed to the Reich
-without compensation (see _infra_ under B, (1)) nor do they reflect the
-windfall to the Reich resulting from the substantial over-valuation of
-the Reichsmark, particularly in the case of France and Belgium.
-(_EC-86_)
-
-A few illustrative examples of specific items, taken from the report of
-the German Military Commander for France of 10 September, 1942
-(_EC-267_), will serve to show even more concretely than monetary
-figures, the extent to which materials and equipment were taken from the
-occupied countries for the benefit of the Reich. Since the Armistice,
-according to this report, the French contributed to the Germans 73
-percent of the normal annual French consumption of iron, amounting to
-nearly 5 million tons. From the Armistice to July, 1942, 225,000 tons of
-copper and 5,700 tons of nickel were delivered by France to Germany,
-amounting to 80 percent and 86 percent of French supplies respectively;
-also 55 percent of the French aluminum and 80 percent of the magnesium
-production. For her own needs France retained only 30 percent of the
-normal production of the wool industry, 16 percent of the cotton
-production, and 13 percent of the linen production. The total French
-production of locomotives and the major part of the machine tool
-industry were put at the disposal of the Germans. (_EC-267_)
-
-B. _The Foodstuffs, Raw Materials and Equipment Delivered to Germany
-were Obtained by Compelling the Nationals of the Conquered Countries to
-Produce and Distribute in Accordance with German War Requirements, by
-Seizure and Requisition, and by Purchases Financed with Funds Exacted
-from the Occupied Countries and Their Nationals._
-
-(1) _Much of the material and equipment removed to Germany was obtained
-by seizure, requisition, and confiscation of private property._ During
-the first phase of the occupation, the Nazis systematically removed to
-the Reich almost all available supplies to satisfy the immediate German
-requirements. This phase, according to the German Military Commander’s
-description of the practice in France, was one of “stripping” occupied
-areas of “foodstuffs, raw materials and machinery”, leaving only enough
-to secure the “bare subsistence” of the population (_EC-614_). In the
-words of the report of the Wi-Rue Staff in France:
-
- “In this period the legal concepts of the Hague Regulations
- regarding Land Warfare are not yet strictly observed. The main
- purpose is to get out of France through seizure _Beschlagnahme_
- or purchase at infinitesimal prices the materials of use for the
- German armament.” (_EC-422_)
-
-By order of the German High Command, booty was defined to include not
-merely public property but “beyond the Hague Regulations on Land
-Warfare,” also “privately owned finished and semi-finished products if
-they were manufactured in fulfillment of an order of the French armed
-forces” (_EC-422_). At the same time, payments made by the French armed
-forces on account of war material orders were likewise treated as war
-booty. Even goods in transit were arbitrarily placed in this category
-(_EC-422_). Machinery and equipment affixed to the realty were seized
-and shipped to Germany in wilful disregard of the limitations of the
-Hague Regulations authorizing seizure only of chattels. (_EC-84_)
-
-The “stripping phase” of Nazi spoliation was relatively short-lived.
-Decision was soon reached to utilize at least part of the industrial
-capacity of the occupied areas to relieve the burden on the armament
-plants in Germany (_EC-620_). Throughout the period of occupation,
-however, the Nazis continued the seizure and requisition of machinery
-and certain raw materials in short supply in the Reich. From December,
-1942, to the end of the occupation, for example, 242 German demands for
-Belgian machinery were met, of which 110 were fulfilled by requisitions
-(_ECH-10_). In 79 instances the requisitioned equipment was shipped to
-Germany. (_ECH-10_)
-
-Support for such requisitions was found in an order of the Military
-Commander of Belgium of 6 August 1942. This order was explained as
-embodying the “modern” German view that, as “total war is no longer
-limited in space but has become a struggle of peoples and nations
-against each other,” requisitions under Article 52 of the Hague
-Regulations should no longer be limited to the “needs of the occupying
-forces” but may also be used in the “general interest of the German war
-effort”; and that requisitioned articles may be used not only in the
-territory in which they were obtained but also “in other territories in
-the sphere of the occupying power.” (_ECH-10_)
-
-In April 1941, Goering ordered the removal of church bells in France
-“which represent the most important and last reserve of copper and tin,”
-stressing that “no church bells would be removed in Germany before all
-bells had been removed in France” (_EC-323_). In 1943, after the removal
-of church bells from the other occupied countries and even from the
-Reich, Hitler ordered their removal from Belgium (_ECH-11_). The
-Belgians protested, invoking the Hague Regulations, and refused an offer
-to buy; thereupon the Germans requisitioned the bells against receipt.
-(_ECH-11_)
-
-By circular letter, dated 23 June 1943, Speer ordered that scientific
-instruments and apparatus be taken out of the laboratories and research
-institutes in the occupied Western countries, directing that
-applications for instruments be made through channels and that the
-requisitions be made by the Military Government. (_ECH-14_)
-
-In many cases, representatives of German scientific institutions sought
-to acquire scientific instruments in order to modernize their own
-installations, appearing in Army uniforms to give the impression that
-the requisition was a military measure (_ECH-15_). The Military
-Government of Belgium decided that Articles 52 and 56 of the Hague
-Regulations were inapplicable because the Allies had destroyed a number
-of German scientific installations in the Reich through bombing, which
-therefore had to be replaced from the occupied territories, and that “in
-a total war, no consideration could be given to the cited articles of
-the Hague Regulations”. (_ECH-16_)
-
-As part of the design to supply the armament industry in Germany with
-material from the occupied Western territories, a program for the
-removal of copper and lead from transmission installations of power
-distribution plants in the occupied Western countries was instituted by
-a decree of Speer dated 31 May, 1943 (_EC-101_). The plan contemplated
-from the outset that the transmission of facilities would not be
-restored (as required by the second paragraph of Article 53 of the Hague
-Regulations) but that an equivalent amount of metal would be returned
-after the war. (_EC-101_)
-
-(2) _The Nazis purchased war materials and consumer goods_ _in the
-regular and black markets for shipment to the Reich, all with funds
-exacted from the occupied countries._ Following the initial “stripping”
-phase of the occupation, the Nazis promptly instituted an extensive
-“buying-out” program (_061-PS_) with the object of procuring not merely
-materials required for the German war effort, but to obtain also
-consumer goods, including luxury items, for the civilian population of
-Germany (_EC-485_).
-
-No limitations, legal or moral, were observed in the execution of this
-program. Supplies which could not be obtained through normal channels
-were purchased on the black market. The disastrous effects of
-competition among various German agents led the central occupational
-authorities in Belgium, France, and Holland to take over black market
-operation directly (_1765-PS_). On 13 June 1942, by order of Goering,
-Col. Veltjens was appointed to direct black market purchases in all
-occupied territories and a new agency, the so-called UEWA, was placed at
-his disposal. (_ECH-7_)
-
-The actual purchases were made by several corporations, including
-Pimetex, an agency of the Speer Ministry of Armament and Munitions. The
-goods were distributed through Roges according to directives of the
-Central Planning Board (Speer, Koerner, Milch) and in appropriate cases
-by the German Ministry of Economics and the _Reichsstellen_ (_ECH-7_).
-Black market operations were finally abolished by order of Goering dated
-2 April, 1943, confirmed in Belgium by circular of the Military
-Commander of 19 June, 1943. (_ECH-9_)
-
-Certain of the purchases made through the black market while under the
-direction of Col. Veltjens are of special interest:
-
- _Christmas Drive._ On 22 September 1942, Goering ordered a
- special drive in the Western occupied countries to purchase
- presents for the civil population in Germany for the coming
- Christmas. The Roges Company effected the distribution of the
- articles in Germany.
-
- _Special Drive WABO._ This drive was pursuant to Hitler’s order
- to Speer to procure Christmas packages for the soldiers. The O.
- Todt Cantine accepted offers of sale on the black market and
- Pimetex did the buying.
-
- _Special Drive LOWA_ (Degenkolb locomotive program). The
- purchase were made by Pimetex. (_ECH-7_)
-
-As of 15 January 1943, black market purchases totaled approximately
-1,100,000,000 RM, including:
-
- RM 929,100,000 in France.
-
- RM 103,881,929 in Belgium, and
-
- RM 73,685,162.64 in Holland. (_1765-PS_)
-
-Payment in France was made out of occupation funds, in Belgium out of
-such funds and through the clearing, and in Holland through “normal bank
-transactions” (_1765-PS_; _ECR-132_). As appears very clearly from the
-report of Col. Veltjens of 15 January, 1943, substantially all the goods
-so purchased were shipped to the Reich. (_1765-PS_)
-
-(3) _The Nazi conspirators compelled the nationals of the occupied
-countries to produce and distribute materials and equipment in
-accordance with the German general war requirements._ The “stripping”
-and “buying-out” phases of the Nazi spoliation were both gradually
-superseded by a regulated program for the utilization of the industrial
-plant of the occupied areas and the transfer of orders (subcontracting)
-to local concerns. The Nazi conspirators established comprehensive
-rationing controls under which essential raw materials were made
-available only to those who produced in the German interest; those
-reluctant to produce on German order were placed under compulsory
-administration. “This,” Keitel noted in commenting on the controls
-established in France, “is * * * booty of the victor”. (_EC-613_)
-
- _Belgium_
-
-The means employed in Belgium were typical. Production quotas for coal,
-iron and steel, textiles and leather, and other products were fixed by
-the Ministry of Economics and its _Reichsstellen_, in some cases after
-consultation with the Reich Minister (Funk). (_ECH-2_)
-
-Comprehensive production controls were established in Belgium to assure
-the fulfillment of these quotas. Pursuant to plans developed in advance
-of the invasion (_EC-155_), a decree was issued by the Military
-Commander on 27 May, 1940, creating so-called “Goods Offices,” endowed
-with authority to issue general and special orders to Belgian firms
-requiring production of designated products, and the sale thereof to
-designated buyers, and with the further power to prohibit production or
-sale without license (_3604-PS_). By decree of the Military Commander of
-29 April, 1941, the appointment of a commissar to direct operations of
-private plants was authorized. (_3610-PS_)
-
-The German Goods Offices (_ECH-3_) were transferred to similar units
-established by Belgian decree of 3 September, 1940. (Whether this decree
-was issued on German order or suggestion does not appear.) The Germans
-supervised the Belgian Goods Offices and adopted as German orders both
-the Belgian decree establishing the Offices and the orders issued
-thereunder, and prescribed punishment by fine and imprisonment for
-violations. (_3609-PS_)
-
-For the first two years of the occupation, German control was exercised
-mainly through prohibitions and restrictions, that is, by a priority
-system (_ECH-4_), although even then important sectors of the Belgian
-economy, notably textiles and leather products, were controlled by
-“positive” orders directing the amount in kind to be produced and the
-persons to whom distribution must be made (_ECH-4_; _ECH-2_). During
-this period the Military Commander issued instructions to the Goods
-Offices through “command channels,” that is, through the Belgian
-Minister of Economics. (_ECH-3_)
-
-On 6 August, 1942, the Military Commander, however, published a decree
-reaffirming explicitly the power to compel production of designated
-articles (_3612-PS_), a signal for the introduction of “positive”
-controls. In 1943, on instructions from the Reich Ministry of Economics,
-German representatives selected from the _Reichsstellen_ were attached
-directly to the Belgian Goods Offices (_ECH-3_). At the end of 1943, the
-office of the “Ruestungsobmann” of the Speer Ministry for Armaments and
-War Production began issuing “positive orders” for production to
-individual concerns directly, without clearing with the Goods Offices,
-pursuant to decree of the Minister for Armaments and War Production
-(Speer). (_ECH-3_)
-
-Production facilities in Belgium which were not deemed to serve the
-German interest were shut down. By order of 30 March 1942, the Military
-Commander prohibited the enlargement of existing plants and the
-construction of new ones without German authorization, and provided for
-the closing down of factories at his discretion (_3616-PS_). In the iron
-and metal industry alone at least 400 plants “not important for the war
-effort” had been closed down by 15 April 1943 (_EC-335_). By the end of
-the occupation, 1360 put of a total of 2164 plants in the textile
-industry had been closed down. (_ECH-19_)
-
- _France and Holland_
-
-Substantially the same system was put into effect in France and Holland.
-German Goods Offices were established in Occupied France at the same
-time as in Belgium (_3604-PS_). These were subsequently abolished in
-November, 1940, however, when the Vichy Government, at the “suggestion”
-of the Nazis, created raw material rationing boards, on which delegates
-of the German Military Administration served as technical advisers
-(_EC-613_; _EC-616_). In the Netherlands, controls were exercised by the
-local German Armament Inspectorate (_EC-471_; _EC-472-A_), who, it is
-believed, made use of the rationing boards set up in Holland before the
-outbreak of war.
-
-C. _The Nazi Conspirators Acquired Ownership of Belgian, Dutch, and
-French Participations in European Industries by Means of Governmental
-Pressure and Through the Use of Funds Unlawfully Exacted from the
-Occupied Countries and Their Nationals._
-
-The Nazi conspirators were not content with securing for Germany the
-supplies necessary for the period of the war. They aimed at obtaining
-permanent ownership and domination of European industry to the fullest
-extent possible, and embarked on a program to that end even during the
-progress of the war.
-
-(1) _The Nazi conspirators established a program to acquire for German
-interests ownership of Belgian, Dutch, and French participations during
-the war._ On 23 May 1940, recommendation was made that it would be
-opportune to secure all Dutch and Belgian stocks “in order, especially
-in the case of holding companies, to win influence * * * over the
-controlled companies” (_EC-41_). The memorandum recommended the taking
-possession of stocks of the dominated companies located in foreign
-countries and influencing the decisions of members of holding companies
-located in Holland and Belgium or of other owners of such stock. Because
-of the provisions of Article 46 of the Hague Regulations prohibiting
-confiscation of private property, it was deemed more advisable to
-influence members of holding companies through careful guiding than
-through plain force. (_EC-41_)
-
-At a meeting held in the Reich Ministry of Economics on 3 June 1940 on
-the subject of “Belgian and Dutch capital shares in southeastern
-European countries,” it was decided that regulations should be issued
-immediately by the Military Commander for Belgium prohibiting the
-destruction, transfer, or disposition of any bonds or stocks of these
-countries, and that registration should be required of owners and
-trustees. (_1445-PS_)
-
-In a memorandum of 2 August 1940 Goering declared that the goal of the
-Germans’ economic policy was the “increase of German influence with
-foreign enterprises,” that it was “necessary already now that any
-opportunity is used to make it possible for the German economy to start
-the penetration even during the war of the interesting objects of the
-economy of the occupied countries,” and directed that the transfer of
-capital from Germany to the occupied countries be facilitated to make
-possible the immediate purchase of enterprises in the occupied
-countries. (_EC-137_)
-
-At a meeting at the Reich Ministry of Economics on 8 August 1940 on the
-subject of “Acquisition of shares of important foreign enterprises in
-southeastern Europe,” Dr. Schlotterer of the Reich Ministry of Economics
-commented that “private economical penetration of the Southeast area by
-German influence is desirable, likewise the supplanting of British and
-French interests in that territory” (_EC-43_). The group present,
-including representatives of the Reich Ministry of Economics and the
-Reichsbank, agreed that “attempts should be made immediately to acquire
-shares” and that “in doing so the tendency should be preserved to
-present a bill for the shares at the peace conference.” It was further
-agreed that “it should be attempted if possible to transfer the shares
-into private hands” but that “in order to make the right selection it
-appears necessary to introduce an intermediary stage” in which “first of
-all, enterprises should be taken over through banks, thereupon the
-plants should be managed as a matter of trusteeship for the Reich with
-the aim that the Reich (Reich Marshal Goering)” undertake handing them
-over to private industry. (_EC-43_)
-
-(2) _The Nazi conspirators carried out this program by compulsory sale
-where necessary and by purchases financed out of occupation charges and
-under clearing agreements with the occupied countries._
-
- _Belgium_
-
-Immediate steps were taken to implement these measures in Belgium. The
-annual report of the Commissar at the National Bank from May 1940-41
-states:
-
- “According to the directions of the Reichsmarshal Goering as
- early as September 1940 the first measures for a closer
- formation of capital ties between the Belgian and German economy
- were taken. Two different procedures were concerned here:
-
- “1. Direct negotiations between German industrialists and
- Belgian industrialists, for the purpose of obtaining
- constructive participations in important Belgian enterprises
- which offer the basis for collaboration between the two
- economies even after the war. Furthermore, it is desired to
- transfer to German hands important Belgian participations in
- foreign enterprises whose administration is located in Belgium,
- particularly so far as enterprises are concerned which are
- located in the Balkans and in which a general German interest
- exists.
-
- “2. Ties which result from purchases of stock by German parties
- on the Belgian stock markets. For this purpose the Reich
- Economic Minister has given general permission to 32 German
- banks to obtain participation rights, particularly stocks, in a
- limited quantity in Belgium. Till now use has been made of this
- permission in the amount of about 25 million RM, to which can be
- added an additional 10 million RM for the procurement of Belgian
- participations in Rumania, Bulgaria, and the former Poland.”
- (_ECR-24_)
-
-In his report for November 1940 the Military Commander for Belgium
-stated:
-
- “A certain readiness exists on the part of the Belgians to give
- up investments in stocks in such countries which, at the present
- time, are being ruled militarily or economically by Germany.
- Among the important business deals of this kind which have been
- concluded should be mentioned the taking over by the
- _Kreditanstalt, Wien_ (Credit Institute, Vienna) of an essential
- interest in the _Allgemeiner Jugoslawischer Bankverein_ (General
- Yugoslav Bank Association) from the _Societé Generale_ (capital
- approximately 1 million RM) and the taking over by the _Deutsche
- Bank_ of the overwhelming majority [translator’s note: of
- shares] of the _Banca Commerciala Romana_ from the _Societé
- Generale_ (capital approximately 2 million RM). The _Deutsche
- Bank_ also succeeded in acquiring shares of the _Kreditanstalt,
- Wien_, of approximately 800,000 RM nominally from the _Societé
- Generale_ and from one of its subsidiaries. Negotiations between
- the _Deutsche Bank_ and the _Societé Generale_ on the transfer
- of approximately 25% of the capital of the _Banque Generale du
- Luxembourg_ are about to be concluded. Through this deal the
- _Deutsche Bank_ together with the other German groups obtains
- the absolute majority of the Luxembourger Bank (approximately
- 70% of the shares). The _Deutsche Bank_ gets the right to
- acquire another 25% of the shares which for the time being,
- remained with the _Societé Generale_.” (_EC-34_)
-
-While the Military Commander of Belgium may have given some assurance
-that the owners would not be compelled to sell (_ECH-22_), in at least
-one instance, purchase could be effected only by military order
-(_EC-335_). In this instance the procurement for the Main Branch of
-Trustees East of shares of the Belgian “Trust Metallurgique” in
-electricity and road enterprises of East Silesia and the General
-Government, as well as purchase of shares in the iron works Ostrovica
-for the Reichswerk Hermann Goering had “to be done, at the request of
-the Reich Ministry for Economics, forcibly, as an agreement on a
-financial basis could not be obtained.” (_EC-335_)
-
-The German acquisition of Belgian stock participations was financed
-through the Belgium-German clearing. The Belgian clearing balances of 20
-March 1940 included an item of 296 millions bfrs., which “is explained
-by out-payment of large clearing transfers to purchase Belgian capital
-participations in Balkan enterprises” (_ECR-14_). Increasing transfers
-resulting from the German capital penetration program precipitated a
-controversy with the Emission Bank, which was resolved by the
-Commissar’s issuance of an order requiring the bank to make payment
-(_ECR-24_). As a sequel, “capital” payments were separated from those
-for “goods and services” and financed by a separate “capital” clearing
-agreement covering purchases of securities and other “capital”
-transactions (_ECR-24_). The Belgian clearing “credit” under the capital
-clearing, as of 31 July 1943, amounted to 1,071,000,000 bfrs
-(_ECR-173_). As shown below, (see _infra_, D, 2) the Belgian credit
-under the capital clearing traffic represents a forced loan, exacted for
-a purpose not even remotely related to the needs of the occupation army.
-
- _France and Holland_
-
-The limited evidence, in the presently available German documents
-indicates that similar methods were employed in French and Dutch
-participations. The procedure followed in the Netherlands is indicated
-below in the discussion of the removal of restrictions on the free
-transfer of Reichsmarks in that country. (See _infra_, D, 5.) In France,
-participations of a value of 121,000,000 RM were purchased for German
-interests, paid for in part out of occupation funds and in part through
-the clearing. (_1991-PS_)
-
-D. _The Nazi Conspirators Compelled the Occupied Countries and Their
-Nationals to Furnish the Monetary Requirements for the German
-Exploitation, by Means of Occupation Levies, Forced Loans, and the
-Requisition of Gold and Foreign Exchange in Amounts Far in Excess of the
-Needs of the Occupation Armies._
-
-Except for the early period of the occupation, during which
-_Reichskreditkassen_ certificates were issued to finance the needs of
-the occupation troops (Lemkin, _Axis Rule In Occupied Europe_, p. 329),
-the Nazis obtained the necessary local currency through the levy of
-excessive occupation charges, the imposition of clearing arrangements
-under which the local central banks were compelled to finance exports to
-the Reich, and by requisition of gold and foreign exchange.
-
-(1) _The Nazi conspirators exacted excessive occupation charges from the
-conquered countries._
-
- _Belgium_
-
-The Nazi conspirators demanded from Belgium both “internal occupation
-costs” and “external occupation costs” (_ECR-32_). The former was
-defined as “those sums which are gotten out of the country to finance
-the needs of the German military formations located in the country”
-(_ECR-32_). The term “external occupation costs” was used
-interchangeably with the title “antibolshevistic contribution”
-(_EC-401_). Under whatever theory, the exaction of occupation charges
-was made “to the limit of capacity”. (_ECR-59_)
-
-Throughout the period of German occupation, a substantial part of the
-contribution charges obtained from Belgium was used as a matter of
-regular practice “not for occupation cost purposes” (_ECR-166_;
-_ECR-155-A_; _ECR-35_), including:
-
-(_a_) Exports to Germany, Holland, and France (_ECR-89_; _ECR-104_).
-
-(_b_) Exchange for Belgian francs of RKK certificates, a “not
-inconsiderable part” of which did “not have the least thing to do with
-occupation costs” (_ECR-39_; _ECR-142_).
-
-(_c_) “Political purposes (that is, SS, Propaganda, Hitler Youth)”
-(_ECR-106_).
-
-(_d_) Purchases in the “black market” (_ECR-106_), many of them destined
-for export. (See _supra_, B, (2).)
-
-(_e_) General war expenses, including the supply of troops based in
-Belgium for military operations against England (_ECH-5_); the
-Commander-in-Chief of the Army rejected a recommendation of the Military
-Commander that a distinction be drawn between occupation troops and
-those for military operations (_ECH-5_).
-
-Notwithstanding the extensive use of occupation levies for
-non-occupation purposes, the contributions exacted from Belgium
-
- “were not only sufficient to cover the needs of the _Wehrmacht_
- * * * but also made it possible * * * to fund a cash reserve
- which reached at certain times about 2,500,000,000 bfrs”.
- (_ECH-5_)
-
- _France_
-
-The occupation cost accounts of the _Reichskreditkasse_ in Paris
-disclose on their face that a large part of the occupation funds was
-obtained and used for nonoccupational purposes. Two sets of occupation
-cost accounts, were maintained: Account A, into which payments were made
-on behalf of various Reichs ministeries and agencies, and for specified
-purposes; and Account B, into which payments were made for disposal for
-the _Wehrmacht_ (_3615-PS_). The funds in Account A were used for
-obviously nonoccupational purposes, as follows:
-
- _June 1940 to end
- 1943_
- A I. Reich Minister for Economic Affairs
- (primarily for the buying agency,
- “Roges,” also for the purchase of
- securities and devisen) RM 1,518,000,000
- A II. Foreign Office (for propaganda
- purposes in France) 27,000,000
- A III. Payment of support to dependents of
- laborers recruited in France for
- work in Germany 1,500,000
- A IV. Reich Minister for Transportation
- (purchase of securities) 2,500,000
- A V. Paris Agency of the
- _Reichstierstelle_ (Reich Agency
- for Animals)—imports of meat and
- meat products 19,000,000
- A VI. Exchange by the Bank of France of
- RM notes for persons evacuated
- from Alsace-Lorraine 900,000
- A VII. Financing purchases of raw sugar in
- North France by sugar refinery in
- South Germany 1,285,000
- A VIII. Compensation for war damage to
- _Reichsdeutsche_ and
- _Volkdeutsche_ in France 8,500,000
- A IX. Sale of French francs to the Reich
- (Commodity imports into
- Alsace-Lorraine) 66,000,000
- A X. Reich Minister of Education
- (Purchases for libraries in the
- Reich of books destroyed in air
- raids) 1,000,000
- (_3615-PS_)
-
-The available records do not disclose the full extent to which the
-_Wehrmacht_ used the funds at its disposal in Account B for
-nonoccupational purposes. It is certain, however, that large sums were
-expended for such purposes. Thus, a communication of the OKW to the
-Foreign Office of 6 November 1942, explaining the decrease in reserve
-for Account B, states:
-
- “In addition, payments to a considerable extent had to be made
- from the occupation cost funds which were not allotted to meet
- the demands of those units of the German Wehrmacht stationed in
- France. On 15 January the B account of occupation costs was
- approximately 3 bill. RM. The reason for the decrease appears
- from the following compilation:
-
- _Million
- RM._
- _a._ For procurement of goods exported from France during
- the period of 1 Jan.-31 Oct. 1942 an estimated 10 × 90 mill.
- RM  900
- _b._ To Roges Raw Material Trading Company Ltd. for
- purchases on black market  700
- _c._ For procurement of foreign bills by the Navy (the
- purchase of foreign bills with French francs was necessary
- to buy and repair merchant ships in Spanish harbors. These
- merchant ships are to serve for supplying Rommel’s Panzer
- army in Africa)  40
- _d._ Reimbursement to Foreign Office (account Syria)  4
- _e._ Allotments in favor of families of French workersw
- orking in Germany  1.5
- _f._ Special commissioner Rumania  1.3
- _g._ Costs of building completions for directors of French
- powder factories  0.2
-  ———
-  1,647
-
- Therefrom it appears that the decrease of reserves of occupation
- cost funds amounting to 3,000 mill. RM on 15 January 1942 is
- primarily due to expenditures for purposes unrelated to the
- occupation.” (_1741-PS_)
-
- _Holland_
-
-Occupation charges were fixed at about 100,000,000 gulden a month
-(_ECR-174_; _EC-86_). (100 RM = 75 gulden, approximately (_EC-468_)).
-
-Expenditures were divided between “occupation” purposes and
-“nonoccupation” purposes, according to whether “the products purchased
-or produced on orders of the armed forces of the Netherlands remain in
-the Netherlands (occupation cost) or leave the Netherlands
-(nonoccupation cost)” (_ECR-174_). During the 20-month period from March
-1941 to October 1942, inclusive (the only period for which figures are
-available), out of the total occupation charges of 1,545,500,000 gulden,
-433,800,000 gulden were expended for “nonoccupation” purposes
-(_ECR-175-193_). A large part of the “pure” occupation expenditure,
-moreover, was for general war expenses, including the construction of
-fortifications and airfields, and the letting of shipbuilding contracts.
-(_ECR-180, 181, 183, 187, 191_)
-
-In theory, only the “occupation” costs were supposed to be charged to
-the Netherlands (_ECR-174_); until April 1941, the “nonoccupation”
-expenditures were returned to the Military Commander in the Netherlands
-(_ECR-175_). The claim of the Netherlands to the sums “returned,”
-however, was rejected. Moreover, as appears from the above cited reports
-(_ECR-175-193_), nonoccupation expenditure continued even after April
-1941, when reimbursements ceased. (_ECR-176_)
-
-During the first year of the occupation Germany exacted an additional
-levy from the Netherlands under the heading of “external occupation
-costs,” amounting to 500,000,000 RM (_ECR-194_). Of this sum,
-100,000,000 RM was paid in gold; the remainder was paid by a transfer of
-the clearing balance of the Netherlands Bank at the _Verrechnungskasse_
-to the German Ministry of Finance, that is, was used to reduce a credit
-which arose by reason of exports to the Reich. (_ECR-194_)
-
-In April 1942, “at the instigation of the Reich Commissioner
-Seyss-Inquart,” the Netherlands began to pay a “voluntary contribution
-to the war against Bolshevism” of 50,000,000 guilders per month,
-retroactive to 1 July 1941, of which 10,000,000 per month was paid in
-gold (_ECR-195_). By 31 March 1944, this “contribution” amounted to
-2,150,000,000 RM. (_EC-86_)
-
-It is immaterial whether this “contribution” was made at the direction
-of Seyss-Inquart or was in fact the “voluntary” act of the then
-President of the Netherlands Bank and Treasurer in the Ministry of
-Finance, Van Tonningen. Van Tonningen was appointed by Seyss-Inquart and
-acted in the German interest. His acts, like that of civilian
-administrators in occupied territories generally, must be charged to the
-occupant. (See _infra_, _Conclusion_.) The spirit in which he discharged
-his duties is sympathetically described by the German Commissar at the
-Netherlands Bank as follows:
-
- “The new President of the Netherlands Bank, Mr. Rost Van
- Tonningen, is, in contrast to a large part of the leadership,
- penetrated in his movements and his official acts by the greater
- German thought, and convinced of the necessity of the creation
- of a greater European economic space. This ideological attitude
- in itself gives him the correct position on financial and
- monetary policy questions for his country in relation to the
- greater German economic space. Furthermore, it makes easier
- cooperation with my office, a fact which deserves special
- mention in consideration of the frequently observed passive
- conduct of the Netherlands agencies before the entrance into
- office of the new President. I consider as a fortunate solution
- the fact that the Reichskommissar for the Occupied Dutch Areas
- has also entrusted Mr. Rost Van Tonningen with the Treasury of
- the Ministry of Finance (_Schatzamt des Finanzministeriums_).
- Mr. Rost Van Tonningen took over this office at the end of the
- month of April. Thus there is a guarantee that the financial and
- monetary policy of the country will be conducted according to
- unified points of view.” (_ECR-196_)
-
-(2) _The Nazi conspirators financed exports from the occupied countries
-to Germany by means of forced loans under the guise of clearing
-agreements._
-
- _Belgium_
-
-The principle of the clearing system is as follows:
-
-The importer makes a deposit of the purchase price in his own currency
-at the national clearing agency of his country, which places the same
-amount to the credit of the clearing agency of the exporting country.
-The latter institution then pays the exporter in his own currency. Thus
-if trade between two countries is unequal the clearing agency of one
-acquires a claim against the agency of the other which, however, is
-satisfied only when a shift in the balance of trade gives rise to an
-offsetting claim.
-
-In the order establishing the German-Belgium clearing, the Belgium
-clearing agency was the National Bank of Belgium (_3608-PS_). The
-administration of the clearing was shortly thereafter transferred to
-Emission Bank, an organization originally incorporated by Belgian
-interests pursuant to order of the Military Commander of 27 June 1940
-(_ECR-24_). The change was one in name only, however, since at this time
-the management of the two banks was substantially identical and the
-Emission Bank obtained its currency by loan from the National Bank. The
-Emission Bank was, by its charter terms, subject to orders of the
-Commissar at the National Bank; the Commissar obtained the same powers
-over the National Bank by German order of 16 December 1940. (_ECR-24_)
-
-The Belgian total “credit” under the clearing, as of 31 July 1944,
-amounted to 60,837,000,000 bfrs = 4,867,000,000 RM, of which
-54,993,000,000 bfrs = 4,399,000,000 RM arose from the Belgian-German
-clearing for goods and services. (_ECR-173_)
-
-The continued increase in the Belgian “credit” was due mainly to “the
-increasing Belgian export to Germany for which there are only small
-imports from Germany on the other side of the account.” (_ECR-149_)
-
-The entire Belgian credit under the clearing constitutes a forced loan,
-largely for nonoccupation purposes:
-
-(_a_) The Belgian-German clearing was established by circular of the
-Reichs Minister of Economics, 4 July 1940 (_ECH-6_), which was published
-to the Belgians by proclamation of the Military Commander of 10 July
-1940 (_EC-604_; _3608-PS_).
-
-(_b_) “Since it was to be foreseen that as the result of the increased
-deliveries from Belgium to the Reich, which were not matched by opposite
-accounts, particularly in the early period, the clearing status would
-develop to the favor of the Emission Bank” (_ECR-24_), an agreement was
-signed by the Emission Bank and the German Reichsbank on 16/17 August
-1940 under which each undertook to pay out clearing transfers
-immediately (_ECR-24_; _ECH-5_).
-
-(_c_) This agreement did not prescribe what must be financed through the
-clearing; it merely provided for immediate payment of claim arising
-thereunder without waiting until the account should be balanced by
-equalizing of imports and exports. As the Military Commander stated, the
-German-Belgian clearing was “not regulated by an agreement, but has been
-regulated unilaterally by my proclamation of 10 July 1940” (_EC-604_).
-The Military Commander made clear the absolute power asserted by the
-German authorities over the Belgian Note Banks (as the Germans described
-the Emission and National Banks). He stated:
-
- “* * * The claim made to the Commissar that the Emission Bank is
- entitled to ask in every case for detailed explanation of
- compensation payments coming from Germany is incorrect. The
- clearing activities between Germany and Belgium are not
- regulated by an agreement but have been regulated unilaterally
- by my proclamation on July 10, 1940 and are not subject to any
- Belgian control. Inter-alia the transfer of all payments which
- have been specially authorized by the Reich Ministry of Economy
- has been expressly permitted * * *.” (_EC-604_)
-
-(_d_) The Commissar freely invoked his directive power over the Note
-Banks.
-
- 1. When, in April 1941, the clearing balance of the Emission
- Bank exceeded 1,500,000 bfrs the Emission Bank refused to pay
- out several large sums arising by virtue of German-Belgian
- “capital” transactions. Thereupon, the Commissar issued an order
- directing the bank to make the payment. (_ECR-24_)
-
- 2. In December 1941, the Emission Bank refused to pay out a sum
- of 43,256,000 RM transferred from Paris. The Commissar thereupon
- issued an order directing the bank to do so. (_ECR-172_)
-
- 3. In October 1942, the Emission Bank refused to pay out certain
- amounts expended for purchases on the Belgian black market. The
- military administrator, however, “held down the increasing
- resistance of the Note Banks which culminated at the end of
- October of this year in a public threat of resignation by the
- Governor of the National Bank, by the heaviest pressure, and
- forced the Note Banks, while emphasizing his willingness to
- negotiate on certain Belgian proposals, again to take up the
- global clearing transfers for German procurement agencies which
- were cut off for a period” (_ECR-132_). The nature of this
- pressure is explicitly shown in the following communication from
- the Commissar to the President of the Emission Bank dated 29
- October 1942:
-
- “The Military Commander has ordered me to inform you of the
- following:
-
- “The requested extension of time for the resumption of business
- relations with the Armed Forces Clearing Institute
- (_Wehrmachtverrechnungskasse_) and for the payment of the
- arrears of RM 60 million have been denied. An official will
- determine tomorrow at 10 a. m. whether payment has been made.
-
- “Severest measures against you and all responsible parties must
- be expected in case of failure to pay.
-
- “If acts of sabotage occur on the equipment and the values of
- the National Bank or the Emission Bank, you and the gentlemen
- designated on the enclosed list will be held responsible
- personally and your property will be seized. Your liability is a
- joint one.” (_EC-605_)
-
- _France_
-
-The “credit” balance of the Bank of France under the Franco-German
-clearing established on 14 November 1940 amounted to 4,400,000,000 RM as
-of September 1943 (_3615-PS_). The clearing arrangement was designed, of
-course, principally for the financing of exports, that is, for purposes
-not related to the needs of the occupation army. (_EC-619_)
-
-Coercion in the establishment of the Franco-German clearing is readily
-demonstrable. Extreme pressure was brought to bear, particularly in
-regard to the rate of exchange established in the agreement, by
-threatening to cut off communications between “occupied” and
-“nonoccupied” zones in France (_3602-PS_; _3603-PS_), a step which would
-have destroyed the last vestige of economic order in France. The harsh
-terms of the agreement, which required the Bank of France to make
-immediate payment for exports to Germany regardless of the balance of
-trade, fixed the rate of exchange at 20 francs to the mark (as compared
-to 10 to 1 before the war), and gave Germany a unilateral option to
-cancel at any time, forcibly suggest that the agreement would not
-voluntarily have been accepted. (_EC-619_)
-
- _Holland_
-
-The clearing system between Holland and Germany was of short duration,
-being cancelled effective 1 April 1941, when free transfer of
-Reichsmarks to Holland was introduced. (See _infra_, D, (5).) It is
-therefore not deemed of sufficient importance to warrant discussion at
-this point.
-
-(3) _The Nazi conspirators unlawfully took over the gold reserve of the
-National Bank of Belgium and the Netherlands Bank in the interest of the
-German general war effort._
-
- _Belgium_
-
-The gold of the National Bank, deposited with the Bank of France and
-transferred to Dakar, was brought to Berlin pursuant to German-French
-“agreement” in the amount of 545,700,000 RM (_ECR-149_), and there
-deposited with the Reichsbank in Berlin (_ECR-24_). Because of the “high
-demands on gold and foreign exchange” which led to a “considerable
-straining of the reserves” (_EC-401_), the “Reich Government felt itself
-required to lay claim to the gold of the National Bank for the Reich”
-(_ECR-149_). A decision to proceed by requisitioning under paragraph 52
-of the Hague Regulations (_EC-401_) was not executed, apparently because
-of fears on the part of the Reichsbank that title thus acquired would
-not be recognized (_ECR-115_). On order of Goering (_ECH-5, part 9,
-Annex XIII_), the gold was then “requisitioned on 19 September 1942 by
-the Oberpraesident of the Province of Mark Brandenburg for the Deputy of
-the Four-Year Plan, on the basis of the Reich Contribution Law
-(_Reichsleistungsgesetz_) of 1.IX.1939 (Sec. 15, paragraph 1, No. 5, and
-Sec. 2a)” (_ECR-149_).
-
- _Holland_
-
-As shown above, part of the Dutch “voluntary” contribution to the “war
-against Bolshevism” was paid in gold. The gold was, in fact, taken from
-the Netherlands Bank. (_EC-401_)
-
-(4) _The Nazi conspirators unlawfully compelled the nationals of the
-occupied countries to surrender and offer for sale all precious metals
-and foreign exchange to the local central banks, which delivered them to
-the German Reichsbank._
-
- _Belgium_
-
-By German decree of 17 June 1940 and administrative orders issued
-pursuant thereto the Belgians were required to surrender gold and
-foreign exchange notes to the Emission Bank, which in turn, delivered
-the loot to the Reichsbank (_ECR-24_).
-
-By May 1943, the Reichsbank had acquired in this fashion gold and
-foreign exchange of the value of 23,400,000 RM. (_ECR-149_)
-
- _Holland_
-
-Gold and foreign exchange delivered by the Netherlands Bank to the
-Reichsbank “on the basis of the direction of the Reichsmarshal”
-(Goering) amounted to 74,000,000 RM through November 1940. (_EC-465_)
-
- _France_
-
-It is believed that the same practice was followed in France, but
-evidence as to details has not been found in the German documents
-presently available.
-
-(5) _The Nazi conspirators used German Reichsmarks as currency in the
-Netherlands, for purposes unrelated to the needs of the occupational
-troops, which currency they caused to be freely exchanged for gulden by
-the Netherlands Bank._ The Nazi conspirators, animated in part by the
-view that the Netherlands were “akin in blood to the German nation”
-(_3613-PS_), sought to promote a “mutual interpenetration of the German
-and Netherlands economies” through the acquisition by Germans of Dutch
-participations (_EC-468_) and Dutch investment in German securities.
-(_ECR-174_)
-
-To this end, restrictions on the free transfer of Reichsmark and gulden
-across the German-Dutch border were removed. Conversations between the
-Reich Economics and Finance Ministers in October 1940 led to the first
-step in this direction, the issuance by the Economics Minister of a
-Circular (_Runderlass_)—No. 89/40—which produced substantial changes
-in the foreign exchange control along the German-Dutch borders
-(_EC-468_). This provided, _inter-alia_, that RM 1,000 or its equivalent
-in gulden could be taken across the German-Dutch border by travelers or
-in border trade without permit, and permitted Germans to transfer to
-Holland up to 5,000 RM per person per month for any purpose except
-purchase of goods without any permission (_EC-468_).
-
-These relaxations were made effective in Holland by free exchange of
-Reichsmarks for gulden by the Netherlands Bank, introduced “on the
-initiative” of the Commissar, and by enforced acceptance of Reichsmark
-currency by the Dutch business population. (_EC-468_)
-
-The Reichsmarks thus made available in the Netherlands were mainly used
-to purchase Dutch securities on the stock exchange (_EC-468_).
-Permission to make such purchases was extended to a large number of
-German banks by the German Ministry of Economics. The transfers were
-made with “reluctance” by the Dutch, in connection with which the Reich
-Commissar at the Netherlands Bank observed, “it may be pointed out with
-some justification that an out-payment of gulden made against a
-Reichsmark credit, which can only result through the burdening of the
-Netherlands State credit, represents no genuine transfer” (_EC-468_).
-
-Notwithstanding the objections of the then Commissar at the Netherlands
-Bank (_EC-468_), circular 87/40 was soon followed by No. 29/41 of 31
-March 1941, which abolished almost completely all restrictions on the
-free use of the Reichsmark in Holland (_ECR-197_). Circular 29/41
-provided that all foreign exchange transactions between Germany and the
-Netherlands were freed of control, the only important exception being
-that German investments of more than 100,000 gulden in Holland required
-permission of the Reichskommissar in the Netherlands. The clearing
-agreement was abolished, and payments between Germany and the
-Netherlands were permitted by simple bank checks, drafts, or postal
-money orders. A simultaneous order by the Reich Commissar for the
-Occupied Netherlands Areas lifted all restrictions set by Netherlands
-foreign exchange law on such transactions (_ECR-197_).
-
-After this “introduction of free payments traffic” or “removal of the
-foreign exchange frontiers,” payments for exports from Holland were made
-in Germany “through the accounts of the banks, mainly through the
-account of the Netherlands Bank, which takes on the exchange into gulden
-means of payment without further formalities.” (_ECR-174_)
-
-This exchange presumably merely continued the practice introduced
-earlier at the “instigation” of Seyss-Inquart. At all events, the
-President of the Bank, Van Tonningen, was a Nazi agent, and his acts may
-be charged to the Nazi conspirators.
-
-The result of this radical step was this:
-
- “Ever since the introduction of free payments traffic the status
- of the Netherlands Bank is mainly influenced by the taking up of
- Reichsmarks. On 31 March 1941, the day before the introduction
- of free payments traffic, the Netherlands Bank had a total stock
- of about 83 million RM of Reichsmark credits, on 30 April 1941
- of about 213 million RM, and on 31 May 1941 of about 366 million
- RM. Thus, in the two months after the removal of the foreign
- exchange frontier, it has taken up about 283 million RM, the
- gulden equivalent, at the rate of RM 132.7 equals florin 100, on
- the basis of the transfer agreement with the Reichsbank.”
- (_ECR-174_)
-
-Thus the Netherlands Bank was caused to pledge its credit (in the form
-of Dutch currency) in exchange for a Reichsmark credit. In this manner
-the Nazi conspirators were enabled to exact from the bank a loan
-unlimited in quantity and beyond the bank’s control, by the simple
-expedient of writing out a check in Germany.
-
-E. _Argument and Conclusion._
-
-The acts of the Nazi conspirators as revealed by the evidence constitute
-war crimes within the meaning of Article 6 (B) of the charter of the
-International Military Tribunal. Two general observations should be made
-at the outset. In the first place, the pertinent provisions of the Hague
-Regulations (_3737-PS_) are controlling. The Germans entered into an
-Armistice Agreement with only one of the countries under discussion
-(France), and the Franco-German Armistice Agreement of 22 June 1940
-contains nothing which purports to confer on the occupant powers broader
-than those which may be exercised under the Hague Regulations. Article 3
-of the Armistice reserves to Germany in the occupied zone “all the
-rights of the occupying power.” No other provision is material here. The
-language of Article 3 plainly does not purport to qualify in any way the
-otherwise binding terms of the Hague Regulations. The German position
-(_EC-113_) that “the rights of Article 3 are more extensive than the
-rights of the occupation power in the Hague Regulations” and permitted
-Germany to base thereon “all measures which are, according to her own
-judgment, necessary for the continuation of the war against England,” is
-therefore plainly untenable.
-
-Secondly, the collaboration of certain French, Dutch, and Belgian
-officials is legally immaterial and does not serve to shield the Nazi
-conspirators from responsibility for the acts done in the territory
-under German control. Belgium, Holland, and a large part of France were
-under German occupation throughout the period in question and, after 10
-November 1942, so-called Vichy France was overrun and occupied as well.
-It is accepted doctrine that governmental authority is completely,
-albeit temporarily, vested in the occupant during the period of its
-control. Whether the occupant elects to employ the existing
-administrative machinery and personnel or substitute its own, is solely
-a question of political and administrative convenience; the choice is
-without legal significance. The civil administration of an occupied
-country, it may be confidently asserted, has no independent legal status
-whatever.
-
-(1) _The acts of the Nazi conspirators as revealed by the evidence are
-prohibited by the Hague Regulations._
-
-(_a_) _The forcible removal of machinery, foodstuffs, and raw
-materials._ It has been shown above that the Nazis forcibly removed
-large quantities of machinery, foodstuffs, and raw materials to Germany,
-including even church bells and the strategic metals contained in the
-transmission systems of the occupied countries. Articles 52 and 53 of
-the Hague Regulations (the only pertinent provisions) provide no basis
-for such action.
-
-Article 52 of the Hague Regulations declares that requisitions in kind
-and services shall not be demanded except for “the needs of the
-occupation army,” a limitation deliberately substituted for the less
-restrictive one of “military necessity” which had previously been
-contained in the Brussels Declaration of 1874 (_Conference
-Internationale de la Paix, La Haye_, 1899, Part I, p. 60; Part III, pp.
-45, 181). It is settled that requisitions for export to the country of
-the occupying power is violative of Article 52 (see Feilchenfeld, _The
-International Law of Belligerent Occupation_, Washington, 1942, pars.
-148-149, and cases cited).
-
-The argument, advanced by the Germans in defense of such requisitions
-during the first World War (see Garner, _International Law and World
-War_, Vol. II, p. 126, n.) and frequently again during the recent
-conflict (_EC-344-7_; _ECH-16_), that the limitations of Article 52 may
-be disregarded in case of military necessity, is not well founded.
-Article 23g, which permits the destruction of private property when
-“imperatively demanded by the necessities of war,” is included among the
-provisions relating to the rights of belligerents in the conduct of
-military operations, and has no relation to the powers of a belligerent
-in an occupied area in which conflict has ceased (see Garner, _loc. cit.
-supra_). The latter are governed, so far as material here, by Articles
-42-56.
-
-Apart from Article 23g, there is no basis whatever for the German
-position. The Hague Regulations are limitations on the powers which may
-be exercised under the plea of military necessity (II, Oppenheim,
-_International Law_, 6th Edition Revised, edited by Lauterpacht, p. 185,
-n.1). An exception for cases of alleged military necessity, therefore,
-cannot be implied. The deliberate substitution of the present
-terminology in lieu of the vague limitations of “military necessity” as
-contained in the Brussels Declaration of 1874, moreover, would seem to
-remove all basis for a contrary construction.
-
-Article 53 provides no better support for the Nazis’ action. The second
-paragraph, relating to private property, states:
-
- “All appliances, whether on land, on sea, or in the air, adapted
- for the transmission of news, or for the transport of persons or
- things, exclusive of cases governed by naval law, depots of arms
- and, generally, all kinds of munitions of war, may be seized
- even if they belong to private individuals, but must be restored
- and compensation fixed when peace is made.”
-
-This Article, it may be conceded, authorizes not only the sequestration
-but the use of all matters within its reach. The term “munitions of
-war,” however, clearly refers only to chattels (Feilchenfeld, _supra_,
-par. 351). It does not, therefore, include machinery affixed to the
-realty. The German legal advisors uniformly so conceded during this war
-(_EC-560_; _EC-84_; _EC-263_; _EC-344-7_). The suggestion that Article
-53 is subject to an implied exception in the case of military necessity
-(_EC-344-7_) is, for reasons noted above, untenable. It is equally clear
-that the deliberate removal of the metal content of the transmission
-systems in the occupied areas is without legal basis. Article 53 in
-terms requires restoration when peace is made and, whatever exceptions
-may be implied in case of munitions which are necessarily consumed by
-use, no basis can be found for the deliberate destruction of
-transmission facilities.
-
-The question as to the class of chattels included within the
-deliberately general term “munitions of war” is not free from doubt. The
-right of seizure is based on military necessity, namely, the danger of
-leaving at large things which are peculiarly adapted to warlike purposes
-(Spaight, _War Rights on Land_, p. 512). It should accordingly be
-limited to those things which are “susceptible of direct military use”
-(see British Manual of Military Law, 1929, Amendment No. 12, par. 415;
-U. S. Army Basic Field Manual on Rules of Land Warfare, FM 27-10, 1940,
-par. 332). Article 53, which contains no limitation restricting seizures
-to the needs of the occupation army, would otherwise completely nullify
-the deliberate limitations on the right of requisition imposed in
-Article 52. In this view, raw materials and even semi-finished goods,
-save perhaps such goods as are normally part of military equipment,
-would seem outside the reach of Article 53.
-
-(_b_) _The control and direction of production and distribution in the
-German interest._ The planned control and direction of the economy of
-the occupied countries in the interest of the German war effort
-constitute a violation of Article 52. This seems clearly true to the
-extent that production and sale for export to Germany were ordered by
-the _Ruestungsobmann_ pursuant to Speer’s directive late in 1943. It
-would seem equally true of the earlier method of control by prohibitions
-and restrictions. For the net effect of the priority system was to leave
-no alternative to producing in the German interest save to cease
-operations. And even this alternative was not available, since the power
-to appoint a commissar in case of recalcitrant plants was expressly
-reserved.
-
-Article 53, which is limited to chattels and has no relation to the
-demanding of personal services in any event, provides not even a remote
-basis for the imposition of the controls in question.
-
-In what has been said, it is not meant to be suggested that an occupant
-is without power to institute a system of rationing for articles in
-short supply with the aim of securing an equitable distribution among
-the population of the occupied area. Such a measure is plainly related
-to the promotion of economic order and there is nothing in the Hague
-Regulations which restricts even requisition for the needs of the local
-population. The Nazi controls, however, were exercised, not in the
-interest of the local population, but to fulfill the general war
-requirements of Germany, in the Reich as well as in the occupied area.
-
-(_c_) _Levy of occupation charges for purposes not related to the needs
-of the occupation army._ Article 49 of the Hague Regulations limits the
-levy of occupation charges to the “needs of the army or of the
-administration of the territory in question.” The only purpose for which
-such contributions may be levied (other than for the financing of the
-costs of administration, a matter not material here), is to supply the
-needs of the army of occupation (_Conference Internationale de la Paix,
-La Haye_, 1899, Pt. I, p. 60; Feilchenfeld, _supra_, par. 167; Spaight,
-_supra_, pp. 384-392). The power to levy contributions is reserved in
-order to permit an equitable distribution among the entire community of
-costs which, if supplies were requisitioned, would fall directly and
-solely on the owners of the requisitioned property (Spaight, _supra_,
-pp. 387-389). Accordingly, the levy of contributions to finance exports
-or for other purposes unrelated to the needs of the army in the
-territory in question would seem plainly forbidden (Feilchenfeld,
-_supra_, par. 167; Spaight, _supra_, pp. 384-392).
-
-Moreover, as Article 49 refers to the occupation army only, the levy of
-contributions to support the troops engaged in military operations
-against an enemy located outside the boundaries of the occupied country
-or to finance other general war expenses would seem prohibited.
-
-(_d_) _Forced loans._ Forced loans can be justified only as
-contributions and are therefore subject to the same limitations
-(Feilchenfeld, _supra_, par. 185). The forced loans under the
-Belgian-German and Franco-German clearing arrangements, were executed
-largely to finance exports to Germany, that is, for nonoccupation
-purposes.
-
-(_e_) _The exchange of reichsmarks for gulden by the Netherlands Bank._
-These transactions, whether viewed as resulting in a loan or merely in
-an exchange, constitute a contribution of money for nonoccupation
-purposes. It may be assumed that they were carried out “voluntarily”
-while the Netherlands Bank was under the immediate direction of Rost Van
-Tonningen. This circumstance is immaterial, however, since Van Tonningen
-was a civil official appointed by Seyss-Inquart, and his authority, like
-that of civilian officials in occupied areas generally, was derived
-solely from that of the occupant.
-
-(_f_) _The taking over of gold of the National Bank of Belgium and the
-Netherlands Bank._ That the gold of the National Bank of Belgium was
-private property is not disputed; the Nazi conspirators proceeded on
-this view in the original decision to requisition under Article 52
-(_EC-401, second enclosure_). Confiscation under Article 53, first
-paragraph, therefore, was not open to the Nazi conspirators; so far as
-appears they never considered such a step.
-
-It may be assumed for purposes of argument that gold is subject to
-requisition under the Hague Regulations. Requisition may be made,
-however, only for the needs of the occupation army. It cannot be
-resorted to to relieve the “considerable straining of the reserves” of
-Germany.
-
-The gold reserve of the Netherlands Bank, it is believed, is private
-property, no less than that of the National Bank of Belgium. In this
-view, the taking over of the gold of the Netherlands Bank was likewise
-illegal. There is, of course, no basis in law for exacting a
-contribution for the so-called “war against Bolshevism,” to use the
-Nazis’ phrase. And, for the reasons indicated above, it is immaterial
-whether these “contributions” were “voluntarily” made by Van Tonningen.
-
-(_g_) _The compulsory surrender of gold and foreign exchange._ The
-requirement of surrender of gold and foreign exchange for ultimate
-delivery to the Reichsbank amounts in substance to a requisition and
-cannot be supported because obviously done solely to maintain the
-reserves of foreign exchange for the total war effort, not for the needs
-of the occupation army alone.
-
-(_h_) _The acquisition of business interests._ The Nazis’ acquisition of
-Belgian, Dutch, and French participations was unlawful. That this is so
-in the case of the sales ordered by the Ministry of Economics is clear
-(_EC-43_). The conclusion should be the same even when sale was not
-expressly ordered. These purchases were financed through the clearing
-system (which, as shown above, constituted a forced loan) and out of
-occupation cost funds. Since such expenditures bore no relation to the
-needs of the occupation army or, indeed, served any purpose other than
-to enrich the Nazi conspirators and their nominees, the Nazi program for
-acquisition of participations was in plain violation of Article 49 of
-the Hague Regulations.
-
-(2) _Such acts constitute “plunder of public or private property” within
-the meaning of Article 6 (B) of the Charter of the International
-Military Tribunal._ Save as they may be authorized by International Law
-(and hence “consented” to by the occupied countries), the acts
-complained of are of a character condemned by the criminal code of the
-occupied countries and, indeed, of all civilized nations. Absent such
-authority, the forcible permanent taking of money or other property
-whether from Government agencies or private persons, constitutes larceny
-or, as known in the international law of belligerent occupation,
-“pillage” (Garner, _supra_, pp. 472-473). The question of which court or
-courts may try and punish for the offense is one of jurisdiction only
-(see Garner, _supra_, pp. 475-480) and has been resolved by the
-Agreement and Charter of the International Military Tribunal.
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO GERMANIZATION AND
- SPOLIATION
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6, especially 6 (b, │ │
- │ c). │ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, │ │
- │ Indictment Number 1, Sections III; │ │ 15, 43,
- │ VIII (E, J). │ I │ 51
- │ │ │
- 3737-PS │Hague Convention of 1907 respecting the │ │
- │ Laws and Customs of War on Land, │ │
- │ Annex, Articles 49, 52, 53, 55. │ VI │598, 599
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was│ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg │ │
- │trial. A double asterisk (**) before a │ │
- │document number indicates that the │ │
- │document was referred to during the │ │
- │trial but was not formally received in │ │
- │evidence, for the reason given in │ │
- │parentheses following the description of│ │
- │the document. The USA series number, │ │
- │given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
- *061-PS │Secret Bormann letter, 11 January 1944, │ │
- │concerning large-scale organization for │ │
- │withdrawal of commodities from occupied │ │
- │territories for use of bombed-out │ │
- │population in Germany. (USA 692) │ III │ 105
- │ │ │
- *294-PS │Top secret memorandum signed by │ │
- │Brautigam, 25 October 1942, concerning │ │
- │conditions in Russia. (USA 185) │ III │ 242
- │ │ │
- *661-PS │Secret thesis from the Academy of German│ │
- │Law, January 1940, on Resettlement. (USA│ │
- │300) │ III │ 472
- │ │ │
- *686-PS │Decree of the Fuehrer and Reich │ │
- │Chancellor to strengthen German Folkdom,│ │
- │7 October 1939, signed by Hitler, │ │
- │Goering, Lammers and Keitel. (USA 305) │ III │ 496
- │ │ │
- *862-PS │Memorandum by General Friderici, │ │
- │Plenipotentiary of the Wehrmacht to the │ │
- │Reich Protector of Bohemia and Moravia, │ │
- │initialled by Keitel, Jodl and │ │
- │Warlimont, 15 October 1940, concerning │ │
- │plan to Germanize Czechoslovakia. (USA │ │
- │313) │ III │ 618
- │ │ │
- *910-PS │Notes on Himmler’s plan for │ │
- │Germanization of Poland, 27 and 30 March│ │
- │1942, from the Main Office, Interior │ │
- │Administration, initialled “Dr. S. H.”. │ │
- │(USA 310) │ III │ 639
- │ │ │
-  997-PS │Top secret report by Seyss-Inquart │ │
- │concerning the situation in the │ │
- │Netherlands—Exploitation and │ │
- │Nazification in period 29 May to 19 July│ │
- │1940. │ III │ 641
- │ │ │
-*1029-PS │Paper entitled “Instructions for a Reich│ │
- │Commissar in the Baltic States”, 8 May │ │
- │1941, found in Rosenberg’s “Russia │ │
- │File”. (USA 145) │ III │ 690
- │ │ │
-*1058-PS │Excerpt from a speech, 20 June 1941, by │ │
- │Rosenberg before people most intimately │ │
- │concerned with Eastern Problem, found in│ │
- │his “Russia File”. (USA 147) │ III │ 716
- │ │ │
-*1352-PS │Reports concerning the confiscation of │ │
- │Polish agricultural properties, 16 and │ │
- │29 May 1940, signed Kusche. (USA 176) │ III │ 916
- │ │ │
- 1445-PS │Report on conference at Ministry of │ │
- │Economics regarding use of Belgian and │ │
- │Dutch capital investments in │ │
- │southeastern European enterprises, 15 │ │
- │June 1940. │ IV │ 20
- │ │ │
-*1456-PS │Thomas memorandum 20 June 1941; Keitel │ │
- │consulted about resources of USSR. (USA │ │
- │148) │ IV │ 21
- │ │ │
- 1741-PS │Collection of documents relating to the │ │
- │French Armistice. │ IV │ 228
- │ │ │
- 1765-PS │Report of the Commissioner for the Four │ │
- │Year Plan Plenipotentiary for Special │ │
- │Missions on Black Market Activities, 15 │ │
- │January 1943. │ IV │ 325
- │ │ │
-*1918-PS │Speech by Himmler to SS officers on day │ │
- │of Metz. (USA 304) │ IV │ 553
- │ │ │
- 1991-PS │Sixth report on activity and final │ │
- │report of the German Armistice │ │
- │Delegation for Economy, and of Delegate │ │
- │of Reich Government for Economic and │ │
- │Financial Questions with French │ │
- │Government, 1 July 1943 to 17 August │ │
- │1944. │ IV │ 605
- │ │ │
-*1997-PS │Decree of the Fuehrer, 17 July 1941, │ │
- │concerning administration of Newly │ │
- │Occupied Eastern Territories. (USA 319) │ IV │ 634
- │ │ │
- 2149-PS │Letter, 11 December 1942, to Foreign │ │
- │Office, enclosing statement of German │ │
- │Reichsbank concerning question of an │ │
- │increase of French contributions to │ │
- │Occupation expenses. │ IV │ 758
- │ │ │
-*2233-D-PS │Frank Diary. Regierungsitzungen. 1941. │ │
- │October-December. Entry of 16 December │ │
- │1941 at pp. 76-77. (USA 281) │ IV │ 891
- │ │ │
-*2233-G-PS │Frank Diary. 1939. 25 October to 15 │ │
- │December. (USA 302) │ IV │ 903
- │ │ │
-*2233-H-PS │Frank Diary. Tagebuch. 1941. Part II. │ │
- │Entry of 19 April 1941. (USA 311) │ IV │ 904
- │ │ │
-*2749-PS │Title page of publication of Academy for│ │
- │German Law, 7th year, 1940. (USA 301) │ V │ 390
- │ │ │
-*2915-PS │Extracts from German Labor, June-July │ │
- │1942. (USA 306) │ V │ 580
- │ │ │
-*2916-PS │Commitment of Manpower │ │
- │Doctrines-Orders-Directives, published │ │
- │by Office of Reich Commissioner for │ │
- │strengthening of National Character of │ │
- │German People, December 1940. (USA 307) │ V │ 581
- │ │ │
- 3602-PS │Report on conversation (interview) │ │
- │between Mr. Hemmen and Mr. de Boisanger,│ │
- │4 October. │ VI │ 314
- │ │ │
- 3603-PS │Report on conversation between Mr. │ │
- │Hemmen and Mr. de Boisanger, 10 October.│ VI │ 314
- │ │ │
- 3604-PS │Decree concerning rationing of │ │
- │industrial goods from Official Gazette │ │
- │of Military Commander in Belgium and │ │
- │Northern France, 1940-41, p. 37, Sec. 1.│ VI │ 315
- │ │ │
- 3605-PS │Rationing decree, 27 May 1940, from │ │
- │Official Gazette of Military Commander │ │
- │in Belgium and Northern France, 1940-41,│ │
- │p. 37, Sec. 4. │ VI │ 315
- │ │ │
- 3606-PS │Rationing decree, 27 May 1940, from │ │
- │Official Gazette of Military Commanders │ │
- │in Belgium and Northern France, 1940-41,│ │
- │p. 38, Sec. 10. │ VI │ 316
- │ │ │
- 3607-PS │Public Notice on Board of Directors of │ │
- │Reichskreditkasse, from Official Gazette│ │
- │of Military Commander in Belgium and │ │
- │Northern France, 1940-41, p. 65. │ VI │ 316
- │ │ │
- 3608-PS │Public Notice of Establishment of a │ │
- │Clearing system between Belgium and │ │
- │German Reich, 10 July 1940, from │ │
- │Official Gazette of Military Commander │ │
- │in Belgium and Northern France. │ VI │ 317
- │ │ │
- 3609-PS │Decree for execution of rationing decree│ │
- │in Belgium, 5 November 1940, from │ │
- │Official Gazette of Military Commander │ │
- │in Belgium and Northern France. │ VI │ 318
- │ │ │
- 3610-PS │Decree regarding Plant Commissars, 29 │ │
- │April 1941, from Official Gazette of │ │
- │Military Commander in Belgium and │ │
- │Northern France, 1940-41, p. 599. │ VI │ 319
- │ │ │
- 3611-PS │Decree on economic measures against │ │
- │Jews, 31 May 1941, from Official Gazette│ │
- │of Military Commander in Belgium and │ │
- │Northern France, 1940-41, p. 620, Sec. │ │
- │17. │ VI │ 320
- │ │ │
- 3612-PS │Decree regarding prohibition of │ │
- │manufacturing of certain products, 6 │ │
- │August 1942, from Official Gazette of │ │
- │Military Commander in Belgium and │ │
- │Northern France, 1942, p. 986, Sec. 1. │ VI │ 321
- │ │ │
- 3613-PS │Proclamation to Netherlands population, │ │
- │25 May 1940, from Official Gazette for │ │
- │Occupied Dutch Territory, No. 1, 5 June │ │
- │1940. │ VI │ 321
- │ │ │
- 3615-PS │Report by Ostrow on examination of │ │
- │records of Reichskreditkasse, 29 │ │
- │September 1945. │ VI │ 322
- │ │ │
- 3616-PS │Decree on prohibition to establish and │ │
- │enlarge enterprises and on shutting down│ │
- │enterprises, 30 March 1942, from │ │
- │Official Gazette of Military Commander │ │
- │in Belgium and Northern France, 1942, p.│ │
- │865. │ VI │ 388
- │ │ │
-*EC-3 │Letter of Liaison Staff at Supreme │ │
- │Headquarters, Armament Procurement │ │
- │Office directed to General Thomas, Chief│ │
- │of Wi Rue Amt, Berlin, 25 November 1941.│ │
- │(USA 318) │ VII │ 242
- │ │ │
- EC-21 │Memorandum of Posse, 8 January 1940. │ VII │ 249
- │ │ │
- EC-34 │Report No. 1 on activities of Military │ │
- │Administration for month of November │ │
- │1940. │ VII │ 254
- │ │ │
- EC-41 │Notice concerning seizure of security │ │
- │properties of Dutch and Belgian │ │
- │holdings, 23 May 1940. │ VII │ 255
- │ │ │
- EC-43 │Report on conferences at Ministry of │ │
- │Economics, 20 August 1940, regarding │ │
- │acquisition of shares in important │ │
- │foreign enterprises in Southeast Europe.│ VII │ 258
- │ │ │
- EC-69 │Memorandum of General Holder, 13 │ │
- │December 1939, regarding treatment of │ │
- │economical questions at the OKH. │ VII │ 262
- │ │ │
- EC-84 │Report of Lt. Colonel Helder on │ │
- │reconversion of the economy, 7 December │ │
- │1940. │ VII │ 263
- │ │ │
- EC-86 │Report on financial contributions of the│ │
- │Occupied Areas. │ VII │ 264
- │ │ │
- EC-87 │Report on contribution of Netherlands │ │
- │for German War economy. │ VII │ 278
- │ │ │
- EC-101 │Affidavit by Schmid-Lossberg, 21 │ │
- │September 1945, concerning Holland, │ │
- │Belgium and France. │ VII │ 280
- │ │ │
- EC-113 │Covering letter, 8 July 1940, to letter │ │
- │from Supreme Command of Armed Forces, │ │
- │concerning decision of Fuehrer in │ │
- │Armistice questions, and memorandum of │ │
- │Goering, 5 July 1940. │ VII │ 291
- │ │ │
-*EC-126 │Economic Policy Directive for Economic │ │
- │Organization, East, Agricultural Group, │ │
- │23 May 1941. (USA 316) │ VII │ 295
- │ │ │
- EC-137 │Memorandum of Goering, 2 August 1940, │ │
- │regarding extension of German interests │ │
- │in foreign enterprise, and covering │ │
- │letter. │ VII │ 309
- │ │ │
- EC-155 │Collection of planned decrees on │ │
- │economic matters, from Military │ │
- │Administration-Economy, pp. 50-74. │ VII │ 312
- │ │ │
- EC-256 │Letter from Dr. Lammers to Goering and │ │
- │Funk, 12 October 1937. │ VII │ 346
- │ │ │
- EC-261 │Letter from Funk to all Ministries, 14 │ │
- │March 1938, regarding appointment of │ │
- │Sarnow, deputy of Plenipotentiary for │ │
- │War Economy. │ VII │ 371
- │ │ │
- EC-263 │Note on draft of decree on confiscation │ │
- │of private Polish property. │ VII │ 373
- │ │ │
- EC-267 │Development and Position of French │ │
- │Industry in area of Military Commander, │ │
- │France, in 1941, from Report on Economy │ │
- │by Military Commander, France. │ VII │ 376
- │ │ │
-*EC-305 │Minutes of meeting on 12 February 1940, │ │
- │under Chairmanship of Goering concerning│ │
- │labor supply in the East. (USA 303) │ VII │ 402
- │ │ │
- EC-323 │Telegram signed Schleier, dated Paris 26│ │
- │April 1941. │ VII │ 406
- │ │ │
- EC-335 │Report of the Military Administration in│ │
- │Belgium and Northern France, │ │
- │January-March 1943. │ VII │ 407
- │ │ │
- EC-336 │Report of the Reich Minister for │ │
- │Occupied Eastern Territories, 26 │ │
- │November 1942, concerning treatment of │ │
- │Poles under his jurisdiction. │ VII │ 408
- │ │ │
- EC-344-7 │Report on Armament Economy in │ │
- │Poland, 1939-1940. │ VII │ 416
- │ │ │
-*EC-344 16 and │Thomas report, 20 August 1940, │ │
-17 │summarizing experience with German │ │
- │Armament Industry in Poland 1939-40 and │ │
- │extract from report by Captain Dr. │ │
- │Varain on same subject. (USA 297) │ VII │ 419
- │ │ │
-*EC-347 │Directives for operation of the Economy │ │
- │in Occupied Eastern Territories. (USA │ │
- │320) │ VII │ 421
- │ │ │
- EC-401 │Letter from Office Four Year Plan, 8 │ │
- │July 1942, on seizure of Belgian gold. │ VII │ 439
- │ │ │
-*EC-410 │Appendix to Goering’s directive of 19 │ │
- │October 1939 concerning the economic │ │
- │administration of Occupied Territories. │ │
- │(USA 298) │ VII │ 466
- │ │ │
-*EC-411 │Order by Hess concerning the │ │
- │reconstruction of certain industrial │ │
- │enterprises in Poland, 20 November 1939.│ │
- │(USA 299) │ VII │ 469
- │ │ │
- EC-422 │Extracts from History of the War │ │
- │Economy—and Armament Staff in France. │ VII │ 481
- │ │ │
- EC-427 │Letter from Lammers to Reichsbank │ │
- │Directorate, 20 January 1939, on │ │
- │appointment of Funk as President of │ │
- │Reichsbank. │ VII │ 484
- │ │ │
-*EC-453 │Letter to Himmler, 21 September 1943, │ │
- │and list of contributions by his │ │
- │friends. (USA 322) │ VII │ 510
- │ │ │
-*EC-454 │Letter to Himmler, 27 August 1943, │ │
- │regarding contributions by his friends. │ │
- │(USA 321) │ VII │ 512
- │ │ │
- EC-465 │Letter from Commissar with the │ │
- │Netherlands Bank, 9 December 1940, with │ │
- │November report to Fuehrer. │ VII │ 518
- │ │ │
- EC-468 │Letter from Commissar at the Netherlands│ │
- │Bank, 10 February 1941, with report for │ │
- │January 1941 to Fuehrer. │ VII │ 524
- │ │ │
- EC-469 │Memorandum on meeting in Duesseldorf, 25│ │
- │May 1940. │ VII │ 536
- │ │ │
- EC-470 │Special Events in the field of │ │
- │procurement of means of production, raw │ │
- │material, semi-finished products. │ VII │ 538
- │ │ │
- EC-471 │Armament Inspectorate Netherlands—War │ │
- │Diary for time from 1 January-31 March │ │
- │1943. │ VII │ 538
- │ │ │
-*EC-472 │Directives of Reich Marshal Goering │ │
- │concerning economic organization of │ │
- │Occupied Eastern Territories. (USA 315) │ VII │ 539
- │ │ │
- EC-472-A │War Diary of Armament Inspectorate from │ │
- │10 April 1940-30 September 1942. │ VII │ 540
- │ │ │
- EC-473 │Extract from History of Armament │ │
- │Inspectorate—Netherlands. │ VII │ 542
- │ │ │
- EC-474 │Letter, 1 June 1940, enclosing report of│ │
- │Armament Inspectorate Netherlands. │ VII │ 542
- │ │ │
- EC-485 │Minutes on Goering Meeting, 1 October │ │
- │1940, on the economic exploitation of │ │
- │Occupied Territories. │ VII │ 543
- │ │ │
- EC-560 │Extract from War Diary of Armament │ │
- │Inspectorate—Belgium 21 January 1941, │ │
- │regarding right to remove machinery. │ VII │ 584
- │ │ │
- EC-604 │Letter from Military Commander in │ │
- │Belgium and Northern France, 1 May 1942.│ VII │ 584
- │ │ │
- EC-605 │Letter of the Commissar with the │ │
- │Emission Bank in Brussels, 29 October │ │
- │1942, with enclosure. │ VII │ 585
- │ │ │
- EC-606 │Minutes concerning conference with Field│ │
- │Marshal Goering at Karinhall, 30 January│ │
- │1940. │ VII │ 588
- │ │ │
- EC-613 │Memorandum on contributions of French │ │
- │economy in favor of France performed at │ │
- │instigation of Military Commander in │ │
- │France. │ VII │ 602
- │ │ │
- EC-614 │Memorandum of the Military Commander in │ │
- │France. │ VII │ 602
- │ │ │
- EC-615 │Notes by General Thomas on Meeting with │ │
- │Colonel General Keitel, 1 December 1939.│ VII │ 603
- │ │ │
- EC-616 │Interference of War Economy and Armament│ │
- │Staff with raw material rationing boards│ │
- │from Situation Report of War Economy and│ │
- │Armament Staff of France. │ VII │ 603
- │ │ │
- EC-617 │Extracts from Situation Report of War │ │
- │Economy and Armament Staff of France. │ VII │ 604
- │ │ │
- EC-618 │Service instructions for Economic │ │
- │Squads. │ VII │ 604
- │ │ │
- EC-619 │Clearing agreement of 14 November 1940, │ │
- │for French-German payments. │ VII │ 608
- │ │ │
- EC-620 │Directive of Goering on exploitation of │ │
- │the Occupied Western Territories, 26 │ │
- │August 1940. │ VII │ 608
- │ │ │
- ECH-1 │Final report of Military Commander │ │
- │Belgium, Part 10, Section I, concerning │ │
- │German-Belgian trade. │ VII │ 609
- │ │ │
- ECH-2 │Report on Economic Planning of Military │ │
- │Commander Belgium and Northern France, │ │
- │13 September 1940. │ VII │ 610
- │ │ │
- ECH-3 │Final Report of Chief of Military │ │
- │Administration in Belgium and Northern │ │
- │France. │ VII │ 611
- │ │ │
- ECH-4 │Annual report of Military Commander of │ │
- │Belgium and Northern France, 15 July │ │
- │1941. │ VII │ 613
- │ │ │
- ECH-5 │Final Report of Military Commander in │ │
- │Belgium and Northern France. │ VII │ 615
- │ │ │
- ECH-6 │Final report of Military Commander in │ │
- │Belgium and Northern France. │ VII │ 620
- │ │ │
- ECH-7 │Final Report of Supervisory Office with │ │
- │Military Commander in Belgium and │ │
- │Northern France on legalized │ │
- │exploitation of black market in Belgium │ │
- │and Northern France. │ VII │ 622
- │ │ │
- ECH-9 │Circular of Military Commander, 19 June │ │
- │1943, concerning prohibition of black │ │
- │market purchase. │ VII │ 629
- │ │ │
- ECH-10 │Final Report of Military Commander on │ │
- │machinery clearing. │ VII │ 629
- │ │ │
- ECH-11 │Final Report of Military Commander on │ │
- │Church Bell drive in Belgium. │ VII │ 631
- │ │ │
- ECH-12 │Report of Activity Department for │ │
- │“Protection of Art” of Military │ │
- │Commander Belgium and Northern France. │ VII │ 632
- │ │ │
- ECH-14 │Letter from Speer, 23 June 1943, with │ │
- │covering letter. │ VII │ 632
- │ │ │
- ECH-15 │Draft of letter to Falkenhausen, 22 May │ │
- │1944. │ VII │ 634
- │ │ │
- ECH-16 │Memorandum from Military Administration │ │
- │Department for Culture, 17 May 1944, │ │
- │concerning requisition of scientific │ │
- │instruments. │ VII │ 635
- │ │ │
- ECH-19 │Final Report of Military Commander │ │
- │showing total picture of consolidation │ │
- │of Belgian Textile Industry. │ VII │ 636
- │ │ │
- ECH-21 │Letter from Military Commander in │ │
- │Belgium and Northern France to General │ │
- │Falkenhausen, 12 October 1940, and │ │
- │annexes. │ VII │ 637
- │ │ │
- ECH-22 │Final Report of Military Commander, │ │
- │concerning foreign exchange and gold. │ VII │ 639
- │ │ │
- ECH-23 │Report of Military Commander on supplies│ │
- │in the German interest in Belgium and │ │
- │Northern France in 1941. │ VII │ 641
- │ │ │
- ECH-24 │Introduction to Final Report of Military│ │
- │Commander by Dr. Beyer. │ VII │ 642
- │ │ │
- ECR-14 │Memorandum from Commissar at the Belgian│ │
- │National Bank on Clearing Transfers, 24 │ │
- │March 1941. │ VII │ 642
- │ │ │
- ECR-24 │Annual report of the Commissar at the │ │
- │National Bank of Belgium, covering │ │
- │period May 1940-May 1941. │ VII │ 642
- │ │ │
- ECR-32 │Memorandum from Reich Marshal of the │ │
- │Greater German Reich Commissioner for │ │
- │the Four Year Plan, 11 June 1941, on │ │
- │occupation costs in Belgium and covering│ │
- │letters. │ VII │ 667
- │ │ │
- ECR-35 │Memorandum from Special Commissioner │ │
- │West of the Reichskreditkassen, 2 August│ │
- │1941. │ VII │ 670
- │ │ │
- ECR-39 │Memorandum from Military Commander in │ │
- │Belgium and Northern France, 2 August │ │
- │1941, concerning procurement of │ │
- │Occupation Costs in Belgium, and │ │
- │covering letter. │ VII │ 671
- │ │ │
- ECR-59 │Memorandum from Military Commander in │ │
- │Belgium and Northern France, 2 October │ │
- │1941, on contributions from Belgium to │ │
- │the limit of its capacity, and covering │ │
- │letter. │ VII │ 676
- │ │ │
- ECR-72 │Memorandum from Special Commissioner │ │
- │West of RKK, 22 December 1941, ordering │ │
- │Emission Bank to pay out clearing │ │
- │transfer. │ VII │ 681
- │ │ │
- ECR-89 │Letter from Military Commander in │ │
- │Belgium and Northern France, 2 March │ │
- │1942, concerning payment for German │ │
- │Military Expenditures in Belgium through│ │
- │clearing; and letter of transmittal. │ VII │ 682
- │ │ │
- ECR-104 │Letter from Military Commander in │ │
- │Belgium and Northern France, 24 April │ │
- │1942, concerning payment of expenses of │ │
- │German Armed Forces in Belgium in │ │
- │clearing. │ VII │ 685
- │ │ │
- ECR-106 │Memorandum from Commissar at the │ │
- │National Bank of Belgium, 1 May 1942, on│ │
- │use of occupation funds for black market│ │
- │purchases and political purposes. │ VII │ 686
- │ │ │
- ECR-115 │Teletype, 27 July 1942, on position of │ │
- │Reichsbank regarding requisition of │ │
- │Belgian gold. │ VII │ 689
- │ │ │
- ECR-132 │Report of the Commissar at the National │ │
- │Bank of Belgium, 1 December 1942, │ │
- │covering period August-October 1942. │ VII │ 690
- │ │ │
- ECR-142 │Letter from Military Commander in │ │
- │Belgium and Northern France, 22 February│ │
- │1943, on exchange of RKK notes in │ │
- │Belgium. │ VII │ 695
- │ │ │
- ECR-149 │Third Annual Report of the Commissar at │ │
- │the National Bank of Belgium, 5 June │ │
- │1943. │ VII │ 700
- │ │ │
- ECR-155-A │Memorandum from Special Commissioner │ │
- │West of Reichskreditkassen, 7 December │ │
- │1943, on occupation costs. │ VII │ 716
- │ │ │
- ECR-166 │Memorandum from Special Commissioner │ │
- │West of Reichskreditkassen, 10 May 1944,│ │
- │concerning cash situation of Chief │ │
- │Paymaster at Military Commander in │ │
- │Belgium and Northern France. │ VII │ 718
- │ │ │
- ECR-172 │Letter from Reichskommissar for Occupied│ │
- │Territories of Belgium and Northern │ │
- │France, 21 July 1944, concerning │ │
- │equalization of monthly balance in giro │ │
- │traffic of Reichskreditkassen. │ VII │ 720
- │ │ │
- ECR-173 │Report of Commissar at the National Bank│ │
- │of Belgium, 15 August 1944, on total │ │
- │occupation charges and Belgium clearing │ │
- │balance. │ VII │ 721
- │ │ │
- ECR-174 │Report of the Commissar of the │ │
- │Netherlands Bank for the month May 1941,│ │
- │dated 12 June 1941. │ VII │ 726
- │ │ │
- ECR-175 │Letter from RKK Amsterdam to Central │ │
- │Administration of RKK Brussels, 18 May │ │
- │1941, concerning occupation costs. │ VII │ 732
- │ │ │
- ECR-176 │Letter from RKK Amsterdam to Central │ │
- │Administration of RKK Brussels, 27 May │ │
- │1941, concerning occupation costs. │ VII │ 733
- │ │ │
- ECR-177 │Letter from RKK Amsterdam to Central │ │
- │Administration of RKK Berlin, 30 June │ │
- │1941, concerning occupation costs. │ VII │ 735
- │ │ │
- ECR-178 │Letter from RKK Amsterdam to Central │ │
- │Administration of RKK Berlin, 25 July │ │
- │1941, concerning occupation costs. │ VII │ 735
- │ │ │
- ECR-179 │Letter from RKK Amsterdam to Central │ │
- │Administration of RKK Berlin, 28 August │ │
- │1941, concerning occupation costs. │ VII │ 735
- │ │ │
- ECR-180 │Letter from RKK Amsterdam to Central │ │
- │Administration of RKK Berlin, 30 │ │
- │September 1941, concerning occupation │ │
- │costs. │ VII │ 736
- │ │ │
- ECR-181 │Letter from RKK Amsterdam to Central │ │
- │Administration of RKK Berlin, 28 October│ │
- │1941, concerning occupation costs. │ VII │ 737
- │ │ │
- ECR-182 │Letter from RKK Amsterdam to Central │ │
- │Administration of RKK Berlin, 29 │ │
- │November 1941, concerning occupation │ │
- │costs. │ VII │ 737
- │ │ │
- ECR-183 │Letter from RKK Amsterdam to Central │ │
- │Administration of RKK Berlin, 6 January │ │
- │1942, concerning occupation costs. │ VII │ 738
- │ │ │
- ECR-184 │Letter from RKK Amsterdam to Central │ │
- │Administration of RKK Berlin, 30 January│ │
- │1942, concerning occupation costs. │ VII │ 739
- │ │ │
- ECR-185 │Letter from RKK Amsterdam to Central │ │
- │Administration of RKK Berlin, 27 │ │
- │February 1942, concerning occupation │ │
- │costs. │ VII │ 740
- │ │ │
- ECR-186 │Letter from RKK Amsterdam to Central │ │
- │Administration of RKK Berlin, 28 March │ │
- │1942, concerning occupation costs. │ VII │ 740
- │ │ │
- ECR-187 │Letter from RKK Amsterdam to Central │ │
- │Administration of RKK Berlin, 30 April │ │
- │1942, concerning occupation costs. │ VII │ 741
- │ │ │
- ECR-188 │Letter from RKK Amsterdam to Central │ │
- │Administration of RKK Berlin, 13 July │ │
- │1942, concerning occupation costs. │ VII │ 742
- │ │ │
- ECR-189 │Letter from RKK Amsterdam to Central │ │
- │Administration of RKK Berlin, 13 August │ │
- │1942, concerning occupation costs. │ VII │ 743
- │ │ │
- ECR-190 │Letter from RKK Amsterdam to Central │ │
- │Administration of RKK Berlin, 31 August │ │
- │1942, concerning occupation costs. │ VII │ 743
- │ │ │
- ECR-191 │Letter from RKK Amsterdam to Central │ │
- │Administration of RKK Berlin, 30 │ │
- │September 1942, concerning occupation │ │
- │costs. │ VII │ 744
- │ │ │
- ECR-192 │Letter from RKK Amsterdam to Central │ │
- │Administration of RKK Berlin, 6 November│ │
- │1942, concerning occupation costs. │ VII │ 744
- │ │ │
- ECR-193 │Letter from RKK Amsterdam to Central │ │
- │Administration of RKK Berlin, 7 December│ │
- │1942, concerning occupation costs. │ VII │ 745
- │ │ │
- ECR-194 │Letter of Commissar at the Netherlands │ │
- │Bank Amsterdam, enclosing report on │ │
- │contributions of Holland for Germany │ │
- │during the first year of occupation, 28 │ │
- │May 1941. │ VII │ 745
- │ │ │
- ECR-195 │Letter from RKK Amsterdam to Central │ │
- │Administration of RKK Berlin, 21 April │ │
- │1942, concerning Dutch East Help. │ VII │ 747
- │ │ │
- ECR-196 │Report of the Commissar of the │ │
- │Netherlands Bank, 9 May 1941. │ VII │ 748
- │ │ │
- ECR-197 │Circular of the Reichsminister of │ │
- │Economics in foreign exchange matters, │ │
- │31 March 1941. │ VII │ 749
- │ │ │
-*L-70 │Speech by Himmler at Bad Schachen, 14 │ │
- │October 1943, on the Question of │ │
- │Security. (USA 308) │ VII │ 818
- │ │ │
-*L-221 │Bormann report on conference of 16 July │ │
- │1941, concerning treatment of Eastern │ │
- │populations and territories. (USA 317) │ VII │ 1086
- │ │ │
-*R-92 │Instruction for internal use on │ │
- │application of law concerning property │ │
- │of Poles of 17 September 1940; copy of │ │
- │monthly report 31 May 1942 with │ │
- │statistics on farms and estates seized │ │
- │and confiscated in the Incorporated │ │
- │Eastern Territories; copy of letter from│ │
- │SS officer to Himmler, 20 November 1940.│ │
- │(USA 312) │ VIII │ 61
- │ │ │
-*R-112 │Orders issued by Reich Commissioner for │ │
- │the Consolidation of German nationhood, │ │
- │16 February 1942, 1 July 1942, 28 July │ │
- │1942. (USA 309) │ VIII │ 108
- │ │ │
-*R-114 │Memoranda of conferences, 4 and 18 │ │
- │August 1942, concerning directions for │ │
- │treatment of deported Alsatians. (USA │ │
- │314) │ VIII │ 122
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XIV
- THE PLUNDER OF ART TREASURES
-
-
- 1. THE EINSATZSTAB ROSENBERG
-
-A. _Formation, Purpose, Powers._
-
-On 29 January 1940 Hitler issued a decree in the following terms:
-
- “The ‘Hohe Schule’ is supposed to become the center for national
- socialistic ideological and educational research. It will be
- established after the conclusion of the war. I order that the
- already initiated preparations be continued by Reichsleiter
- Alfred Rosenberg, especially in the way of research and the
- setting up of the library.
-
- “All sections of Party and State are requested to cooperate with
- him in this task.” (_136-PS_)
-
-What began as a project for the establishment of a research library
-developed into a project for the seizure of cultural treasures.
-(_141-PS_)
-
-On 1 March 1942 Hitler issued a decree in which he asserted that Jews,
-Freemasons, and affiliated opponents of National Socialism are the
-authors of the War against the Reich, and that a systematic spiritual
-battle against them is a military necessity. The decree thereupon
-authorized Rosenberg to search libraries, archives, lodges, and cultural
-establishments, to seize relevant material from these establishments as
-well as cultural treasures which were the property or in the possession
-of Jews, which were ownerless, or the origin of which could not be
-clearly established. The decree directed the cooperation of the
-_Wehrmacht_ High Command and indicated that Rosenberg’s activities in
-the West were to be conducted in his capacity as Reichsleiter and in the
-East in his capacity as Reichsminister. (_149-PS_)
-
-This decree was implemented by a letter from Dr. Lammers, Reichsminister
-and Chief of Chancellory, directed to the “Highest Reich Authorities and
-the Services directly subordinate to the Fuehrer.” The letter reiterated
-the terms of the Hitler decree and requested support of the Reich
-authorities in Rosenberg’s fulfillment of his task. (_154-PS_)
-
-B. _Scope of Activities._
-
-Rosenberg’s activities in fulfillment of the above decrees were
-extended, in the West, to France (_138-PS_), Belgium (_139-PS_), the
-Netherlands (_140-PS_), Luxembourg (_137-PS_), and Norway and Denmark.
-(_159-PS_)
-
-In the East activities were carried out throughout the Occupied Eastern
-Territories (_153-PS_), including the Baltic states and the Ukraine
-(_151-PS_), as well as in Hungary (_158-PS_), Greece (_171-PS_), and
-Yugoslavia. (_071-PS_)
-
-The function of the Rosenberg Organization included not only the seizure
-of books and scientific materials specified in the original Hitler Order
-(_171-PS_), but the seizure of private art treasures (_1015-B-PS_),
-public art treasures (_055-PS_), and household furnishings. (_L-188_)
-
-C. _Cooperating Agencies._
-
-On 5 July 1940 Keitel (Chief of the OKW) informed the Chief of the Army
-High Command (OKH) and the Chief of the Armed Forces in The Netherlands
-that the Fuehrer had ordered that Rosenberg’s suggestion be followed, to
-the effect that certain libraries and archives, chancelleries of high
-church authorities, and lodges be searched for documents valuable to
-Germany or indicating political maneuvers directed against Germany, and
-that such material be seized. The letter further stated that Hitler had
-ordered the support of the Gestapo and that the Chief of the Sipo
-(Security Police), SS-Gruppenfuehrer Heydrich, had been informed and
-would communicate with the competent military commanders. (_137-PS_)
-
-Keitel issued a further order to the Chief of the OKH, France, on 17
-September 1940, providing:
-
- “The ownership status before the war in France, prior to the
- declaration of war on 1 September 1939, shall be the criterion.
-
- “Ownership transfers to the French state or similar transfers
- completed after this date are irrelevant and legally invalid
- (for example, Polish and Slovak libraries in Paris, possessions
- of the Palais Rothschild or other ownerless Jewish possessions).
- Reservations regarding search, seizure and transportation to
- Germany on the basis of the above reasons will not be
- recognized.
-
- “Reichsleiter Rosenberg and/or his deputy
- Reichshauptstellenleiter Ebert has received clear instructions
- from the Fuehrer personally governing the right of seizure; he
- is entitled to transport to Germany cultural goods which appear
- valuable to him and to safeguard them there. The Fuehrer has
- reserved for himself the decision as to their use.
-
- “It is requested that the services in question be informed
- correspondingly.” (_138-PS_)
-
-The above order was extended to Belgium on 10 October 1940 (_139-PS_),
-and an identical order was issued by the Chief of the OKH to the Armed
-Forces Commander in The Netherlands on 17 September 1940. (_140-PS_)
-
-Hitler’s order of 1 March 1942 stated:
-
- “Directions for carrying out this order in cooperation with the
- Wehrmacht will be issued by the Chief of the Wehrmacht High
- Command in agreement with Reichsleiter Rosenberg.” (_149-PS_)
-
-Dr. Lammers’ order of 5 July 1942 declared that the Chief of the OKH, in
-agreement with Keitel, would issue regulations governing the cooperation
-with the Wehrmacht and the Police Services for assistance in making
-seizures. (_154-PS_)
-
-An official of the Rosenberg Ministry for the Occupied East declared the
-Wehrmacht to be one of the primary agencies engaged in removing art
-treasures from Russia. (_1107-PS_)
-
-Cooperation of the SS and the SD was indicated by Rosenberg in a letter
-to Bormann on 23 April 1941:
-
- “* * * It is understood that the confiscations are not executed
- by the regional authorities but that this is conducted by the
- Security Service as well as by the police. * * * it has been
- communicated to me in writing by a Gauleiter, that the chief
- office of the Reich Security (RSHA) of the SS has claimed the
- following from the library of a monastery: * * *.” (_071-PS_)
-
-The above letter also points out that there has been
-
- “* * * close cooperation on the widest scale with the Security
- Service and the military commanders. * * *
-
- “This affair (Operations in Salonika) has already been executed
- on our side with the Security Service (SD) in the most loyal
- fashion.” (_071-PS_)
-
-The National Socialist Party financed the operations of the _Einsatzstab
-Rosenberg_. (_090-PS_; _145-PS_)
-
-In a letter to Goering, 18 June 1942, Rosenberg voiced the opinion that
-all art objects and other confiscated items should belong to the
-National Socialist Party because the Party has been bearing the brunt of
-the battle against the persons and forces from whom this property was
-taken. (_1118-PS_)
-
-D. _Cooperation of Hermann Goering._
-
-On 5 November 1940, Goering issued an order specifying the distribution
-to be made of art objects brought to the Louvre. The order lists as
-second in priority of disposition, “Those art objects which serve to the
-completion of the Reichsmarshal’s collection” and states that the
-objects will “be packed and shipped to Germany with the assistance of
-the Luftwaffe.” (_141-PS_)
-
-On 1 May 1941 Goering issued an order to all Party, State, and Wehrmacht
-Services requesting them:
-
- “* * * to give all possible support and assistance to the Chief
- of Staff of Reichsleiter Rosenberg’s Staff,
- Reichshauptstellenleiter Party Comrade Utikal, and his deputy
- DRK-Feldfuehrer Party Comrade von Behr, in the discharge of
- their duties. The above-mentioned persons are requested to
- report to me on their work, particularly on any difficulties
- that might arise.” (_1117-PS_)
-
-On 30 May 1942, Goering claimed credit for the success of the
-_Einsatzstab_:
-
- “* * * On the other hand I also support personally the work of
- your _Einsatzstab_ wherever I can do so, and a great part of the
- seized cultural goods can be accounted for because I was able to
- assist the _Einsatzstab_ by my organizations.” (_1015-I-PS_)
-
-E. _Method of Operation._
-
-The staff of the _Einsatzstab Rosenberg_ seized not only “abandoned” art
-treasures but also treasures which had been hidden, or were left in the
-custody of depots or warehouses, including art treasures that were
-already packed for shipment to America. (_1015-B-PS_)
-
-Robert Scholz, Chief of the Special Staff for Pictorial Art, described
-the thoroughness with which the _Einsatzstab_ conducted investigations
-and seizures:
-
- “* * * These seizures were carried out on the basis of
- preliminary exhaustive investigations into the address lists of
- the French Police authorities, on the basis of Jewish handbooks,
- warehouse inventories and order books of French shipping firms
- as well as on the basis of French art and collection catalogs.
-
- “* * * The seizure of ownerless Jewish works of art has
- gradually extended over the whole French territory.”
- (_1015-B-PS_)
-
-In the East, members of Rosenberg’s staff operated directly behind the
-front in close cooperation with the infantry. (_035-PS_)
-
-Von Behr, in a progress report dated 8 August 1944, described the method
-of seizing household furnishings:
-
- “The confiscation of Jewish homes was effected in most cases in
- such a way that the so-called confiscation officials went from
- house to house when no records were available of the addresses
- of Jews who had departed or fled, as was the case for example,
- in Paris * * * They drew up inventories of these homes and
- subsequently sealed them . . . . . . . . .
-
- “The goods are dispatched first, to large collecting camps from
- where they are turned over, sorted out and loaded for Germany.
-
- “* * * work shops were established for cabinet-makers,
- watchmakers, shoemakers, electricians, radio experts, furriers,
- etc. All incoming goods were diligently sorted out and those not
- ready for use were repaired. Moreover special boxes were
- dispatched for the use of special trades * * *
-
- “For the sorting out of the confiscated furniture and goods on
- the invisible assembly line and for the packing and loading,
- exclusive use was made of interned Jews. Because of its
- experience as to confiscation, as to working systems within the
- camps, and as to transportation, the Office West was able to
- reorganize their entire working system and thus to succeed in
- providing for the use in Germany of even things which appeared
- to be valueless such as scrap paper, rags, salvage, etc. * * *”
- (_L-188_).
-
-F. _Nature, Extent, and Value of Property Seized._
-
-(1) _Books, manuscripts, documents, and incunabula._ A report on the
-library of the “_Hohe Schule_,” prepared by Dr. Wunder, lists the most
-significant book collections belonging to the library and confiscated by
-the _Einsatzstab Rosenberg_ in accordance with the orders of the
-Fuehrer, as follows (_171-PS_):
-
- (approx.)
- Alliance Israelite Universelle 40,000 Vols.
- Ecole Rabbinique 10,000 Vols.
- Federation de Societé des Juifs de France 4,000 Vols.
- Lipschuetz Bookstore, Paris 20,000 Vols.
- Rothschild Family, Paris 28,000 Vols.
- Rosenthaliana, Amsterdam 20,000 Vols.
- Sefardischen Jewish Community, Amsterdam 25,000 Vols.
- Occupied Eastern Territories 280,000 Vols.
- Jewish Community, Greece 10,000 Vols.
- “Special Action”, Rhineland 5,000 Vols.
- Other sources 100,000 Vols.
- ———
- 552,000
-
-An undated report on the activities of the _Einsatzstab_ Working Group,
-Netherlands, lists Masonic Lodges and other organizations whose
-libraries and archives have been seized. The report states that 470
-cases of books had already been packed and reports materials seized from
-92 separate lodges of the “_Droit Humain_”, the “_Groot Oosten_”, the
-“IOOF” and the “Rotary Club”. An additional 776 cases containing
-approximately 160,000 volumes were seized from the International
-Institute for Social History at Amsterdam. An additional 170 cases were
-seized from the “Theosophischen Society” and other organizations.
-(_176-PS_)
-
-The report further states that the value of the above works is between
-30 million and 40 million Reichsmarks. Additional materials to be
-derived from other sources, including 100,000 volumes from the
-“Rosenthaliana” collection, are estimated to have a value of three times
-that of the above, or an additional 90 million to 120 million
-Reichsmarks. The estimated over-all value is thus between 120 and 160
-million Reichsmarks. (_176-PS_)
-
-(2) _Household furnishings._ The entire furniture seizure action, known
-as “Action M”, is summarized in a report of Von Behr, Chief of the
-Office West, dated 8 August 1944. The report furnishes the following
-statistics on results up to 1 July 1944:
-
- Jewish homes confiscated 71,619
- Loading capacity required cu. ms. 1,079,373
- Railroad cars required 26,984
- Foreign currency and securities
- confiscated RM 11,695,516
- Scrap metal, scrap paper, and textiles
- dispatched kgms. 3,191,352
- (_L-188_)
-
-The report goes on to list in detail the number of boxes of
-miscellaneous items seized, including china (199 boxes), curtains (72
-boxes), coat hangers (120 boxes), toys (99 boxes), bottles (730 boxes),
-etc. The report concludes with an itemized statement of the number of
-wagons dispatched to various cities throughout Germany, to German camps,
-to SS Divisions, the German State Railways, the Postal Service, and the
-Police. (_L-188_)
-
-(3) _Works of Art (East)._ With reference to the work of the
-_Einsatzstab_ in the Eastern Territories, Robert Scholz reported as
-follows:
-
- “In the course of the evacuation of the territory several
- hundred most valuable Russian ikons, several hundred Russian
- paintings of the 18th and 19th centuries, individual articles of
- furniture and furniture from castles were saved in cooperation
- with the individual Army Groups, and brought to a shelter in the
- Reich.” (_1015-B-PS_)
-
-In August 1943, just prior to the loss of Charcow by the Germans, 300
-paintings of West European masters and Ukrainian painters, and 25
-valuable Ukrainian carpets, mostly from the Charcow museum, were packed
-and shipped by the _Einsatzstab_. (_707-PS_)
-
-Reporting on the withdrawal from the Ukraine, Staff Director Utikal
-accounted for the removal of the following materials:
-
- From the Museum of Art at Charcow:
-   Ukrainian paintings 96
-   Western European paintings 185
-   Wood carvings and etchings 12
-   Carpets and tapestries 25
-
- From the Ukrainian museum in Kiev:
-   Textiles of all sorts.
-   Collection of valuable embroidery patterns.
-   Collection of brocades.
-   Numerous items of wood, etc. (_035-PS_)
-
-In addition Utikal reported shipment of a total of 131 cases containing:
-10,186 books, the catalog of the “East” library, art folios, samples of
-magazines, Bolshevist pictures, and Bolshevist films. Utikal also
-stated:
-
- “Moreover an essential part of the prehistoric museum was
- transported away.” (_035-PS_)
-
-Another report on the shipment of works of art from the Ukraine, 12
-September 1944, indicated the value of the contents of 85 chests of art
-objects:
-
- “There are a great many of the oldest ikons, works of famous
- masters of the German, Dutch and Italian schools of the 16th,
- 17th and 18th centuries, as well as works of the best Russian
- artists of the 18th and 19th centuries. On the whole, the
- contents include the most valuable works of the known Ukrainian
- art possession, which in themselves represent a value of many
- millions after a cursory appraisal.” (_055-PS_)
-
-Attached to the above report is a detailed inventory listing hundreds of
-individual objects.
-
-Additional evidence as to the extent of material seized in Kiev is found
-in a secret note, 17 June 1944, dealing with measures taken prior to the
-Russian Occupation. The note reported the taking of materials from
-museums, archives, institutions, etc., during the autumn of 1943 on the
-order of the _Einsatzstab_ and of the Reichs-commissar. During October
-there were sent to the Reich 40 railway trucks, carrying mostly goods
-belonging to the Central Research Institute of the Ukraine. The report
-concluded with the statement that when the Soviets entered the town
-nothing of value was left. (_1109-PS_)
-
-On 28 September 1941, the General Commissar for White Ruthenia reported
-the seizure of art treasures in the area of Minsk, destined for
-Konigsberg and Linz. The value of these confiscations was stated to
-amount to millions of marks. (_1099-PS_)
-
-(4) _Works of Art (West)._ The Robert Scholz report declared that:
-
- “During the period from March 1941 to July 1944, the Special
- Staff for Pictorial Art brought into the Reich:
- _29 large shipments_ including _137 freight cars_ with _4,174
- cases of art works_.” (_1015-B-PS_)
-
-The report stated that a total of 21,903 art objects of all types had
-been counted and inventoried, and stated:
-
- “With this scientific inventory of a material unique in its
- scope and importance and of a value hitherto unknown to art
- research, the Special Staff for Pictorial Art has conducted a
- work important to the entire field of art. _This inventory work
- will form the basis of an all-inclusive scientific catalog in
- which should be recorded history, scope and scientific and
- political significance of this historically unique art
- seizure._” (_1015-B-PS_)
-
-The following is a summary of the inventory attached to the report:
-
- Paintings 10,890
- Plastics 583
- Furniture 2,477
- Textiles 583
- Hand-made art objects 5,825
- East Asiatic objects 1,286
- Antiquities 259
- ———
-   Total 21,903
- (_1015-B-PS_)
-
-The report stated that the above figures would be increased since
-seizures in the West were not yet completed and it had not been possible
-to make a scientific inventory of part of the seized objects because of
-the lack of experts. (_1015-B-PS_)
-
-As early as 28 January 1941, Rosenberg stated, with reference to
-properties seized in France alone:
-
- “* * * the value involved will come close to a billion
- Reichsmarks.” (_090-PS_)
-
-Scholz, in his report on activities from March 1941 to July 1944,
-expressed the value of the seizures as follows:
-
- “The extraordinary artistic and material value of the seized art
- works cannot be expressed in figures. The paintings, period
- furniture of the 17th and 18th Centuries, the Gobelins, the
- antiques and renaissance jewelry of the Rothschild’s are objects
- of such a unique character that their evaluation is impossible,
- since no comparable values have so far appeared on the art
- market.
-
- “A short report, moreover, can only hint at the artistic worth
- of the collections. Among the seized paintings, pastels and
- drawings there are several hundred works of the first quality,
- masterpieces of European art, which could take first place in
- any museum. Included therein are absolutely authenticated signed
- works of Rembrandt Van Rijn, Rubens, Frans Hals, Vermeer van
- Delft, Valasquez, Murillo, Goya, Sebastiano del Piombo, Palma
- Vecchio, etc.
-
- “Of first importance among the seized paintings are the works of
- the famous French painters of the 18th Century, with
- masterpieces of Boucher, Watteau, Rigaud, Largielliere, Rattler,
- Fragonard, Pater, Danloux and de Troy.
-
- “This collection can compare with those of the best European
- museums. It includes many works of the foremost French masters,
- who up to now have been only inadequately represented in the
- best German museums. Very important also is the representation
- of masterpieces of the Dutch Painters of the 17th and 18th
- Centuries. First of all should be mentioned the works of Van
- Dyck, Saloman and Jacob Ruisdal, Wouvermann, Terborch, Jan
- Weenix, Gabriel Metsu, Adrian van Ostade, David Teniers, Pieter
- de Hooch, Willem van der Velde, etc.
-
- “Of foremost importance also are the represented works of
- English painting of the 18th and early 19th centuries, with
- masterpieces of Reynolds, Romney, and Gainsborough. Cranach and
- Amberger, among the German masters, should be mentioned.
-
- “The collection of French furniture of the 17th and 18th
- centuries is perhaps even more highly to be evaluated. This
- contains hundreds of the best preserved and, for the most part,
- signed works of the best known cabinet-makers from the period
- between Louis XIV to Louis XVI. Since German cabinetmakers
- played an important part in this golden age of French cabinetry,
- now recognized for the first time in the field of art, this
- collection is of paramount importance.
-
- “The collection of Gobelins and Persian tapestries contains
- numerous world-famous objects. The collection of handicraft
- works and the Rothschild collection of renaissance jewelry is
- valuable beyond comparison.” (_1015-B-PS_)
-
-The report refers to 25 portfolios of pictures of the most valuable
-works of the art collections seized in the West, which portfolios were
-presented to the Fuehrer. Ten additional portfolios are stated to be
-attached to the report and additional portfolios are said to be in
-preparation. Thirty-nine leatherbound volumes prepared by the
-_Einsatzstab_ contain photographs of paintings, textiles, furniture,
-candelabra, and numerous other objects of art and illustrate the
-magnitude and value of the collection made by _Einsatzstab Rosenberg_.
-
- 2. THE GENERAL-GOUVERNEMENT
-
-A. _Confiscatory Laws and Decrees_
-
-In October 1939 Goering issued a verbal order to Dr. Muehlmann asking
-him to undertake the immediate securing of all Polish art treasures.
-(_1709-PS_)
-
-On 15 November 1939, Hans Frank, Governor-General for the Occupied
-Polish Territories, issued a decree providing in part:
-
- “Article 1. 1. All movable and stationary property of the Former
- Polish State * * * will be sequestered for the purpose of
- securing all manner of public valuables.” (_1773-PS_).
-
-On 16 December 1939, Frank issued a decree providing in part:
-
- “Article 1. All art objects in public possession in the General
- Gouvernement will be confiscated for the fulfillment of public
- tasks of common interest insofar as it has not already been
- seized under the decree on the confiscation of the wealth of the
- former Polish State in the General Gouvernement of 15 November
- 1939 (_Verordnungsblatt GGP_, p. 37).
-
- “Article 2. With the exception of art collections and art
- objects which were the property of the former Polish State, art
- objects will be considered as owned by the public:
-
- “1. Private art collections which have been taken under
- protection by the special commissioner for the seizure and
- safekeeping of the art and cultural treasures.
-
- “2. All ecclesiastical art property with the exception of those
- objects required for the daily performance of liturgic actions.
-
- “Article 3. 1. In order to determine whether art objects are
- public property in the sense of this regulation, every private
- and ecclesiastical art possession has to be registered with
- exact data on the kind, nature and number of pieces.
-
- “2. Everyone who possessed or at the present time is in
- possession of or else is entitled to dispose of such objects of
- art since 15 March 1939, is obliged to register the same.”
- (_1773-PS_)
-
-In order to implement the above decree, the following registration
-decree was issued in the name of the Governor-General by Dr. Muehlmann,
-Special Deputy for the Securing of Art Treasures:
-
- “Article 2. 1. Objects of artistic, cultural-historical and
- historical value which originate from the time before 1850, have
- to be registered.
-
- “2. The registration includes the following:
-
- “_a._ Paintings.
-
- “_b._ Sculpture.
-
- “_c._ Products of handicraft (for instance antique
- furniture, chinaware, glass, golden and silver objects,
- Gobelins, rugs, embroideries, lacework, paramente,
- etc.).
-
- “_d._ Drawings, engravings, woodcuts, etc.
-
- “_e._ Rare manuscripts, musical manuscripts, autographs,
- book-paintings, miniatures, prints, covers, etc.
-
- “_f._ Weapons, armors, etc.
-
- “_g._ Coins, medals, seals, etc.
-
- “3. Regarding the art objects mentioned in section 2, detailed
- information has to be given if possible, on the master, the time
- of production, the contents of the representation, measurements
- and material (for instance, wood, canvas, bronze, etc.).”
- (_1773-PS_)
-
-The seizures authorized by the above decrees ripened into confiscation
-and assumption of ownership by the General Gouvernement, with the
-issuance of the following decree by Frank on 24 September 1940:
-
- “Article 1. The property sequestered on the basis of Article 1,
- section 1 of the decree on the confiscation of the wealth of the
- former Polish State within the General Gouvernement of 15
- November 1939 (_Verordnungsblatt GGP_, page 37) will be
- transferred to the ownership of the General Gouvernement.”
- (_1773-PS_)
-
-Heinrich Himmler, as Reichscommissioner for the Strengthening of
-Germanism, issued an “urgent decree” to the regional officers of the
-Secret Police in the Annexed Eastern Territories and the Commanders of
-Security Service in Krakau (Charkow), Radom, Warsaw, and Lublin. The
-decree, 1 December 1939, was circulated on 16 December 1939, the same
-date as the promulgation of the decree of Dr. Muehlmann, above referred
-to (_1773-PS_). The Himmler decree contained administrative directions
-for execution of the Art Seizure program. (_R-143_)
-
-B. _Purpose of Art Seizures._
-
-The purpose of the Seizure Program is indicated in the aforementioned
-Himmler decree:
-
- “I
-
- “1. To strengthen Germanism in the defense of the Reich all
- articles mentioned in Section II of this decree are hereby
- confiscated. This applies to all articles located in the
- territories annexed by the Fuehrer’s and Reich Chancellor’s
- decree of 12/10/39, and the General Government for the Occupied
- Polish Territories. They are confiscated for the benefit of the
- German Reich and are at the disposal of the Reich Commissioner
- for the Strengthening of Germanism.”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- IV
-
- “All confiscations made before this decree by authorities of the
- Reich Fuehrer SS and the Chief of German Police and the Reich
- Commissioner for the Strengthening of Germanism are hereby
- confirmed. They are to be regarded as made for the benefit of
- the German Reich and are at the disposal of the Reich
- Commissioner for the Strengthening of Germanism.” (_R-143_)
-
-The methodical nature of the Art Seizure Program, and the existence of a
-general policy of confiscation of art treasures, is indicated in section
-V of Himmler’s decree:
-
- “In due course the usual questionnaires for cataloguing
- confiscated articles are to be sent to the Chief Custodian
- East.” (_R-143_)
-
-The intention to enrich Germany by the seizures rather than merely to
-protect the seized objects is indicated in a report by Dr. Hans Posse,
-Director of the Dresden State Picture Gallery:
-
- “I was able to gain some knowledge on the public and private
- collections as well as clerical property in Cracow and Warsaw.
- It is true that we cannot hope too much to enrich ourselves from
- the acquisition of great Art works, of paintings and sculptures,
- with the exception of the Veit-Stoss Altar and the plates of
- Hans Von Kulmbach in the Church of Maria in Cracow . . . . . .
- and several other works from the National Museum in Warsaw. * *
- *” (_1600-PS_)
-
-The avowed purpose of the art treasure seizures was the promulgation of
-German Culture throughout the Occupied East:
-
- “* * * the result is put down in the catalogue together with
- reproductions, and this is a definite proof of the penetration
- of the East by the German Cultural urge.” (_1233-PS_)
-
-C. _Nature, Extent, and Value of Property Seized._
-
-Virtually the entire art possession of Poland, private as well as
-public, was seized by the General Gouvernement (_1233-PS_). In a
-catalogue of the more important works of art seized by the General
-Gouvernement, paragraph 1 of the Foreword contains the following
-admission:
-
- “On the basis of the decree of the General Governor for the
- Occupied Polish Territories of December 16, 1939, the Special
- Delegate for the Safeguarding of Treasures of Art and Culture
- was able in the course of six months to secure almost the entire
- art treasure of the country, with one single exception: the
- Flemish Gobelin series from the castle in Cracow. According to
- the latest information, these are kept in France, so that it
- will be possible to secure them eventually.” (_1233-PS_)
-
-The nature and extent of materials seized by the General Gouvernement is
-indicated in Document _1709-PS_. The document inventories the objects
-seized, and divides them into two classifications: those of primary
-importance (“Reich-important”), and those of secondary importance.
-Articles of primary importance, totaling 521 separate objects, are also
-set forth in a descriptive catalogue. (_1233-PS_)
-
-The articles catalogued include paintings by German, Italian, Dutch,
-French, and Spanish masters, rare illustrated books, Indian and Persian
-miniatures, woodcuts, the famous Veit-Stoss hand-carved altar,
-handicraft articles of gold and silver, antique furniture, articles of
-crystal, glass and porcelain, tapestries, antique weapons, rare coins,
-and medals. The objects were seized from both public and private
-sources, including the National Museum in Cracow and the National Museum
-in Warsaw, the cathedrals of Warsaw and Lublin, a number of churches and
-monasteries, the Chateau of the Kings in Warsaw, university and other
-libraries, and a large number of private collections of the Polish
-nobility. (_1709-PS_)
-
-Items placed in the second category are of the same nature as those
-placed in category I. Approximately 500 separate items are catalogued,
-many of the items including a large number of separate objects treated
-under a single catalogue heading. (_1709-PS_)
-
-The value of the objects seized from 22 collections is stated to be
-9,437,000 Zloty. The materials referred to are only a portion of those
-selected as being of secondary importance. No valuation is given as to
-the balance of the items of secondary importance or as to the 521
-objects selected as being of primary importance. (_1709-PS_)
-
-D. _Evidence That Seizures Were Not Merely for Protective Purposes._
-
-In Dr. Posse’s report (_1600-PS_), a number of items are referred to
-which may be found in the catalogue of art objects “made secure”
-(_1233-PS_):
-
- “I was able to gain some knowledge on the public and private
- collections as well as clerical property in Cracow and Warsaw.
- It is true that we cannot hope too much to enrich ourselves from
- the acquisition of great Art works, of paintings and sculptures,
- with the exception of the Veit-Stoss altar and the plates of
- Hans von Kulmbach in the Church of Maria in Cracow, the Raphael,
- Leonardo and Rembrandt from the collection Czartoryski, and
- several other works from the National Museum in Warsaw, * * *
- works of a rather high value of whose existence we in Germany
- had already known. Richer and more extensive is the Polish stock
- of ‘objects d’art’, such as handicraft in gold and silver, of
- German origin to a large part, particularly from the Church of
- Maria and the Cathedral of Wawel, tapestries, arms, porcelains,
- furniture, bronzes, coins, valuable parchment scrips, books,
- etc. * * *”
-
- * * * * * *
-
- “As I said before, I shall not be able to make proposals
- regarding the distribution as long as an inventory of the entire
- material does not exist. However, I should like to reserve for
- the museum at Linz the three most important paintings of the
- Czartoryski collection, namely the Raphael, Leonardo and
- Rembrandt which are at present in the Kaiser-Frederick Museum in
- Berlin. We in Dresden are particularly interested in the
- interior decorations of the castle of the Kings in Warsaw since
- Saxonian architects and artists have created them; therefore,
- the suggestion is made that the salvaged parts of it
- (panellings, doors, inlaid floors, sculptures, mirrors,
- glass-chandeliers, porcelains, etc.) be used for the interior
- decoration of the Pavillion of the ‘Zivinges’ in Dresden.”
- (_1600-PS_)
-
-The following items listed in the above report are also listed in the
-catalogue:
-
- _Item_ _Catalog No._
- Veit-Stoss Altar 241
- Hans Vol Kulmbach Works 22
- Raphael 141
- Leonardo 134
- Rembrandt 81
- Church of Maria Handicraft 262-265, 279, 280
- From Jagellonic Library 166, 167, 186, 199-203, 206,
- 209, 212, 215-224
- (_See 1233-PS_; _1600-PS_.)
-
-Appendix 8 of Document _1709-PS_ lists a large number of objects which
-were turned over to Architect Koettgen. The items listed include, in
-addition to paintings, tapestries, etc., plates, dishes, cups and
-saucers, vases, cream pitchers, glasses, a bread basket, a service tray,
-and other items of table service. These objects were turned over to the
-architect for the purpose of furnishing the Castle at Cracow and Schloss
-Kressendorf for the Governor. (_1709-PS_)
-
-A number of objects were transported out of Poland and placed in Berlin
-in the Depot of the Special Deputy or in the safe of the Deutsche Bank
-(_1709-PS_). Items at this location are also listed in the catalog
-(_1233-PS_) as numbers 4, 17, 27, 35, 42, 45, 47, 51, 138, 141, 145, and
-148.
-
-Thirty-one sketches by Durer were taken from the collection Lubomierski
-in Lemberg:
-
- “The Special Deputy has personally handed over these sketches in
- July 1941 to the Reichsmarshal who took them to the Fuehrer at
- headquarters where they remain at the present time. On express
- direction of the Fuehrer they will stay in his possession for
- the time being.” (_1709-PS_)
-
-All art objects seized were screened for those which were important from
-the German point of view:
-
- “The Reich-important pieces were collected in a catalogue of the
- so called ‘First Choice’. One copy of this catalogue has been
- submitted to the Fuehrer who reserved to himself the first
- decision as to location and use of the art objects of the ‘First
- Choice’”. (_1709-PS_)
-
-Dr. Muehlmann, the “Special Deputy for the Safeguarding of Art
-Treasures” in the General Government, has confirmed that it was the
-policy and purpose of the art seizure program to confiscate the art
-treasures and to retain them for the benefit of Germany:
-
-“I confirm, that it was the official policy of the Governor General,
-Hans Frank, to take into custody all important art treasures, which
-belonged to Polish public institutions, private collections and the
-Church. I confirm, that the art treasures, mentioned, were actually
-confiscated, and it is clear to me, that they would not have remained in
-Poland in case of a German victory, but that they would have been used
-to complement German artistic property.” (_3042-PS_)
-
- * * * * *
-
- LEGAL REFERENCES AND LIST OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO THE PLUNDER OF ART
- TREASURES
-
- Document │ Description │ Vol. │ Page
- │ │ │
- │Charter of the International Military │ │
- │ Tribunal, Article 6 (b). │ I │ 5
- │ │ │
- │International Military Tribunal, Indictment│ │
- │ Number 1, Sections III; VIII (E). │ I │15, 43
- │ │ │
- 3737-PS │Hague Convention of 1907 respecting the │ │
- │ Laws and Customs of War on Land, Annex, │ │ 597,
- │ Articles 46, 47, 56. │ VI │ 599
- │ ————— │ │
- │Note: A single asterisk (*) before a │ │
- │document indicates that the document was │ │
- │received in evidence at the Nurnberg trial.│ │
- │A double asterisk (**) before a document │ │
- │number indicates that the document was │ │
- │referred to during the trial but was not │ │
- │formally received in evidence, for the │ │
- │reason given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document. The USA series│ │
- │number, given in parentheses following the │ │
- │description of the document, is the │ │
- │official exhibit number assigned by the │ │
- │court. │ │
- │ ————— │ │
- *015-PS │Letter and report of Rosenberg to Hitler, │ │
- │16 April 1943, concerning seizure of │ │
- │ownerless Jewish art possessions. (USA 387)│ III │ 41
- │ │ │
-  035-PS │Report, 26 October 1943, regarding security│ │
- │measures by Main Division Ukraine during │ │
- │withdrawal of Armed Forces. │ III │ 75
- │ │ │
-  055-PS │Report, 12 September 1944, concerning works│ │
- │of art shipped from the Ukraine. │ III │ 99
- │ │ │
- *071-PS │Rosenberg letter to Bormann, 23 April 1941,│ │
- │replying to Bormann’s letter of 19 April │ │
- │1941 (Document 072-PS). (USA 371) │ III │ 119
- │ │ │
- *090-PS │Letter from Rosenberg to Schwarz, 28 │ │
- │January 1941, concerning registration and │ │
- │collection of art treasures. (USA 372) │ III │ 148
- │ │ │
- *136-PS │Certified copy of Hitler Order, 29 January │ │
- │1940, concerning establishment of “Hohe │ │
- │Schule”. (USA 367) │ III │ 184
- │ │ │
- *137-PS │Copy of Order from Keitel to Commanding │ │
- │General of Netherlands, 5 July 1940, to │ │
- │cooperate with the Einsatzstab Rosenberg. │ │
- │(USA 379) │ III │ 185
- │ │ │
-  138-PS │Copy of Order from Keitel to Commanding │ │
- │General of France, 17 September 1940, to │ │
- │cooperate with the Einsatzstab Rosenberg. │ III │ 186
- │ │ │
-  139-PS │Reineke order, 10 October 1940, concerning │ │
- │instructions to be given to Military │ │
- │Administration in Belgium to cooperate with│ │
- │Einsatzstab Rosenberg. │ III │ 187
- │ │ │
-  140-PS │Reineke order, 30 October 1940, │ │
- │supplementing order of 17 September 1940 │ │
- │(Document 138-PS). │ III │ 187
- │ │ │
- *141-PS │Goering Order, 5 November 1940, concerning │ │
- │seizure of Jewish art treasures. (USA 368) │ III │ 188
- │ │ │
- *145-PS │Order signed by Rosenberg, 20 August 1941, │ │
- │concerning safeguarding the cultural goods │ │
- │in the Occupied Eastern Territories. (USA │ │
- │373) │ III │ 189
- │ │ │
- *149-PS │Hitler Order, 1 March 1942, establishing │ │
- │authority of Einsatzstab Rosenberg. (USA │ │
- │369) │ III │ 190
- │ │ │
-  151-PS │Rosenberg Order, 7 April 1942, concerning │ │
- │safeguarding of cultural goods, research │ │
- │material and Scientific Institutions in │ │
- │Occupied Eastern Territories. │ III │ 191
- │ │ │
- *153-PS │Rosenberg Order, 27 April 1942, for │ │
- │formation of central unit for seizure of │ │
- │art treasures in occupied Eastern │ │
- │Territories. (USA 381) │ III │ 192
- │ │ │
- *154-PS │Letter from Lammers to high State and Party│ │
- │authorities, 5 July 1942, confirming │ │
- │Rosenberg’s powers. (USA 370) │ III │ 193
- │ │ │
- *158-PS │Message, 1 June 1944, initialled Utikal, │ │
- │Chief of Einsatzstab, concerning missions │ │
- │in Hungary. (USA 382) │ III │ 199
- │ │ │
- *159-PS │Message, 6 June 1944, initialled Utikal, │ │
- │Chief of Einsatzstab, concerning missions │ │
- │in Denmark and Norway. (USA 380) │ III │ 199
- │ │ │
- *171-PS │Undated report on “Library for Exploration │ │
- │of the Jewish Question” by the Hohe Schule │ │
- │District Office. (USA 383) │ III │ 200
- │ │ │
- *176-PS │Report on Einsatzstab Rosenberg, Working │ │
- │Group Netherlands, signed Schimmer. (USA │ │
- │707) │ III │ 203
- │ │ │
-  707-PS │Letters, June-October 1943 concerning │ │
- │evacuation of the museum of Charkow. │ III │ 516
- │ │ │
- 1015-B-PS │Report on activities of Special Staff for │ │
- │Pictorial Art, October 1940 to July 1944. │ III │ 666
- │ │ │
-*1015-I-PS │Letter from Goering to Rosenberg, 30 May │ │
- │1942. (USA 385) │ III │ 670
- │ │ │
- 1015-GG-PS │Inventory of art objects—attached to a │ │
- │report (Document 1015-B-PS). │ III │ 671
- │ │ │
- 1099-PS │Letter from Kube, General Commissar White │ │
- │Ruthenia, to Rosenberg, 28 September 1941. │ III │ 781
- │ │ │
- 1107-PS │Office memorandum, 17 May 1944, in │ │
- │Rosenberg Ministry concerning the │ │
- │Wehrmacht’s function in removing treasures │ │
- │from the USSR. │ III │ 789
- │ │ │
- 1109-PS │Note signed by Dr. Ullman, 17 June 1944, │ │
- │concerning Bolshevic Atrocity Propaganda. │ III │ 791
- │ │ │
-*1117-PS │Goering Order, 1 May 1941 concerning │ │
- │establishment of Einsatzstab Rosenberg in │ │
- │all Occupied Territories. (USA 384) │ III │ 793
- │ │ │
- 1118-PS │Letter from Rosenberg to Goering, 18 June │ │
- │1942, and related correspondence. │ III │ 793
- │ │ │
-*1233-PS │Printed catalog undated, concerning secured│ │
- │objects of art in the Government General │ │
- │(Poland). (USA 377) │ III │ 850
- │ │ │
-*1600-PS │Bormann correspondence, 1940-1941, │ │
- │concerning confiscation of religious art │ │
- │treasures. (USA 690) │ IV │ 128
- │ │ │
-*1709-PS │Report of Special Delegate for art │ │
- │seizures, July 1943. (USA 378) │ IV │ 211
- │ │ │
-*1773-PS │Decree on sequestration of property of │ │
- │former Polish State in the General │ │
- │Government, 15 November 1939, published in │ │
- │The Law of the General Government, pp. │ │
- │E810, E845, E846. (USA 376) │ IV │ 346
- │ │ │
-*2523-PS │Account of conversation between Goering and│ │
- │Bunjes. (USA 783) │ V │ 258
- │ │ │
-*3042-PS │Affidavit of Dr. Kajetan Muehlmann, 19 │ │
- │November 1945. (USA 375) │ V │ 754
- │ │ │
- 3766-PS │Report prepared by the German Army in │ │
- │France 1942 concerning removal of French │ │
- │art objects through the German Embassy and │ │
- │the Einsatzstab Rosenberg in France. │ VI │ 646
- │ │ │
- 3814-PS │Correspondence between Hans Frank, Lammers │ │
- │and various witnesses to the conduct of │ │
- │Frank, February 1945. │ VI │ 739
- │ │ │
-*L-188 │Report of 8 August 1944, on confiscation up│ │
- │to 31 July 1944. (USA 386) │ VII │ 1022
- │ │ │
- R-143 │Himmler decree, 1 December 1939, concerning│ │
- │procedure for confiscation of works of art,│ │
- │archives, and documents. │ VIII │ 246
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER NOTES
-
-Punctuation and spelling has been maintained except where obvious
-printer errors have occurred including missing periods or commas for
-periods. American spelling occurs throughout the document. There are
-differences in spellings of cities depending on whether the source is
-the prosecutor or part of a quoted statement. Multiple occurrences of
-the following spellings which differ and are found throughout this
-volume are as follows:
-
- Luxemburg Luxembourg
- Esthonia Estonia
- Kiew Kiev
- Roumania Rumania
- Czecho-Slovakia Checkoslovakia
-
-Although some sentences may appear to have incorrect spellings or verb
-tenses, the original text has been maintained as presented read into the
-record and reflects the actual translations of the various national
-documents presented as material for the trial(s). This volume had no
-German, Polish, Czech, Russian or other eastern European diacritics,
-only French diacritics. As a result, Goering and Fuehrer are spelled
-without umlauts throughout.
-
-A correction of fact has been made on page 778 regarding “. . . the
-Italian invasion of Greece on 28 November 1940. . . .” It should be “28
-October 1940”. In this ebook, “November” is marked with overstrike and
-“[October]” has been added.
-
-An attempt has been made to produce this ebook in a format as close as
-possible to the original document's presentation and layout. As a
-result, the reader will find that the quoted texts in the first six
-chapters have indented paragraphs and the remaining chapters have
-quotations which are not indented, just as in the original document.
-
-[The end of _Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression (Vol. I)_, by Anonymous.]
-
-
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